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A year after the federal government promised new rules governing how electric vehicles can qualify for tax credits, the Treasury Department’s official guidance is finally here.
The Biden administration rolled out the guidance last week, including tests to determine if a car contains enough U.S.-made components to qualify for all or some of a $7,500 credit. Vehicles that contain parts or materials from China and a few other countries won’t qualify for full incentives.
The Treasury Department hasn’t yet published a list of what EVs meet the new requirements, which would take effect next year. But an auto industry trade group said the 20 models that currently qualify for federal incentives will continue to do so, E&E News reports.
The new rules could cause problems for Ford and other automakers that have licensed Chinese technology for their EVs. They could lose out on a piece of $6 billion in federal grants for U.S.-made EVs, and sales could suffer in comparison to automakers that qualify for federal tax credits.
Meanwhile, some car buyers could still be apprehensive about the lack of public EV chargers in many parts of the country. Two years ago, Congress allocated $7.5 billion to build tens of thousands of EV chargers, but as Politico reports, the program still hasn’t funded any charger projects, and states and charging companies say complicated requirements to receive the funds are to blame.
How the Biden administration navigates EV chargers, tax credits and more will determine just how quickly Americans decide to swap out their gas cars — and whether the White House can reach its EV deployment goals.
More clean energy news
🏭 Methane in the crosshairs: The U.S. EPA unveils new methane emissions standards that will require oil and natural gas producers to upgrade equipment and regularly inspect their pipelines and infrastructure for leaks. (E&E News)
💡 Time to get efficient: The world needs to double the pace at which it’s deploying energy efficiency measures, such as installing heat pumps and LED lightbulbs, if it hopes to meet global climate goals, the International Energy Agency says. (Reuters)
☑️ Biden’s climate to-do list: Environmental advocates release a to-do list of climate actions they want President Biden to take in the last year of his term, including a slew of EPA regulations and other Cabinet-level actions. (Washington Post)
🚘 UAW’s next step: After a successful strike against the Big Three automakers, the United Auto Workers announces plans to organize workers at three non-union electric vehicle companies. (CNN)
☀️ Made in the USA: A solar company says it’ll soon build arrays out of U.S.-produced materials, which could be the first projects to qualify for federal tax credits with domestic production requirements. (Bloomberg)
📉 California’s solar collapse: California rooftop solar installations have plummeted by up to 85% since regulators slashed the rates utilities pay for excess solar power sent back to the grid, according to an industry group. (Canary Media)
👷Tribes turn to solar: Indigenous entrepreneurs in North Dakota and elsewhere are building solar farms on reservations, and training tribal members to install them. (BBC)
Plus: What happened at COP28
World leaders gathered in Dubai last week and through the weekend to discuss climate action. Here are some of the highlights:
- Scientists warned that it’s “becoming inevitable” that nations will blow past the 1.5 degrees Celsius warming threshold they pledged to avoid under the Paris climate agreement. (Politico)
- More than 100 countries called for a fossil fuel phaseout and an immediate end to all new oil and gas production, plus an end date for fossil fuel production. (Inside Climate News)
- The U.S. pledged $3 billion to an international climate fund that will help developing countries develop clean energy and climate projects, though Biden administration officials say it’ll be hard to get Congress to approve the money. (The Hill, New York Times)
- Many of the world’s biggest oil companies pledged they’ll slash methane emissions more than 80% by 2030, but environmental groups say it’s a “smokescreen” to cover up the need to phase out fossil fuels completely. (Associated Press)
- A leaked document of talking points for the climate conference’s leader — an oil executive — suggested he’d use the summit to lobby in favor of fossil fuels, though a spokesperson denied the documents were used at COP28. (The Hill)
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