One of the world’s largest green investment manager, Impax Asset Management, is expressing the problems in President Joe Biden’s landmark climate law.
According to the firm, the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which was introduced in mid-2022, has many built-in issues that delay the implementation of green projects due to insufficient funds and enriches middlemen.
The law’s clean-energy tax credits are claimed to be complex even though they are an important part of the bill.
They are “overly complex from a financial structuring point of view and not lending themselves very well towards a replicable, scalable system,” according to Charlie Donovan, senior economic adviser at Impax.
The upshot is the US has “set that whole system up to be dependent upon a few industries of which the banking industry is one,” Donovan, who’s also a professor at the University of Washington, said in an interview.
“The tax consultants — and the banks arranging it — have made a lot of money, but it doesn’t lend itself to a really efficient, fluid system in which you can push a lot of money at scale.”
Bloomberg NEF says that the new law, IRA, may cut emissions by half if applied correctly by 2050 from 2021 levels.
Impax, managing around £40 billion ($50 billion) in assets, was one of the early sustainability-oriented investors to embrace the IRA, recognizing its potential to transform the landscape of green finance.
A year ago, Impax announced a portfolio review to leverage the benefits of the new legislation, aimed at enhancing sectors like wind energy, solar power, and electric vehicle supply chains.