US renewable energy firms were celebrating last night after the House of
Representatives voted in favour of extending a package of green energy tax
credits, but the legislation still faces a rocky path if it is to make it into
law.
The House passed the bill by 236 to 182 votes, deciding in favour of
repealing $18bn of tax breaks for big oil companies to help pay for the
extension of a tax credit scheme for wind, solar, geothermal and biofuel
projects.
The bill would also provide a major boost for other green technologies,
giving consumers up to $4,000 in tax credits for buying plug-in hybrid vehicles,
extending tax credits for some energy-efficient appliances and increasing tax
breaks for gas stations that install alternative fuel pumps.
However, the legislation still has to get through the Senate, where a similar
bill was blocked last year by the Republicans. The White House has also
signalled that it could veto the bill, which it claims unfairly penalises US oil
firms.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, said that extending tax breaks for the renewables
sector, many of which are scheduled to lapse at the end of this year, is
necessary to "provide business with the certainty necessary to make long-term
plans to build viable and sustaining markets for these technologies".
A major coalition of US firms, environmental groups and investors organised
by the Solar Energy Industries Association and including Wal-Mart, Dow Chemical
and The Home Depot, also urged lawmakers to pass the legislation.
In a letter to
Congressional representatives released ahead of the vote, the group warned
that the incentives included in the bill "must be extended immediately to avoid
significant harm to the developing clean energy industries in the US". It added
that the technologies supported by the tax breaks would "play a vital role in
reducing global warming pollution, creating new high-wage jobs in our country,
and saving consumers and businesses money on their energy bills".
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