The Sentinel-Record

Climate bill could short-circuit tax credits

- AP’S The Conversati­on James Morton Turner is a professor of Environmen­tal Studies, Wellesley College. The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

The U.S. Senate passed a far-reaching climate, energy and health care bill on Sunday that invests an unpreceden­ted $370 billion in energy and climate programs over the next 10 years — including incentives to expand renewable energy and electric vehicles.

Rapid and widespread adoption of electric vehicles will be essential for the United States to meet its climate goals. And the new bill, which includes a host of other health and tax-related provisions, aims to encourage people to trade their gasoline-fueled cars for electrics by offering a tax credit of up to $7,500 for new electric vehicles and up to $4,000 for used electric vehicles through 2032.

But there’s a catch, and it could end up making it difficult for most EVs to qualify for the new incentive.

The bill, which needs House approval, requires that new electric vehicles meet stringent sourcing requiremen­ts for critical materials, the components of the battery, and final assembly to qualify for the tax credits. While some automakers, like Tesla and GM, have well-developed domestic supply chains, no electric vehicle manufactur­er currently meets all the bill’s requiremen­ts. EV supply chain

At first glance, the revised EV tax credits seem like a smart move.

Existing U.S. policy allows credits for the first 200,000 electric vehicles a manufactur­er sells. Those credits helped jump-start demand for EVs. But industry leaders, including Tesla and GM, have already hit that cap, while most foreign automakers’ vehicles are still eligible. The bill would eliminate the cap for individual automakers and extend the tax credits through 2032 — for any vehicle that meets the sourcing requiremen­ts.

Right now, China dominates the global supply chain for materials and lithium-ion batteries used in electric vehicles. This is no accident. Since the early 2000s, Chinese policymake­rs have adopted aggressive policies that have supported advanced battery technologi­es, including investment­s in mines, materials processing and manufactur­ing. I discuss how China got a head start in the race toward a clean energy future in my new book, “Charged: A History of Batteries and Lessons for a Clean Energy Future.”

Sen. Joe Manchin, the West Virginia Democrat who stalled earlier efforts to get these measures through the sharply divided Senate, said he hopes the requiremen­ts will help scale up the U.S. domestic critical minerals supply chain.

The EV incentives would complement other U.S. policies aimed at jump-starting domestic EV manufactur­ing capacity. Those include $7 billion in grants to accelerate the developmen­t of the battery supply chain allocated in the Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 and a $3 billion expansion of the Advanced Vehicle Manufactur­ing Loan Program included in the current bill, formally known as the Inflation Reduction Act.

The problem is that the Inflation Reduction Act’s sourcing requiremen­ts come online so quickly, starting in 2023, and ratchet upward so rapidly, that the plan could backfire. Instead of expanding electric vehicle adoption, the policy could make almost all electric vehicles ineligible for the tax incentives.

Tesla’s Gigafactor­y

The bill excludes incentives for any new vehicle which contains battery materials or components extracted, processed, manufactur­ed or assembled by a “foreign entity of concern” — a category that includes China.

According to Benchmark Intelligen­ce, a market research firm that tracks the battery industry, China currently controls 81% of global cathode manufactur­ing capacity, 91% of global anode capacity, and 79% of global lithium-ion battery manufactur­ing capacity. By comparison, the United States has 0.16% of cathode manufactur­ing capacity, 0.27% of anode manufactur­ing capacity, and 5.5% of lithium-ion battery manufactur­ing capacity.

Even the U.S.’s most advanced battery factories, such as Tesla’s Nevada Gigafactor­y, currently rely on materials processed in China. Despite Ford’s plans to expand its domestic supply chain, its most recent deals are for sourcing batteries from Chinese manufactur­er CATL.

In addition to excluding materials and components sourced from China starting in 2023, the bill also requires that a minimum percentage of the materials and components in batteries be sourced domestical­ly or from countries the U.S. has a fair trade agreement with, such as Australia and Chile. The threshold starts at 40% of the value of critical minerals in 2023 and ramps up to 80% in 2027, with similar requiremen­ts for battery components.

If a manufactur­er doesn’t meet these requiremen­ts, its vehicle would be ineligible for the tax credit. Whether the Treasury Department would come up with exemptions remains to be seen.

Although EV manufactur­ers are already pursuing plans to develop supply chains that meet these sourcing requiremen­ts, proposals for mines and processing facilities often face challenges. Indigenous and environmen­tal concerns have slowed a proposed lithium mine in Nevada. In some cases, key materials, such as cobalt and graphite, are not readily sourced domestical­ly or from fair-trade allies.

Proposed recycling projects could help meet demand. Redwood Materials projects its recycling facility, currently under constructi­on in Nevada, will supply cathode and anode materials to support one million electric vehicles per year by 2025. Despite such optimistic projection­s, experts anticipate that recycling can only play a small role in offsetting the demand for raw materials needed to scale up electric vehicle adoption in the coming decade.

Cutting emissions?

Clean energy supporters called the bill historic. In addition to a massive investment in renewable energy and electric vehicles, it provides support for technologi­es such as carbon capture and storage and zero-carbon fuels, and includes a fee to curtail methane emissions, as well as some trade-offs that boost fossil fuels.

Forecaster­s have projected that the climate package as a whole could help put the U.S. on track to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by about 40% by 2030 compared to 2005 levels — still short of the Biden administra­tion’s goal of a 50% reduction, but closer.

But for the U.S. to hit those goals, electric vehicles will have to replace fossil-fueled vehicles by the millions. A realistic EV tax credit that allows time for manufactur­ers to diversify their supply chains and makes these vehicles more affordable for all Americans will be crucial. The proposed policy risks short-circuiting EV tax credits just when they are needed most.

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