The Biden administration unveils final rules for subsidizing hydrogen power amid debate over how green the fuel should be.
The Biden administration loosened some stringent safeguards on a tax credit worth billions of dollars for hydrogen production, after companies argued the rules would stifle domestic manufacturing of the fuel.
The Biden administration finalized rules meant to boost domestic production of hydrogen fuel through a new tax credit, a move that might also keep struggling nuclear power plants on line for longer.
Hydrogen projects had been waiting for the rules, which determine what ventures are eligible for incentives under the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.
The Biden administration on Tuesday released guidance to help companies secure clean energy tax credits under the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, finalizing a program to extend subsidies long available for wind and solar to other low carbon sources.
Despite its regulatory future in limbo as the clean energy industry awaits potential shakeups when Trump returns to the White House, Bosch is still working to make hydrogen a
The tax credit created by President Joe Biden’s signature ... a global leader in truly green hydrogen,” John Podesta, senior climate adviser to Biden, said in a statement.
Local proponents of the green fuel have been encouraged by the US government’s billions of dollars in tax credits which now come with fewer conditions attached.
The tax credit created by President Joe Biden’s signature ... a global leader in truly green hydrogen,” John Podesta, senior climate adviser to Biden, said in a statement.
The Biden administration has taken several actions to ensure its climate measures will last through the next administration — or at least make them difficult to overturn.
The rush to disburse cash has invited questions about whether the funding commitments—the cornerstone of the CHIPS and Science Act, passed in 2022—are at risk under Mr Trump. On the campaign trail, he called CHIPS a “bad” deal, saying the government could have just slapped tariffs on imported semiconductors.
A report from Windward indicates that new methods of illicit activity, including underwater infrastructure damage and the emergence of new convenience