Chattanooga Times Free Press

Warnock introduces EV tax credit bill to give grace period to Hyundai

- BY ZACHARY HANSEN AND DREW KANN

U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock introduced a bill Thursday to tweak requiremen­ts for electric vehicle tax credits in President Joe Biden’s signature climate and health law amid complaints from foreign automakers expanding in the U.S. that the law puts them at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge.

The legislatio­n comes as Warnock, locked in a tight reelection battle against Republican challenger Herschel Walker, has taken flak from GOP critics that the new law threatens Georgia’s biggest economic developmen­t project — a $5.54 billion EV factory near Savannah from Hyundai Motor Group that is expected to employ 8,100.

The bill from Warnock, which faces long odds of passing before the election, also reflects the stakes of his duel with Walker, with control of the Senate potentiall­y at stake.

Before the climate law was signed, EVs built by Hyundai Motor brands Hyundai, Kia and Genesis qualified for tax credits of as much as $7,500, and Biden in May hailed executives of the South Korean conglomera­te for choosing a site in Bryan County for the EV factory. But the law — known as the Inflation Reduction Act — requires vehicles be assembled in the U.S., Mexico or Canada and meet certain material sourcing rules to qualify, among other stipulatio­ns.

Once Biden signed the legislatio­n, EVs like the Hyundai Ioniq 5 and Kia EV6 that are assembled overseas no longer qualify and the automakers say that puts them at a disadvanta­ge to models built in North America.

In the long run, the Biden administra­tion expects the tax credits will boost American manufactur­ing and EV sales. But in the near term, the changes could hurt brands like Hyundai and Kia, which weren’t expecting to lose the current credits before ramping up U.S. production.

Warnock’s bill would give companies like Hyundai time to ramp up production in the U.S. before the final assembly and battery material sourcing rules kick in. If the legislatio­n passes, it would delay the battery sourcing provision until 2025 and the final assembly requiremen­t until 2026.

Those adjustment­s would allow Hyundai vehicles to qualify for the tax credits until the company’s Bryan County plant is completed in 2025.

“I want to make sure that we maximize the full potential of the bill, so I’m introducin­g the Affordable Electric Vehicles for America Act because I want to make sure that Georgia consumers have the full benefit of the legislatio­n we’ve already passed,” Warnock said.

Republican­s, who unanimousl­y opposed the climate change law in Congress, were quick to blame Warnock for potential fallout.

Warnock also said he’s encouragin­g the U.S. Treasury Department to “be flexible” with its interpreta­tion and enforcemen­t of the new tax credit requiremen­ts.

Only a few EVs on the market today will meet the strict newmateria­l sourcing and assembly requiremen­ts for tax credit eligibilit­y. But that will change in the years ahead as both foreign and domestic automakers have committed tens of billions to build new North American EV plants.

Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican who is attempting to fend off Democrat Stacey Abrams this November, has urged Washington lawmakers to alter the tax credit requiremen­ts to assist Hyundai and other automakers that are making large investment­s in Georgia, such as California EV startup Rivian.

Rivian plans to build a $5 billion EV factory an hour east of Atlanta that will employ about 7,500 workers. The companies were wooed with state and local incentive packages valued at more than $1.5 billion for Rivian and $1.8 billion for Hyundai.

Under the IRA, many of Rivian’s models would be too expensive to qualify for federal tax credits.

At an event Wednesday at Kia’s factory in West Point, Kemp chastised Warnock and his Democratic colleagues over the EV credit requiremen­ts.

“It’s unfortunat­e that they read the bill after they pass it to figure out that they’re actually helping companies that aren’t in our state and hurting companies that either are or they will be,” Kemp said. “It’s the Biden Administra­tion that’s been picking winners and losers in Washington, D.C., and Georgia is again a loser unless they fix that with writing the rules and (regulation­s) to help companies like Kia and Hyundai and Rivian and others.”

Hyundai isn’t the only automaker with Georgia ties critical of the climate bill’s changes to the EV tax credits. MercedesBe­nz, which has its North American headquarte­rs in Sandy Springs, recently opened a battery plant next to its U.S. factory in Alabama. The German luxury giant is currently producing the EQS luxury electric SUV in Tuscaloosa and plans to build its EQE SUV there.

The EQS SUV will qualify for the credit until the end of this year, but won’t starting in January under the new climate law.

“If your aim is to improve the environmen­t, you should incentiviz­e the buyer,” Mercedes-Benz USA CEO Dimitris Psillakis said in a recent interview.

Mercedes has committed to a carbon-neutral fleet in the years ahead, and Rob Moran, a spokesman said “Mercedes-Benz is fully committed to an electric future.”

Warnock said he’s proud of the climate law, especially the provision he wrote capping the cost of prescripti­on drugs for seniors. He added that his bill is part of the legislativ­e process and will only strengthen what’s already passed.

“Here we have a partner (Hyundai) working with the federal government to create green energy jobs and a clean energy future,” Warnock said. “We ought to incentiviz­e them in that work while at the same time encouragin­g manufactur­ing in America, which they are doing.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/JEFF AMY ?? Democratic U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock exhorts the crowd Aug. 27 at the Democratic Party of Georgia convention in Columbus, Ga.
AP PHOTO/JEFF AMY Democratic U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock exhorts the crowd Aug. 27 at the Democratic Party of Georgia convention in Columbus, Ga.

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