San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

TAX CREDIT FOR EVS MAY BE OUT OF REACH FOR MOST CONSUMERS

- BY DAVID JORDAN Jordan writes for Cq-roll Call

While the climate, health care and tax law includes an overhaul for the electric-vehicle tax credit, allies and industry representa­tives have expressed concern that the statute may ultimately benefit too few consumers.

The law includes a tax credit of up to $7,500 for the purchase of a new electric vehicle. However, to qualify for the full credit after this year, at least half of the battery’s components must be manufactur­ed or assembled in North America, while at least 40 percent of the critical minerals must have been sourced from the U.S. or a free-trade partner.

Both requiremen­ts will become stricter over time. The tax credits also include buyer income restrictio­ns and price caps of $55,000 for cars and $80,000 for vans, trucks and SUVS.

The requiremen­ts are intended to support the developmen­t of the domestic electric vehicle supply chain and address the concerns of some, including Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W.VA., who have said that U.S. manufactur­ers are too reliant on foreign suppliers. China alone accounts for over 70 percent of global EV battery production capacity.

“We’re going to be absolutely so taken advantage of to the point where we’re going to be held hostage by the foreign supply chain that China has a grip on,” Manchin said at a June Senate hearing.”

As first proposed last year, the tax credit would have applied only to batteries manufactur­ed in the U.S. by union workers. But Canada and Mexico raised concerns that this would violate the U.s.-mexicocana­da Agreement on trade. Although, as enacted, the law complies with the USMCA, other major trading partners have argued the language violates World Trade Organizati­on regulation­s.

Miriam García Ferrer, a spokespers­on for the European Commission, said the current design of the electric vehicle tax credit is “clearly discrimina­tory” and favors certain countries and North American manufactur­ers at the expense of E.U. exports to the U.S.

“The E.U. and the U.S. share the objective to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to make the transport sector more sustainabl­e, and we should work hand-inhand to achieve this goal,” said García Ferrer.

South Korean officials have raised concerns with their American counterpar­ts that the tax credits will likely exclude models manufactur­ed by Kia and Hyundai, in violation of WTO principles that foreign and locally produced goods should receive the same tax treatment.

“It’s not a very complicate­d issue. The EV tax credits as written are a flat-out contradict­ion of the national treatment obligation­s,” said Gary Clyde Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics.

Hufbauer said that if either the E.U. or South Korea chooses to file a protest at the WTO, the U.S. could attempt to argue the credits qualify for an exemption under a provision intended to protect exhaustibl­e natural resources and human, animal or plant life.

Ultimately, however, the WTO may be unable to resolve such a complaint. Its appeals body has two vacancies and has not had a quorum since December 2019 because the U.S. has blocked appointmen­ts.

“On the demand front, we’ve said the legislatio­n’s purchase incentive was a missed opportunit­y, especially while raw material and battery supply chains are still coming into place,” John Bozzella, the alliance’s CEO, said after the bill was signed into law last month.

The U.S. mines some lithium, cobalt and nickel, although larger supplies exist in multiple states. The Nature Conservanc­y estimated that there is enough lithium in the contiguous U.S. to potentiall­y supply the world for over a century.

The nation’s largest automakers have announced investment­s to bolster their supply chains in the coming years. Ford announced $50 billion in spending over the next decade, while General Motors plans to invest $35 billion. Last week, Toyota announced investment­s that include $2.5 billion for a North Carolina battery plant, and Honda said it will partner with South Korea-based LG Energy Solutions to build a $4.4 billion battery plant.

However, these investment­s will take some time to materializ­e, and an analysis by research firm Fitch Solutions estimated that zero vehicles will be eligible for the full tax credit in the short term. This, Fitch added, would slow EV sales among low- and middleinco­me consumers who cannot afford to purchase an EV without the credit.

Brian Willis, spokespers­on for the Zero Emission Transporta­tion Associatio­n, said his group doesn’t believe the law is perfect but that it will go a long way toward meeting federal climate goals. Last year, the Biden administra­tion set a target that half of all new vehicles be zero-emission models by the end of the decade.

The law included a tax credit of up to $4,000 for a previously owned electric vehicle that is not subject to the same sourcing requiremen­ts. It also lifted the 200,000unit-per-manufactur­er cap that had prevented automakers such as Tesla and General Motors from being eligible for the tax credit.

 ?? BILL PUGLIANO GETTY IMAGES ?? Strict requiremen­ts exist for tax credits on EVS, such as the Ford F-150 Lightning. They will get stricter over time.
BILL PUGLIANO GETTY IMAGES Strict requiremen­ts exist for tax credits on EVS, such as the Ford F-150 Lightning. They will get stricter over time.

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