U.S. senator Manchin says Treasury should limit commercial EV tax credit
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[December 14, 2022]
By David Shepardson
(Reuters) - U.S. Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat who chairs the
chamber's energy panel, asked the Treasury Department on Tuesday not to
allow a commercial electric vehicle tax credit to be used for consumer
leasing, rental cars or ridesharing vehicle sales, rejecting a broad
interpretation of the credit.
Reuters first reported last week the push by South Korea and some
automakers that asked the Treasury Department to allow use of the
commercial electric vehicle tax credit to boost consumer EV access as
well as for the purchase of ride share and rental car vehicles.
The $430 billion U.S. Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) passed in August
ended $7,500 consumer tax credits for electric vehicles assembled
outside North America, angering South Korea, the European Union, Japan
and others.
The climate bill also imposes significant battery minerals and component
sourcing restrictions, sets income and price caps for qualifying
vehicles and seeks to phase out Chinese battery minerals or components.
The commercial credit known as "45W" does not, however, have the
sourcing restrictions of the consumer credit called "30D."
"Some automakers and foreign governments are asking your agency for a
broad interpretation of 45W that would allow rental cars, leased
vehicles, and rideshare vehicles (such as those used for Uber and Lyft),
a huge piece of the U.S. vehicle market, to be eligible for the full
$7,500 commercial vehicle credit as a way to bypass the strict sourcing
requirements," Manchin, who chairs the Energy Committee and largely
wrote the EV tax credit rules, said in a letter to the Treasury
Department, which did not immediately comment.
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U.S. Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) speaks
to reporters following the weekly Democratic caucus luncheon at the
U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 29, 2022.
REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger
Manchin said if successful in the interpretation "companies will
focus their attention away from trying to invest in North America to
meet the requirements of 30D and will instead continue with business
as usual, putting our transportation sector further at risk."
Manchin said he recognized "many of our allies may be upset at the
strong domestic sourcing requirements included in the IRA and are
looking for a way around them. Let me be clear, this bill was not
designed to hurt any of our allied partners, but it was designed to
help this country and make us stronger."
Toyota Motor Corp said last week "the lack of criteria to qualify
for (commercial credits) could undermine the IRA's goals to expand
domestic production of EV batteries and maintain America's energy
independence."
Hyundai and Kia want the U.S. Treasury to allow people leasing EVs
to benefit from commercial credits and to qualify for up to a $4,000
tax credit for used EVs if they buy vehicles when leases expire.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; editing by Grant McCool)
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