US energy secretary 'hopeful and optimistic' Congress will renew key wind tax credit
Jennifer Granholm said energy security 'imperatives' and job creation potential meant long-standing production tax credit for American wind plant should be extended
US Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said she is “hopeful and optimistic” that Congress will renew the federal production tax credit (PTC) for onshore wind that expired at the end of last year.
Granholm argued that the “bottom line” is that the federal government must co-invest with taxpayer dollars in partnership with the private sector to ensure the US can be energy independent, and wind has a critical role to play.
The PTC, first enacted in 1992 under Republican President George HW Bush, was the main federal tax incentive for onshore wind and played a key role in the US developing the world’s second most installed sector capacity after China.
Granholm said it will be up to Congress to decide if the PTC will be made retroactive to 1 January, as the wind industry is lobbying for.
Depending on start of construction date from 2016-21, an onshore wind project can qualify for 40% to 100% PTC value ($25/MWh for the initial decade of operation) if it meets commercial year-end operation deadlines from 2022 to 2025.
Manchin chairs the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on which Murkowski serves. Both are political moderates.
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