A House committee this week will revive a debate that has been dormant
on Capitol Hill for most of this year with a hearing examining the implications
of a key renewable energy tax credit that again is set to expire in a few
months.
The future of the wind production tax credit was among the biggest energy
policy issues debated in Congress last year, leading to an eleventh-hour
extension in January as part of a broader fiscal package. Since then, lawmakers
have turned their attention elsewhere, and the fate of the PTC fell in with
broader negotiations around a comprehensive overhaul of the tax code.
Though it is scheduled to expire again at the end of this year, a
modification that accompanied the last extension combined with a favorable
Internal Revenue Service interpretation means wind developers can continue to
benefit from the credit at least through 2015 as long as they meet certain
criteria (Greenwire, Sept. 23).
Wind industry lobbyists are asking lawmakers to include an extension or
phaseout of the credit in the evolving comprehensive tax reform package, which
is expected to be unveiled sometime this fall. If the comprehensive effort seems
likely to stretch past the end of next year, the industry may seek another
short-term renewal as part of a tax extenders package. Meanwhile, conservative
opponents of the wind incentive are ramping up their lobbying against it
(E&E Daily, Sept. 25).
As the issue starts to come out of hibernation, the House Oversight and
Government Reform Subcommittee on Energy Policy will examine the PTC in more
detail at a hearing scheduled for Wednesday.
A full witness list had not been posted by Friday afternoon, but a source
familiar with planning for the hearing said it would feature testimony from an
IRS representative as well as Robert Michaels, an economist with the
conservative Institute for Energy Research, a think tank that opposes the
credit.
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