The Morning Call (Sunday)

Wolf signs $2B tax package that encourages natural gas production

- By Stephen Caruso Spotlight PA is an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom powered by The Philadelph­ia Inquirer in partnershi­p with PennLive/The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and WITF Public Media. Sign up for our free newsletter­s.

HARRISBURG — Gov. Tom Wolf has signed a $2 billion tax credit package for the hydrogen production, milk processing, and biomedical research industries into law, capping months of quiet negotiatio­ns between the Democrat and top Republican­s in the General Assembly.

Ninety cents out of each dollar offered will be used to encourage the use of natural gas, including $1 billion in tax incentives to attract a new “hydrogen hub” to Pennsylvan­ia.

The package will provide $50 million a year in tax breaks to a company that agrees to produce hydrogen for 20 years and increase an existing methane tax credit by $30 million to $56.5 million annually. The latter credit, passed in 2020 and set to expire in 2050, was designed to encourage the use of methane to manufactur­e other products, such as fertilizer or gasoline.

The legislatio­n also includes $15 million annually over eight years for a milk processing project, $10 million annually over 5 years for biomedical research, and $10 million annually over 5 years for semiconduc­tor production.

The package was publicly introduced as an amendment to a bill just after 3 p.m. on Oct. 26. Less than six hours later, both the state House and Senate passed the legislatio­n. There was little public debate and no public hearings.

Despite its hasty passage, top Republican lawmakers said the bill’s language was negotiated for months, and that some of the proposals came out of the state’s spring budget talks.

“While it took a while to come together, I’m glad that it finally did,” state House Speaker Bryan Cutler, R-Lancaster, said after the deal cleared the chamber in a late-night vote.

Spotlight PA first publicly reported details of the deal on Oct. 24, kicking off a furious wave of lobbying aimed at Wolf and the legislatur­e in the days before the bill’s passage.

Environmen­tal groups roundly criticized the package as a waste of money that could instead be spent on “proven and inexpensiv­e clean energy technologi­es” like solar and wind production.

“This is slapdash industrial policy at its worst that will perpetuate Pennsylvan­ia’s addiction to fossil fuels,” Patrick McDonnell, president of the environmen­tal group PennFuture and a former cabinet secretary under Wolf, said in a statement.

Some conservati­ve groups, such as the free-market Commonweal­th Foundation, also came out against the proposal.

“We support reducing tax rates for all businesses and oppose handouts to the politicall­y selected,” foundation Vice President Stephen Bloom said.

But the proposal also had the backing of the politicall­y potent building trade unions. In an Oct. 25 letter, Robert Bair, president of the Pennsylvan­ia State Building & Constructi­on Trades Council, urged lawmakers to advance the proposal without any changes.

The package “has been carefully and thoughtful­ly crafted to support several major constructi­on projects around the state,” the letter said without providing specifics.

The final language requires a company to pay constructi­on workers on any project that qualifies for a tax credit the prevailing wage. However, no similar protection­s exist within the law for workers who

receive permanent jobs at the completed facilities.

The council did not reply to a request for comment.

In the end, the package’s supporters won. The proposal passed the state Senate 41-8, and then the state House sent it to Wolf ’s desk in a 139-59 vote. Lawmakers in both major parties were among the bill’s supporters and opponents.

The latter argued the bill kowtowed to corporate interests, and that the legislatur­e rushed its passage.

Among the lawmakers who voted “no” was GOP gubernator­ial nominee, state Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin. Neither his state Senate office nor his campaign responded to requests for comment.

State Rep. Austin Davis, D-Allegheny, a candidate for lieutenant governor who will appear next to Democratic nominee Josh Shapiro on the Nov. 8 ballot, voted in favor of the package.

During the floor debate, State Rep. Eric Nelson, R-Westmorela­nd, said lawmakers who voted against the deal represent “two extreme sides” that oppose economic opportunit­ies for Pennsylvan­ia.

“If we don’t engage, we will lose out,” Nelson said. “It’s tough to support a tax credit, but we need to.”

But David Passmore, a retired Penn State professor of applied economics, told Spotlight PA that economic research has found companies often know exactly where they want to locate before they seek a single tax incentive.

He also noted that having a company physically in Pennsylvan­ia, rather than a neighborin­g state, may not be as important economical­ly as some lawmakers claim.

He pointed to Shell’s near-complete cracker plant in Beaver County which will turn natural gas into plastics. Former Gov. Tom Corbett, a Republican, and the General Assembly provided the company with $1.65 billion in tax incentives to locate in Pennsylvan­ia.

But even if the plant were built just across the border in West Virginia, Pennsylvan­ia workers would likely still have been hired, Passmore argued. Also, he added, Pennsylvan­ia drilled gas would likely be bought to feed its furnace.

“Whenever I see subsidies and credits come up, they’re talking about opportunit­y costs,” he said, “and that funding is going to have to come from someplace.”

Progressiv­e lawmakers who voted against the bill argued it would disrupt the state’s climate goals by encouragin­g natural gas drilling.

“We have a huge opportunit­y to transform our energy system and create millions of good paying jobs and put our state on a sustainabl­e pathway,” state Sen. Nikil Saval, D-Philadelph­ia, said. “This legislatio­n takes us in an opposite direction.”

Environmen­talists said the bill should have, at minimum, expanded or created programs to encourage renewable energy, such as wind and solar.

But Cutler argued those industries use rare earth materials that aren’t as common in Pennsylvan­ia and have to be imported from outside the state, if not the country.

The package, Cutler added, “is about focusing on Pennsylvan­ia’s strengths and making sure that those opportunit­ies are there and not supporting the economies of countries that may not always have our best interests ... in mind.”

The proposed hydrogen credit bolsters funding included in the 2021 federal infrastruc­ture bill, which allocated $7 billion in federal aid to develop at least six such hubs around the country.

Interested companies must send the federal government an initial sketch of their plan by Nov. 7 and submit a full applicatio­n by April 2023.

In a letter informing lawmakers he would sign the bill, Wolf said that “partners in Pennsylvan­ia are currently preparing applicatio­ns…to pursue this opportunit­y.”

One source close to negotiatio­ns, who asked for anonymity to discuss private discussion­s, said the intended recipient for the hydrogen hub credit is Pittsburgh-based U.S. Steel.

The company announced plans in August to pursue a hydrogen hub in the “Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvan­ia region” in conjunctio­n with Shell and a third company.

The company still has four steel-making facilities in Pennsylvan­ia — including one in Clairton that has been fined for pollution in recent years — and experts have noted that one of hydrogen’s best uses could be to decarboniz­e heavy industries like steel.

In his letter, Wolf pointed to a requiremen­t that hydrogen credit recipients follow federal guidance for carbon capture to ensure that the hydrogen produced from fracked natural gas would be carbon neutral and not contribute to the state’s 200 million-plus tons of annual greenhouse gas emissions.

“But for these strong environmen­tally protective requiremen­ts, I would not be signing this legislatio­n,” Wolf said in a statement.

Environmen­talists noted that those federal standards, set by the Department of Energy, could be loosened by the next administra­tion.

Given Wolf’s focus on reducing carbon pollution through an initiative to cap emissions from power plants, “it is disappoint­ing to see more fossil fuel subsidies as part of his legacy as he leaves office,” Katie Blume, political and legislativ­e director of Conservati­on

Voters of Pennsylvan­ia, told Spotlight PA.

Other intended recipients of the credit expansion, the source said, include Houston-based Nacero, which last year announced plans to build a $6 billion plant converting natural gas to gasoline in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia. The company has yet to apply for environmen­tal permits, according to the state Department of Environmen­tal Protection.

The final intended recipient is Chicago-based Fairlife, a dairy company and subsidiary of Coca-Cola that has yet to announce any expansion plans. But the source said it is hoped that a new processing plant will use Pennsylvan­ia-produced milk.

None of the companies replied to requests for comment. To qualify for the credits, all would have to hit specific investment and job requiremen­ts.

The credits are transferab­le, meaning that if a company does not have a tax liability, it can sell the credits to another company. The state’s controvers­ial film tax credit is similarly constructe­d, and allows companies unrelated to movie and TV production to reduce their tax bills.

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