Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Incentives for electric cars

California considerin­g bill to provide rebates for buyers.

- DANA HULL AND RYAN BEENE

The federal tax credit for electric car purchases has an end in sight, but California doesn’t want demand for the zero-emissions vehicles to meet the same fate.

The state, long a champion of electric cars, is considerin­g a bill to provide rebates to electric vehicle buyers at the time of purchase, reducing the sale price right as customers drive off the lot. The bill, which does not specify the size of rebates but proposes giving more cash to low-income buyers, looks to set aside as much as $3 billion for the incentives.

If passed, the program could help bridge the “valley of death” looming on the horizon for electric vehicle demand as federal rebates begin to wind down, said Max Baumhefner, an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council’s clean vehicles program. “The conditions are right for a tipping point to occur but with uncertaint­y about the state’s purchase rebates and the prospect of federal tax incentives expiring, it could tip in the wrong way.”

The plan — dubbed the California Electric Vehicle Initiative — could be a key step in encouragin­g the purchase of battery-powered vehicles by bringing the price after credits more in line with similar gasoline-fueled models. Gov. Jerry Brown set a goal of 1.5 million zero-emission cars on state roads by 2025. California already offers clean vehicle rebates for the purchase of models including the Chevy Bolt, Nissan Leaf and Tesla Model S and X, but customers have to apply for those credits after the purchase is complete, a possible deterrent.

The bill would eliminate the need for buyers to file tax rebates with the state, according to a draft statement on the bill seen by Bloomberg News. The income-based rebates would also help assuage concerns that tax dollars are helping wealthy buyers afford luxury cars like the Tesla Model S, which can sell for more than $100,000.

The legislatio­n, which passed a vote on the assembly floor last month, faces votes in two state Senate committees this week, the draft statement said.

The bill is modeled on the state’s highly successful California Solar Initiative, which resulted in a pick-up in rooftop solar installati­ons on homes and commercial buildings across the state. Like that program, the electric vehicle proposal suggests the rebates decline over time as market penetratio­n rises.

Electric vehicles are forecast to become comparable price-wise with combustion-engine vehicles around 2026 in the U.S., according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

The bill comes as the federal tax rebate begins to run its course. Purchasers of only the first 200,000 electric cars sold by each manufactur­er in the U.S. are eligible for the $7,500 federal tax credit before it starts to phase out, meaning the largest electric vehicle-makers including General Motors, Nissan and Tesla will lose eligibilit­y first, just as their more affordable, longerrang­e electrics are hitting the market.

This month, Tesla is slated to begin production of its Model 3 sedan, which is expected to start at $35,000 before incentives or options. Tesla produced roughly 84,000 electric vehicles in 2016 and plans to make half a million in 2018, then 1 million in 2020.

As the nation’s coal-fired power plants close, transporta­tion is likely to eclipse electricit­y production as the nation’s largest source of greenhouse gas emissions. That’s already true in California, where transporta­tion accounts for nearly 40 percent of the state’s emissions.

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 ?? Bloomberg/JASPER JUINEN ?? An employee inspects under the hood of a Volkswagen e-Golf electric automobile in the light tunnel inside the Volkswagen AG factory in Dresden, Germany, in April.
Bloomberg/JASPER JUINEN An employee inspects under the hood of a Volkswagen e-Golf electric automobile in the light tunnel inside the Volkswagen AG factory in Dresden, Germany, in April.

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