Albuquerque Journal

IRS is holding US mineral security hostage

- BY RICH NOLAN Rich Nolan is president and CEO of the National Mining Associatio­n.

It may be surprising to hear tax guidance — of all things — could have enormous implicatio­ns for national security and the competitiv­eness of the U.S. industrial base. Yet, that’s precisely what’s at stake with a critically important tax credit tucked into the Inflation Reduction Act.

How the Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service interpret the 45X advanced manufactur­ing tax credit could make or break an effort to reshore mineral production and address our alarming overrelian­ce on overseas mineral supply chains, particular­ly those dominated by China.

In proposed guidance late last year, the IRS said critical minerals extraction activities and certain processing costs would be excluded from eligibilit­y for the credit. It was a stunning proposal that ignores congressio­nal intent and doesn’t make any sense.

The stakes are enormous. When Congress came together to pass the Inflation Reduction Act, legislator­s carefully and intentiona­lly worked to address our mineral supply chain problem with an eye toward ramping up domestic mining. Lawmakers recognized that we are beholden to China, Russia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and other countries for vast percentage­s of the minerals U.S. manufactur­ing and automakers need.

Of the 50 critical mineral commoditie­s the U.S. Geological Survey lists as essential for U.S. economic and national security, China is the top producer or top supplier for 30.

Our minerals vulnerabil­ity — often called the nation’s Achilles’ heel — is now a source of alarming strength and geopolitic­al leverage for our rivals.

In just the last 12 months, China has continuous­ly threatened critical mineral supply chains with export controls or flooded the marketplac­e for metals — intentiona­lly forcing U.S. suppliers to pause mine developmen­t or shutter.

John Podesta, the White House’s lead energy and climate adviser, recently said, “China has too much of a chokehold on critical minerals.” And President Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, warned that mineral supply chains are “at risk of being weaponized in the same way as oil in the 1970s, or natural gas in Europe in 2022.”

The danger is obvious. And Congress, for its part, has worked to address it. But if an interpreta­tion of the 45X tax credit goes sideways, a critical lever to bring these supply chains home will disappear.

U.S. mineral producers and processors have warned that without this incentive, proposed domestic projects will have to be canceled — the economics just won’t work.

There should be no confusion about how the guidance should be interprete­d. The senators who played a crucial role in shaping the law in 2022 recently wrote to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen urging a fix to the interpreta­tion.

Those senators wrote, “The clear purpose of section 45X was to encourage investment in the United States and to build a reliable and resilient domestic supply chain for critical minerals right here at home.” They added, “We want to clarify that the blanket exclusion of materials costs is not consistent with the intent of Congress and should be expeditiou­sly revised.”

It doesn’t get any clearer than that. The 45X tax credit is a golden opportunit­y to address our alarming mineral import reliance and begin the vital work of building these critical supply chains at home. But that work can’t start — or may never — unless we get this tax guidance right.

The Inflation Reduction Act and the 45X tax credit were no cure-all to the nation’s mineral vulnerabil­ities, but they were an essential step in the right direction. It’s now critical that Treasury and the IRS let us take it.

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Rich Nolan

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