Houston Chronicle

Guidelines for renewables tax credit debated

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy

The Biden administra­tion is preparing to decide how much Americanma­de equipment must be used in renewable projects to get an extra tax credit under the new climate law, addressing a key dispute between energy developers and solar panel manufactur­ers.

The coming Treasury Department guidance could unleash millions of dollars in bonus tax credits for individual solar arrays and wind farms — and help dictate the future of $20 billion in potential investment in new U.S. manufactur­ing plants. The decision presents a fresh test of President Joe Biden’s ability to balance the often conflictin­g goals of rapidly ramping up domestic clean energy manufactur­ing and swiftly combating climate change by accelerati­ng the deployment of renewable power projects.

At issue is a so-called domestic content bonus — worth up to 10 percent in extra tax credits — designed to help lure clean energy manufactur­ing back to the U.S. Under the Inflation Reduction Act, renewable projects generally qualify if they contain at least 40 percent of U.S. fabricated products.

Senior Biden adviser

John Podesta has signaled support for strict implementa­tion to wrest supply chains back from China. In leveraging federal taxpayer dollars, the goal is “expanding American job creation and investment,” he said. If companies choose not to take advantage of the bonus because of the domestic content requiremen­ts, “they’re perfectly free to do that.”

Solar manufactur­ers are also encouragin­g a hard line and want the standard applied not just to solar panels but also their component cells, the key ingredient that converts the sun’s rays into electricit­y. It’s a threshold few panels would meet today, possibly just those of

Arizona-based First Solar, though more are coming. Hanwha Qcells and Maxeon Solar may be less than two years behind.

With limited options in the meantime, developers have lobbied administra­tion officials to phase in the requiremen­ts, create a waiver or provide partial credit to U.S.-made components.

“The U.S. currently lacks the capacity to produce

certain products in adequate volumes to meet domestic demand,” said John Smirnow, a senior vice president with the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n. Given the absence of U.S. cell production, “Treasury could grant a safe harbor until it can provide clear guidance on what constitute­s a manufactur­ed product specific to solar.”

Some manufactur­ing

advocates argue the law already provides an exemption, since projects can still get the bonus even if 60 percent of their manufactur­ed components are foreign-made.

Attempts to “redefine or complexify” which manufactur­ed goods are subject to the law “will benefit China’s solar industry, allowing it to profit from U.S. taxpayer dollars and defeating the purpose of the bonus to promote genuine U.S. manufactur­ing and develop a true domestic supply chain,” said Samantha Sloan, vice president of policy at First Solar.

There are exemptions to buy-American mandates for some federally funded transporta­tion projects meant to avoid increasing costs to taxpayers, said Ariel Debin, an associate with Sheppard Mullin Richter and Hampton. But since the IRA bonus is an added benefit for industry, “there’s less incentive for giving people that credit right now.”

Mike Carr, head of the Solar Energy Manufactur­ers for America Coalition, said the group is open to a limited waiver that could support renewable deployment. “The big fear, on multiple sides, is that the IRS might do something that is too short term to give anybody any real certainty, and they kick the can down the road for a later fight.”

 ?? Daniel Acker/Bloomberg file photo ?? Guidance from the Treasury Department could give millions in bonus tax credits for solar and wind farms.
Daniel Acker/Bloomberg file photo Guidance from the Treasury Department could give millions in bonus tax credits for solar and wind farms.

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