Manchin And Schumer Reach $738B Deal To Enforce Hefty Corporate Taxes And Climate Goals
Recently The WinePress reported on statements from the National Association of Evangelicals, who urged Christians to action against the current climate crisis. Near the end of their treatise, the NAE is calling on Christians to take advantage of the very deals the Inflation Reduction Act offers.
Live more simply and use energy more efficiently. Consider buying sustainable foods, recycling, composting, and switching to renewable energy sources and less polluting vehicles. Live with restraint. Take advantage of tax incentives to weatherize your home and business. Encourage your church and workplace to adopt money-saving energy efficiency measures. Make choices that express your love for God and care for his world and the people he has made.
The NEA wrote
CNBC goes into more details about these incentives and tax credits, those most of these benefits and gifts will not initiate until 2023-2024:
There are many moving pieces tied to incentives for new and used electric vehicles — and each may influence when a consumer chooses to buy.
Consumers who buy a new electric vehicle can get a tax credit worth up to $7,500. Used vehicles qualify for up to $4,000. Each credit comes with various requirements tied to the consumer and vehicle, such as household income and sales price.
Consumers may also be eligible for additional electric-vehicle incentives from state and local governments or utility providers, per rules already on the books.
The timing for used vehicles is relatively straightforward: Purchases qualify for the new federal tax break starting in 2023. This “credit for previously-owned clean vehicles” is available to the end of 2032. However, consumers in the market for a used vehicle may wish to wait until 2024 or later (more on that in a bit).
Timing for new vehicles is more complex. There are three timeframes worth considering, each with their own benefits and drawbacks: purchases in 2022, 2023 and 2024 onward, according to Joel Levin, executive director of Plug In America.
There was a tax break for new electric vehicles already on the books — also worth up to $7,500. But the Inflation Reduction Act tweaked some rules that may limit who qualifies in the near term.
One rule took effect when Biden signed the law Aug. 16. It stipulates that final assembly of the new car must take place in North America.
Two other rules take effect in 2023. One carries requirements for sourcing of the car battery’s critical minerals; the second requires a share of battery components be manufactured and assembled in North America. Consumers lose half the tax credit’s value — up to $3,750 — if one of those requirements isn’t met; they’d lose the full $7,500 for failing to meet both.
Additionally, consumers’ household income and a vehicle’s retail price must fall below certain thresholds starting in 2023 to qualify for a tax break.
Consumers who buy in 2022 can avoid those requirements; however, they would still be subject to the North American final-assembly rules that took effect in August. The IRS and U.S. Department of Energy have tips to help consumers determine which car models qualify.
Many new electric vehicles may not be immediately eligible for the tax break in 2023 as companies work to meet new manufacturing rules, according to experts.
“If you want an EV, go buy an EV, [but] to wait four months for the credit is risky,” Levin said. “There’s a lot of uncertainty what will be available Jan. 1.”
One potential upside to waiting until 2023 or later: Purchases of General Motors and Tesla car models would be eligible. They aren’t eligible in 2022 due to existing restrictions on the tax credit that will expire next year.
“If you’re looking at those two and are really concerned about getting a [tax] credit, you should wait,” Levin said. Of course, consumers would need to meet income and sales-price rules at that point.
Consumers who buy qualifying cars in 2022 or 2023 would only get the tax credit when they file their tax returns — and then only if they have a tax liability. That means consumers may wait several months to a year for their benefit, depending on purchase timing.
“If your tax liability is $5,000, you can use $5,000 of the credit — the other $2,500 goes poof,” Steven Schmoll, a director at KPMG, said of the new-vehicle credit.
But, starting in 2024, a new mechanism would essentially turn the tax break into a point-of-sale discount on the price of new and used electric vehicles. Consumers wouldn’t have to wait to file their taxes to reap the financial benefit — the savings would be immediate.
“That’s really valuable, particularly for people who don’t have a lot of money in the bank,” Levin said. “It’s a ton more consumer-friendly.”
Here’s how the mechanism works: The Inflation Reduction Act lets a buyer transfer their tax credit to a car dealer. A dealer — which must register with the U.S. Department of the Treasury — would get an advance payment of the consumer’s tax credit from the federal government.
In theory, the dealer would then provide a dollar-for-dollar break on the car price, Levin said. He expects dealers to use the funds as a buyer’s down payment, which would reduce the upfront cash necessary to buy a car. Some negotiating may be involved on the consumer’s part, he added.
These transfers apply to new and used cars purchased starting Jan. 1, 2024.
There are two tax credits available to homeowners who make certain upgrades.
The “nonbusiness energy property credit” is a 30% tax credit, worth up to $1,200 a year. It helps defray the price of installing energy-efficient skylights, insulation and exterior doors and windows, for example. The annual cap is higher — $2,000 — for heat pumps, heat pump water heaters and biomass stoves and boilers.
The “residential clean energy credit” is also a 30% tax credit. It applies to installation of solar panels or other equipment that harness renewable energy like wind, geothermal and biomass fuel.
Each policy enhances and tweaks existing tax breaks set to expire soon, extending them for about a decade.
The tax credits cover project costs and apply in the year that project is finished. In legal terms, the project is completed when it is “placed in service.”
The enhanced residential clean energy credit is retroactive to the beginning of 2022. So, solar panel installations and other qualifying projects completed between Jan. 1, 2022 and the end of 2032 qualify for the 30% credit. Those finished in 2033 and 2034 qualify for lesser credits — 26% and 22%, respectively.
The enhanced nonbusiness energy property credit is available for projects finished after Jan. 1, 2023 and before the end of 2033. There are some exceptions — oil furnaces and hot water boilers with certain efficiency ratings only qualify before 2027, for example.
“If you complete and install a project in 2022, it’s not going to be eligible for the new incentive,” Ben Evans, federal legislative director at the U.S. Green Building Council, said of the nonbusiness energy property credit. “Look ahead and start planning projects, because it’ll take time to do some of them.”
Costs incurred in 2022 for a project completed in 2023 would still count toward the overall value of the homeowner’s tax break, according to Schmoll of KPMG.
One caveat: Since these are tax credits, consumers will only get the financial benefit when they file their annual tax returns.
The Inflation Reduction Act also creates two rebate programs tied to clean energy and efficiency: one offering up to $8,000 and another up to $14,000.
Unlike some of the tax credits, these rebates are designed to be offered at the point of sale — meaning upfront savings for consumers.
One catch: They likely won’t be broadly available until the second half of 2023 or later, according to experts. That’s because the Energy Department must issue rules governing these programs; states, which will administer the rebate programs, must then apply for federal grants; after approval, they can start issuing rebates to consumers.
The law doesn’t set a required timeframe for this process.
Even according to the most optimistic timeline, those funds may not become available to consumers until summer 2023, according to Kara Saul-Rinaldi, president and CEO of AnnDyl Policy Group, an energy and environmental policy strategy firm
“Everything is going to depend on how quickly these guidelines can be written and put in place,” said Saul-Rinaldi, who helped design the rebate programs.
Some states may also decide not to apply for the grants — meaning rebates wouldn’t be available to homeowners in those states, Saul-Rinaldi added.
The HOMES rebate program offers up to $8,000 for consumers who cut their home energy via efficiency upgrades, such as insulation or HVAC installations. Overall savings depend on energy reduction and household income level.
The “high-efficiency electric home rebate program” offers up to $14,000. Households get rebates when they buy efficient electric appliances: up to $1,750 for a heat pump water heater; $8,000 for a heat pump for space heating or cooling; and $840 for an electric stove or an electric heat pump clothes dryer, for example. Non-appliance upgrades like electric wiring also qualify.
Rebates from the “high-efficiency” program are only available to lower-income households, defined as those earning less 150% of an area’s median income.
Steve Nadel, the executive director of the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, expects most states to participate; they’re unlikely to pass up free money for residents from the federal government, he said.
Large states “who have their act together and have the staff” may be able to start offering the rebates as soon as early 2023, he said.
AUTHOR COMMENTARY
He that is greedy of gain troubleth his own house; but he that hateth gifts shall live.
Proverbs 15:27
I should not have to tell you to not fall for this. One minute they incentivize you to enslave yourself, then the next minute they want you voluntarily get smart meters and not overuse the electricity per power outage ataxia.
More importantly, I find that it is no mere coincidence that NEA makes their recommendations and papal panderings to snap up green tax incentives, and then the financial outlets announce these tax credit programs today.
[7] Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges? who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof? or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? [8] Say I these things as a man? or saith not the law the same also? [9] For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? [10] Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no doubt, this is written: that he that ploweth should plow in hope; and that he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope. (1 Corinthians 9:7-10).
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Lol! Exactly: I thought immediately of the ‘voluntary’ socialist sin-scratching-for-a-buck-and-an-endgame scheme to get people to sign on to their spread the misery & control scheme of the $100 ‘rebate’ & $25 a year thereafter.
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How’s that for selling out cheaply? Die of heat stroke or shock & asphyxiation in one of those low income 12 by 25’s in which the windows don’t even open, not able to flee to better climes or fresher air at the beach or something because you can’t charge your over-priced surveillance buggy, & they won’t even be paying out the $25 a year for very many over time.
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Serving the Destroyer, the thief & first sinner & master tempter ….death cults…is a lose-lose for both the deceiving and the being deceived.
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I personally believe that our Lord knew…and knows… there was more hope for the deceived, and showed them more grace, than he had for the knowingly deceiving, the pompous & proud, masters of sorcery: the ‘purpose driven’ & such ‘disciplines’ …those rich & powerful by illegitimate & devilish means, & the crafty religionists partnering & riding that system of the world. That ‘fox’ Herod & such, Caiphas and Annas, with their dynasties of crooked power & nepotism. It’s all over the Gospels with Matthew 23 the scorcher, but really all over the whole of the 66 books….and with history testifying with evident truth.
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Another steps towards BMI.
I mean UBI… lol BMI
What rhymes with debt? More debt!
Solar is excellent for emergency systems and for small off-grid campers and cabins, but it’s not really worth it if you want to have even a moderate sized home with central heating and all of the other luxuries. In other words, you have to drastically downsize or find alternates to as many of your electrical needs as you can to make it viable.
And really, unless you know a guy who works on small-scale private home solar array systems, you typically have to chose between building it yourself or having it tied into the grid. And trust me, you don’t want your solar array tied to the grid in any way, shape, or form, something which I’m certain the government will try and force one to do in any “incentive” program. You also don’t want to electrocute yourself trying to set up solar energy either.
Hi Jacob are you heard this particular sermon of ruckmans before?
Just came across it a couple days ago
*have you heard of
Correcting a Typing error there