House Bill 5749 from state Rep. Mike Zalewski, D-Riverside, was
discussed last month during a House Revenue and Finance
Committee hearing. The measure promotes more use of sustainable
aviation fuel by giving a $2 a gallon credit for the use of SAF.
Bill Glunz with American Airlines said the measure makes sense
for airlines in the continued push for cleaner energy.
“We’re large consumers of fossil fuels, that’s not a secret, and
this is the way we move the needle,” Glunz said. “The big way is
sustainable aviation fuel.”
Dan Lynch with United Airlines argued they need the right
policies in place to ease airlines into it.
“The cost of SAF today versus conventional jet fuel is a
significant gap,” Lynch said. “We need to close that gap. We
need government incentives to close that gap.”
The Illinois Department of Revenue said the issue is worth
continued discussion, but warned the more SAF is used, the more
cost prohibitive to the state the credit would become.
Aaron Robinson with United Airlines told the committee SAF can
be made with agricultural byproducts, similar to biodiesel,
something that could make Illinois a major player if the right
policies are in place.
“To really make these benefits, greenhouse gas emissions
reductions, local air quality improvements and clean economy
jobs all a reality here in Illinois and can really further
establish in fact as a national leader in enabling a cleaner
future,” Robinson said.
Illinois Department of Revenue Director David Harris said that’s
not what this bill does.
“You want to establish some sort of a credit as we have done for
other industries, that if you locate in Illinois then you’re
going to get a credit for the production in Illinois,” Harris
said.
There are also concerns that the provision could give a credit
for fuel purchased in Illinois but not taxed because it’s for an
international flight.
It’s unclear if the measure would advance in the final weeks of
scheduled session before a new General Assembly is seated
mid-January.
Greg Bishop reports on Illinois government and
other issues for The Center Square. Bishop has years of
award-winning broadcast experience and hosts the WMAY Morning
Newsfeed out of Springfield.
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