Clean Energy Manufacturing: Award of Tax Credits Announced By U.S. Government, Funding for Additional Tax Incentives Requested From Congress
The U.S. government recently announced that it would award up to $2.3 billion in tax credits under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in accordance with Section 48C of the Internal Revenue Code to 183 clean energy manufacturing projects across the United States. Following a competitive application process that opened in August of 2009, and the submission and review of over 500 applications for clean energy manufacturing projects, these tax credits were awarded to manufacturing projects in order to promote economic growth and encourage a robust domestic manufacturing capacity for renewable and clean energy projects. The application process considered specific criteria for these projects, including, among others, domestic job creation; the net impact in avoiding or reducing air pollutants or greenhouse gas emissions; the greatest potential for technological innovation and commercial deployment; and the shortest project time from certification to completion. The Internal Revenue Service has already notified the projects that have been awarded the tax credit, as well as the amount of the tax credit, which will be allocated to these projects until the program funding is exhausted. Importantly, this investment in the manufacturing tax credit will be matched by up to $5.4 billion in private sector funding.
Because the clean energy manufacturing tax credit program was substantially oversubscribed by “technically acceptable applications” during the application period, the White House “has called on Congress to provide an additional $5 billion to expand the program” in order to provide further tax incentives to “worthy applicants who are willing to invest private resources to build and equip factories that manufacture clean energy products in America.” The Administration’s statement that recommends expansion of the program includes the observation that “there is already an existing pipeline of worthy projects and substantial interest in this area, [and] these funds will be deployed quickly to create jobs and support economic activity.”
The pie chart below reflects the individual sectors that received the energy manufacturing tax credit, according to an Excel spreadsheet linked in the Department of Energy press release announcing the tax credits. The Solar Photovoltaic, Solar Components and Materials, Industrial, and Buildings sectors are the largest recipients, by dollar amount, of the clean energy manufacturing tax credits, and more than a dozen additional clean energy manufacturing sectors also received tax credits under the program.
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(1) Approximately 137 of the 183 projects were identified by technology sector. The remaining projects were not identified by a technology sector. Given the lack of data relating to these projects and their respective sectors, these projects were not included in the chart.
(2) The “Other” category on the pie chart includes the following sectors that represent 2% or less of the total dollar amount awarded: Batteries ($29,360,400, 5 projects); Biomass ($29,304,480, 2 projects); Carbon Capture & Storage ($4,842,438, 2 projects); Fuel Cells ($5,510,100, 2 projects); Geo/Buildings ($8,941,626, 1 project); Smart Grid ($35,652,663, 9 projects); and Solar-Hot Water ($806,501, 3 projects).
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