The US Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) released unpublished proposed guidance on technology-neutral clean electricity incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). The report is set to be published on 3 June 2024.
The proposed incentives include new credits offered to any clean energy facility that achieves Net-Zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
The IRA has existing guidelines for shifting from the Production Tax Credit and Investment Tax Credit to the Clean Energy Production Credit (45Y) and the Clean Electricity Investment Credit (48E). The credits offered are for projects enlisted in service after the end of this year.
The Treasury’s Notice of Proposed Rulemaking also has provisions to identify “certain types or categories of facilities that are categorically Non-C&G (combustion and gasification) Facilities with a GHG emissions rate that is not greater than zero”, according to the report with the proposed guidelines.
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According to the announcement, the proposed guidance also clarifies how energy storage technologies would qualify for the Clean Electricity Investment Credit.
The release of the guidance was appreciated by The American Council on Renewable Energy (ACORE). “Today’s announcement is another ‘win’ for American consumers seeking affordable, reliable, and clean electricity,” said ACORE president and chief executive Ray Long, according to an article by Renewables Now.
He added, “The technology-neutral tax credit simplifies the tax code and is expected to lower the average annual electric bill by USD 29-74 per household in the next six years and USD 42-95 by 2035. This amounts to tens of billions of dollars in electricity cost savings for US families.”