Los Angeles Times

Electric car subsidy is on GOP chopping block

- russ.mitchell@latimes.com

selling all- electric vehicles over the next several years, and all would have to deal with the fallout from the eliminatio­n of the tax credit. Battery packs for electric cars still cost thousands of dollars more to make than traditiona­l internal combustion engines, and removing the subsidy could place them at an even bigger price disadvanta­ge with gasoline-and diesel- powered passenger vehicles.

“Electric vehicles are several years away from being cost competitiv­e,” said Colin McKerrache­r, advanced transporta­tion analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance. If the credit is cut, “it would have a very big impact on the EV market.”

Electric car promoters are hoping the credit will be restored to the bill before passage.

“This is a terrible idea,” said Joel Levin, executive director of the advocacy group Plug In America. “Fortunatel­y, this is just the beginning of the discussion, not the end of it.”

Subsidy foes say electric cars should compete at a free- market price without government assistance.

Steve Leslie, who owns a roofing company in Hood River, Ore., and drives a Tesla Model S, said he won’t give up his deposit on a Model 3, tax credit or no.

A big fan of electric cars and Tesla CEO Musk, Leslie acknowledg­ed that the lack of a credit might make the car unaffordab­le to some Model 3 depositors, which he said would be “too bad.”

“Obviously we’d like to have the credit,” said Leslie, 56. “Everybody likes a tax break. But I hate the oil companies more. I hate them so much I don’t [ care] about the tax break.”

Mandates favoring electric vehicles are being implemente­d or considered around the world. London and Paris want to ban gaspowered vehicles by 2040. China has made clear it aims to dominate electric vehicle production, and is considerin­g mandates on top of existing incentives.

“The question for the United States is whether we want these cars to be built here or in China,” Levin said.

In California, legislator­s plan to introduce a bill in January that would mandate electric powertrain­s for all new cars sold in the state by 2040. California currently offers $ 2,500 refunds on electric cars, which would remain whatever happens with the federal credit.

The state’s Zero Emission Vehicle program, which in effect mandates automakers meet a certain percentage of EV sales in California and nine other states, would remain. The aim for automakers is 22% of new car sales in California be electric by 2025.

“It’s not a foregone conclusion that U. S. automakers would shelve their EV plans,” said McKerrache­r. “But it would take the pressure off a little bit and could have implicatio­ns for their [ global] competitiv­eness.”

It could also hurt a budding industry in battery packs, charging stations and other components.

China and Germany are committed to the electric car market, he said.

Bloomberg New Energy Finance forecasts 1 million pure- electric passenger vehicles will be sold in 2017, half of them in China, about a quarter in the U. S.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? THE REPUBLICAN plan seeks to eliminate the $ 7,500 federal credit for electric vehicles. California offers $ 2,500 credits, which would remain whatever happens with the federal break. Above, a Model S is charged.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times THE REPUBLICAN plan seeks to eliminate the $ 7,500 federal credit for electric vehicles. California offers $ 2,500 credits, which would remain whatever happens with the federal break. Above, a Model S is charged.

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