10.4 C
Ottawa
Saturday, April 19, 2025

The Wall Street Journal: U.S. tweaks EV tax-credit program in move to appease allies

Date:

WASHINGTON — The Biden administration on Thursday signaled its willingness to address some of the concerns expressed by European and Asian allies over a new U.S. tax credit program for electric vehicles.

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!

The program requires all vehicles to be assembled in North America to qualify for consumer tax credits, but the Treasury Department released documents paving the way for some vehicles assembled overseas to qualify for incentives through a separate commercial EV program if they are purchased for lease by businesses, not for resale.  

The documents were released to clarify which vehicles will qualify for the program that provides up to $7,500 per vehicle in tax incentives under the Inflation Reduction Act. According to one document, which the Treasury Department released in question-answer format, the commercial EV program also provides $7,500 in tax credits for cars and SUVs. 

The European Union, South Korea, Japan and the U.K. have complained that the local-vehicle assembly and battery-content requirements discriminated against their companies and that they might violate international trade rules. Most EVs from foreign manufacturers don’t qualify for the consumer tax credit as they are assembled overseas. 

The number of North American-built vehicles eligible for tax credits will increase significantly after Jan. 1. The new program replaces a previous one that provided up to $7,500 for electric or plug-in hybrid vehicles as long as the manufacturer hadn’t sold more than 200,000 vehicles. Under the new program, the cap will be lifted, allowing vehicles from top U.S. EV manufacturers, including Tesla Inc.
TSLA,
+8.08%

and General Motors Co.
GM,
+3.50%
,
to qualify for incentives again. 

An expanded version of this report appears on WSJ.com.

Also popular on WSJ.com:

How Southwest Airlines melted down.

An epic dollar rally goes into reverse — and investors expect further declines.

know more

Popular

More like this
Related

This top U.S. economist puts the chance of a ‘stagflationary’ recession at 65%

Please enable JS and disable any ad blockerknow more

Want to make college a worthwhile investment? First answer these 5 questions.

Please enable JS and disable any ad blockerknow more

Could Ben White do a job up front for title-chasing Arsenal?

Liverpool are seven points clear at the top of the Premier League but you wouldn’t know going by the reaction. They want another striker. Will Ben White do? Send your thoughts to theeditor@football365.com. BANTER BANTER BANTER BANTER JOKE CLUBS CLOWN SHOW BANTER BANTER BANTER DAVE TICKNER EXCLUSIVE ANGE MUST BE SACKED BANTER BANTER CRICKET SCORE

‘I don’t blame you’: U.S. tourism hot spots mourn Canadian travel cancellations

WorldU.S. President Donald Trump's repeated suggestion that Canada become...