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Energy-related tax incentives in the 2008 Energy Act Article (MS Word)
Energy-related tax incentives in the 2008 Energy Act Article (.pdf)
Energy-related tax incentives in the 2008 Energy Act
Dear Reader,
The “Energy Improvement and Extension Act of 2008” (the
2008 Energy Act), which was enacted on Oct. 3, 2008, includes a
package of energy-related tax incentives designed to spur investment
and create jobs in the renewable energy industry. Here's an overview
of the key energy provisions in the new legislation:
Extension and modification of
production tax credit. The renewable energy production tax
credit is extended through 2009 in the case of wind and refined
coal, and through 2010 in the case of other sources. The types of
facilities qualifying for the credit are expanded to include new
biomass facilities and those that generate electricity from marine
renewables (e.g., waves and tides).
Long-term extension of energy credit. The 30% investment tax credit for solar energy property
and qualified fuel cell property, as well as the 10% investment tax
credit for microturbines, are extended through 2016. The cap for
qualified fuel cells is increased, and small commercial wind is
added as a category of qualified investment. A new 10% investment
tax credit is provided for combined heat and power systems and
geothermal heat pumps. These credits may be used to offset the
alternative minimum tax (AMT).
Long-term extension and modification
of the residential energy-efficient property credit. The credit for residential solar property is extended
through 2016, and the credit cap ($2,000 under pre-2008 Energy Act
law) for solar electric investments is removed. Residential small
wind investment, capped at $4,000, and geothermal heat pumps, capped
at $2,000, are added as qualifying property. The credit may be used
to offset the AMT.
Carbon capture and sequestration
demonstration projects.
The new law provides $1.5 billion in new tax credits for the
creation of advanced coal electricity projects and certain coal
gasification projects that demonstrate the greatest potential for
carbon capture and sequestration technology.
CO2 capture credit. The new law provides a credit of $10 per ton for the first
75 million metric tons of CO2 captured and transported from an
industrial source for use in enhanced oil recovery and $20 credit
per ton for CO2 captured and transported from an industrial source
for permanent storage underground.
Plug-in electric drive vehicle credit. Consumers could collect a tax credit of $2,500 to $7,500
for the purchase of a plug-in electric car or light truck, depending
on the capacity of the battery. The credit is available against the
AMT.
Bicycle commuters. Employers are allowed to provide employees who commute to
work by bicycle limited fringe benefits to offset the costs of such
commuting (e.g., storage).
Expansion of allowance for cellulosic
biofuels property. The provision allowing taxpayers to
immediately write off 50% of the cost of facilities that produce
cellulosic biofuels is expanded to include production of other
cellulosic biofuels in addition to cellulosic ethanol.
Extension of biodiesel production tax
credit; extension and modification of renewable diesel tax credit. The $1.00 per gallon production tax credit for biodiesel
and the 10¢/gallon credit for small biodiesel producers are extended
through 2009. The $1.00 per gallon production tax credit for diesel
fuel created from biomass is also extended. Biodiesel imported and
sold for export is not eligible for the credit effective May 15,
2008.
Extension and expansion of the
alternative refueling stations credit.
The 30% credit for alternative refueling property, such as natural
gas or E85 pumps, is extended through 2010. Electric vehicle
recharging property is added to the types of property eligible for
the credit. The credit for hydrogen refueling property is unchanged.
Percentage depletion for marginal
wells. The suspension on the taxable income
limit for purposes of depreciating a marginal oil or gas well is
extended for 2009.
Extension and modification of credit
for energy-efficiency improvements to existing homes. The tax credit for energy-efficient existing homes is
extended for 2009 and is expanded to include energy-efficient
biomass fuel stoves as a new class of energy-efficient property
eligible for a consumer tax credit of $300.
Extension of energy-efficient
buildings deduction. The law allowing taxpayers to deduct
the cost of energy-efficient property installed in commercial
buildings is extended through 2013.
Extension of credit for
energy-efficiency improvements to new homes. The provision allowing contractors to receive a credit for the
construction of energy-efficient new homes is extended through 2009.
Modification and extension of
energy-efficient appliance credit.
The provision allowing manufacturers to receive a tax credit for the
production of energy-efficient appliances is extended through 2010,
and the credit's standards and amounts are increased.
Accelerated depreciation for smart
meters and smart grid systems.
The depreciable life of such property is reduced from 20 years to 10
years.
Investments in recycling. Taxpayers can claim accelerated depreciation for purchases
of equipment used to collect, distribute or recycle a variety of
commodities.
Revenue raisers. The energy changes are offset by: mandatory basis
reporting to IRS by brokers on transactions involving publicly
traded securities; freezing the Code Sec. 199 manufacturing
deduction at 6% (the deduction had been scheduled to increase to 9%
in 2010 under pre-2008 Energy Act law) for domestic manufacturing
activities of major American oil and gas companies; extending the
FUTA surtax through 2010; tightening the rules by which oil and gas
companies pay taxes on income earned overseas; and making general
fund monies available with increased payments into the oil spill
liability trust fund as new drilling is considered.
I hope this information is helpful. If you would like more
details about these changes, or any other aspects of the new law,
please do not hesitate to call.
Lewes CPA
office