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White House, Democrats agree to boost carbon capture credit

Reuters . Washington
03 Oct 2021 00:41:26 | Update: 03 Oct 2021 00:41:26
White House, Democrats agree to boost carbon capture credit
The White House and top Democratic lawmakers have agreed to boost a tax credit for industrial carbon capture – Reuters Photo

The White House and top Democratic lawmakers have agreed to boost a tax credit for industrial carbon capture projects in a deal that could help solidify support for the budget reconciliation bill at the heart of President Joe Biden’s economic agenda, two sources with knowledge of the matter said.

The agreement worked out by White House officials and lawmakers, including Senators Ron Wyden and Sheldon Whitehouse and some of their counterparts in the House, would raise the so-called 45-Q tax credit for carbon capture projects in heavy industry, such as cement and steel plants, to $85 per metric ton, up from $50.

The White House and Senator Whitehouse did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A spokesperson for Wyden said conversations are ongoing.

The incentives, if passed, could help Biden with his climate goals by getting more industrial plants to invest in heavy equipment that siphons off carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions for permanent storage underground, preventing the gas from reaching the atmosphere.

The deal would also waive “capture rate” requirements that say that plants must sock away a high percentage of carbon to be eligible. That could allow more plants to begin to get some credit for investing in initial carbon credit units.

Still, some environmentalists say the technique may never enter wide commercial use as it is expensive to build, certify, and operate. Many projects, such as Petra Nova in Texas, have stopped operations in recent years.

U.S. Representative Cheri Bustos, a Democrat who has sponsored carbon capture legislation, said the deal was welcome news. Raising the credit “would drastically increase our carbon capture capacity by 2035 and create tens of thousands of new jobs,” including at ethanol and manufacturing plants in rural states, Bustos said in a statement.

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