U.S. Senate Democratic electric vehicle tax credit plan faces questions
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[July 29, 2022]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Automakers and U.S.
lawmakers on Thursday were closely reviewing details of a proposed
expansion of the electric vehicle tax credit that could help retool
factories to build green vehicles and cut greenhouse gas emissions.
Under a deal announced by Senator Chuck Schumer, the 200,000-vehicle per
manufacturer cap on the $7,500 EV tax credit would be lifted and a new
$4,000 used EV tax credit adopted. Lawmakers and automaker executives
want to know more about whether content sourcing requirements will bar
many if not all EVs from getting tax credits and if consumers will be
able to use it at the time of sale.
The new EV tax credit would be subject to rising annual sourcing
requirements for critical minerals and components used in batteries.
Congressional aides and automakers said the provisions were aimed at
China, which produces much of the world's critical minerals for
batteries.
"The basic structure I am fine with," Representative Dan Kildee told
Reuters. He wants more details on "our ability to source these
materials... "We need to make sure it is workable and it does what we
intended."
Schumer told reporters the EV provisions would account for a "very
small" amount of the anticipated 40% reduction in emissions expected
from the bill.
Schumer said Manchin had "some real disagreements" about the EV tax
credit "so we tried to come to a compromise. It's not everything I would
want."
General Motors, which has pushed Congress to lift the cap, said it would
"review the draft text and look forward to working with Congress on
these provisions that would ensure a level playing field."
The bill also includes billions in new loans and grants for auto
production, including a $10 billion investment tax credit to build
clean-technology manufacturing facilities, $2 billion in cash grants to
retool existing auto manufacturing facilitiesand up to $20 billion in
loans to build new clean vehicle manufacturing facilities.
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An electric vehicle charger is seen in Manhattan, New York, U.S.,
December 7, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Last year, President Joe Biden proposed boosting EV tax credits to
up to $12,500 per vehicle -- including $4,500 for union-made
vehicles -- and eventually making the credits apply only to U.S.
made vehicles.
The Schumer Manchin proposal dropped the union and U.S. production
requirements. It keeps the maximum credit at $7,500 per EV. Canada
on Thursday hailed the revised bill that does not include the U.S-only
provision.
The bill includes rising requirements for the percentage of North
American battery components by value and would disallow any
batteries after 2023 with any Chinese battery components. Some auto
executives the timelines for requirements are too aggressive and
will prevent use of the credit.
Automakers including GM and Tesla hit the cap and are no longer
eligible for the existing EV tax credit while Toyota Motor Corp said
this month it has hit the cap, which means its credit will phaseout
in 2023.
The new EV tax credits would be limited to trucks, vans and SUVs
with suggested retail prices of no more than $80,000 and to cars
priced at no more than $55,000. They would be limited to families
with adjusted gross incomes of up to $300,000 annually.
Biden's target is for EVs to comprise half of all new vehicles sold
in 2030.
Zero Emission Transportation Association Executive Director Joe
Britten said the EV credit is "going to be a huge accelerant to
invest" in production of U.S. batteries and critical minerals.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by David Gregorio)
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