Treasury and the IRS will carefully consider public feedback before issuing final rules. The proposed regulations released today will now have a formal 60-day public comment period. Many of those issues were raised by stakeholders in response to Treasury’s far-reaching effort to solicit public input. The proposed regulations clarify which entities would be eligible for each credit monetization mechanism, lays out the process and timeline to claim and receive an elective payment or to transfer a credit, and addresses numerous other issues. Treasury’s proposed guidance today helps provide clarity for governments, tax-exempt organizations, and businesses to understand the law’s scope and eligibility requirements. “This provision of the Inflation Reduction Act will make it easier for local governments, Tribes, territories, nonprofits, schools, houses of worship and more to invest in clean energy, allowing them to save money, improve public health, and better serve their communities.” “Direct pay is a game-changer for our ability to spread the benefits of clean energy to every community in America,” said John Podesta, Senior Advisor to the President for Clean Energy Innovation and Implementation. Entities without sufficient tax liability were previously unable to realize the full value of credits, which raised costs and created challenges for financing projects. The Inflation Reduction Act also allows businesses not using elective pay to transfer all or a portion of any of 11 clean energy credits to a third-party in exchange for tax-free immediate funds, so that businesses can take advantage of tax incentives if they do not have sufficient tax liability to fully utilize the credits themselves. Businesses can also choose elective pay for three of those credits: the credits for Advanced Manufacturing (45X), Carbon Oxide Sequestration (45Q), and Clean Hydrogen (45V). The Inflation Reduction Act allows tax-exempt and governmental entities to receive elective payments for 12 clean energy tax credits, including the major Investment and Production Tax credits, as well as tax credits for electric vehicles and charging stations. “More clean energy projects will be built quickly and affordably, and more communities will benefit from the growth of the clean energy economy.” They will act as a force multiplier, bringing governments and nonprofits to the table,” said Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. “The Inflation Reduction Act’s new tools to access clean energy tax credits are a catalyst for meeting President Biden’s historic economic and climate goals. Until the Inflation Reduction Act introduced these new credit delivery mechanisms, governments, many types of tax-exempt organizations, and even many businesses could not fully benefit from tax credits like those that incentivize clean energy construction. territories and other entities to take advantage of clean energy tax credits. The Inflation Reduction Act created two new credit delivery mechanisms- elective pay (otherwise known as “direct pay”) and transferability -that enable state, local, and Tribal governments non-profit organizations, U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) today released guidance on key provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act to expand the reach of the clean energy tax credits and help build projects more quickly and affordably, which will create good-paying jobs, lower energy costs for families, and advance American innovation. As part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s Investing in America agenda, the U.S. Territories, Rural Energy Co-ops, and More to Access Tax Credits for Building a Clean Energy Economy New Inflation Reduction Act Provisions Allow State, Local, and Tribal Governments, Non-profits, U.S.
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