Renewable Energy - Wind, Solar, & Storage - Get Big Boost From Inflation Reduction Act - CleanTechnica

2022-07-30 09:24:01 By : Ms. Kelly Zhao

Hi, what are you looking for?

Estonian Solar Roofing Manufacturer Solarstone Raises €10 Million

Renewable Energy — Wind, Solar, & Storage — Get Big Boost From Inflation Reduction Act

Boosting Michigan’s Energy Future with Regional Transmission Upgrades

US Renewable Energy Has Its Ups & Down In First 6 Months Of 2022

University Of Minnesota & MIT Teams Win American Solar Challenge

Renewable Energy — Wind, Solar, & Storage — Get Big Boost From Inflation Reduction Act

Boosting Michigan’s Energy Future with Regional Transmission Upgrades

US Renewable Energy Has Its Ups & Down In First 6 Months Of 2022

Extending U.S. Investment Tax Credits Through 2050 Increases U.S. Solar Generation By 10%

MISO Lets Renewable Energy Genie Out Of Bottle With Biggest Ever Transmission Project

Most Renewables Now Cheaper Than Cheapest Coal

Kenya Elections: Electric Mobility, Utility Scale Battery Storage, Energy Efficiency & Green Hydrogen Feature Prominently

More Electricity from Wind & Solar than Nuclear for 1st Time in USA

Funding Notice: Community Geothermal Heating & Cooling Design & Deployment

Geothermal: Tapping Into the Million-Year Energy Source Below Our Feet

LG Chem & General Motors Reach Agreement For Long-Term Supply Of Cathode Active Material To Support EV Growth

Should Tesla Invest In Indonesia’s Nickel Mines & Build A New Gigafactory There?

General Motors & Livent Enter Long-Term Lithium Hydroxide Supply Agreement

U.S. Solar & Storage Industry Praises Joe Biden’s Targeted Actions on Community Solar

BioLite AlpenGlow Lanterns & Solar Charger — CleanTechnica Review

Can Virtual Power Plants Provide Revenue for Householders?

ERCOT & Tesla: How Virtual Power Plants Can Help Texas Electricity Grid & Save Lives

Energy Security at the Edge of the Grid

Texan Tesla Powerwall Owners Can Help Change ERCOT’s Mind On VPPs

Gridspertise — Advanced Digital Solutions For A Smart, Resilient Grid

Greener Air Conditioning for a Warmer World

Sensata Technologies Develops New Joystick & Controls For Urban Air Mobility

Ecoflow Wave Portable Air Conditioner Initial Review

President Biden Enlists Heat Pumps For Climate Emergency Action

Renault & Phoenix Mobility Partnering To Convert Commercial Vehicles To Electric

Tesla Model Y & Model X Are 1st Electric Vehicles To Reach Mt. Everest Base Camp (Video)

Mercedes-Benz Electric Trucks Now Shipping, More Coming

Watch A Tesla Semi Truck With Cyber Rodeo Cowboy Art Accelerating On California Highway

Tesla Model 3 — “But Will It Get Me To Uluru?”

BP Opens Electric Truck Charging Station

The Tesla App — Informing Driving & Having Fun

BioLite AlpenGlow Lanterns & Solar Charger — CleanTechnica Review

Ecoflow Wave Portable Air Conditioner Initial Review

CleanTechnica Tested: GoSun Chillest Review

CleanTechnica Tested: The EcoFlow Delta Max & 400 Watt Folding Solar Panel System

13% Of New Car Sales In Europe Electric (21% Plugins)

26% of New Car Sales in Germany Have a Plug, 14% Fully Electric

24% of New Car Sales Now Electric in the Netherlands!

Tesla Cumulative Vehicle Sales Hit Nearly 3 Million

25.5% of US Electricity Coming from Renewable Energy

The Tesla App — Informing Driving & Having Fun

BioLite AlpenGlow Lanterns & Solar Charger — CleanTechnica Review

Ecoflow Wave Portable Air Conditioner Initial Review

CleanTechnica Tested: GoSun Chillest Review

CleanTechnica Tested: The EcoFlow Delta Max & 400 Watt Folding Solar Panel System

Tesla Q4 Shareholder Conference Call — Watch & Listen Here

Volkswagen Group — In-Depth Conference Call Highlights Company’s Focus On Transition

Bill McKibben On Unions, Tesla, & Elon Musk — CleanTechnica Interview

How To Watch & Listen To Tesla Q3 Earnings Call — Most Useful Livestream

Tesla Sales & Future of Tesla Discussion with Ride the Lightning, Starman, & EVANNEX

Renewable energy got a big boost in the Inflation Reduction Act with new long term stability for clean energy investments.

What does business want? Predictability. The installation of new wind and solar energy installations plummeted in the United States during the first six months of 2022 because renewable energy developers could not predict what incentives would be available. The Inflation Reduction Act — assuming it actually gets passed — will fix that.

Previously, Congress set up arbitrary end dates for renewable energy tax credits, giving the industry only one or two years to react. That leaves precious little time to acquire the hardware needed, obtain all the permits required, and get the financing in place before the incentives expired. The new legislation solves that by providing a new 30% investment tax credit for clean energy projects, including geothermal and advanced nuclear technology. The best part is, the credit is locked in for the next ten years, giving developers the time they need to design, finance, and build new renewable energy infrastructure.

As Tina Casey reported this week, significant new transmission lines will soon get built to transport renewable electricity from where it is generated to where it is consumed. The upshot of all this is we can expect an explosion in renewable energy over the next decade, driven by the new package of incentives that will further drive down the cost of clean energy.

Most of us at CleanTechnica think carbon capture is a myth invented by the fossil fuel industry to permit it to continue with the thermal generation of electricity. It’s a bait and switch proposition that says, “Let us continue to burn coal and methane today to make electricity and we promise we will suck the carbon emissions we create back out of the atmosphere at some unspecified date in the future.” It’s similar to the pledges made to clean up old mines and wells. They cross their hearts and hope to die when they make such promises, but somehow they never actually get around to cleaning up their mess.

Maybe this time is different. (Emphasis on maybe.) Federal incentives helped lower the price of solar energy by 90% or more over the past 15 years or so. Maybe carbon capture will be something similar — a new technology that will become commercially viable over time. According to Bloomberg Green, the new law will increase the carbon capture incentive from $50 a ton to $85 a ton. It actually costs about $300 a ton today, so there’s a long way to go, but who knows?

We all know methane is a powerful greenhouse gas, but billions of tons of the stuff escape into the atmosphere every year. Virtually every oil well emits methane, but oil companies are not in the methane business and so they are content to let it escape since it costs them nothing to do so. Oil producers have been bitterly opposed to being forced to deal with their mess and because of lax laws, they have been able to avoid doing so. Until now.

The Inflation Reduction Act slaps a $900 a ton penalty on excess methane emissions starting in 2024 and increasing to $1500 a ton in  2026, according to the New York Times. The legislation also includes other incentives to get fossil fuel companies to spend what is needed to fix the ongoing leaks in their pumping and transmission infrastructure.

The Inflation Reduction Act puts a lot of emphasis on producing heat pumps domestically and helping people and businesses get them installed. It provides significant incentives for low and moderate income households to electrify their homes, replace furnaces, boilers, water heaters, and stoves that run on fuel oil or methane with high efficiency electric devices that can be powered by renewable energy.

The $4.28 billion High Efficiency Electric Home Rebate Program would provide a rebate up to $8,000 to install heat pumps that can both heat and cool homes and a rebate up to $1,750 for a heat pump water heater. Homeowners can also obtain up to $840 to offset the cost of a heat pump clothes dryer or an electric stove, such as a high efficiency induction range.

Many homes will need their electrical panels upgraded before these appliances can be installed and the program offers up to a $4,000 rebate for such improvements. To make homes more energy efficient, a rebate up to $1,600 will be available to insulate and seal a house. A rebate of up to $2,500 is also offered for improvements to electrical wiring needed to support all those new electric appliances.

The program will be administered by the states and will run through Sept. 30, 2031. Homeowners can claim up to a maximum of $14,000 in rebates. To qualify, household income cannot exceed 150% of the area median income.

“The impact of this program is huge, as it will help over a million low- and moderate-income households make the switch to electric,” Sam Calisch, head of special projects for Rewiring America, said in an email to Bloomberg Green. “This looks like a slam dunk win for electrification. We estimate at current prices, households that get heat pumps for space and water heating, an EV, and put solar on their roof stand to save $1,800 per year on energy bills. Not only that, but these households will be getting off the roller-coaster ride of fossil fueled inflation, with stable bills into the future.”

For homeowners who do not qualify for the rebates, the IRA provides for a tax credit of up to $2,000 to install heat pumps. Other energy efficiency measures such as installing an induction stove or new windows and doors qualify for tax credits up to $1,200 a year.

The IRA sets aside $60 billion for clean energy manufacturing in the US, including $30 billion in production tax credits for solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, and critical minerals processing, and $10 billion in investment tax credits to build manufacturing facilities that make electric vehicles and renewable energy technologies.

These provisions are intended to halt and reverse the migration of clean energy manufacturing overseas to countries like China, something neoliberals have been promoting for 40 years. The bill will also invest $500 million through the Defense Production Act for heat pump production and critical minerals processing and set aside $27 billion toward a “green bank” aimed at deploying clean energy projects, particularly in disadvantaged communities.

The Inflation Reduction Act will invest over $60 billion to support underserved communities that are disproportionately burdened by the environmental and public health effects of climate change. This includes grants for zero emissions technology and vehicles as well as money to mitigate the negative effects of highways, bus depots and other transportation facilities, along with construction projects located near disadvantaged communities.

An additional $20 billion would be set aside for programs to cut emissions that come from cows and other livestock, as well as from agricultural soil and rice production. Agriculture generates about 11% of the greenhouse gases emitted by the United States, according to the government. The bill would also fund grants to support forest conservation, the development of fire-resilient forests and increased urban tree planting, along with the conservation and restoration of coastal habitats.

Politics means you always have to say you’re sorry for something. The fossil fuel industry got some things it wanted in the new legislation, primarily an agreement to open federal lands to all forms of energy — solar, wind, and geothermal, as well as oil and gas drilling. On balance, the good far outweighs the bad.

In his latest email, Bill McKibben has some interesting news about the fossil fuel industry. He quotes the official quarterly report of the Dallas branch of the Federal Reserve, which notes that even with high oil prices there has not been a surge of investment into the oil patch. The reason, one executive explains, is the success of divestment campaigns over the last decade:

“Investors are still not coming back to the well, so to speak. Private investors like endowments and foundations are structurally gone for good, and it is actually different this time. Pension plans are also hesitant to commit capital despite high prices. Public equity investors are still demanding too much, which has caused firms to go public via a special-purpose acquisition company and reverse merger transactions, indicating the discount demanded by traditional initial public offering investors is too high to stomach. The administration may be getting blamed, but it is the investors’ fault.”

McKibben says, “I read that and thought of the hundreds of thousands of people who have played roles large or small in those divestment campaigns around the world. There’s lots more we can do. We’ve got momentum now and the best use of momentum is to roll over the opposition.” Onward!

Steve writes about the interface between technology and sustainability from his homes in Florida and Connecticut or anywhere else the Singularity may lead him. You can follow him on Twitter but not on any social media platforms run by evil overlords like Facebook.

#1 most loved electric vehicle, solar energy, and battery news & analysis site in the world.   Support our work today!

Advertise with CleanTechnica to get your company in front of millions of monthly readers.

The new Inflation Reduction Act promises major changes to the federal incentive program for electric cars and trucks.

The US Postal Service finally commits to more electric vehicles, and a $3 billion carve-out in the new climate bill should help grease the...

I don’t think I have to explain the problem with oil leaks from pipelines, but fewer people know about the problem of methane (aka...

The on-again, off-again climate bill is back, now that West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin is on board, for now.

Copyright © 2021 CleanTechnica. The content produced by this site is for entertainment purposes only. Opinions and comments published on this site may not be sanctioned by and do not necessarily represent the views of CleanTechnica, its owners, sponsors, affiliates, or subsidiaries.