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Contractor Takeaways for the Inflation Reduction Act

Following the Senate’s passage of the “Inflation Reduction Act of 2022,” the House returned for a special session on Friday to pass the legislation along a party-line 220-207 vote. President Biden signed the $3.5 trillion package into law on Aug. 16. While Congress is in recess until Sept. 6, FCA is sending this special edition of the Legislative Update to provide signatory contractors a breakdown of the legislation’s components that could affect their businesses.

The Inflation Reduction Act includes a new minimum tax on large corporations, provisions to lower prescription drug prices and more than $300 billion to address climate change and promote clean energy. The legislation stipulates that the funding for the energy and climate programs must meet certain prevailing wage and registered apprenticeship requirements. It also ensures timely permitting processes, including environmental reviews on all federal construction projects and on the Federal Energy Regulation Commission (FERC) and interstate electricity transmission line projects. The legislation includes the following items of potential note to contractors:

Renewable Energy Credits

The legislation has $60 billion of incentives to bring clean energy manufacturing into the U.S. These include production tax credits to accelerate U.S. manufacturing of solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, and critical minerals processing. The legislation also includes investment tax credits to build clean technology manufacturing plants that make electric vehicles (EVs), turbines and other products.

Additionally, there would be tax credits for consumers who add renewable energy items to their homes, including efficient heat pumps, rooftop solar, electric HVAC and water heaters. The legislation includes $9 billion for home energy rebate programs for low-income consumers to make their homes more energy efficient and $1 billion in grants for affordable housing energy upgrades.

The legislation adds several new renewable energy tax credits:

The legislation extends existing renewable energy tax incentives:

Manufacturing

Regarding manufacturing, the legislation includes:

Building Codes

The legislation would provide $330 million for FY 22 for grants to help states adopt residential and commercial building energy codes that meet or exceed the 2021 International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), the ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2019, or some combination of those codes. Funds could also be used to implement building codes achieving equal or greater energy savings. It would provide a further $670 million for states and local governments to adopt building codes to meet or exceed the zero-energy provisions in the 2021 IECC and to implement a plan to achieve compliance with newly adopted building energy codes.

Construction Materials

The legislation would provide $2 billion for FY 22 for the Federal Highway Administration to reimburse or provide incentives to states, local governments, metropolitan planning organizations and public authorities to use materials produced with lower-carbon emissions. The incentive could cover as much as 2% of the incremental cost of using the materials. Funds could not be used for projects adding travel lanes for single occupancy passenger vehicles. The legislation would authorize the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide financial assistance for low-carbon building materials and encourage low-carbon and net-zero energy projects.

Transportation Infrastructure

The legislation would provide $1.89 billion for FY 22 for the Federal Highway Administration to provide grants to states, local governments, territories or transportation authorities to increase neighborhood access and transportation equity, or reduce the negative effects of infrastructure projects in disadvantaged or underserved communities.

EPA Greenhouse Gas Reduction

The legislation would provide $12 billion for FY 22 for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to provide financial and technical assistance on projects to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. An additional $8 billion for FY 22 would be provided for grants to offer assistance on greenhouse gas reduction projects in low-income and disadvantaged communities.

Ports

The legislation would provide $2.25 billion for FY 22 for grants and rebates for port authorities, air pollution control agencies, private entities and governments with jurisdiction over ports to install zero-emission port equipment or technology. Awards could also be used to develop climate action plans to reduce greenhouse gasses and other air pollutants. An additional $750 million would be provided for ports in areas that do not meet national ambient air quality standards.

Methane

The EPA would impose a charge on methane emissions for oil and gas facilities that report more than 25,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent greenhouse gasses per year if they exceed the amount of oil or gas they produce by a certain threshold. The charge would be $900 for each metric ton above the threshold in 2024, rising to $1,500 in 2026.

Diesel

The legislation would provide $60 million for FY 22 for grants, rebates, and loans identifying and reducing diesel emissions resulting from the transportation of goods and to address health effects on low-income and disadvantaged communities.

Fossil Fuels

The legislation could cost the oil industry $25 billion in new taxes as it would reinstate and increase a long-lapsed tax on crude and imported petroleum products to 16.4 cents per gallon.

Electric Car Credits

The legislation includes $4,000 tax credits to purchase used electric vehicles, and up to $7,500 tax credit for new vehicles.

Offshore Wind

The legislation would allow the Department of Energy (DOE) to grant leases, easements and rights-of-way for offshore wind projects in parts of the Outer Continental Shelf off the coasts of Georgia, Florida, North Carolina and South Carolina withdrawn from leasing activities by two Trump administration memos.


Drought Mitigation

The legislation would provide $4 billion for FY 22 and available through FY 26 for grants, contracts or financial assistance for projects to mitigate drought in the “Reclamation States,” which are primarily in the western U.S. Priority would be given to the Colorado River Basin and other basins experiencing comparable levels of long-term drought.

The legislation would also provide the following in FY 22:

Affordable Housing Efficiency

The legislation would provide $1 billion to the Housing and Urban Development Department. Of those funds, $837.5 million would be for grants or loans to the owners and sponsors of affordable housing to implement or promote:

Corporate Minimum Tax

The legislation would impose a 15% minimum tax in tax years after 2022 on the income corporations report on their financial statements, or “book income,” with some adjustments. The minimum tax would apply to corporations with more than $1 billion in average annual income over a three-year period. Financial statement income would be:

Stock Repurchases

The legislation would impose a 1% excise tax of the fair market value of any stock repurchase in a tax year by a publicly traded U.S. corporation, including any subsidiary that has 50% or more of its stock owned by a corporation. Firms purchase their own shares as an alternative way to distribute income to shareholders, with a lower tax rate compared to divided distributions. The tax would also apply to stock repurchases of certain foreign corporations by subsidiaries and “expatriated entities.” It would exempt stock repurchases that are:

IRS Funding

The legislation would appropriate the following amounts for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in fiscal year 2022:

Amounts would remain available through FY 31. The measure would specify that the IRS funding boost is not intended to increase taxes on any taxpayer or small business with a taxable income below $400,000 or any taxpayer not in the top 1%. The CBO estimates that the IRS will collect about $203 billion resulting from the 10-year, $80 billion allocation for IRS tax enforcement and compliance.

Prescription Drugs

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