The
measure follows the lead of the Senate version approved last
month that did not eliminate the credit. Killing the credit
could have hurt automakers like General Motors Co <GM.N>,
Volkswagen AG <VOWG_p.DE>, Tesla Inc <TSLA.O> and Nissan Motor
Co <7201.T>.
Consumers under current law are eligible for a $7,500 tax credit
to defray the cost of plug-in electric vehicles. The electric
vehicle tax credit starts to phase out after a manufacturer
sells 200,000 plug-in vehicles. After an automaker hits that
point, the $7,500 tax credit is still available for at least
three more months before phasing out.
Consumers are currently allowed to take the credit on vehicles
until the manufacturer hits 200,000 plug-in vehicles sold.
Electric vehicles have expensive batteries that make them
pricier than gasoline-powered vehicles.
The Electric Drive Transportation Association said in a
statement late Friday it was pleased the credit would remain in
law. "The credit supports innovation and job creation while
helping drivers access advanced vehicle technology," the group
said.
More than 50 automakers and other companies and groups released
a letter earlier this week urging Congress to retain the credit,
including Ford Motor Co <F.N>, BMW AG <BMWG.DE>, GM, Uber
Technologies Inc.
Former President Barack Obama repeatedly proposed hiking the tax
credit for electric vehicles to $10,000 and converting it to a
point-of-sale rebate, but Congress did not approve the measure.
Automakers face mandates from California and a dozen other
states to produce a rising number of zero-emission vehicles and
have said the credits are essential to meeting requirements.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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