Section 30D New Clean Vehicle Credit, 23370-23386 [2023-06822]
Download as PDF
23370
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
property’’ is corrected to read ‘‘the basis
of the qualified property’’.
§ 1.48D–4
[Corrected]
6. On page 17460, in the third
column, the heading for paragraph
(c)(3)(i) is corrected to read ‘‘Example 1:
Primary purpose.’’.
7. On page 17461, in the first column,
the heading of paragraph (c)(3)(ii) is
corrected to read as ‘‘Example 2:
Primary purpose.’’.
§ 1.48D–6
[Corrected]
8. On page 17464, in the second
column, paragraph (d)(3)(i), the sixth
line, the language ‘‘48D(d)(2)(A)(I)(i)’’ is
corrected to read ‘‘48D(d)(2)(A)(i)(I)’’.
Oluwafunmilayo A. Taylor,
Branch Chief, Publications and Regulations
Branch, Legal Processing Division, Associate
Chief Counsel (Procedure and
Administration).
[FR Doc. 2023–07987 Filed 4–14–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG–120080–22]
RIN 1545–BQ52
Section 30D New Clean Vehicle Credit
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
This document contains
proposed regulations regarding the
Federal income tax credit under the
Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 for the
purchase of qualifying new clean
vehicles, including new plug-in electric
vehicles powered by an electric battery
meeting certain requirements and new
qualified fuel cell vehicles. These
proposed regulations would affect
eligible taxpayers who purchase new
vehicles that qualify for the credit.
DATES:
Comments and Requests for a Public
Hearing: Written or electronic
comments and requests for a public
hearing must be received by June 16,
2023. Requests for a public hearing must
be submitted as prescribed in the
‘‘Comments and Requests for a Public
Hearing’’ section.
Applicability Date of New Critical
Mineral and Battery Component
Requirements: See section III.D of the
‘‘Background’’ section for a discussion
of the applicability date of the new
critical mineral and battery component
requirements.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
Commenters are strongly
encouraged to submit public comments
electronically. Submit electronic
submissions via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and
REG–120080–22) by following the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments
cannot be edited or withdrawn. The
Department of the Treasury (Treasury
Department) and the IRS will publish
for public availability any comments
submitted, whether electronically or on
paper, to the IRS’s public docket. Send
paper submissions to: CC:PA:LPD:PR
(REG–120080–22), Room 5203, Internal
Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben
Franklin Station, Washington, DC
20044.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations,
the Office of Associate Chief Counsel
(Passthroughs & Special Industries) at
(202) 317–6853 (not a toll-free number);
concerning submissions of comments
and requests for a public hearing, Vivian
Hayes at (202) 317–5306 (not a toll-free
number) or by email to publichearings@
irs.gov (preferred).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
general business credit depending on
the character of the vehicle. In general,
the section 30D credit is treated as a
personal credit allowable under subpart
A of the Code. Section 30D(c)(2).
However, the amount of the section 30D
credit that is attributable to property
that is of a character subject to an
allowance for depreciation is treated as
a current year business credit under
section 38(b) instead of being allowed
under section 30D(a). Section 30D(c)(1).
Section 38(b)(30) lists as a current year
business credit the portion of the
section 30D credit to which section
30D(c)(1) applies. The IRA did not
amend section 30D(c)(1) or (2).
Background
A. Credit Amount and Critical Mineral
and Battery Component Requirements
The IRA amends the rules for
determining the amount of the section
30D credit. Prior to the amendments to
section 30D made by section 13401(a)
and (e) of the IRA becoming applicable,
the amount of the section 30D credit is
calculated based on the vehicle’s battery
capacity. The base amount is $2,500,
plus $417 for a battery with a capacity
of at least 5 kilowatt hours, and an
additional $417 for each kilowatt hour
of capacity in excess of 5 kilowatt hours,
up to a maximum credit of $7,500 per
vehicle. Section 13401(a) of the IRA
amends section 30D(b) of the Code to
provide a maximum credit of $7,500 per
vehicle, consisting of $3,750 in the case
of a vehicle that meets certain
requirements relating to critical
minerals and $3,750 in the case of a
vehicle that meets certain requirements
relating to battery components. The
amendments made by section 13401(a)
of the IRA apply to vehicles placed in
service after the date on which the
Secretary of the Treasury or her delegate
(Secretary) issues proposed guidance
described in new section 30D(e)(3)(B) of
the Code relating to the new critical
minerals requirements described in new
section 30D(e)(1)(A) (Critical Minerals
Requirement) and the new battery
components requirements described in
ADDRESSES:
I. Overview
Section 30D(a) of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code) provides a credit
(section 30D credit) against the tax
imposed by chapter 1 of the Code
(chapter 1) with respect to each new
clean vehicle that a taxpayer purchases
and places in service. The credit is
determined and allowable with respect
to the taxable year in which the
taxpayer places the new clean vehicle in
service. This document contains
proposed amendments to the Income
Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under
section 30D of the Code (proposed
regulations). To date, no regulations
have been proposed pursuant to section
30D.
Section 30D was originally enacted by
section 205(a) of the Energy
Improvement and Extension Act of
2008, Division B of Public Law 110–343,
122 Stat. 3765, 3835 (October 3, 2008),
to provide a credit for the purchase and
placing in service of new qualified plugin electric drive motor vehicles. Section
30D has been amended several times
since its enactment, most recently by
section 13401 of Public Law 117–169,
136 Stat. 1818 (August 16, 2022),
commonly known as the Inflation
Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA).
The amount of the section 30D credit
is treated as a personal credit or a
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
II. IRA Amendments to Section 30D
The IRA made a number of
amendments to section 30D. In general,
the purpose of these amendments is to
promote the purchase and use of new
clean vehicles by lower and middleincome Americans, to promote resilient
supply chains and domestic
manufacturing, to strengthen supply
chains with trusted trading partners, to
protect against improper credit claims,
and to achieve significant carbon
emissions reductions. These
amendments are specifically described
in the following subsections.
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
new section 30D(e)(2)(A) (Battery
Components Requirement). See section
13401(k)(3) of the IRA.
New section 30D(e)(1)(A) provides
that the Critical Minerals Requirement
with respect to the battery from which
the electric motor of a vehicle draws
electricity is satisfied if the percentage
of the value of the applicable critical
minerals (as defined in section
45X(c)(6)) contained in such battery that
were (i) extracted or processed in the
United States, or in any country with
which the United States has a free trade
agreement in effect, or (ii) recycled in
North America, is equal to or greater
than the applicable percentage (as
certified by the qualified manufacturer,
in such form or manner as prescribed by
the Secretary). The applicable
percentage for the Critical Minerals
Requirement is set forth in section
30D(e)(1)(B)(i) through (v) of the Code
and varies based on when the vehicle is
placed in service. In the case of a
vehicle placed in service after the date
of issuance of the proposed guidance
described in new section 30D(e)(3)(B) of
the Code and before January 1, 2024, the
applicable percentage is 40 percent. In
the case of a vehicle placed in service
during calendar year 2024, 2025, and
2026, the applicable percentage is 50
percent, 60 percent, and 70 percent,
respectively. In the case of a vehicle
placed in service after December 31,
2026, the applicable percentage is 80
percent.
New section 30D(e)(2)(A) provides
that the Battery Components
Requirement with respect to the battery
from which the electric motor of a
vehicle draws electricity is satisfied if
the percentage of the value of the
components contained in such battery
that were manufactured or assembled in
North America is equal to or greater
than the applicable percentage (as
certified by the qualified manufacturer,
in such form or manner as prescribed by
the Secretary). The applicable
percentage for the Battery Components
Requirement is set forth in section
30D(e)(2)(B)(i) through (vi) of the Code
and varies based on when the vehicle is
placed in service. In the case of a
vehicle placed in service after the date
of issuance of the proposed guidance
described in new section 30D(e)(3)(B) of
the Code and before January 1, 2024, the
applicable percentage is 50 percent. In
the case of a vehicle placed in service
during calendar year 2024 or 2025, the
applicable percentage is 60 percent. In
the case of a vehicle placed in service
during calendar year 2026, 2027, and
2028, the applicable percentage is 70
percent, 80 percent, and 90 percent,
respectively. In the case of a vehicle
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
placed in service after December 31,
2028, the applicable percentage is 100
percent.
B. New Clean Vehicle Definition
The IRA amends the definition of the
vehicles that may qualify for the section
30D credit. Section 13401(c) of the IRA
amends section 30D(d) of the Code by
making the credit applicable to ‘‘new
clean vehicles,’’ instead of ‘‘new
qualified plug-in electric drive motor
vehicles,’’ applicable to vehicles placed
in service after December 31, 2022. As
amended by section 13401(c) and (g)(2)
of the IRA, section 30D(d)(1) of the Code
defines a ‘‘new clean vehicle’’ as a
motor vehicle that satisfies the eight
requirements set forth in section
30D(d)(1)(A) through (H) of the Code:
the original use of the motor vehicle
must commence with the taxpayer; the
motor vehicle must be acquired for use
or lease by the taxpayer and not for
resale; the motor vehicle must be made
by a qualified manufacturer; the motor
vehicle must be treated as a motor
vehicle for purposes of title II of the
Clean Air Act; the motor vehicle must
have a gross vehicle weight rating of less
than 14,000 pounds; the motor vehicle
must be propelled to a significant extent
by an electric motor which draws
electricity from a battery that has a
capacity of not less than 7 kilowatt
hours, and is capable of being recharged
from an external source of electricity;
the final assembly of the motor vehicle
must occur within North America; and
the person who sells any vehicle to the
taxpayer must furnish a report to the
taxpayer and to the Secretary, at such
time and in such manner as the
Secretary provides, containing
specifically enumerated items.
With respect to the requirement that
the motor vehicle must be made by a
qualified manufacturer, the IRA creates
new requirements for manufacturers of
vehicles eligible for the section 30D
credit applicable to vehicles placed in
service after December 31, 2022. As
amended by section 13401(c) the IRA,
section 30D(d)(3) of the Code defines a
‘‘qualified manufacturer’’ as any
manufacturer (within the meaning of the
regulations prescribed by the
Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency for purposes of the
administration of title II of the Clean Air
Act (42 U.S.C. 7521 et seq.)) that enters
into a written agreement with the
Secretary under which such
manufacturer agrees to make periodic
written reports to the Secretary (at such
times and in such manner as the
Secretary may provide) providing
vehicle identification numbers and such
other information related to each
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
23371
vehicle manufactured by such
manufacturer as the Secretary may
require.
The IRA provides that certain fuel cell
vehicles may qualify for the section 30D
credit. Section 13401(c) of the IRA adds
new section 30D(d)(6) to the Code,
which includes in the definition of the
term ‘‘new clean vehicle’’ applicable to
vehicles placed in service after
December 31, 2022, any ‘‘new qualified
fuel cell motor vehicle’’ (as defined in
section 30B(b)(3)) that meets the
requirements under section 30D(d)(1)(G)
and (H) (North American final assembly
and seller reporting requirements).
The IRA disqualifies certain vehicles
from the section 30D credit if the battery
of the vehicle contains critical minerals
or battery components from a foreign
entity of concern. As amended by
section 13401(e) of the IRA, section
30D(d)(7) of the Code excludes, after
certain specified dates, vehicles placed
in service with batteries containing
certain critical minerals or battery
components from a foreign entity of
concern from the definition of the term
‘‘new clean vehicle.’’ In particular,
amended section 30D(d)(7) provides
that the term ‘‘new clean vehicle’’ does
not include (A) any vehicle placed in
service after December 31, 2024, with
respect to which any of the applicable
critical minerals contained in the
battery of such vehicle (as described in
section 30D(e)(1)(A)) were extracted,
processed, or recycled by a foreign
entity of concern (as defined in section
40207(a)(5) of the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act (42 U.S.C.
18741(a)(5))), or (B) any vehicle placed
in service after December 31, 2023, with
respect to which any of the components
contained in the battery of such vehicle
(as described in section 30D(e)(2)(A))
were manufactured or assembled by a
foreign entity of concern (as so defined).
These rules will be addressed in future
guidance.
C. Final Assembly Requirement
As described in section II.B of the
Background section of this preamble,
the IRA requires new clean vehicles to
undergo final assembly in North
America to be eligible for the section
30D credit. This requirement is
applicable to vehicles sold after August
16, 2022. See section 13401(k)(2) of the
IRA. New section 30D(d)(5) defines
‘‘final assembly’’ as the process by
which a manufacturer produces a new
clean vehicle at, or through the use of,
a plant, factory, or other place from
which the vehicle is delivered to a
dealer or importer with all component
parts necessary for the mechanical
operation of the vehicle included with
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
23372
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
the vehicle, whether or not the
component parts are permanently
installed in or on the vehicle.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
D. Elimination of Phaseout
The IRA eliminates the phaseout of
the section 30D credit for vehicles made
by manufacturers that have sold at least
200,000 vehicles eligible for the credit
for use in the United States after
December 31, 2009. Pursuant to section
13401(d) of the IRA this limitation does
not apply to vehicles sold after
December 31, 2022. See section
13401(k)(5) of the IRA.
E. Special Rules
The IRA adds four new special rules
under section 30D(f) applicable to
vehicles placed in service after
December 31, 2022. First, section
30D(f)(8) permits only one section 30D
credit to be claimed for each vehicle
identification number (VIN). Second,
section 30D(f)(9) requires taxpayers to
include on the taxpayer’s return for the
taxable year the VIN of the vehicle for
which the section 30D credit is claimed.
Third, section 30D(f)(10) denies the
section 30D credit to certain highincome taxpayers. More specifically,
section 30D(f)(10)(A) provides that no
credit is allowed for any taxable year if
(i) the lesser of (I) the modified adjusted
gross income of the taxpayer for such
taxable year, or (II) the modified
adjusted gross income of the taxpayer
for the preceding taxable year, exceeds
(ii) the threshold amount (Modified AGI
Limitation). New section 30D(f)(10)(B)
provides that the threshold amount is (i)
in the case of a joint return or a
surviving spouse (as defined in section
2(a) of the Code), $300,000, (ii) in the
case of a head of household (as defined
in section 2(b) of the Code), $225,000,
and (iii) in the case of any other
taxpayer, $150,000. New section
30D(f)(10)(C) defines ‘‘modified
adjusted gross income’’ as adjusted
gross income (AGI) increased by any
amount excluded from gross income
under sections 911, 931, or 933.
Fourth, section 30D(f)(11) excludes
from the section 30D credit vehicles that
exceed certain manufacturer’s suggested
retail price thresholds. New section
30D(f)(11)(A) provides that no credit is
allowed for a vehicle with a
manufacturer’s suggested retail price in
excess of the applicable limitation. New
section 30D(f)(11)(B) provides that the
applicable limitation for each vehicle
classification is as follows: in the case
of a van, $80,000; in the case of a sport
utility vehicle, $80,000; in the case of a
pickup truck, $80,000; and in the case
of any other vehicle, $55,000. New
section 30D(f)(11)(C) authorizes the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
Secretary to prescribe such regulations
or other guidance as the Secretary
determines necessary to determine
vehicle classifications using criteria
similar to that employed by the
Environmental Protection Agency and
the Department of the Energy to
determine size and class of vehicles.
Section 13401(i)(4) of the IRA
amended section 6213(g)(2) to provide
the IRS with math error authority for the
omission of a correct VIN included on
the return as required under section
30D(f)(9).
Amended section 30D(g) provides
rules for transfer of the credit from the
taxpayer to certain registered dealers
applicable to vehicles placed in service
after December 31, 2023. Those rules
will be addressed in future guidance.
Amended section 30D(h) provides
that no credit is allowed with respect to
any vehicle placed in service after
December 31, 2032.
F. IRA Applicability Dates
Section 13401(k) of the IRA specifies
various applicability dates for its
amendments to section 30D. As noted
previously, except as provided in
section 13401(k)(2) through (5) of the
IRA, the amendments made by section
13401 of the IRA apply to vehicles
placed in service after December 31,
2022. Section 13401(k)(2) of the IRA
provides that the amendments made by
section 13401(b) of the IRA relating to
final assembly apply to vehicles sold
after the date of enactment of the IRA
(August 16, 2022). Section 13401(k)(3)
of the IRA provides that the
amendments made by section 13401(a)
and (e) of the IRA relating to the per
vehicle credit amount dollar limitation
and Critical Minerals and Battery
Components Requirements apply to
vehicles placed in service after the date
on which the proposed guidance
described in new section 30D(e)(3)(B) is
issued by the Secretary. Section
13401(k)(4) of the IRA provides that the
amendments made by section 13401(g)
of the IRA relating to transfers of the
section 30D credit apply to vehicles
placed in service after December 31,
2023. Section 13401(k)(5) of the IRA
provides that the amendment made by
section 13401(d) of the IRA eliminating
the manufacturer limitation applies to
vehicles sold after December 31, 2022.
Section 13401(l) of the IRA provides
a transition rule for a taxpayer who
purchased or entered into a written
binding contract to purchase a new
qualified plug-in electric drive motor
vehicle (as defined in section 30D(d)(1)
of the Code, as in effect on the day
before the date of enactment of the IRA
(August 15, 2022)) after December 31,
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
2021, and before the date of enactment
of the IRA (August 16, 2022), and placed
such vehicle in service on or after the
date of enactment of the IRA. The
transition rule provides that such a
taxpayer may elect (at such time, and in
such form and manner as the Secretary
may prescribe) to treat such vehicle as
having been placed in service on the
day before the date of enactment of the
IRA.
III. Prior Guidance, Request for
Comments, and Other Documents
Relating to the New Clean Vehicle
Credit
A. Notice 2022–46
On October 5, 2022, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published
Notice 2022–46, 2022–43 I.R.B. 302. The
notice requested general comments on
issues arising under section 30D, as well
as specific comments concerning: (1)
definitions; (2) critical minerals; (3)
battery components; (4) applicable
values; (5) foreign entities of concern;
(6) recordkeeping and reporting; (7) taxexempt entities; (8) registered dealers
and eligible entities; (9) the final
assembly requirement; (10) vehicle
classifications; (11) elections to transfer
and advance payments; and (12)
recapture. The Treasury Department and
the IRS received 884 comments from
industry participants, environmental
groups, individual consumers, and other
stakeholders. The Treasury Department
and the IRS appreciate the commenters’
interest and engagement on these issues.
These comments have been carefully
considered in the preparation of the
proposed regulations.
B. Revenue Procedure 2022–42
On December 12, 2022, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published
Revenue Procedure 2022–42, 2022–52
I.R.B. 565, providing guidance for
qualified manufacturers to enter into
written agreements with the IRS, as
required in sections 30D, 25E, and 45W
of the Code, and to report certain
information regarding vehicles
produced by such manufacturers that
may be eligible for these credits.
Information required to be reported
includes certifications regarding the
Critical Minerals and Battery
Components Requirements, as required
in sections 30D(e)(1)(A) and (e)(2)(A),
once those requirements are applicable.
In addition, Revenue Procedure 2022–
42 provides the procedures for sellers of
new clean vehicles or previously-owned
clean vehicles to report certain
information to the IRS and the
purchasers of such clean vehicles.
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
C. Notices 2023–1 and 2023–16 and 30D
White Paper
On December 29, 2022, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published
Notice 2023–1, 2023–3 I.R.B. 373, which
describes definitions for certain terms in
section 30D that the Treasury
Department and the IRS intended to
include in proposed regulations. The
Treasury Department also released a
white paper on the anticipated
direction, as of December 29, 2022, of
the proposed guidance on the Critical
Minerals and Battery Components
Requirements and the process for
determining whether vehicles qualify
under these requirements (30D White
Paper). See ‘‘Anticipated Direction of
Forthcoming Proposed Guidance on
Critical Mineral and Battery Component
Value Calculations for the New Clean
Vehicle Credit,’’ Dec. 29, 2022, https://
home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/
30DWhite-Paper.pdf (last accessed
March 28, 2023).
On February 3, 2023, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published
Notice 2023–16, 2023–8 I.R.B. 479,
which modifies Notice 2023–1 by
revising the vehicle classification
standard that the Treasury Department
and the IRS intend to provide in
proposed regulations.
D. Proposed Guidance Described in
Section 30D(e)(3)(B)
The publication of these proposed
regulations in the Federal Register is
the issuance of the proposed guidance
described in section 30D(e)(3)(B) (as
added by section 13401(e) of the IRA).
Pursuant to section 13401(a), (e), and
(k)(3) of the IRA, the critical minerals
and battery components requirements of
section 13401(a) and (e) of the IRA
amend section 30D with respect to
vehicles placed in service after the date
on which these proposed regulations are
published in the Federal Register.
Accordingly, the Critical Minerals and
Battery Components Requirements
apply to vehicles placed in service after
April 17, 2023, the date of publication
in the Federal Register.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Explanation of Provisions
I. General Rules
Section 30D(a) and proposed § 1.30D–
1(a) provide that there is allowed as a
credit against the tax imposed by
chapter 1 for the taxable year an amount
equal to the sum of the credit amounts
determined under section 30D(b) with
respect to each new clean vehicle
placed in service by the taxpayer during
the taxable year.
Section 30D(c) and proposed § 1.30D–
1(b) provide that the section 30D credit
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
may be allowed as a general business
credit or a personal credit depending on
whether the property is of a character
subject to an allowance for depreciation
(depreciable vehicle).
Section 30D(c)(1) and proposed
§ 1.30D–1(b)(1) provide that so much of
the credit that would be allowed to a
taxpayer under section 30D(a) for any
taxable year with respect to all new
clean vehicles placed in service by the
taxpayer during the taxable year
(determined without regard to section
30D(c) and proposed § 1.30D–1(b)(1))
that is attributable to one or more
depreciable vehicles will be treated as a
current year general business credit
under section 38 of the Code that is
listed in section 38(b)(30) for such
taxable year (and not allowed under
section 30D(a)). Depreciable vehicles
may also be eligible for the credit for
qualified commercial clean vehicles
under section 45W. However, under
section 45W(d)(3), no credit is allowed
under section 45W for a vehicle for
which a section 30D credit was allowed
to any taxpayer for any taxable year. In
addition, proposed § 1.30D–1(b)(2)
would require the apportionment of any
section 30D credit with respect to a
depreciable vehicle the business use of
which is less than 50 percent of a
taxpayer’s total use of the vehicle for the
taxable year in which the vehicle is
placed in service. The portion of the
section 30D credit corresponding to the
percentage of the taxpayer’s business
use of the depreciable vehicle would be
treated as a general business credit
under section 30D(c)(1) and proposed
§ 1.30D–1(b)(1), and the portion of the
section 30D credit corresponding to the
percentage of the taxpayer’s personal
use of such vehicle would be treated as
a section 30D credit allowed under
section 30D(a) pursuant to section
30D(c)(2) and proposed § 1.30D–1(b)(3).
Section 30D(c)(2) and proposed
§ 1.30D–1(b)(3) provide that the section
30D credit allowed for any taxable year
(determined after application of section
30D(c)(1) and proposed § 1.30D–1(b)(1))
is treated as a nonrefundable personal
credit allowable under subpart A of part
IV of subchapter A of chapter 1 (subpart
A) for such taxable year. Section 26 of
the Code limits the aggregate amount of
credits allowed to a taxpayer by subpart
A based on the taxpayer’s tax liability.
Under section 26(a), the aggregate
amount of credits allowed to a taxpayer
by subpart A cannot exceed the sum of
(i) the taxpayer’s regular tax liability (as
defined in section 26(b)) for the taxable
year reduced by the foreign tax credit
allowable under section 27 of the Code,
and (ii) the alternative minimum tax
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
23373
imposed by section 55(a) for the taxable
year.
II. Definitions
Proposed § 1.30D–2 clarifies the
definitions of certain terms related to
the statutory requirements of the section
30D credit. The definitions contained in
proposed § 1.30D–2 were substantially
described in Notice 2023–1, as modified
by Notice 2023–16.
A. Final Assembly
Under section 30D(d)(1)(G) and
section 13401(k)(2) of the IRA, any
vehicle sold after August 16, 2022, must
undergo its final assembly in North
America to be eligible for the section
30D credit. Section 30D(d)(5) defines
‘‘final assembly’’ as the process by
which a manufacturer produces a new
clean vehicle at, or through the use of,
a plant, factory, or other place from
which the vehicle is delivered to a
dealer or importer with all component
parts necessary for the mechanical
operation of the vehicle included with
the vehicle, whether or not the
component parts are permanently
installed in or on the vehicle.
Proposed § 1.30D–2(b) would provide
that, for purposes of section 30D(d)(5) of
the Code, ‘‘final assembly’’ means the
process by which a manufacturer
produces a new clean vehicle at, or
through the use of, a plant, factory, or
other place from which the vehicle is
delivered to a dealer or importer with
all component parts necessary for the
mechanical operation of the vehicle
included with the vehicle, whether or
not the component parts are
permanently installed in or on the
vehicle. To establish where final
assembly of a new clean vehicle
occurred, the taxpayer could rely on the
following information: (1) the vehicle’s
plant of manufacture as reported in the
vehicle identification number (VIN)
pursuant to 49 CFR 565; or (2) the final
assembly point reported on the label
affixed to the vehicle as described in 49
CFR 583.5(a)(3).
The vehicle’s plant of manufacture as
reported in the VIN means the plant
where the manufacturer affixes the VIN.
See 49 CFR 565.12. The plant of
manufacture is reported in the VIN
pursuant to 49 CFR 565.15(d)(2). The
Department of Energy, Alternative Fuels
Data Center (AFDC), and the
Department of Transportation, National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHSTA), each provide a VIN decoder
to the public, which can be used to
identify a vehicle’s plant of
manufacture. AFDC, VIN Decoder,
https://afdc.energy.gov/laws/electricvehicles-for-tax-credit (last accessed
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
23374
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
March 28, 2023); NHTSA, VIN Decoder,
https://www.nhtsa.gov/vin-decoder (last
accessed March 28, 2023).
Labeling requirements in 49 CFR
583.5 require the final assembly point to
be reported on the label affixed to a
passenger motor vehicle. Final assembly
point means the plant, factory, or other
place, which is a building or series of
buildings in close proximity, where a
new passenger motor vehicle is
produced or assembled from passenger
motor vehicle equipment and from
which such vehicle is delivered to a
dealer or importer in such a condition
that all component parts necessary to
the mechanical operation of such
automobile are included with such
vehicle whether or not such component
parts are permanently installed in or on
such vehicle. For multi-stage vehicles,
the final assembly point is the location
where the first stage vehicle is
assembled. 49 CFR 583.4(b)(5).
B. North America
Proposed § 1.30D–2(d) would provide
that for purposes of section
30D(d)(1)(G), ‘‘North America’’ means
the territory of the United States,
Canada, and Mexico as defined in 19
CFR part 182, Appendix A, § 1(1). The
territory described in 19 CFR part 182,
Appendix A, § 1(1), which provides
rules of origin regulations for the United
States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, is
defined as (a) for Canada, the following
zones or waters as determined by its
domestic law and consistent with
international law: (i) The land territory,
air space, internal waters, and territorial
sea of Canada, (ii) the exclusive
economic zone of Canada, and (iii) the
continental shelf of Canada; (b) for
Mexico, (i) the land territory, including
the states of the Federation and Mexico
City, (ii) the air space, and (iii) the
internal waters, territorial sea, and any
areas beyond the territorial seas of
Mexico within which Mexico may
exercise sovereign rights and
jurisdiction, as determined by its
domestic law, consistent with the
United Nations Convention on the Law
of the Sea, done at Montego Bay on
December 10, 1982; and (c) for the
United States, (i) the customs territory
of the United States, which includes the
50 states, the District of Columbia, and
Puerto Rico, (ii) the foreign trade zones
located in the United States and Puerto
Rico, and (iii) the territorial sea and air
space of the United States and any area
beyond the territorial sea within which,
in accordance with customary
international law as reflected in the
United Nations Convention on the Law
of the Sea, the United States may
exercise sovereign rights or jurisdiction.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
C. Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price
(MSRP)
Section 30D(f)(11)(A) provides that no
section 30D credit is allowed for a
vehicle with an MSRP in excess of the
applicable limitation. Section
30D(f)(11)(B) provides that the
‘‘applicable limitation’’ for each vehicle
classification is as follows: in the case
of a van, $80,000; in the case of a sport
utility vehicle, $80,000; in the case of a
pickup truck, $80,000; and in the case
of any other vehicle, $55,000.
Proposed § 1.30D–2(c) would provide
that for purposes of section
30D(f)(11)(A), ‘‘manufacturer’s
suggested retail price’’ means the sum
of: (A) the retail price of the automobile
suggested by the manufacturer as
described in 15 U.S.C. 1232(f)(1); and
(B) the retail delivered price suggested
by the manufacturer for each accessory
or item of optional equipment,
physically attached to such automobile
at the time of its delivery to the dealer,
which is not included within the price
of such automobile as stated pursuant to
15 U.S.C. 1232(f)(1), as described in 15
U.S.C. 1232(f)(2). This price information
is reported on the label that is affixed to
the windshield or side window of the
vehicle, as described in 15 U.S.C. 1232.
D. Vehicle Classifications
For purposes of applying the MSRP
limitation under section 30D(f)(11)(A),
section 30D(f)(11)(C) authorizes the
Secretary to prescribe such regulations
or other guidance as the Secretary
determines necessary to determine
vehicle classifications using criteria
similar to that employed by the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
and the Department of Energy to
determine size and class of vehicles.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
originally announced an intent to
propose use of the vehicle classification
standards in 40 CFR 600.002 in Notice
2023–1; however, in Notice 2023–16,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
modified the expected vehicle
classification standard set forth in
Notice 2023–1 to instead provide that a
vehicle’s vehicle classification is
expected to be determined consistent
with the fuel economy labeling regime
described in 40 CFR 600.315–08.
Although the EPA vehicle classification
standards in both regimes are similar,
the fuel economy labeling regime
provides for EPA discretion to assign socalled ‘‘crossover’’ vehicles to a class on
a case-by-case basis, taking into account
consumer perspective and the marketing
segment targeted by the manufacturer.
EPA, ‘‘Fuel Economy Labeling of Motor
Vehicles: Revisions to Improve
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Calculation of Fuel Economy
Estimates,’’ 71 FR 77872, 77913 (Dec.
27, 2006). In addition, the proposed
adoption of the fuel economy labeling
regime would align the vehicle
classification standards for purposes of
the section 30D credit with the
classification displayed on the vehicle
label and on the consumer-facing
website FuelEconomy.gov, making it
easier for consumers to know which
vehicles qualify under the applicable
MSRP limitation.
Proposed § 1.30D–2(g) would provide
that for purposes of section
30D(f)(11)(B), a vehicle’s vehicle
classification is to be determined
consistent with the rules and definitions
provided in 40 CFR 600.315–08 for
vans, sport utility vehicles, pickup
trucks, and other vehicles. Specifically,
‘‘van’’ means a vehicle classified as a
van or minivan under 40 CFR 600.315–
08(a)(2)(iii) and (iv), or otherwise so
classified by the Administrator of the
EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 600.315–
08(a)(3)(ii); ‘‘sport utility vehicle’’
means a vehicle classified as a small
sport utility vehicle or standard sport
utility vehicle under 40 CFR 600.315–
08(a)(2)(v) and (vi), or otherwise so
classified by the Administrator of the
EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 600.315–
08(a)(3)(ii); ‘‘pickup truck’’ means a
vehicle classified as a small pickup
truck or standard pickup truck under 40
CFR 600.315–08(a)(2)(i) and (ii), or
otherwise so classified by the
Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40
CFR 600.315–08(a)(3)(ii); and ‘‘other
vehicle’’ means any vehicle classified in
one of the classes of passenger
automobiles listed in 40 CFR 600.315–
08(a)(1), or otherwise so classified by
the Administrator of the EPA pursuant
to 40 CFR 600.315–08(a)(3)(ii).
E. Placed in Service
Proposed § 1.30D–2(e) would provide
that for purposes of the section 30D
credit, a new clean vehicle is considered
to be placed in service on the date the
taxpayer takes possession of the vehicle.
This proposed definition is consistent
with the meaning of ‘‘placed in service’’
for purposes of other provisions of the
Code under which property is
considered to be ‘‘placed in service’’
when the property is ‘‘placed in a
condition or state of readiness and
availability for a specifically assigned
function’’ and as ‘‘the date on which the
owner of the vehicle took actual
possession of the vehicle.’’ See §§ 1.46–
3(d)(1)(ii) and (4)(i), 1.179–4(e) and
145.4051–1(c)(2); see also § 1.1250–
4(b)(2); Consumers Power Co. v.
Commissioner, 89 T.C. 710 (1987); Noell
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
v. Commissioner, 66 T.C. 718, 728–729
(1976).
III. The Critical Minerals and Battery
Components Requirements
Section 30D(e) of the Code provides
requirements for critical minerals and
battery components with respect to the
battery from which the electric motor of
a new clean vehicle draws electricity.
The Critical Mineral and Battery
Component Requirements apply to
applicable critical minerals and battery
components, respectively, contained in
a battery as defined in proposed
§ 1.30D–3(c)(3).
A. Critical Minerals Requirement
Proposed § 1.30D–3(a) would provide
the rules for determining compliance
with the Critical Minerals Requirement.
In general, proposed § 1.30D–3(a) is
consistent with the framework for the
Critical Minerals Requirement that was
described in the 30D White Paper.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(a) would provide a
three-step process for determining the
percentage of the value of the applicable
critical minerals in a battery that
contribute toward meeting the Critical
Minerals Requirement.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
i. Step 1: Determine Procurement
Chains
In the first step for determining
compliance with the Critical Minerals
Requirement, the manufacturer would
need to determine the procurement
chain or chains for each applicable
critical mineral. Proposed § 1.30D–
3(c)(14) would define a ‘‘procurement
chain’’ as a common sequence of
extraction, processing, or recycling
activities that occur in a common set of
locations, concluding in the production
of constituent materials. Proposed
§ 1.30D–3(c)(14) would further clarify
that sources of a single applicable
critical mineral may have multiple
procurement chains if, for example, one
source of the applicable critical mineral
undergoes the same extraction,
processing, or recycling process in
different locations. Each applicable
critical mineral procurement chain
would need to be evaluated separately
pursuant to proposed § 1.30D–3(a)(3)(ii).
ii. Step 2: Identify Qualifying Critical
Minerals
In the second step for determining
compliance with the Critical Minerals
Requirement, each applicable critical
mineral procurement chain in the
battery would need to be evaluated to
determine whether critical minerals
procured from the chain have been (1)
extracted or processed in the United
States, or in any country with which the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
United States has a free trade agreement
in effect, or (2) recycled in North
America. Applicable critical minerals
that satisfy this requirement are
considered qualifying critical minerals.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(17) would define
‘‘qualifying critical mineral’’ as an
applicable critical mineral that is
extracted or processed in the United
States, or in any country with which the
United States has a free trade agreement
in effect, or recycled in North America.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(17) would use a
‘‘50% of value added test’’ to determine
whether this definition is satisfied.
Thus, an applicable critical mineral
would be treated as extracted or
processed in the United States, or in any
country with which the United States
has a free trade agreement in effect, if:
(1) 50 percent or more of the value
added to the applicable critical mineral
by extraction is derived from extraction
that occurred in the United States or in
any country with which the United
States has a free trade agreement in
effect; or (2) 50 percent or more of the
value added to the applicable critical
mineral by processing is derived from
processing that occurred in the United
States or in any country with which the
United States has a free trade agreement
in effect. An applicable critical mineral
would be treated as recycled in North
America if 50 percent or more of the
value added to the applicable critical
mineral by recycling is derived from
recycling that occurred in North
America.
The 30D White Paper explained the
likely need for transition rules that
would provide manufacturers time to
develop the necessary capability to
certify compliance with the Critical
Minerals Requirement throughout their
supply chains—especially given the
complexity of battery supply chains and
the detailed tracking that would be
required—while moving towards more
secure and resilient critical mineral
supply chains. The proposed 50% of
value added test would serve that
purpose for vehicles placed in service in
2023 and 2024. For later years, however,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
anticipate moving to a more stringent
test for determining if an applicable
critical mineral was extracted or
processed in the United States or in any
country with which the United States
has a free trade agreement in effect, or
whether an applicable critical mineral
was recycled in North America. This
more stringent test would reflect the
potential for more detailed tracking
throughout manufacturers’ supply
chains, which may be necessary to
certify compliance with the foreign
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
23375
entity of concern requirements
described in section 30D(d)(7)(A)
(applicable for vehicles placed in
service after December 31, 2024).
The Treasury Department and the IRS
specifically request comment on the
50% of value added test, and the best
approach for adopting a more stringent
test for vehicles placed in service in
2025 and later years. For example,
under one approach, the standard of 50
percent or more of the value added to
the applicable critical mineral for
extraction, processing, or recycling in
the definition of qualifying critical
mineral, could increase incrementally
over time (similar to the incremental
increase in the applicable critical
minerals percentages in section
30D(e)(1)(B) and proposed § 1.30D–
3(a)(2)).
Notably, the 50% of value added test
would need to be applied separately for
each procurement chain of an
applicable critical mineral pursuant to
proposed § 1.30D–3(a)(3)(ii). For
example, lithium that undergoes initial
processing activities in a plant in
Country A and then is transferred to a
plant in Country B to undergo final
processing activities, culminating in the
lithium being incorporated into a
constituent material, would be analyzed
under this step together with other
lithium moving through the same
procurement chain. However, if some of
the lithium in the prior example instead
undergoes final processing activities in
a plant in Country C instead of Country
B, then there would be two procurement
chains for lithium: (1) Country A to
Country B and (2) Country A to Country
C.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(8) would
define ‘‘extraction’’ as the activities
performed to extract or harvest minerals
or natural resources from the ground or
a body of water, including, but not
limited to, by operating equipment to
extract minerals or natural resources
from mines and wells, or to extract or
harvest minerals or natural resources
from the waste or residue of prior
extraction. Extraction would conclude
when activities are performed to convert
raw mined or harvested products or raw
well effluent to substances that can be
readily transported or stored for direct
use in applicable critical mineral
processing. Extraction would include
the beneficiation or other physical
processes that allow the extracted
materials, including ores, clays, and
brines, to become transportable.
Extraction would include the physical
processes involved in refining.
Extraction would not include the
chemical and thermal processes
involved in refining.
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
23376
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(13) would
define ‘‘processing’’ as the non-physical
processes involved in refining of nonrecycled substances or materials,
including the treating, baking, and
coating processes used to convert such
substances and materials into
constituent materials. Processing would
begin when chemical or thermal
processes, or the combination of them,
are used on extracted minerals or
natural resources or manmade minerals
or resources to create a new product
that, through subsequent steps in the
applicable critical minerals supply
chain, will be processed into a final
constituent material. Processing would
include the chemical or thermal
processes involved in refining.
Processing would not include the
physical processes involved in refining.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(6) would
define ‘‘constituent materials’’ as
materials that contain applicable critical
minerals and are employed directly in
the manufacturing of battery
components. Constituent materials
could include, but would not be limited
to, powders of cathode active materials,
powders of anode active materials, foils,
metals for solid electrodes, binders,
electrolyte salts, and electrolyte
additives, as required for a battery cell.
The definition of constituent materials
describes the materials that distinguish
the steps of extraction, processing, and
recycling of critical minerals from the
subsequent steps of manufacturing and
assembly of battery components.
Constituent materials would be the final
products relevant for calculating the
value of the applicable critical minerals
in the battery.
Constituent materials would mark the
end of processing as the point at which
no further chemical, physical, or
thermal processes are needed to create
the final product that is then used in
battery component manufacturing.
Constituent materials would similarly
mark the end of recycling as the point
at which no further transformations are
needed to create the final product that
is then used in battery component
manufacturing. All constituent materials
contain applicable critical minerals.
Once the final constituent material is
created, it then is used as an input to a
battery component. Some battery
components could be made entirely of
inputs that do not contain constituent
materials. Inputs used to manufacture
battery components that do not contain
any applicable critical minerals (for
example, solvents, conductive additives,
etc.) would not be considered to be
constituent materials.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(19) would
define ‘‘recycling’’ as the series of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
activities during which recyclable
materials containing applicable critical
minerals are transformed into
specification-grade commodities and
consumed in lieu of virgin materials to
create new constituent materials; such
activities result in new constituent
materials contained in the battery from
which the electric motor of a new clean
vehicle draws electricity. All physical,
chemical, and thermal treatments or
modifications that convert recycled
feedstocks to specification grade
constituent materials would be included
in recycling. This definition would align
with the current methods of direct,
hydrometallurgical, or
pyrometallurgical recycling that are
utilized commercially for reuse of
materials for battery applications.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(24) would
define ‘‘value,’’ with respect to property,
as the arm’s-length price that was paid
or would be paid for the property by an
unrelated purchaser determined in
accordance with the principles of
section 482 of the Code and regulations
thereunder.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(25) would
define ‘‘value added,’’ with respect to
recycling, extraction, or processing of an
applicable critical mineral as the
increase in the value of the applicable
critical mineral attributable to the
relevant activity.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(11) would
define ‘‘North America’’ as the territory
of the United States, Canada, and
Mexico as defined in 19 CFR. part 182,
Appendix A, § 1(1).
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(7) would
define the term ‘‘country with which the
United States has a free trade agreement
in effect’’ and list the countries with
which the United States has a ‘‘free
trade agreement in effect.’’ The term free
trade agreement is not defined in the
IRA or in the Code. The proposed
definition takes into account the term’s
meaning, use and context in the statute.
The IRA’s amendments to section 30D
expand the incentives for taxpayers to
purchase new clean vehicles and for
vehicle manufacturers to increase their
reliance on supply chains in the United
States and in countries with which the
United States has reliable and trusted
economic relationships. The Treasury
Department and the IRS recognize that
more secure and resilient supply chains
are essential for our national security,
our economic security, and our
technological leadership. The Treasury
Department and the IRS propose to
identify the countries with which the
United States has free trade agreements
in effect for purposes of section 30D
consistent with the statute’s purposes of
promoting reliance on such supply
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
chains and of providing eligible
consumers with access to tax credits for
the purchase of new clean vehicles.
Based on these considerations, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
propose criteria the Secretary would
consider in identifying these countries.
As set forth in proposed § 1.30D–
3(c)(7)(i), those criteria would include
whether an agreement between the
United States and another country, as to
the critical minerals contained in
electric vehicle batteries or more
generally, and in the context of the
overall commercial and economic
relationship between that country and
the United States: (A) reduces or
eliminates trade barriers on a
preferential basis, (B) commits the
parties to refrain from imposing new
trade barriers, (C) establishes highstandard disciplines in key areas
affecting trade (such as core labor and
environmental protections), and/or (D)
reduces or eliminates restrictions on
exports or commits the parties to refrain
from imposing such restrictions on
exports.
Applying those factors, the proposed
regulations include countries with
which the United States has
comprehensive free trade agreements
(that is, agreements covering
substantially all trade in goods and
services between the parties, including
trade in critical minerals). These are
Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Chile,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican
Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Israel, Jordan, Korea, Mexico,
Morocco, Nicaragua, Oman, Panama,
Peru, and Singapore. In addition, the
Treasury Department and the IRS also
propose to include additional countries
that the Secretary identifies after
considering the factors listed in
proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(7)(i). One
example of such a country is Japan, with
which the United States recently
concluded a Critical Minerals
Agreement (CMA) 1 containing robust
obligations to help ensure free trade in
critical minerals, including a
commitment to refrain from imposing
duties on exports of critical minerals
that are currently essential to the
electric vehicle battery supply chain, a
commitment for the United States and
Japan to confer on investments in this
sector that may affect national security,
and detailed undertakings related to the
1 Agreement Between the Government of the
United States of America and the Government of
Japan on Strengthening Critical Minerals Supply
Chains, concluded March 28, 2023, https://ustr.gov/
sites/default/files/2023-03/
US%20Japan%20Critical%20
Minerals%20Agreement%202023%
2003%2028.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
enforcement of labor and environmental
laws related to trade in those critical
minerals. The CMA was concluded in
the context of an earlier trade agreement
the United States concluded with Japan
in 2019,2 a related 2019 agreement on
digital trade,3 and the U.S.-Japan
Partnership on Trade announced in
November 2021.4 The Treasury
Department and the IRS have consulted
with the U.S. Trade Representative in
applying the proposed factors here.
Based on an evaluation of the criteria
in proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(7)(i), the
Treasury Department and the IRS would
make any necessary amendments to the
list in proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(7)(ii),
including adding any additional
countries as any new qualifying
international agreements enter into force
and the Secretary determines that the
factors have been met. The Treasury
Department and the IRS would similarly
make any necessary amendments based
on the modification, termination, or
expiration of any previously identified
free trade agreements. Proposed
§ 1.30D–3(c)(7)(iii) would provide that
the list of countries in proposed
§ 1.30D–3(c)(7)(ii) may be revised and
updated through appropriate
publication in the Federal Register or in
the Internal Revenue Bulletin. The
treatment of any given country under
this overall approach is independent
from the inclusion or exclusion of any
other.5
The Treasury Department and the IRS
seek comment on the proposed criteria
for identifying countries with which the
United States has free trade agreements
in effect, other potential approaches for
identifying those countries, and the list
of countries set forth in proposed
§ 1.30D–3(c)(7)(ii).
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
iii. Step 3: Calculate Qualifying Critical
Mineral Content
The third step for determining
compliance with the Critical Minerals
Requirement would involve the
2 Trade Agreement Between the United States of
America and Japan, concluded October 7, 2019,
https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/files/agreements/
japan/Trade_Agreement_between_the_United_
States_and_Japan.pdf.
3 Agreement Between the United States of
America and Japan Concerning Digital Trade,
concluded October 7, 2019, https://ustr.gov/sites/
default/files/files/agreements/japan/Agreement_
between_the_United_States_and_Japan_
concerning_Digital_Trade.pdf.
4 Office of United States Trade Representative,
United States and Japan Announce the Formation
of the U.S.-Japan Partnership on Trade, Nov. 17,
2021, https://ustr.gov/about-us/policy-offices/pressoffice/press-releases/2021/november/united-statesand-japan-announce-formation-us-japanpartnership-trade-0.
5 This independent treatment is consistent with
proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(e).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
calculation of the percentage of the
value of qualifying critical minerals
contained in a battery. The proposed
regulations refer to this percentage as
the ‘‘qualifying critical mineral content’’
and define that term under proposed
§ 1.30D–3(c)(18) as the percentage of the
value of the applicable critical minerals
contained in the battery from which the
electric motor of a new clean vehicle
draws electricity that were extracted or
processed in the United States, or in any
country with which the United States
has a free trade agreement in effect, or
were recycled in North America. Under
proposed § 1.30D–3(a)(3)(i), qualifying
critical mineral content would be
calculated as the percentage that results
from dividing the total value of
qualifying critical minerals by the total
value of critical minerals. Proposed
§ 1.30D–3(c)(23) would define ‘‘total
value of qualifying critical minerals’’ as
the sum of the values of all the
qualifying critical minerals contained in
a battery described in proposed § 1.30D–
3(a)(1). Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(22)
would define ‘‘total value of critical
minerals’’ as the sum of the values of all
applicable critical minerals contained in
a battery described in proposed § 1.30D–
3(a)(1).
Proposed § 1.30D–3(a)(3)(iii) would
require qualified manufacturers to select
a date for determining the values
associated with the total value of
qualifying critical minerals (determined
separately for each procurement chain)
and the total value of critical minerals.
Such date would need to be after the
final processing or recycling step for the
applicable critical minerals relevant to
the certification described in section
30D(e)(1)(A) of the Code. This date
would need to be uniformly applied for
all applicable critical minerals
contained in the battery. Proposed
§ 1.30D–3(a)(15) would define a
qualified manufacturer as a
manufacturer described in section
30D(d)(3) of the Code.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(a)(3)(iv) would
provide that a qualified manufacturer
may determine qualifying critical
mineral content based on the value of
the applicable critical minerals actually
contained in the battery of a specific
vehicle. Alternatively, for purposes of
calculating the qualifying critical
mineral content for batteries in a group
of vehicles, a qualified manufacturer
could average the qualifying critical
mineral content calculation over a
limited period of time (for example, a
year, quarter, or month) with respect to
vehicles from the same model line,
plant, class, or some combination of
thereof, with final assembly (as defined
in section 30D(d)(5) of the Code and
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
23377
proposed § 1.30D–2(b)) within North
America. The Treasury Department and
the IRS seek comment on whether to
include any more specific conditions or
limitations on this ability to average
these calculations
The percentage of qualifying critical
minerals content that is calculated in
Step 3 would ultimately be compared
with the relevant applicable critical
minerals percentage provided in
proposed § 1.30D–3(a)(2) to determine
whether a vehicle satisfies the Critical
Minerals Requirement described in
section 30D(e)(1)(A) of the Code.
B. Battery Components Requirement
Proposed § 1.30D–3(b) would provide
the rules for determining compliance
with the Battery Components
Requirement. In general, proposed
§ 1.30D–3(b) is consistent with the
framework for the Battery Components
Requirement that was described in the
30D White Paper. Proposed § 1.30D–3(b)
would provide a four-step process for
determining the percentage of the value
of the battery components in a battery
that contribute toward meeting the
Battery Components Requirement.
i. Step 1: Identify Components That Are
Manufactured or Assembled in North
America
In the first step for determining
compliance with the Battery
Components Requirement, qualified
manufacturers would need to determine
whether each battery component in a
battery was manufactured or assembled
in North America. Such components are
referred to in the proposed regulations
as ‘‘North American battery
components’’ and are defined in
proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(12) as a battery
component substantially all of the
manufacturing or assembly of which
occurs in North America, without regard
to the location of the manufacturing or
assembly activities of the components
that make up the particular battery
component.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(3) would
define ‘‘battery,’’ for purposes of a new
clean vehicle, as a collection of one or
more battery modules, each of which
has two or more electrically configured
battery cells in series or parallel, to
create voltage or current. The term
‘‘battery’’ would not include items such
as thermal management systems or other
parts of a battery cell or module that do
not directly contribute to the
electrochemical storage of energy within
the battery, such as battery cell cases,
cans, or pouches. This definition of
battery is consistent with the statute
because battery modules and cells are
the sources ‘‘from which the electric
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
23378
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
motor of such vehicle draws
electricity.’’ Sections 30D(e)(1)(A) and
(2)(A). The battery module is the end
point for the purpose of calculating the
value of battery components.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(4) would
define ‘‘battery cell’’ as a combination of
battery components (other than battery
cells) capable of electrochemically
storing energy from which the electric
motor of a new clean vehicle draws
electricity. This definition of battery cell
would encompass the smallest
combination of battery components
necessary for the function of energy
storage.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(5) would
define ‘‘battery component’’ as a
component that forms part of a battery
and which is manufactured or
assembled from one or more
components or constituent materials
that are combined through industrial,
chemical, and physical assembly steps.
Battery components would include, but
not be limited to, a cathode electrode,
anode electrode, solid metal electrode,
separator, liquid electrolyte, solid state
electrolyte, battery cell, and battery
module. Constituent materials would
not be considered a type of battery
component, although constituent
materials could be manufactured or
assembled into battery components.
Some battery components could be
made entirely of inputs that do not
contain constituent materials. Battery
components would include any piece of
the assembled battery cell that
contribute to electrochemical energy
storage.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(10) would
define ‘‘manufacturing,’’ with respect to
a battery component, as the industrial
and chemical steps taken to produce a
battery component. Manufacturing
would use industrial and chemical steps
starting with constituent materials and
other battery components that do not
contain constituent materials to create a
new battery component.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(2) would
define ‘‘assembly,’’ with respect to
battery components, as the process of
combining battery components into
battery cells and battery modules.
ii. Step 2: Determine the Incremental
Value of Each Battery Component and
North American Battery Components
In the second step for determining
compliance with the Battery
Components Requirement, qualified
manufacturers would need to determine
the incremental value for each battery
component. The resulting incremental
value for a battery component would be
attributable to North America if the
battery component is a ‘‘North
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
American battery component’’ as
defined in proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(12).
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(9) would
define ‘‘incremental value,’’ with
respect to a battery component, as the
value (as defined in proposed § 1.30D–
3(c)(24)) determined by subtracting from
the value of that battery component the
value of the manufactured or assembled
battery components, if any, that are
contained in that battery component.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(20) would
define ‘‘total incremental value of North
American battery components’’ as the
sum of the incremental values of each
North American battery component
contained in a battery described in
proposed § 1.30D–3(b)(1).
iii. Step 3: Determine the Total
Incremental Value of Battery
Components
In the third step for determining
compliance with the Battery
Components Requirement, qualified
manufacturers would need to total the
incremental value of battery
components. Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(21)
would define ‘‘total incremental value
of battery components’’ as the sum of
the incremental values of each battery
component contained in a battery
described in proposed § 1.30D–3(b)(1).
The total incremental value of battery
components could also be calculated by
totaling the value of each battery
module in the battery.
iv. Step 4: Calculate the Qualifying
Battery Component Content
In the fourth step for determining
compliance with the Battery
Components Requirement, qualified
manufacturers would need to determine
the qualifying battery component
content. Proposed § 1.30D–3(c)(16)
would define ‘‘qualifying battery
component content’’ as the percentage
of the value of the battery components
contained in the battery from which the
electric motor of a new clean vehicle
draws electricity that were
manufactured or assembled in North
America. Proposed § 1.30D–3(b)(3)(i)
would provide that the qualifying
battery component content is the
percentage that results from dividing the
total incremental value of North
American battery components
(determined in step 2) by the total
incremental value of battery
components (determined in step 3).
Proposed § 1.30D–3(b)(3)(ii) would
require qualified manufacturers to select
a date for determining the values
associated with the total incremental
value of North American battery
components and the total incremental
value of battery components. Such date
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
would need to be after the last
manufacturing or assembly step for the
battery components relevant to the
certification described in section
30D(e)(2)(A) of the Code. This date must
be uniformly applied for all battery
components contained in the battery.
Proposed § 1.30D–3(b)(3)(iii) would
provide that a qualified manufacturer
may determine qualifying battery
component content based on the
incremental values of the battery
components actually contained in the
battery of a specific vehicle.
Alternatively, for purposes of
calculating the qualifying battery
component content for batteries in a
group of vehicles, a qualified
manufacturer could average the
qualifying battery component content
calculation over a limited period of time
(for example, a year, quarter, or month)
with respect to vehicles from the same
model line, plant, class, or some
combination of thereof, with final
assembly (as defined in section
30D(d)(5) of the Code and proposed
§ 1.30D–2(a)) within North America.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
seek comment on whether to include
any more specific conditions or
limitations on this ability to average
these calculations.
The percentage of qualifying battery
component content that would be
calculated in Step 4 would ultimately be
compared with the relevant applicable
battery components percentage
provided in proposed § 1.30D–3(b)(2) to
determine whether a vehicle satisfies
the Battery Components Requirement
described in section 30D(e)(2)(A) of the
Code.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on the Critical
Mineral and Battery Component
Requirements as they would be
implemented in proposed § 1.30D–3,
including the distinction between
processing of applicable critical
minerals and manufacturing and
assembly of battery components, and
related definitions.
C. Excluded Entities
Section 30D(d)(7) of the Code
excludes from the definition of ‘‘new
clean vehicle’’ any vehicle placed in
service after December 31, 2024, with
respect to which any of the applicable
critical minerals contained in the
battery of such vehicle (as described in
section 30D(e)(1)(A)) were extracted,
processed, or recycled by a foreign
entity of concern (as defined in section
40207(a)(5) of the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act (42 U.S.C.
18741(a)(5))), or any vehicle placed in
service after December 31, 2023, with
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
respect to which any of the components
contained in the battery of such vehicle
(as described in section 30D(e)(2)(A))
were manufactured or assembled by a
foreign entity of concern (as so defined).
The Treasury Department and the IRS
intend to issue guidance with respect to
section 30D(d)(7) at a later date.
IV. Special Rules
Proposed § 1.30D–4 would provide
special rules with respect to the section
30D credit.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
A. No Double Benefit
Section 30D(f)(2) and proposed
§ 1.30D–4(a)(1) would provide that the
amount of any deduction or other credit
allowable under chapter 1 for a vehicle
for which a section 30D credit is
allowable must be reduced by the
amount of the section 30D credit
allowed under section 30D(a) for such
vehicle determined without regard to
section 30D(c), which may treat all or a
portion of the aggregate credit allowed
under section 30D(a) as a current year
general business credit under section
38(b).
Proposed § 1.30D–4(a)(2) would
provide that a section 30D credit that
has been allowed with respect to a
vehicle in a taxable year before the
taxable year in which a credit under
section 25E is allowable for that vehicle
does not reduce the amount of the
allowable section 25E credit.
Accordingly, a taxpayer who otherwise
satisfies the requirements of section 25E
would be eligible to claim the section
25E credit for a vehicle for which
another taxpayer previously claimed the
section 30D credit.
Proposed § 1.30D–4(a)(3) would
provide that no credit is allowed under
section 45W with respect to any vehicle
for which a credit was allowed under
section 30D. This rule, which is based
on section 45W(d)(3), precludes both
the section 30D credit and the section
45W credit from being allowed for the
same vehicle, whether in the same or
different taxable years.
B. Limitation Based on Modified
Adjusted Gross Income
Section 30D(f)(10) and proposed
§ 1.30D–4(b) would provide that no
section 30D(a) credit is allowed for any
taxable year if (i) the lesser of (I) the
modified AGI of the taxpayer for such
taxable year or (II) the modified AGI of
the taxpayer for the preceding taxable
year exceeds (ii) the threshold amount
(Modified AGI Limitation). The
threshold amount is $300,000 in the
case of a joint return or a surviving
spouse (as defined in section 2(a) of the
Code), $225,000 in the case of a head of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
23379
household (as defined in section 2(b) of
the Code), and $150,000 for all other
taxpayers. ‘‘Modified adjusted gross
income’’ is defined in section
30D(f)(10)(C) as the taxpayer’s AGI
increased by any amount excluded from
gross income under sections 911, 931, or
933 of the Code. Proposed § 1.30D–
4(b)(4) provides that if the taxpayer’s
filing status changes (for example, from
single to head of household) in this twoyear period, the taxpayer satisfies the
Modified AGI Limitation if the
taxpayer’s modified AGI does not
exceed the threshold amount in either
taxable year based on the applicable
filing status for that taxable year.
Proposed § 1.30D–4(b)(5)(i) would
provide that, except as provided in
proposed § 1.30D–4(b)(5)(ii), in the case
of a new clean vehicle that is placed in
service by a corporation or other
taxpayer that is not an individual for
whom AGI is computed under section
62, the Modified AGI Limitation does
not apply. Corporations and such other
taxpayers do not have AGI computed
under section 62, so the special rule in
section 30D(f)(10) establishing a
Modified AGI Limitation does not apply
to these taxpayers.
Proposed § 1.30D–4(b)(5)(ii) would
provide that in the event that the new
clean vehicle is placed in service by a
partnership or an S corporation, and the
section 30D credit is claimed by
individuals who are direct or indirect
partners of that partnership or
shareholders of that S corporation, the
Modified AGI Limitation will apply to
those partners or shareholders. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on whether a similar
rule should be provided for trusts or
other types of entities that place in
service a new clean vehicle.
proration would present challenges
from a tax administration perspective.
Proposed § 1.30D–4(c)(1) would
provide that, except as provided in
proposed § 1.30D–4(c)(2), the amount of
the section 30D credit attributable to a
new clean vehicle may be claimed on
only one tax return. In the event
multiple owners place in service a new
clean vehicle, no allocation or proration
of the credit would be available.
Proposed § 1.30D–4(c)(3)(i) would
provide that the name and taxpayer
identification number of the owner
claiming the credit under section 30D(a)
should be listed on the seller’s report
pursuant to section 30D(d)(1)(H).
Accordingly, multiple owners of a new
clean vehicle would inform the seller
which owner will claim the section 30D
credit so that the seller can identify that
taxpayer on the seller’s report. The
credit would be allowed only on the tax
return of the owner listed in the seller’s
report.
Proposed § 1.30D–4(c)(2) would
provide that in the case of a new clean
vehicle placed in service by a
partnership or S corporation, while the
partnership or S corporation is the
vehicle owner, the section 30D credit is
allocated among the partners of the
partnership under § 1.704–1(b)(4)(ii) or
among the shareholders of the S
corporation under sections 1366(a) and
1377(a) of the Code and claimed on the
tax returns of the partners or
shareholder(s). Proposed § 1.30D–
4(c)(3)(i) would provide that in the case
of a new clean vehicle placed in service
by a partnership or S corporation, the
name and tax identification number of
the partnership or S corporation that
placed the new clean vehicle in service
should be listed on the seller’s report
pursuant to section 30D(d)(1)(H).
C. Multiple Owners and Passthrough
Entity Ownership of a Single Vehicle
In certain instances, multiple
taxpayers may purchase, place in
service, and be titled as owners of a
single vehicle. For example, a married
couple that files separate tax returns
may jointly purchase and take
possession of a new clean vehicle that
qualifies for the section 30D credit and
both spouses may be titled as owners of
the vehicle. However, the structure of
section 30D provides for one taxpayer to
claim the section 30D credit per vehicle
placed in service. See generally section
30D(a), (b), (f)(8), (f)(9) and section
6213(g)(2)(T) of the Code. Section 30D
does not contain rules for allocation or
proration of the section 30D credit with
respect to a single vehicle to multiple
taxpayers placing that vehicle in
service, and such an allocation or
V. Severability
If any provision in this proposed
rulemaking is held to be invalid or
unenforceable facially, or as applied to
any person or circumstance, it shall be
severable from the remainder of this
rulemaking, and shall not affect the
remainder thereof, or the application of
the provision to other persons not
similarly situated or to other dissimilar
circumstances.
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Effect on Other Documents
This proposed rulemaking hereby
makes IRS Notices 2023–1, 2023–3
I.R.B. 373 and 2023–16, 2023–8 I.R.B.
479 obsolete.
Proposed Applicability Dates
Proposed § 1.30D–1 is proposed to
apply to new clean vehicles placed in
service after the date of publication of
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
23380
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
the Treasury Decision adopting these
rules as final rules in the Federal
Register.
Proposed § 1.30D–2 is proposed to
apply to new clean vehicles placed in
service on or after January 1, 2023, for
taxable years ending after April 17,
2023. The amendments made to section
30D by the IRA generally apply to
vehicles placed in service after
December 31, 2022, with certain
exceptions. The definitions in proposed
§ 1.30D–2 were substantially described
in Notice 2023–1, which was released
on December 29, 2022.6 The definitions
in proposed § 1.30D–2 generally relate
to statutory rules applicable to vehicles
placed in service on or after January 1,
2023. These proposed regulations are
proposed to apply to vehicles placed in
service on or after January 1, 2023, for
taxable years ending after the date these
proposed regulations are published in
the Federal Register to improve
certainty for taxpayers and to provide
clear rules for tax administration.
Proposed § 1.30D–3 is proposed to
apply to new clean vehicles placed in
service after April 17, 2023 for taxable
years ending after April 17, 2023.
Pursuant to section 13401(a), (e), and
(k)(3) of the IRA, the critical minerals
and battery components requirements of
section 13401(a) and (e) of the IRA
amend section 30D with respect to
vehicles placed in service after the date
on which these proposed regulations are
published in the Federal Register.
Accordingly, the Critical Minerals and
Battery Components Requirements in
proposed § 1.30D–3 are proposed to
apply to vehicles placed in service after
the date of publication of these
proposed regulations for taxable years
ending after the date of publication of
these proposed regulations.
Proposed § 1.30D–4 is proposed to
apply to new clean vehicles placed in
service after the date of publication of
the Treasury Decision adopting these
rules as final rules in the Federal
Register.
Taxpayers may rely on these proposed
regulations for vehicles placed in
service prior to the date final regulations
are published in the Federal Register,
provided the taxpayer follows the
proposed regulations in their entirety,
and in a consistent manner.
6 Notice 2023–16, released February 3, 2023,
modified Notice 2023–1, regarding the vehicle
classification standard set forth in Notice 2023–1 in
a manner that allowed additional new clean
vehicles to be eligible for the section 30D credit.
Notice 2023–16 provided that taxpayers could rely
on these modified expected definitions for new
clean vehicles placed in service on or after January
1, 2023.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
Statement of Availability for IRS
Documents
For copies of recently issued Revenue
Procedures, Revenue Rulings, Notices,
and other guidance published in the
Internal Revenue Bulletin, please visit
the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review—
Economic Analysis
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866
direct agencies to assess costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility.
These proposed regulations have been
designated by the Office of Management
and Budget’s Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) as subject to
review under Executive Order 12866
pursuant to the Memorandum of
Agreement (April 11, 2018) between the
Treasury Department and the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
regarding review of tax regulations.
OIRA has determined that the proposed
rulemaking is significant and subject to
review under Executive Order 12866
and section 1(b) of the Memorandum of
Agreement. Accordingly, the proposed
regulations have been reviewed by
OMB.
II. Paperwork Reduction Act
Any collection burden associated
with rules described in these proposed
regulations is previously accounted for
in OMB Control Number 1545–2137.
These proposed regulations do not alter
previously accounted for information
collection requirements and do not
create new collection requirements.
OMB Control Number 1545–2137 covers
Form 8936 and Form 8936–A regarding
electric vehicle credits, including the
new requirement in section 30D(f)(9) to
include on the taxpayer’s return for the
taxable year the VIN of the vehicle for
which the section 30D credit is claimed.
Revenue Procedure 2022–42 describes
the procedural requirements for
qualified manufacturers to make
periodic written reports to the Secretary
to provide information related to each
vehicle manufactured by such
manufacturer that is eligible for the
section 30D credit as required in section
30D(d)(3), including the critical mineral
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
and battery component certification
requirements in sections 30D(e)(1)(A)
and (e)(2)(A). In addition, Revenue
Procedure 2022–42 also provides the
procedures for sellers of new clean
vehicles to report information required
by section 30D(d)(1)(H) for vehicles to
be eligible for the section 30D credit.
The collections of information
contained in Revenue Procedure 2022–
42 are described in that document and
were submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget in accordance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act
under control number 1545–2137.
The requirement to determine the
final assembly location in proposed
§ 1.30D–2(b) by relying on (1) the
vehicle’s plant of manufacture as
reported in the vehicle identification
number (VIN) pursuant to 49 CFR 565
or (2) the final assembly point reported
on the label affixed to the vehicle as
described in 49 CFR 583.5(a)(3) is
accounted for by the Department of
Transportation in OMB Control
Numbers 2127–0510 and 2127–0573.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a valid control
number assigned by the Office of
Management and Budget.
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6), the Secretary
hereby certifies that these proposed
regulations will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities within the
meaning of section 601(6) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act. Pursuant to
section 7805(f), this notice of proposed
rulemaking has been submitted to the
Chief Counsel for the Office of
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comment on their
impact on small business.
The proposed regulations affect two
types of business entities: (1) qualified
manufacturers that must trace and
report on their critical minerals and
battery components in order to certify
that their new clean vehicles qualify for
the section 30D credit, and (2)
businesses that may earn the section
30D credit when purchasing and placing
in service a new clean vehicle.
While the tracking and reporting of
critical minerals and battery
components is likely to involve
significant administrative costs,
according to public filings, all qualified
manufacturers had total revenues above
$1B in 2022. There are a total of 21
qualified manufacturers that have
indicated that they manufacture
vehicles currently eligible for the
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
23381
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
section 30D credit.7 Pursuant to
Revenue Procedure 2022–42 and
following the publication of these
proposed regulations, qualified
manufacturers will also have to certify
that their vehicles qualify under the
Critical Minerals and Battery
Components Requirements. The
proposed regulations provide
definitions and general rules for the
section 30D credit, including rules for
qualified manufacturers to comply with
the Critical Mineral and Battery
Component Requirements. Accordingly,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
intend that the proposed rules provide
clarity for qualified manufacturers for
consistent application of critical
minerals and battery components
calculations and for taxpayers
purchasing new clean vehicles that
qualify for the section 30D credit. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined that qualified manufacturers
do not meet the applicable definition of
small entity.
Business purchasers of clean vehicles
who take the section 30D credit must
satisfy reporting requirements that are
largely the same as those faced by
individuals accessing the section 30D
credit to purchase clean vehicles.
Taxpayers will continue to file Form
8936, Qualified Plug-In Electric Drive
Motor Vehicle Credit, to claim the
section 30D credit. As was the case for
the section 30D credit prior to
amendments made by the IRA,
taxpayers can rely on qualified
manufacturers to determine if the
vehicle being purchased qualifies for the
section 30D credit and the credit
amount. The estimated burden for
individual and business taxpayers filing
this form is approved under OMB
control number 1545–0074 and 1545–
0123. To make it easier for a taxpayer
to determine the potential section 30D
credit available for a specific vehicle,
the proposed regulations provide
business entities with tools and
definitions to ascertain whether any
vehicles purchased would be eligible for
the credit. The VIN reporting required
by section 30D(f)(9) and described in the
proposed regulations was included in
prior section 30D reporting.
Accordingly, the Secretary certifies
that these proposed regulations will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
7 The list of manufacturers is available at the
following IRS website: https://www.irs.gov/creditsdeductions/manufacturers-and-models-for-newqualified-clean-vehicles-purchased-in-2023-orafter#:∼:text=If%20you%20bought%20
and%20placed,Internal%20Revenue%20
Code%20Section%2030D.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
request comments that provide data,
other evidence, or models that provide
insight on this issue.
IV. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that agencies assess anticipated costs
and benefits and take certain other
actions before issuing a final rule that
includes any Federal mandate that may
result in expenditures in any one year
by a State, local, or Tribal government,
in the aggregate, or by the private sector,
of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. In 2023, that
threshold is approximately $198
million. This rule does not include any
Federal mandate that may result in
expenditures by State, local, or Tribal
governments, or by the private sector in
excess of that threshold.
V. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
prohibits an agency (to the extent
practicable and permitted by law) from
promulgating any regulation that has
federalism implications, unless the
agency meets the consultation and
funding requirements of section 6 of the
Executive order, if the rule either
imposes substantial, direct compliance
costs on State and local governments,
and is not required by statute, or
preempts State law. This proposed rule
does not have federalism implications
and does not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local
governments or preempt State law
within the meaning of the Executive
order.
Comments and Requests for a Public
Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are
adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any
comments that are submitted timely to
the IRS as prescribed in this preamble
under the ADDRESSES heading. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on all aspects of the
proposed regulations, including their
economic impact and any alternative
approaches that should be considered
during the rulemaking process. In
addition, the Treasury Department and
the IRS request comments on the
specific issues noted in the previous
sections of this preamble.
Any comments submitted, whether
electronically or on paper, will be made
available at https://www.regulations.gov
or upon request. A public hearing will
be scheduled if requested in writing by
any person who timely submits
electronic or written comments as
prescribed in this preamble under the
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
DATES heading. Requests for a public
hearing are also encouraged to be made
electronically. If a public hearing is
scheduled, notice of the date and time
for the public hearing will be published
in the Federal Register. Announcement
2020–4, 2020–17 IRB 1, provides that
until further notice, public hearings
conducted by the IRS will be held
telephonically. Any telephonic hearing
will be made accessible to people with
disabilities.
Drafting Information
The principal author of the proposed
regulations is the Office of Associate
Chief Counsel (Passthroughs & Special
Industries). However, other personnel
from the Treasury Department and the
IRS participated in the development of
the proposed regulations.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 1 INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1.The authority citation for
part 1 is amended by adding entries in
numerical order to read in part as
follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Section 1.30D–1 also issued under 26
U.S.C. 30D.
Section 1.30D–2 also issued under 26
U.S.C. 30D.
Section 1.30D–3 also issued under 26
U.S.C. 30D.
Section 1.30D–4 also issued under 26
U.S.C. 30D and 26 U.S.C. 45W(d)(3).
Par 2. Sections 1.30D–0, 1.30D–1,
1.30D–2, 1.30D–3, and 1.30D–4 are
added to read as follows:
■
Sec.
*
*
*
*
*
1.30D–0 Table of contents.
1.30D–1 Credit for new clean vehicles.
1.30D–2 Definitions for purposes of section
30D.
1.30D–3 Critical mineral and battery
component requirements.
1.30D–4 Special rules.
*
*
§ 1.30D–0
*
*
*
Table of contents.
This section lists the captions
contained in §§ 1.30D–1 through 1.30D–
4.
§ 1.30D–1 Credit for new clean vehicles.
(a) In general.
(b) Treatment of credit.
(1) Business credit treated as part of
general business credit.
(2) Apportionment of section 30D credit.
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
23382
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
(3) Personal credit limited based on tax
liability.
(c) Severability.
(d) Applicability date.
§ 1.30D–2 Definitions for purposes of section
30D.
(a) In general.
(b) Final assembly.
(c) Manufacturer’s suggested retail price.
(d) North America.
(e) Placed in service.
(f) Section 30D regulations.
(g) Vehicle classifications.
(i) Van.
(ii) Sport utility vehicle.
(iii) Pickup truck.
(iv) Other vehicle.
(h) Severability.
(i) Applicability date.
§ 1.30D–3 Critical mineral and battery
component requirements.
(a) Critical minerals requirement.
(1) In general.
(2) Applicable critical minerals percentage.
(3) Determining qualifying critical mineral
content.
(i) In general.
(ii) Separate determinations required for
each procurement chain.
(iii) Time for determining value.
(iv) Application of qualifying critical
mineral content to vehicles.
(b) Battery components requirement.
(1) In general.
(2) Applicable battery components
percentage.
(3) Determining qualifying battery
component content.
(i) In general.
(ii) Time for determining value.
(iii) Application of qualifying battery
component content to vehicles.
(c) Definitions.
(1) Applicable critical mineral.
(2) Assembly.
(3) Battery.
(4) Battery cell.
(5) Battery component.
(6) Constituent materials.
(7) Country with which the United States
has a free trade agreement in effect.
(8) Extraction.
(9) Incremental value.
(10) Manufacturing.
(11) North America.
(12) North American battery component.
(13) Processing
(14) Procurement chain.
(15) Qualified manufacturer.
(16) Qualifying battery component content.
(17) Qualifying critical mineral.
(18) Qualifying critical mineral content.
(19) Recycling.
(20) Total incremental value of North
American battery components.
(21) Total incremental value of battery
components.
(22) Total value of critical minerals.
(23) Total value of qualifying critical
minerals.
(24) Value.
(25) Value added.
(d) Excluded entities.
(e) Severability.
(f) Applicability date.
§ 1.30D–4 Special rules
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
(a) No double benefit.
(1) In general.
(2) Application to credit for previouslyowned clean vehicles under section 25E.
(3) Application to credit for qualified clean
vehicles under section 45W.
(b) Limitation based on modified adjusted
gross income.
(1) In general.
(2) Threshold amount.
(3) Modified adjusted gross income.
(4) Special rule for change in filing status.
(5) Application to taxpayers other than
individuals.
(i) In general.
(ii) Application to passthrough entities.
(c) Multiple owners and passthrough entity
ownership of a single vehicle.
(1) In general.
(2) Passthrough entities.
(3) Seller Reporting.
(i) In general.
(ii) Passthrough entities.
(4) Example.
(d) Severability.
(e) Applicability date.
§ 1.30D–1
Credit for new clean vehicles.
(a) In general. Section 30D(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code (Code) allows as
a credit against the tax imposed by
chapter 1 of the Code (chapter 1) for the
taxable year of a taxpayer an amount
equal to the sum of the credit amounts
determined under section 30D(b) with
respect to each new clean vehicle
purchased by the taxpayer that the
taxpayer places in service during the
taxable year. For purposes of the section
30D regulations (as defined in § 1.30D–
2(f)), the term section 30D credit means
the credit allowable to a taxpayer for a
taxable year under section 30D(a) and
the section 30D regulations with respect
to all vehicles placed in service by the
taxpayer during the taxable year.
Section 1.30D–2 provides definitions
that apply for purposes of section 30D
and the section 30D regulations. Section
1.30D–3 provides rules regarding the
critical mineral and battery component
requirements of section 30D(e). Section
1.30D–4 provides guidance regarding
the limitations and special rules in
section 30D(f).
(b) Application with other credits—(1)
Business credit treated as part of
general business credit—(i) In general.
Section 30D(c)(1) requires that so much
of the section 30D credit that would be
allowed under section 30D(a) for any
taxable year (determined without regard
to section 30D(c) and this paragraph (b))
that is attributable to a depreciable
vehicle must be treated as a general
business credit under section 38 of the
Code that is listed in section 38(b)(30)
for such taxable year (and not allowed
under section 30D(a)). In the case of a
depreciable vehicle the use of which is
50 percent or more business use in the
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
taxable year such vehicle is placed in
service, the section 30D credit that
would be allowed under section 30D(a)
for that taxable year (determined
without regard to section 30D(c) and
this paragraph (b)) that is attributable to
such depreciable vehicle must be
treated as a general business credit
under section 38 of the Code that is
listed in section 38(b)(30) for such
taxable year (and not allowed under
section 30D(a)). See paragraph (b)(2) of
this section for rules applicable in the
case of a depreciable vehicle the use of
which is less than 50 percent business
use in the taxable year such vehicle is
placed in service. See paragraph (b)(3)
of this section for rules applicable to a
section 30D credit allowed under
section 30D(a) pursuant to section
30D(c)(2) or paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) or
(b)(3) of this section.
(ii) Depreciable vehicle. For purposes
of this paragraph (b), a depreciable
vehicle is a vehicle of a character subject
to an allowance for depreciation.
(2) Apportionment of section 30D
credit. In the case of a depreciable
vehicle the business use of which is less
than 50 percent of a taxpayer’s total use
of the vehicle for the taxable year in
which the vehicle is placed in service,
the taxpayer’s section 30D credit for that
taxable year with respect to that vehicle
must be apportioned as follows:
(i) The portion of the section 30D
credit corresponding to the percentage
of the taxpayer’s business use of the
vehicle is treated as a general business
credit under section 30D(c)(1) and
paragraph (b)(1) of this section (and not
allowed under section 30D(a) or
paragraph (b)(3) of this section).
(ii) The portion of the section 30D
credit corresponding to the percentage
of the taxpayer’s personal use of the
vehicle is treated as a section 30D credit
allowed under section 30D(a) pursuant
to section 30D(c)(2) and paragraph (b)(3)
of this section.
(3) Personal credit limited based on
tax liability. Section 26 of the Code
limits the aggregate amount of credits
allowed to a taxpayer by subpart A of
part IV of subchapter A of chapter 1
(subpart A) based on the taxpayer’s tax
liability. Under section 26(a), the
aggregate amount of credits allowed to
a taxpayer by subpart A cannot exceed
the sum of the taxpayer’s regular tax
liability (as defined in section 26(b)) for
the taxable year reduced by the foreign
tax credit allowable under section 27 of
the Code, and the alternative minimum
tax imposed by section 55(a) for the
taxable year. Section 30D(c)(2) provides
that the section 30D credit allowed
under section 30D(a) for any taxable
year (determined after application of
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
section 30D(c)(1) and paragraphs (b)(1)
and (2) of this section) is treated as a
credit allowable under subpart A for
such taxable year, and the section 30D
credit allowed under section 30D(a) is
therefore subject to the limitation
imposed by section 26.
(c) Severability. The provisions of this
section are separate and severable from
one another. If any provision of this
section is stayed or determined to be
invalid, it is the agencies’ intention that
the remaining provisions shall continue
in effect.
(d) Applicability date. This section
applies to new clean vehicles placed in
service after [DATE OF PUBLICATION
OF FINAL RULE].
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
§ 1.30D–2 Definitions for purposes of
section 30D.
(a) In general. The definitions in
paragraphs (b) through (g) of this section
apply for purposes of section 30D of the
Internal Revenue Code (Code) and the
section 30D regulations.
(b) Final assembly means the process
by which a manufacturer produces a
new clean vehicle at, or through the use
of, a plant, factory, or other place from
which the vehicle is delivered to a
dealer or importer with all component
parts necessary for the mechanical
operation of the vehicle included with
the vehicle, whether or not the
component parts are permanently
installed in or on the vehicle. To
establish where final assembly of a new
clean vehicle occurred for purposes of
the requirement in section 30D(d)(1)(G)
that final assembly of a new clean
vehicle occur within North America, the
taxpayer may rely on the following
information:
(1) The vehicle’s plant of manufacture
as reported in the vehicle identification
number pursuant to 49 CFR 565; or
(2) The final assembly point reported
on the label affixed to the vehicle as
described in 49 CFR 583.5(a)(3).
(c) Manufacturer’s suggested retail
price means the sum of the prices
described in paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of
this section as reported on the label that
is affixed to the windshield or side
window of the vehicle, as described in
15 U.S.C. 1232.
(1) The retail price of the automobile
suggested by the manufacturer as
described in 15 U.S.C. 1232(f)(1).
(2) The retail delivered price
suggested by the manufacturer for each
accessory or item of optional
equipment, physically attached to such
automobile at the time of its delivery to
the dealer, which is not included within
the price of such automobile as stated
pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 1232(f)(1), as
described in 15 U.S.C. 1232(f)(2).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
(d) North America means the territory
of the United States, Canada, and
Mexico as defined in 19 CFR part 182,
appendix A, section 1(1).
(e) Placed in service. A new clean
vehicle is considered to be placed in
service on the date the taxpayer takes
possession of the vehicle.
(f) Section 30D regulations means
§ 1.30D–1, this section, and §§ 1.30D–3
and 1.30D–4.
(g) Vehicle classifications—(1) In
general. The vehicle classification of a
new clean vehicle is to be determined
consistent with the rules and definitions
provided in 40 CFR 600.315–08 and this
paragraph (g) for vans, sport utility
vehicles, and pickup trucks, and other
vehicles.
(2) Van means a vehicle classified as
a van or minivan under 40 CFR
600.315–08(a)(2)(iii) and (iv), or
otherwise so classified by the
Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40
CFR 600.315–08(a)(3)(ii).
(3) Sport utility vehicle means a
vehicle classified as a small sport utility
vehicle or standard sport utility vehicle
under 40 CFR 600.315–08(a)(2)(v) and
(vi), or otherwise so classified by the
Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40
CFR 600.315–08(a)(3)(ii).
(4) Pickup truck means a vehicle
classified as a small pickup truck or
standard pickup truck under 40 CFR
600.315–08(a)(2)(i) and (ii), or otherwise
so classified by the Administrator of the
EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 600.315–
08(a)(3)(ii).
(5) Other vehicle means any vehicle
classified in one of the classes of
passenger automobiles listed in 40 CFR
600.315–08(a)(1), or otherwise so
classified by the Administrator of the
EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 600.315–
08(a)(3)(ii).
(h) Severability. The provisions of this
section are separate and severable from
one another. If any provision of this
section is stayed or determined to be
invalid, it is the agencies’ intention that
the remaining provisions shall continue
in effect.
(i) Applicability date. This section
applies to new clean vehicles placed in
service on or after January 1, 2023, for
taxable years ending after April 17,
2023.
§ 1.30D–3 Critical mineral and battery
component requirements.
(a) Critical minerals requirement—(1)
In general. The critical minerals
requirement described in section
30D(e)(1)(A) of the Internal Revenue
Code (Code), with respect to the battery
from which the electric motor of a new
clean vehicle draws electricity, is met if
the qualifying critical mineral content of
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
23383
such battery is equal to or greater than
the applicable critical minerals
percentage (as defined in paragraph
(a)(2) of this section), as certified by the
qualified manufacturer, in such form or
manner as prescribed by the Secretary of
the Treasury or her delegate (Secretary).
(2) Applicable critical minerals
percentage. For purposes of paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, section
30D(e)(1)(B) provides the applicable
critical minerals percentage, which is
based on the year in which a vehicle is
placed in service by the taxpayer and set
forth in paragraphs (a)(2)(i) through (v)
of this section.
(i) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service after April 17, 2023, and before
January 1, 2024, the applicable critical
minerals percentage is 40 percent.
(ii) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service during calendar year 2024, the
applicable critical minerals percentage
is 50 percent.
(iii) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service during calendar year 2025, the
applicable critical minerals percentage
is 60 percent.
(iv) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service during calendar year 2026, the
applicable critical minerals percentage
is 70 percent.
(v) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service after December 31, 2026, the
applicable critical minerals percentage
is 80 percent.
(3) Determining qualifying critical
mineral content—(i) In general.
Qualifying critical mineral content with
respect to a battery described in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section is
calculated as the percentage that results
from dividing:
(A) The total value of qualifying
critical minerals, by
(B) The total value of critical
minerals.
(ii) Separate determinations required
for each procurement chain. The
portion of an applicable critical mineral
that is a qualifying critical mineral must
be determined separately for each
procurement chain.
(iii) Time for determining value. A
qualified manufacturer must select a
date for determining the values
described in paragraphs (a)(3)(i)(A) and
(B) of this section. Such date must be
after the final processing or recycling
step for the applicable critical minerals
relevant to the certification described in
section 30D(e)(1)(A).
(iv) Application of qualifying critical
mineral content to vehicles. A qualified
manufacturer may determine qualifying
critical mineral content based on the
value of the applicable critical minerals
actually contained in the battery of a
specific vehicle. Alternatively, for
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
23384
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
purposes of calculating the qualifying
critical mineral content for batteries in
a group of vehicles, a qualified
manufacturer may average the
qualifying critical mineral content
calculation over a period of time (for
example, a year, quarter, or month) with
respect to vehicles from the same model
line, plant, class, or some combination
of thereof, with final assembly (as
defined in section 30D(d)(5) of the Code
and § 1.30D–2(b)) within North
America.
(b) Battery components requirement—
(1) In general. The battery components
requirement described in section
30D(e)(2)(A) of the Code, with respect to
the battery from which the electric
motor of a new clean vehicle draws
electricity, is met if the qualifying
battery component content of such
battery is equal to or greater than the
applicable battery components
percentage (as defined in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section), as certified by the
qualified manufacturer, in such form or
manner as prescribed by the Secretary.
(2) Applicable battery components
percentage. For purposes of paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, section
30D(e)(2)(B) provides the applicable
battery components percentage, which
is based on the year in which a vehicle
is placed in service by the taxpayer as
set forth in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through
(vi) of this section.
(i) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service after April 17, 2023, and before
January 1, 2024, the applicable battery
components percentage is 50 percent.
(ii) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service during calendar year 2024 or
2025, the applicable battery components
percentage is 60 percent.
(iii) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service during calendar year 2026, the
applicable battery components
percentage is 70 percent.
(iv) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service during calendar year 2027, the
applicable battery components
percentage is 80 percent.
(v) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service during calendar year 2028, the
applicable battery components
percentage is 90 percent.
(vi) In the case of a vehicle placed in
service after December 31, 2028, the
applicable battery components
percentage is 100 percent.
(3) Determining qualifying battery
component content—(i) In general.
Qualifying battery component content
with respect to a battery described in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section is
calculated as the percentage that results
from dividing—
(A) The total incremental value of
North American battery components, by
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
(B) The total incremental value of
battery components.
(ii) Time for determining value. A
qualified manufacturer must select a
date for determining the incremental
values described in paragraphs
(b)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of this section. Such
date must be after the last
manufacturing or assembly step for the
battery components relevant to the
certification described in section
30D(e)(2)(A) of the Code.
(iii) Application of qualifying battery
component content to vehicles. A
qualified manufacturer may determine
qualifying battery component content
based on the incremental values of the
battery components actually contained
in the battery of a specific vehicle.
Alternatively, for purposes of
calculating the qualifying battery
component content for batteries in a
group of vehicles, a qualified
manufacturer may average the
qualifying battery component content
calculation over a period of time (for
example, a year, quarter, or month) with
respect to vehicles from the same model
line, plant, class, or some combination
of thereof, with final assembly (as
defined in section 30D(d)(5) of the Code
and § 1.30D–2(b)) within North
America.
(c) Definitions. The following
definitions apply for purposes of this
section:
(1) Applicable critical mineral means
an applicable critical mineral as defined
in section 45X(c)(6) of the Code.
(2) Assembly, with respect to battery
components, means the process of
combining battery components into
battery cells and battery modules.
(3) Battery, for purposes of a new
clean vehicle, means a collection of one
or more battery modules, each of which
has two or more electrically configured
battery cells in series or parallel, to
create voltage or current. The term
battery does not include items such as
thermal management systems or other
parts of a battery cell or module that do
not directly contribute to the
electrochemical storage of energy within
the battery, such as battery cell cases,
cans, or pouches.
(4) Battery cell means a combination
of battery components (other than
battery cells) capable of
electrochemically storing energy from
which the electric motor of a new clean
vehicle draws electricity.
(5) Battery component means a
component that forms part of a battery
and which is manufactured or
assembled from one or more
components or constituent materials
that are combined through industrial,
chemical, and physical assembly steps.
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Battery components may include, but
are not limited to, a cathode electrode,
anode electrode, solid metal electrode,
separator, liquid electrolyte, solid state
electrolyte, battery cell, and battery
module. Constituent materials are not
considered a type of battery component,
although constituent materials may be
manufactured or assembled into battery
components. Some battery components
may be made entirely of inputs that do
not contain constituent materials.
(6) Constituent materials means
materials that contain applicable critical
minerals and are employed directly in
the manufacturing of battery
components. Constituent materials may
include, but are not limited to, powders
of cathode active materials, powders of
anode active materials, foils, metals for
solid electrodes, binders, electrolyte
salts, and electrolyte additives, as
required for a battery cell.
(7) Country with which the United
States has a free trade agreement in
effect—(i) In general. The term ‘‘country
with which the United States has a free
trade agreement in effect’’ means any of
those countries identified in paragraph
(c)(7)(ii) of this section or that the
Secretary may identify in the future.
The criteria the Secretary will consider
in determining whether to identify a
country under this paragraph (c)(7)
include whether an agreement between
the United States and that country, as to
the critical minerals contained in
electric vehicle batteries or more
generally, and in the context of the
overall commercial and economic
relationship between that country and
the United States:
(A) Reduces or eliminates trade
barriers on a preferential basis;
(B) Commits the parties to refrain
from imposing new trade barriers;
(C) Establishes high-standard
disciplines in key areas affecting trade
(such as core labor and environmental
protections); and/or
(D) Reduces or eliminates restrictions
on exports or commits the parties to
refrain from imposing such restrictions.
(ii) Free trade agreements in effect.
The countries with which the United
States currently has a free trade
agreement in effect are: Australia,
Bahrain, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa
Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Honduras, Israel, Japan,
Jordan, South Korea, Mexico, Morocco,
Nicaragua, Oman, Panama, Peru, and
Singapore.
(iii) Updates. The list of countries in
paragraph (c)(7)(ii) may be revised and
updated through appropriate guidance
published in the Federal Register or in
the Internal Revenue Bulletin (see
§ 601.601(d) of this chapter).
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
(8) Extraction means the activities
performed to extract or harvest minerals
or natural resources from the ground or
a body of water, including, but not
limited to, by operating equipment to
extract or harvest minerals or natural
resources from mines and wells, or to
extract minerals or natural resources
from the waste or residue of prior
extraction. Extraction concludes when
activities are performed to convert raw
mined or harvested products or raw
well effluent to substances that can be
readily transported or stored for direct
use in critical mineral processing.
Extraction includes the physical
processes involved in refining.
Extraction does not include the
chemical and thermal processes
involved in refining.
(9) Incremental value, with respect to
a battery component, means the value
determined by subtracting from the
value of that battery component the
value of the manufactured or assembled
battery components, if any, that are
contained in that battery component.
(10) Manufacturing, with respect to a
battery component, means the industrial
and chemical steps taken to produce a
battery component.
(11) North America means the
territory of the United States, Canada,
and Mexico as defined in 19 CFR part
182, appendix A, section 1(1).
(12) North American battery
component means a battery component
substantially all of the manufacturing or
assembly of which occurs in North
America, without regard to the location
of the manufacturing or assembly
activities of any components that make
up the particular battery component.
(13) Processing means the nonphysical processes involved in the
refining of non-recycled substances or
materials, including the treating, baking,
and coating processes used to convert
such substances and materials into
constituent materials. Processing
includes the chemical or thermal
processes involved in refining.
Processing does not include the
physical processes involved in refining.
(14) Procurement chain means a
common sequence of extraction,
processing, or recycling activities that
occur in a common set of locations with
respect to an applicable critical mineral,
concluding in the production of
constituent materials. Sources of a
single applicable critical mineral may
have multiple procurement chains if, for
example, one source of the applicable
critical mineral undergoes the same
extraction, processing, or recycling
process in different locations.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
(15) Qualified manufacturer means a
manufacturer described in section
30D(d)(3) of the Code.
(16) Qualifying battery component
content means the percentage of the
value of the battery components
contained in the battery from which the
electric motor of a new clean vehicle
draws electricity that were
manufactured or assembled in North
America.
(17) Qualifying critical mineral means
an applicable critical mineral that is
extracted or processed in the United
States, or in any country with which the
United States has a free trade agreement
in effect, or recycled in North America.
(i) An applicable critical mineral is
extracted or processed in the United
States, or in any country with which the
United States has a free trade agreement
in effect, if:
(A) Fifty (50) percent or more of the
value added to the applicable critical
mineral by extraction is derived from
extraction that occurred in the United
States or in any country with which the
United States has a free trade agreement
in effect; or
(B) Fifty (50) percent or more of the
value added to the applicable critical
mineral by processing is derived from
processing that occurred in the United
States or in any country with which the
United States has a free trade agreement
in effect.
(ii) An applicable critical mineral is
recycled in North America if 50 percent
or more of the value added to the
applicable critical mineral by recycling
is derived from recycling that occurred
in North America.
(18) Qualifying critical mineral
content means the percentage of the
value of the applicable critical minerals
contained in the battery from which the
electric motor of a new clean vehicle
draws electricity that were extracted or
processed in the United States, or in any
country with which the United States
has a free trade agreement in effect, or
recycled in North America.
(19) Recycling means the series of
activities during which recyclable
materials containing critical minerals
are transformed into specification-grade
commodities and consumed in lieu of
virgin materials to create new
constituent materials; such activities
result in new constituent materials
contained in the battery from which the
electric motor of a new clean vehicle
draws electricity.
(20) Total incremental value of North
American battery components means
the sum of the incremental values of
each North American battery
component contained in a battery
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
23385
described in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section.
(21) Total incremental value of battery
components means the sum of the
incremental values of each battery
component contained in a battery
described in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section.
(22) Total value of critical minerals
means the sum of the values of all
applicable critical minerals contained in
a battery described in paragraph (a)(1) of
this section.
(23) Total value of qualifying critical
minerals means the sum of the values of
all the qualifying critical minerals
contained in a battery described in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
(24) Value, with respect to property,
means the arm’s-length price that was
paid or would be paid for the property
by an unrelated purchaser determined
in accordance with the principles of
section 482 of the Code and regulations
thereunder.
(25) Value added, with respect to
recycling, extraction, or processing of an
applicable critical mineral, means the
increase in the value of the applicable
critical mineral attributable to the
relevant activity.
(d) Excluded entities. [IRS will
address excluded entities in the final
rule.]
(e) Severability. The provisions of this
section are separate and severable from
one another. If any provision of this
section is stayed or determined to be
invalid, it is the agencies’ intention that
the remaining provisions shall continue
in effect.
(f) Applicability date. This section
applies to new clean vehicles placed in
service after April 17, 2023, for taxable
years ending after April 17, 2023.
§ 1.30D–4
Special rules.
(a) No double benefit—(1) In general.
Under section 30D(f)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code), the amount of
any deduction or other credit allowable
under chapter 1 of the Code for a
vehicle for which a credit is allowable
under section 30D(a) must be reduced
by the amount of the section 30D credit
allowed for such vehicle (determined
without regard to section 30D(c)).
(2) Application to credit for
previously-owned clean vehicles under
section 25E. A section 30D credit that
has been allowed with respect to a
vehicle in a taxable year before the year
in which a credit under section 25E of
the Code is allowable for that vehicle
does not reduce the amount allowable
under section 25E.
(3) Application to credit for qualified
clean vehicles under section 45W.
Pursuant to section 45W(d)(3) of the
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
23386
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 73 / Monday, April 17, 2023 / Proposed Rules
Code, no credit is allowed under section
45W with respect to any vehicle for
which a credit was allowed under
section 30D.
(b) Limitation based on modified
adjusted gross income—(1) In general.
No credit is allowed under section
30D(a) for any taxable year if—
(i) The lesser of—
(A) The modified adjusted gross
income of the taxpayer for such taxable
year, or
(B) The modified adjusted gross
income of the taxpayer for the preceding
taxable year, exceeds
(ii) The threshold amount.
(2) Threshold amount. For purposes
of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the
threshold amount applies to individual
taxpayers based on the return filing
status for the taxable year, as set forth
in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) of
this section.
(i) In the case of a joint return or a
surviving spouse (as defined in section
2(a) of the Code), the threshold amount
is $300,000,
(ii) In the case of a head of household
(as defined in section 2(b) of the Code),
the threshold amount is $225,000.
(iii) In the case of a taxpayer not
described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) or (ii) of
this section, the threshold amount is
$150,000.
(3) Modified adjusted gross income.
For purposes of section 30D(f)(10) and
this paragraph (b), the term modified
adjusted gross income means adjusted
gross income (as defined in section 62
of the Code) increased by any amount
excluded from gross income under
section 911, 931, or 933 of the Code.
(4) Special rule for change in filing
status. If the taxpayer’s filing status for
the taxable year differs from the
taxpayer’s filing status in the preceding
taxable year, the taxpayer satisfies the
limitation described in paragraph (b)(1)
of this section if the taxpayer’s modified
AGI does not exceed the threshold
amount in either year based on the
applicable filing status for that taxable
year.
(5) Application to taxpayers other
than individuals—(i) In general. Except
as provided in paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of
this section, the modified adjusted gross
income limitation of this paragraph (b)
does not apply in the case of a new
clean vehicle placed in service by a
corporation or other taxpayer that is not
an individual for whom adjusted gross
income is computed under section 62.
(ii) Application to passthrough
entities. In the case of a new clean
vehicle placed in service by a
partnership or S corporation, where the
section 30D credit is claimed by
individuals who are direct or indirect
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:47 Apr 14, 2023
Jkt 259001
partners of that partnership or
shareholders of that S corporation, the
modified adjusted gross income
limitation of this paragraph (b) will
apply to those partners or shareholders.
(c) Multiple owners and passthrough
entity ownership of a single vehicle—(1)
In general. Except as provided in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the
amount of the section 30D credit
attributable to a new clean vehicle may
be claimed on only one tax return. In
the event a new clean vehicle is placed
in service by multiple owners, no
allocation or proration of the section
30D credit is available.
(2) Passthrough entities. In the case of
a new clean vehicle placed in service by
a partnership or S corporation, while
the partnership or S corporation is the
vehicle owner, the section 30D credit is
allocated among the partners of the
partnership under § 1.704–1(b)(4)(ii) or
among the shareholders of the S
corporation under sections 1366(a) and
1377(a) of the Code and claimed on the
tax returns of the ultimate partners’ or
of the S corporation shareholder(s).
(3) Seller reporting—(i) In general.
The name and taxpayer identification
number of the vehicle owner claiming
the section 30D credit must be listed on
the seller’s report pursuant to section
30D(d)(1)(H). The credit will be allowed
only on the tax return of the owner
listed in the seller’s report.
(ii) Passthrough entities. In the case of
a new clean vehicle placed in service by
a partnership or S corporation, the name
and tax identification number of the
partnership or S corporation that placed
the new clean vehicle in service must be
listed on the seller’s report pursuant to
section 30D(d)(1)(H).
(4) Example. A married couple jointly
purchases and places in service a new
clean vehicle that qualifies for the
section 30D credit and puts both of their
names on the title. When the couple
prepares to file their Federal income tax
return, they choose to file using the
married filing separately filing status.
The section 30D credit may only be
claimed by one of the spouses on that
spouse’s tax return, and the other
spouse may not claim any amount of the
section 30D credit with respect to that
new clean vehicle. The spouse that
claims the section 30D credit must be
the same spouse listed on the seller
report received pursuant to section
30D(d)(1)(H).
(d) Severability. The provisions of this
section are separate and severable from
one another. If any provision of this
section is stayed or determined to be
invalid, it is the agencies’ intention that
the remaining provisions shall continue
in effect.
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
(e) Applicability date. This section
applies to new clean vehicles placed in
service after [DATE OF PUBLICATION
OF FINAL RULE].
Douglas W. O’Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2023–06822 Filed 3–31–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
POSTAL SERVICETM
39 CFR Part 20
International Mailing Services:
Proposed Price Changes
Postal ServiceTM.
Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Postal Service proposes
to revise Mailing Standards of the
United States Postal Service,
International Mail Manual (IMM®), to
reflect changes coincident with the
recently announced mailing services
price adjustments.
DATES: We must receive your comments
on or before May 17, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Mail or deliver comments to
the manager, Product Classification,
U.S. Postal Service®, 475 L’Enfant Plaza
SW, RM 4446, Washington, DC 20260–
5015. You may inspect and photocopy
all written comments at USPS®
Headquarters Library, 475 L’Enfant
Plaza SW, 11th Floor N, Washington DC
by appointment only between the hours
of 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through
Friday by calling 1–202–268–2906 in
advance. Email comments, containing
the name and address of the commenter,
to: PCFederalRegister@usps.gov, with a
subject line of ‘‘July 9, 2023,
International Mailing Services Proposed
Price Changes.’’ Faxed comments are
not accepted. All submitted comments
and attachments are part of the public
record and subject to disclosure. Do not
enclose any material in your comments
that you consider to be confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dale
Kennedy at 202–268–6592 or Kathy
Frigo at 202–268–4178.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
International Price and Service
Adjustments
On April 10, 2023, the Postal Service
filed a notice of mailing services price
adjustments with the Postal Regulatory
Commission (PRC), effective on July 9,
2023. The Postal Service proposes to
revise Notice 123, Price List, available
on Postal Explorer® at https://
E:\FR\FM\17APP1.SGM
17APP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 73 (Monday, April 17, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 23370-23386]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-06822]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG-120080-22]
RIN 1545-BQ52
Section 30D New Clean Vehicle Credit
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains proposed regulations regarding the
Federal income tax credit under the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 for
the purchase of qualifying new clean vehicles, including new plug-in
electric vehicles powered by an electric battery meeting certain
requirements and new qualified fuel cell vehicles. These proposed
regulations would affect eligible taxpayers who purchase new vehicles
that qualify for the credit.
DATES:
Comments and Requests for a Public Hearing: Written or electronic
comments and requests for a public hearing must be received by June 16,
2023. Requests for a public hearing must be submitted as prescribed in
the ``Comments and Requests for a Public Hearing'' section.
Applicability Date of New Critical Mineral and Battery Component
Requirements: See section III.D of the ``Background'' section for a
discussion of the applicability date of the new critical mineral and
battery component requirements.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly encouraged to submit public comments
electronically. Submit electronic submissions via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and
REG-120080-22) by following the online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted to the Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments
cannot be edited or withdrawn. The Department of the Treasury (Treasury
Department) and the IRS will publish for public availability any
comments submitted, whether electronically or on paper, to the IRS's
public docket. Send paper submissions to: CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-120080-22),
Room 5203, Internal Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben Franklin
Station, Washington, DC 20044.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the proposed regulations,
the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs & Special
Industries) at (202) 317-6853 (not a toll-free number); concerning
submissions of comments and requests for a public hearing, Vivian Hayes
at (202) 317-5306 (not a toll-free number) or by email to
[email protected] (preferred).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
I. Overview
Section 30D(a) of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) provides a
credit (section 30D credit) against the tax imposed by chapter 1 of the
Code (chapter 1) with respect to each new clean vehicle that a taxpayer
purchases and places in service. The credit is determined and allowable
with respect to the taxable year in which the taxpayer places the new
clean vehicle in service. This document contains proposed amendments to
the Income Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under section 30D of the
Code (proposed regulations). To date, no regulations have been proposed
pursuant to section 30D.
Section 30D was originally enacted by section 205(a) of the Energy
Improvement and Extension Act of 2008, Division B of Public Law 110-
343, 122 Stat. 3765, 3835 (October 3, 2008), to provide a credit for
the purchase and placing in service of new qualified plug-in electric
drive motor vehicles. Section 30D has been amended several times since
its enactment, most recently by section 13401 of Public Law 117-169,
136 Stat. 1818 (August 16, 2022), commonly known as the Inflation
Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA).
The amount of the section 30D credit is treated as a personal
credit or a general business credit depending on the character of the
vehicle. In general, the section 30D credit is treated as a personal
credit allowable under subpart A of the Code. Section 30D(c)(2).
However, the amount of the section 30D credit that is attributable to
property that is of a character subject to an allowance for
depreciation is treated as a current year business credit under section
38(b) instead of being allowed under section 30D(a). Section 30D(c)(1).
Section 38(b)(30) lists as a current year business credit the portion
of the section 30D credit to which section 30D(c)(1) applies. The IRA
did not amend section 30D(c)(1) or (2).
II. IRA Amendments to Section 30D
The IRA made a number of amendments to section 30D. In general, the
purpose of these amendments is to promote the purchase and use of new
clean vehicles by lower and middle-income Americans, to promote
resilient supply chains and domestic manufacturing, to strengthen
supply chains with trusted trading partners, to protect against
improper credit claims, and to achieve significant carbon emissions
reductions. These amendments are specifically described in the
following subsections.
A. Credit Amount and Critical Mineral and Battery Component
Requirements
The IRA amends the rules for determining the amount of the section
30D credit. Prior to the amendments to section 30D made by section
13401(a) and (e) of the IRA becoming applicable, the amount of the
section 30D credit is calculated based on the vehicle's battery
capacity. The base amount is $2,500, plus $417 for a battery with a
capacity of at least 5 kilowatt hours, and an additional $417 for each
kilowatt hour of capacity in excess of 5 kilowatt hours, up to a
maximum credit of $7,500 per vehicle. Section 13401(a) of the IRA
amends section 30D(b) of the Code to provide a maximum credit of $7,500
per vehicle, consisting of $3,750 in the case of a vehicle that meets
certain requirements relating to critical minerals and $3,750 in the
case of a vehicle that meets certain requirements relating to battery
components. The amendments made by section 13401(a) of the IRA apply to
vehicles placed in service after the date on which the Secretary of the
Treasury or her delegate (Secretary) issues proposed guidance described
in new section 30D(e)(3)(B) of the Code relating to the new critical
minerals requirements described in new section 30D(e)(1)(A) (Critical
Minerals Requirement) and the new battery components requirements
described in
[[Page 23371]]
new section 30D(e)(2)(A) (Battery Components Requirement). See section
13401(k)(3) of the IRA.
New section 30D(e)(1)(A) provides that the Critical Minerals
Requirement with respect to the battery from which the electric motor
of a vehicle draws electricity is satisfied if the percentage of the
value of the applicable critical minerals (as defined in section
45X(c)(6)) contained in such battery that were (i) extracted or
processed in the United States, or in any country with which the United
States has a free trade agreement in effect, or (ii) recycled in North
America, is equal to or greater than the applicable percentage (as
certified by the qualified manufacturer, in such form or manner as
prescribed by the Secretary). The applicable percentage for the
Critical Minerals Requirement is set forth in section 30D(e)(1)(B)(i)
through (v) of the Code and varies based on when the vehicle is placed
in service. In the case of a vehicle placed in service after the date
of issuance of the proposed guidance described in new section
30D(e)(3)(B) of the Code and before January 1, 2024, the applicable
percentage is 40 percent. In the case of a vehicle placed in service
during calendar year 2024, 2025, and 2026, the applicable percentage is
50 percent, 60 percent, and 70 percent, respectively. In the case of a
vehicle placed in service after December 31, 2026, the applicable
percentage is 80 percent.
New section 30D(e)(2)(A) provides that the Battery Components
Requirement with respect to the battery from which the electric motor
of a vehicle draws electricity is satisfied if the percentage of the
value of the components contained in such battery that were
manufactured or assembled in North America is equal to or greater than
the applicable percentage (as certified by the qualified manufacturer,
in such form or manner as prescribed by the Secretary). The applicable
percentage for the Battery Components Requirement is set forth in
section 30D(e)(2)(B)(i) through (vi) of the Code and varies based on
when the vehicle is placed in service. In the case of a vehicle placed
in service after the date of issuance of the proposed guidance
described in new section 30D(e)(3)(B) of the Code and before January 1,
2024, the applicable percentage is 50 percent. In the case of a vehicle
placed in service during calendar year 2024 or 2025, the applicable
percentage is 60 percent. In the case of a vehicle placed in service
during calendar year 2026, 2027, and 2028, the applicable percentage is
70 percent, 80 percent, and 90 percent, respectively. In the case of a
vehicle placed in service after December 31, 2028, the applicable
percentage is 100 percent.
B. New Clean Vehicle Definition
The IRA amends the definition of the vehicles that may qualify for
the section 30D credit. Section 13401(c) of the IRA amends section
30D(d) of the Code by making the credit applicable to ``new clean
vehicles,'' instead of ``new qualified plug-in electric drive motor
vehicles,'' applicable to vehicles placed in service after December 31,
2022. As amended by section 13401(c) and (g)(2) of the IRA, section
30D(d)(1) of the Code defines a ``new clean vehicle'' as a motor
vehicle that satisfies the eight requirements set forth in section
30D(d)(1)(A) through (H) of the Code: the original use of the motor
vehicle must commence with the taxpayer; the motor vehicle must be
acquired for use or lease by the taxpayer and not for resale; the motor
vehicle must be made by a qualified manufacturer; the motor vehicle
must be treated as a motor vehicle for purposes of title II of the
Clean Air Act; the motor vehicle must have a gross vehicle weight
rating of less than 14,000 pounds; the motor vehicle must be propelled
to a significant extent by an electric motor which draws electricity
from a battery that has a capacity of not less than 7 kilowatt hours,
and is capable of being recharged from an external source of
electricity; the final assembly of the motor vehicle must occur within
North America; and the person who sells any vehicle to the taxpayer
must furnish a report to the taxpayer and to the Secretary, at such
time and in such manner as the Secretary provides, containing
specifically enumerated items.
With respect to the requirement that the motor vehicle must be made
by a qualified manufacturer, the IRA creates new requirements for
manufacturers of vehicles eligible for the section 30D credit
applicable to vehicles placed in service after December 31, 2022. As
amended by section 13401(c) the IRA, section 30D(d)(3) of the Code
defines a ``qualified manufacturer'' as any manufacturer (within the
meaning of the regulations prescribed by the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency for purposes of the administration of
title II of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7521 et seq.)) that enters
into a written agreement with the Secretary under which such
manufacturer agrees to make periodic written reports to the Secretary
(at such times and in such manner as the Secretary may provide)
providing vehicle identification numbers and such other information
related to each vehicle manufactured by such manufacturer as the
Secretary may require.
The IRA provides that certain fuel cell vehicles may qualify for
the section 30D credit. Section 13401(c) of the IRA adds new section
30D(d)(6) to the Code, which includes in the definition of the term
``new clean vehicle'' applicable to vehicles placed in service after
December 31, 2022, any ``new qualified fuel cell motor vehicle'' (as
defined in section 30B(b)(3)) that meets the requirements under section
30D(d)(1)(G) and (H) (North American final assembly and seller
reporting requirements).
The IRA disqualifies certain vehicles from the section 30D credit
if the battery of the vehicle contains critical minerals or battery
components from a foreign entity of concern. As amended by section
13401(e) of the IRA, section 30D(d)(7) of the Code excludes, after
certain specified dates, vehicles placed in service with batteries
containing certain critical minerals or battery components from a
foreign entity of concern from the definition of the term ``new clean
vehicle.'' In particular, amended section 30D(d)(7) provides that the
term ``new clean vehicle'' does not include (A) any vehicle placed in
service after December 31, 2024, with respect to which any of the
applicable critical minerals contained in the battery of such vehicle
(as described in section 30D(e)(1)(A)) were extracted, processed, or
recycled by a foreign entity of concern (as defined in section
40207(a)(5) of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (42 U.S.C.
18741(a)(5))), or (B) any vehicle placed in service after December 31,
2023, with respect to which any of the components contained in the
battery of such vehicle (as described in section 30D(e)(2)(A)) were
manufactured or assembled by a foreign entity of concern (as so
defined). These rules will be addressed in future guidance.
C. Final Assembly Requirement
As described in section II.B of the Background section of this
preamble, the IRA requires new clean vehicles to undergo final assembly
in North America to be eligible for the section 30D credit. This
requirement is applicable to vehicles sold after August 16, 2022. See
section 13401(k)(2) of the IRA. New section 30D(d)(5) defines ``final
assembly'' as the process by which a manufacturer produces a new clean
vehicle at, or through the use of, a plant, factory, or other place
from which the vehicle is delivered to a dealer or importer with all
component parts necessary for the mechanical operation of the vehicle
included with
[[Page 23372]]
the vehicle, whether or not the component parts are permanently
installed in or on the vehicle.
D. Elimination of Phaseout
The IRA eliminates the phaseout of the section 30D credit for
vehicles made by manufacturers that have sold at least 200,000 vehicles
eligible for the credit for use in the United States after December 31,
2009. Pursuant to section 13401(d) of the IRA this limitation does not
apply to vehicles sold after December 31, 2022. See section 13401(k)(5)
of the IRA.
E. Special Rules
The IRA adds four new special rules under section 30D(f) applicable
to vehicles placed in service after December 31, 2022. First, section
30D(f)(8) permits only one section 30D credit to be claimed for each
vehicle identification number (VIN). Second, section 30D(f)(9) requires
taxpayers to include on the taxpayer's return for the taxable year the
VIN of the vehicle for which the section 30D credit is claimed. Third,
section 30D(f)(10) denies the section 30D credit to certain high-income
taxpayers. More specifically, section 30D(f)(10)(A) provides that no
credit is allowed for any taxable year if (i) the lesser of (I) the
modified adjusted gross income of the taxpayer for such taxable year,
or (II) the modified adjusted gross income of the taxpayer for the
preceding taxable year, exceeds (ii) the threshold amount (Modified AGI
Limitation). New section 30D(f)(10)(B) provides that the threshold
amount is (i) in the case of a joint return or a surviving spouse (as
defined in section 2(a) of the Code), $300,000, (ii) in the case of a
head of household (as defined in section 2(b) of the Code), $225,000,
and (iii) in the case of any other taxpayer, $150,000. New section
30D(f)(10)(C) defines ``modified adjusted gross income'' as adjusted
gross income (AGI) increased by any amount excluded from gross income
under sections 911, 931, or 933.
Fourth, section 30D(f)(11) excludes from the section 30D credit
vehicles that exceed certain manufacturer's suggested retail price
thresholds. New section 30D(f)(11)(A) provides that no credit is
allowed for a vehicle with a manufacturer's suggested retail price in
excess of the applicable limitation. New section 30D(f)(11)(B) provides
that the applicable limitation for each vehicle classification is as
follows: in the case of a van, $80,000; in the case of a sport utility
vehicle, $80,000; in the case of a pickup truck, $80,000; and in the
case of any other vehicle, $55,000. New section 30D(f)(11)(C)
authorizes the Secretary to prescribe such regulations or other
guidance as the Secretary determines necessary to determine vehicle
classifications using criteria similar to that employed by the
Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of the Energy to
determine size and class of vehicles.
Section 13401(i)(4) of the IRA amended section 6213(g)(2) to
provide the IRS with math error authority for the omission of a correct
VIN included on the return as required under section 30D(f)(9).
Amended section 30D(g) provides rules for transfer of the credit
from the taxpayer to certain registered dealers applicable to vehicles
placed in service after December 31, 2023. Those rules will be
addressed in future guidance.
Amended section 30D(h) provides that no credit is allowed with
respect to any vehicle placed in service after December 31, 2032.
F. IRA Applicability Dates
Section 13401(k) of the IRA specifies various applicability dates
for its amendments to section 30D. As noted previously, except as
provided in section 13401(k)(2) through (5) of the IRA, the amendments
made by section 13401 of the IRA apply to vehicles placed in service
after December 31, 2022. Section 13401(k)(2) of the IRA provides that
the amendments made by section 13401(b) of the IRA relating to final
assembly apply to vehicles sold after the date of enactment of the IRA
(August 16, 2022). Section 13401(k)(3) of the IRA provides that the
amendments made by section 13401(a) and (e) of the IRA relating to the
per vehicle credit amount dollar limitation and Critical Minerals and
Battery Components Requirements apply to vehicles placed in service
after the date on which the proposed guidance described in new section
30D(e)(3)(B) is issued by the Secretary. Section 13401(k)(4) of the IRA
provides that the amendments made by section 13401(g) of the IRA
relating to transfers of the section 30D credit apply to vehicles
placed in service after December 31, 2023. Section 13401(k)(5) of the
IRA provides that the amendment made by section 13401(d) of the IRA
eliminating the manufacturer limitation applies to vehicles sold after
December 31, 2022.
Section 13401(l) of the IRA provides a transition rule for a
taxpayer who purchased or entered into a written binding contract to
purchase a new qualified plug-in electric drive motor vehicle (as
defined in section 30D(d)(1) of the Code, as in effect on the day
before the date of enactment of the IRA (August 15, 2022)) after
December 31, 2021, and before the date of enactment of the IRA (August
16, 2022), and placed such vehicle in service on or after the date of
enactment of the IRA. The transition rule provides that such a taxpayer
may elect (at such time, and in such form and manner as the Secretary
may prescribe) to treat such vehicle as having been placed in service
on the day before the date of enactment of the IRA.
III. Prior Guidance, Request for Comments, and Other Documents Relating
to the New Clean Vehicle Credit
A. Notice 2022-46
On October 5, 2022, the Treasury Department and the IRS published
Notice 2022-46, 2022-43 I.R.B. 302. The notice requested general
comments on issues arising under section 30D, as well as specific
comments concerning: (1) definitions; (2) critical minerals; (3)
battery components; (4) applicable values; (5) foreign entities of
concern; (6) recordkeeping and reporting; (7) tax-exempt entities; (8)
registered dealers and eligible entities; (9) the final assembly
requirement; (10) vehicle classifications; (11) elections to transfer
and advance payments; and (12) recapture. The Treasury Department and
the IRS received 884 comments from industry participants, environmental
groups, individual consumers, and other stakeholders. The Treasury
Department and the IRS appreciate the commenters' interest and
engagement on these issues. These comments have been carefully
considered in the preparation of the proposed regulations.
B. Revenue Procedure 2022-42
On December 12, 2022, the Treasury Department and the IRS published
Revenue Procedure 2022-42, 2022-52 I.R.B. 565, providing guidance for
qualified manufacturers to enter into written agreements with the IRS,
as required in sections 30D, 25E, and 45W of the Code, and to report
certain information regarding vehicles produced by such manufacturers
that may be eligible for these credits. Information required to be
reported includes certifications regarding the Critical Minerals and
Battery Components Requirements, as required in sections 30D(e)(1)(A)
and (e)(2)(A), once those requirements are applicable. In addition,
Revenue Procedure 2022-42 provides the procedures for sellers of new
clean vehicles or previously-owned clean vehicles to report certain
information to the IRS and the purchasers of such clean vehicles.
[[Page 23373]]
C. Notices 2023-1 and 2023-16 and 30D White Paper
On December 29, 2022, the Treasury Department and the IRS published
Notice 2023-1, 2023-3 I.R.B. 373, which describes definitions for
certain terms in section 30D that the Treasury Department and the IRS
intended to include in proposed regulations. The Treasury Department
also released a white paper on the anticipated direction, as of
December 29, 2022, of the proposed guidance on the Critical Minerals
and Battery Components Requirements and the process for determining
whether vehicles qualify under these requirements (30D White Paper).
See ``Anticipated Direction of Forthcoming Proposed Guidance on
Critical Mineral and Battery Component Value Calculations for the New
Clean Vehicle Credit,'' Dec. 29, 2022, https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/30DWhite-Paper.pdf (last accessed March 28, 2023).
On February 3, 2023, the Treasury Department and the IRS published
Notice 2023-16, 2023-8 I.R.B. 479, which modifies Notice 2023-1 by
revising the vehicle classification standard that the Treasury
Department and the IRS intend to provide in proposed regulations.
D. Proposed Guidance Described in Section 30D(e)(3)(B)
The publication of these proposed regulations in the Federal
Register is the issuance of the proposed guidance described in section
30D(e)(3)(B) (as added by section 13401(e) of the IRA). Pursuant to
section 13401(a), (e), and (k)(3) of the IRA, the critical minerals and
battery components requirements of section 13401(a) and (e) of the IRA
amend section 30D with respect to vehicles placed in service after the
date on which these proposed regulations are published in the Federal
Register. Accordingly, the Critical Minerals and Battery Components
Requirements apply to vehicles placed in service after April 17, 2023,
the date of publication in the Federal Register.
Explanation of Provisions
I. General Rules
Section 30D(a) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-1(a) provide that there is
allowed as a credit against the tax imposed by chapter 1 for the
taxable year an amount equal to the sum of the credit amounts
determined under section 30D(b) with respect to each new clean vehicle
placed in service by the taxpayer during the taxable year.
Section 30D(c) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-1(b) provide that the
section 30D credit may be allowed as a general business credit or a
personal credit depending on whether the property is of a character
subject to an allowance for depreciation (depreciable vehicle).
Section 30D(c)(1) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-1(b)(1) provide that so
much of the credit that would be allowed to a taxpayer under section
30D(a) for any taxable year with respect to all new clean vehicles
placed in service by the taxpayer during the taxable year (determined
without regard to section 30D(c) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-1(b)(1)) that
is attributable to one or more depreciable vehicles will be treated as
a current year general business credit under section 38 of the Code
that is listed in section 38(b)(30) for such taxable year (and not
allowed under section 30D(a)). Depreciable vehicles may also be
eligible for the credit for qualified commercial clean vehicles under
section 45W. However, under section 45W(d)(3), no credit is allowed
under section 45W for a vehicle for which a section 30D credit was
allowed to any taxpayer for any taxable year. In addition, proposed
Sec. 1.30D-1(b)(2) would require the apportionment of any section 30D
credit with respect to a depreciable vehicle the business use of which
is less than 50 percent of a taxpayer's total use of the vehicle for
the taxable year in which the vehicle is placed in service. The portion
of the section 30D credit corresponding to the percentage of the
taxpayer's business use of the depreciable vehicle would be treated as
a general business credit under section 30D(c)(1) and proposed Sec.
1.30D-1(b)(1), and the portion of the section 30D credit corresponding
to the percentage of the taxpayer's personal use of such vehicle would
be treated as a section 30D credit allowed under section 30D(a)
pursuant to section 30D(c)(2) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-1(b)(3).
Section 30D(c)(2) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-1(b)(3) provide that the
section 30D credit allowed for any taxable year (determined after
application of section 30D(c)(1) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-1(b)(1)) is
treated as a nonrefundable personal credit allowable under subpart A of
part IV of subchapter A of chapter 1 (subpart A) for such taxable year.
Section 26 of the Code limits the aggregate amount of credits allowed
to a taxpayer by subpart A based on the taxpayer's tax liability. Under
section 26(a), the aggregate amount of credits allowed to a taxpayer by
subpart A cannot exceed the sum of (i) the taxpayer's regular tax
liability (as defined in section 26(b)) for the taxable year reduced by
the foreign tax credit allowable under section 27 of the Code, and (ii)
the alternative minimum tax imposed by section 55(a) for the taxable
year.
II. Definitions
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-2 clarifies the definitions of certain terms
related to the statutory requirements of the section 30D credit. The
definitions contained in proposed Sec. 1.30D-2 were substantially
described in Notice 2023-1, as modified by Notice 2023-16.
A. Final Assembly
Under section 30D(d)(1)(G) and section 13401(k)(2) of the IRA, any
vehicle sold after August 16, 2022, must undergo its final assembly in
North America to be eligible for the section 30D credit. Section
30D(d)(5) defines ``final assembly'' as the process by which a
manufacturer produces a new clean vehicle at, or through the use of, a
plant, factory, or other place from which the vehicle is delivered to a
dealer or importer with all component parts necessary for the
mechanical operation of the vehicle included with the vehicle, whether
or not the component parts are permanently installed in or on the
vehicle.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-2(b) would provide that, for purposes of
section 30D(d)(5) of the Code, ``final assembly'' means the process by
which a manufacturer produces a new clean vehicle at, or through the
use of, a plant, factory, or other place from which the vehicle is
delivered to a dealer or importer with all component parts necessary
for the mechanical operation of the vehicle included with the vehicle,
whether or not the component parts are permanently installed in or on
the vehicle. To establish where final assembly of a new clean vehicle
occurred, the taxpayer could rely on the following information: (1) the
vehicle's plant of manufacture as reported in the vehicle
identification number (VIN) pursuant to 49 CFR 565; or (2) the final
assembly point reported on the label affixed to the vehicle as
described in 49 CFR 583.5(a)(3).
The vehicle's plant of manufacture as reported in the VIN means the
plant where the manufacturer affixes the VIN. See 49 CFR 565.12. The
plant of manufacture is reported in the VIN pursuant to 49 CFR
565.15(d)(2). The Department of Energy, Alternative Fuels Data Center
(AFDC), and the Department of Transportation, National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHSTA), each provide a VIN decoder to the
public, which can be used to identify a vehicle's plant of manufacture.
AFDC, VIN Decoder, https://afdc.energy.gov/laws/electric-vehicles-for-tax-credit (last accessed
[[Page 23374]]
March 28, 2023); NHTSA, VIN Decoder, https://www.nhtsa.gov/vin-decoder
(last accessed March 28, 2023).
Labeling requirements in 49 CFR 583.5 require the final assembly
point to be reported on the label affixed to a passenger motor vehicle.
Final assembly point means the plant, factory, or other place, which is
a building or series of buildings in close proximity, where a new
passenger motor vehicle is produced or assembled from passenger motor
vehicle equipment and from which such vehicle is delivered to a dealer
or importer in such a condition that all component parts necessary to
the mechanical operation of such automobile are included with such
vehicle whether or not such component parts are permanently installed
in or on such vehicle. For multi-stage vehicles, the final assembly
point is the location where the first stage vehicle is assembled. 49
CFR 583.4(b)(5).
B. North America
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-2(d) would provide that for purposes of
section 30D(d)(1)(G), ``North America'' means the territory of the
United States, Canada, and Mexico as defined in 19 CFR part 182,
Appendix A, Sec. 1(1). The territory described in 19 CFR part 182,
Appendix A, Sec. 1(1), which provides rules of origin regulations for
the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, is defined as (a) for
Canada, the following zones or waters as determined by its domestic law
and consistent with international law: (i) The land territory, air
space, internal waters, and territorial sea of Canada, (ii) the
exclusive economic zone of Canada, and (iii) the continental shelf of
Canada; (b) for Mexico, (i) the land territory, including the states of
the Federation and Mexico City, (ii) the air space, and (iii) the
internal waters, territorial sea, and any areas beyond the territorial
seas of Mexico within which Mexico may exercise sovereign rights and
jurisdiction, as determined by its domestic law, consistent with the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, done at Montego Bay on
December 10, 1982; and (c) for the United States, (i) the customs
territory of the United States, which includes the 50 states, the
District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, (ii) the foreign trade zones
located in the United States and Puerto Rico, and (iii) the territorial
sea and air space of the United States and any area beyond the
territorial sea within which, in accordance with customary
international law as reflected in the United Nations Convention on the
Law of the Sea, the United States may exercise sovereign rights or
jurisdiction.
C. Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price (MSRP)
Section 30D(f)(11)(A) provides that no section 30D credit is
allowed for a vehicle with an MSRP in excess of the applicable
limitation. Section 30D(f)(11)(B) provides that the ``applicable
limitation'' for each vehicle classification is as follows: in the case
of a van, $80,000; in the case of a sport utility vehicle, $80,000; in
the case of a pickup truck, $80,000; and in the case of any other
vehicle, $55,000.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-2(c) would provide that for purposes of
section 30D(f)(11)(A), ``manufacturer's suggested retail price'' means
the sum of: (A) the retail price of the automobile suggested by the
manufacturer as described in 15 U.S.C. 1232(f)(1); and (B) the retail
delivered price suggested by the manufacturer for each accessory or
item of optional equipment, physically attached to such automobile at
the time of its delivery to the dealer, which is not included within
the price of such automobile as stated pursuant to 15 U.S.C.
1232(f)(1), as described in 15 U.S.C. 1232(f)(2). This price
information is reported on the label that is affixed to the windshield
or side window of the vehicle, as described in 15 U.S.C. 1232.
D. Vehicle Classifications
For purposes of applying the MSRP limitation under section
30D(f)(11)(A), section 30D(f)(11)(C) authorizes the Secretary to
prescribe such regulations or other guidance as the Secretary
determines necessary to determine vehicle classifications using
criteria similar to that employed by the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and the Department of Energy to determine size and class
of vehicles.
The Treasury Department and the IRS originally announced an intent
to propose use of the vehicle classification standards in 40 CFR
600.002 in Notice 2023-1; however, in Notice 2023-16, the Treasury
Department and the IRS modified the expected vehicle classification
standard set forth in Notice 2023-1 to instead provide that a vehicle's
vehicle classification is expected to be determined consistent with the
fuel economy labeling regime described in 40 CFR 600.315-08. Although
the EPA vehicle classification standards in both regimes are similar,
the fuel economy labeling regime provides for EPA discretion to assign
so-called ``crossover'' vehicles to a class on a case-by-case basis,
taking into account consumer perspective and the marketing segment
targeted by the manufacturer. EPA, ``Fuel Economy Labeling of Motor
Vehicles: Revisions to Improve Calculation of Fuel Economy Estimates,''
71 FR 77872, 77913 (Dec. 27, 2006). In addition, the proposed adoption
of the fuel economy labeling regime would align the vehicle
classification standards for purposes of the section 30D credit with
the classification displayed on the vehicle label and on the consumer-
facing website FuelEconomy.gov, making it easier for consumers to know
which vehicles qualify under the applicable MSRP limitation.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-2(g) would provide that for purposes of
section 30D(f)(11)(B), a vehicle's vehicle classification is to be
determined consistent with the rules and definitions provided in 40 CFR
600.315-08 for vans, sport utility vehicles, pickup trucks, and other
vehicles. Specifically, ``van'' means a vehicle classified as a van or
minivan under 40 CFR 600.315-08(a)(2)(iii) and (iv), or otherwise so
classified by the Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 600.315-
08(a)(3)(ii); ``sport utility vehicle'' means a vehicle classified as a
small sport utility vehicle or standard sport utility vehicle under 40
CFR 600.315-08(a)(2)(v) and (vi), or otherwise so classified by the
Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 600.315-08(a)(3)(ii);
``pickup truck'' means a vehicle classified as a small pickup truck or
standard pickup truck under 40 CFR 600.315-08(a)(2)(i) and (ii), or
otherwise so classified by the Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40
CFR 600.315-08(a)(3)(ii); and ``other vehicle'' means any vehicle
classified in one of the classes of passenger automobiles listed in 40
CFR 600.315-08(a)(1), or otherwise so classified by the Administrator
of the EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 600.315-08(a)(3)(ii).
E. Placed in Service
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-2(e) would provide that for purposes of the
section 30D credit, a new clean vehicle is considered to be placed in
service on the date the taxpayer takes possession of the vehicle. This
proposed definition is consistent with the meaning of ``placed in
service'' for purposes of other provisions of the Code under which
property is considered to be ``placed in service'' when the property is
``placed in a condition or state of readiness and availability for a
specifically assigned function'' and as ``the date on which the owner
of the vehicle took actual possession of the vehicle.'' See Sec. Sec.
1.46-3(d)(1)(ii) and (4)(i), 1.179-4(e) and 145.4051-1(c)(2); see also
Sec. 1.1250-4(b)(2); Consumers Power Co. v. Commissioner, 89 T.C. 710
(1987); Noell
[[Page 23375]]
v. Commissioner, 66 T.C. 718, 728-729 (1976).
III. The Critical Minerals and Battery Components Requirements
Section 30D(e) of the Code provides requirements for critical
minerals and battery components with respect to the battery from which
the electric motor of a new clean vehicle draws electricity. The
Critical Mineral and Battery Component Requirements apply to applicable
critical minerals and battery components, respectively, contained in a
battery as defined in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(3).
A. Critical Minerals Requirement
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a) would provide the rules for determining
compliance with the Critical Minerals Requirement. In general, proposed
Sec. 1.30D-3(a) is consistent with the framework for the Critical
Minerals Requirement that was described in the 30D White Paper.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a) would provide a three-step process for
determining the percentage of the value of the applicable critical
minerals in a battery that contribute toward meeting the Critical
Minerals Requirement.
i. Step 1: Determine Procurement Chains
In the first step for determining compliance with the Critical
Minerals Requirement, the manufacturer would need to determine the
procurement chain or chains for each applicable critical mineral.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(14) would define a ``procurement chain'' as a
common sequence of extraction, processing, or recycling activities that
occur in a common set of locations, concluding in the production of
constituent materials. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(14) would further
clarify that sources of a single applicable critical mineral may have
multiple procurement chains if, for example, one source of the
applicable critical mineral undergoes the same extraction, processing,
or recycling process in different locations. Each applicable critical
mineral procurement chain would need to be evaluated separately
pursuant to proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a)(3)(ii).
ii. Step 2: Identify Qualifying Critical Minerals
In the second step for determining compliance with the Critical
Minerals Requirement, each applicable critical mineral procurement
chain in the battery would need to be evaluated to determine whether
critical minerals procured from the chain have been (1) extracted or
processed in the United States, or in any country with which the United
States has a free trade agreement in effect, or (2) recycled in North
America. Applicable critical minerals that satisfy this requirement are
considered qualifying critical minerals. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(17)
would define ``qualifying critical mineral'' as an applicable critical
mineral that is extracted or processed in the United States, or in any
country with which the United States has a free trade agreement in
effect, or recycled in North America. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(17)
would use a ``50% of value added test'' to determine whether this
definition is satisfied. Thus, an applicable critical mineral would be
treated as extracted or processed in the United States, or in any
country with which the United States has a free trade agreement in
effect, if: (1) 50 percent or more of the value added to the applicable
critical mineral by extraction is derived from extraction that occurred
in the United States or in any country with which the United States has
a free trade agreement in effect; or (2) 50 percent or more of the
value added to the applicable critical mineral by processing is derived
from processing that occurred in the United States or in any country
with which the United States has a free trade agreement in effect. An
applicable critical mineral would be treated as recycled in North
America if 50 percent or more of the value added to the applicable
critical mineral by recycling is derived from recycling that occurred
in North America.
The 30D White Paper explained the likely need for transition rules
that would provide manufacturers time to develop the necessary
capability to certify compliance with the Critical Minerals Requirement
throughout their supply chains--especially given the complexity of
battery supply chains and the detailed tracking that would be
required--while moving towards more secure and resilient critical
mineral supply chains. The proposed 50% of value added test would serve
that purpose for vehicles placed in service in 2023 and 2024. For later
years, however, the Treasury Department and the IRS anticipate moving
to a more stringent test for determining if an applicable critical
mineral was extracted or processed in the United States or in any
country with which the United States has a free trade agreement in
effect, or whether an applicable critical mineral was recycled in North
America. This more stringent test would reflect the potential for more
detailed tracking throughout manufacturers' supply chains, which may be
necessary to certify compliance with the foreign entity of concern
requirements described in section 30D(d)(7)(A) (applicable for vehicles
placed in service after December 31, 2024).
The Treasury Department and the IRS specifically request comment on
the 50% of value added test, and the best approach for adopting a more
stringent test for vehicles placed in service in 2025 and later years.
For example, under one approach, the standard of 50 percent or more of
the value added to the applicable critical mineral for extraction,
processing, or recycling in the definition of qualifying critical
mineral, could increase incrementally over time (similar to the
incremental increase in the applicable critical minerals percentages in
section 30D(e)(1)(B) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a)(2)).
Notably, the 50% of value added test would need to be applied
separately for each procurement chain of an applicable critical mineral
pursuant to proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a)(3)(ii). For example, lithium that
undergoes initial processing activities in a plant in Country A and
then is transferred to a plant in Country B to undergo final processing
activities, culminating in the lithium being incorporated into a
constituent material, would be analyzed under this step together with
other lithium moving through the same procurement chain. However, if
some of the lithium in the prior example instead undergoes final
processing activities in a plant in Country C instead of Country B,
then there would be two procurement chains for lithium: (1) Country A
to Country B and (2) Country A to Country C.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(8) would define ``extraction'' as the
activities performed to extract or harvest minerals or natural
resources from the ground or a body of water, including, but not
limited to, by operating equipment to extract minerals or natural
resources from mines and wells, or to extract or harvest minerals or
natural resources from the waste or residue of prior extraction.
Extraction would conclude when activities are performed to convert raw
mined or harvested products or raw well effluent to substances that can
be readily transported or stored for direct use in applicable critical
mineral processing. Extraction would include the beneficiation or other
physical processes that allow the extracted materials, including ores,
clays, and brines, to become transportable. Extraction would include
the physical processes involved in refining. Extraction would not
include the chemical and thermal processes involved in refining.
[[Page 23376]]
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(13) would define ``processing'' as the
non-physical processes involved in refining of non-recycled substances
or materials, including the treating, baking, and coating processes
used to convert such substances and materials into constituent
materials. Processing would begin when chemical or thermal processes,
or the combination of them, are used on extracted minerals or natural
resources or manmade minerals or resources to create a new product
that, through subsequent steps in the applicable critical minerals
supply chain, will be processed into a final constituent material.
Processing would include the chemical or thermal processes involved in
refining. Processing would not include the physical processes involved
in refining.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(6) would define ``constituent materials''
as materials that contain applicable critical minerals and are employed
directly in the manufacturing of battery components. Constituent
materials could include, but would not be limited to, powders of
cathode active materials, powders of anode active materials, foils,
metals for solid electrodes, binders, electrolyte salts, and
electrolyte additives, as required for a battery cell. The definition
of constituent materials describes the materials that distinguish the
steps of extraction, processing, and recycling of critical minerals
from the subsequent steps of manufacturing and assembly of battery
components. Constituent materials would be the final products relevant
for calculating the value of the applicable critical minerals in the
battery.
Constituent materials would mark the end of processing as the point
at which no further chemical, physical, or thermal processes are needed
to create the final product that is then used in battery component
manufacturing. Constituent materials would similarly mark the end of
recycling as the point at which no further transformations are needed
to create the final product that is then used in battery component
manufacturing. All constituent materials contain applicable critical
minerals. Once the final constituent material is created, it then is
used as an input to a battery component. Some battery components could
be made entirely of inputs that do not contain constituent materials.
Inputs used to manufacture battery components that do not contain any
applicable critical minerals (for example, solvents, conductive
additives, etc.) would not be considered to be constituent materials.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(19) would define ``recycling'' as the
series of activities during which recyclable materials containing
applicable critical minerals are transformed into specification-grade
commodities and consumed in lieu of virgin materials to create new
constituent materials; such activities result in new constituent
materials contained in the battery from which the electric motor of a
new clean vehicle draws electricity. All physical, chemical, and
thermal treatments or modifications that convert recycled feedstocks to
specification grade constituent materials would be included in
recycling. This definition would align with the current methods of
direct, hydrometallurgical, or pyrometallurgical recycling that are
utilized commercially for reuse of materials for battery applications.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(24) would define ``value,'' with respect
to property, as the arm's-length price that was paid or would be paid
for the property by an unrelated purchaser determined in accordance
with the principles of section 482 of the Code and regulations
thereunder.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(25) would define ``value added,'' with
respect to recycling, extraction, or processing of an applicable
critical mineral as the increase in the value of the applicable
critical mineral attributable to the relevant activity.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(11) would define ``North America'' as the
territory of the United States, Canada, and Mexico as defined in 19
CFR. part 182, Appendix A, Sec. 1(1).
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(7) would define the term ``country with
which the United States has a free trade agreement in effect'' and list
the countries with which the United States has a ``free trade agreement
in effect.'' The term free trade agreement is not defined in the IRA or
in the Code. The proposed definition takes into account the term's
meaning, use and context in the statute. The IRA's amendments to
section 30D expand the incentives for taxpayers to purchase new clean
vehicles and for vehicle manufacturers to increase their reliance on
supply chains in the United States and in countries with which the
United States has reliable and trusted economic relationships. The
Treasury Department and the IRS recognize that more secure and
resilient supply chains are essential for our national security, our
economic security, and our technological leadership. The Treasury
Department and the IRS propose to identify the countries with which the
United States has free trade agreements in effect for purposes of
section 30D consistent with the statute's purposes of promoting
reliance on such supply chains and of providing eligible consumers with
access to tax credits for the purchase of new clean vehicles.
Based on these considerations, the Treasury Department and the IRS
propose criteria the Secretary would consider in identifying these
countries. As set forth in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(7)(i), those
criteria would include whether an agreement between the United States
and another country, as to the critical minerals contained in electric
vehicle batteries or more generally, and in the context of the overall
commercial and economic relationship between that country and the
United States: (A) reduces or eliminates trade barriers on a
preferential basis, (B) commits the parties to refrain from imposing
new trade barriers, (C) establishes high-standard disciplines in key
areas affecting trade (such as core labor and environmental
protections), and/or (D) reduces or eliminates restrictions on exports
or commits the parties to refrain from imposing such restrictions on
exports.
Applying those factors, the proposed regulations include countries
with which the United States has comprehensive free trade agreements
(that is, agreements covering substantially all trade in goods and
services between the parties, including trade in critical minerals).
These are Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica,
Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Israel, Jordan,
Korea, Mexico, Morocco, Nicaragua, Oman, Panama, Peru, and Singapore.
In addition, the Treasury Department and the IRS also propose to
include additional countries that the Secretary identifies after
considering the factors listed in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(7)(i). One
example of such a country is Japan, with which the United States
recently concluded a Critical Minerals Agreement (CMA) \1\ containing
robust obligations to help ensure free trade in critical minerals,
including a commitment to refrain from imposing duties on exports of
critical minerals that are currently essential to the electric vehicle
battery supply chain, a commitment for the United States and Japan to
confer on investments in this sector that may affect national security,
and detailed undertakings related to the
[[Page 23377]]
enforcement of labor and environmental laws related to trade in those
critical minerals. The CMA was concluded in the context of an earlier
trade agreement the United States concluded with Japan in 2019,\2\ a
related 2019 agreement on digital trade,\3\ and the U.S.-Japan
Partnership on Trade announced in November 2021.\4\ The Treasury
Department and the IRS have consulted with the U.S. Trade
Representative in applying the proposed factors here.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Agreement Between the Government of the United States of
America and the Government of Japan on Strengthening Critical
Minerals Supply Chains, concluded March 28, 2023, https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/2023-03/US%20Japan%20Critical%20Minerals%20Agreement%202023%2003%2028.pdf.
\2\ Trade Agreement Between the United States of America and
Japan, concluded October 7, 2019, https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/files/agreements/japan/Trade_Agreement_between_the_United_States_and_Japan.pdf.
\3\ Agreement Between the United States of America and Japan
Concerning Digital Trade, concluded October 7, 2019, https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/files/agreements/japan/Agreement_between_the_United_States_and_Japan_concerning_Digital_Trade.pdf.
\4\ Office of United States Trade Representative, United States
and Japan Announce the Formation of the U.S.-Japan Partnership on
Trade, Nov. 17, 2021, https://ustr.gov/about-us/policy-offices/press-office/press-releases/2021/november/united-states-and-japan-announce-formation-us-japan-partnership-trade-0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on an evaluation of the criteria in proposed Sec. 1.30D-
3(c)(7)(i), the Treasury Department and the IRS would make any
necessary amendments to the list in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(7)(ii),
including adding any additional countries as any new qualifying
international agreements enter into force and the Secretary determines
that the factors have been met. The Treasury Department and the IRS
would similarly make any necessary amendments based on the
modification, termination, or expiration of any previously identified
free trade agreements. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(7)(iii) would provide
that the list of countries in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(7)(ii) may be
revised and updated through appropriate publication in the Federal
Register or in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. The treatment of any
given country under this overall approach is independent from the
inclusion or exclusion of any other.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ This independent treatment is consistent with proposed Sec.
1.30D-3(c)(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Treasury Department and the IRS seek comment on the proposed
criteria for identifying countries with which the United States has
free trade agreements in effect, other potential approaches for
identifying those countries, and the list of countries set forth in
proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(7)(ii).
iii. Step 3: Calculate Qualifying Critical Mineral Content
The third step for determining compliance with the Critical
Minerals Requirement would involve the calculation of the percentage of
the value of qualifying critical minerals contained in a battery. The
proposed regulations refer to this percentage as the ``qualifying
critical mineral content'' and define that term under proposed Sec.
1.30D-3(c)(18) as the percentage of the value of the applicable
critical minerals contained in the battery from which the electric
motor of a new clean vehicle draws electricity that were extracted or
processed in the United States, or in any country with which the United
States has a free trade agreement in effect, or were recycled in North
America. Under proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a)(3)(i), qualifying critical
mineral content would be calculated as the percentage that results from
dividing the total value of qualifying critical minerals by the total
value of critical minerals. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(23) would define
``total value of qualifying critical minerals'' as the sum of the
values of all the qualifying critical minerals contained in a battery
described in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a)(1). Proposed Sec. 1.30D-
3(c)(22) would define ``total value of critical minerals'' as the sum
of the values of all applicable critical minerals contained in a
battery described in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a)(1).
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a)(3)(iii) would require qualified
manufacturers to select a date for determining the values associated
with the total value of qualifying critical minerals (determined
separately for each procurement chain) and the total value of critical
minerals. Such date would need to be after the final processing or
recycling step for the applicable critical minerals relevant to the
certification described in section 30D(e)(1)(A) of the Code. This date
would need to be uniformly applied for all applicable critical minerals
contained in the battery. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a)(15) would define a
qualified manufacturer as a manufacturer described in section 30D(d)(3)
of the Code.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(a)(3)(iv) would provide that a qualified
manufacturer may determine qualifying critical mineral content based on
the value of the applicable critical minerals actually contained in the
battery of a specific vehicle. Alternatively, for purposes of
calculating the qualifying critical mineral content for batteries in a
group of vehicles, a qualified manufacturer could average the
qualifying critical mineral content calculation over a limited period
of time (for example, a year, quarter, or month) with respect to
vehicles from the same model line, plant, class, or some combination of
thereof, with final assembly (as defined in section 30D(d)(5) of the
Code and proposed Sec. 1.30D-2(b)) within North America. The Treasury
Department and the IRS seek comment on whether to include any more
specific conditions or limitations on this ability to average these
calculations
The percentage of qualifying critical minerals content that is
calculated in Step 3 would ultimately be compared with the relevant
applicable critical minerals percentage provided in proposed Sec.
1.30D-3(a)(2) to determine whether a vehicle satisfies the Critical
Minerals Requirement described in section 30D(e)(1)(A) of the Code.
B. Battery Components Requirement
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(b) would provide the rules for determining
compliance with the Battery Components Requirement. In general,
proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(b) is consistent with the framework for the
Battery Components Requirement that was described in the 30D White
Paper. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(b) would provide a four-step process for
determining the percentage of the value of the battery components in a
battery that contribute toward meeting the Battery Components
Requirement.
i. Step 1: Identify Components That Are Manufactured or Assembled in
North America
In the first step for determining compliance with the Battery
Components Requirement, qualified manufacturers would need to determine
whether each battery component in a battery was manufactured or
assembled in North America. Such components are referred to in the
proposed regulations as ``North American battery components'' and are
defined in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(12) as a battery component
substantially all of the manufacturing or assembly of which occurs in
North America, without regard to the location of the manufacturing or
assembly activities of the components that make up the particular
battery component.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(3) would define ``battery,'' for purposes
of a new clean vehicle, as a collection of one or more battery modules,
each of which has two or more electrically configured battery cells in
series or parallel, to create voltage or current. The term ``battery''
would not include items such as thermal management systems or other
parts of a battery cell or module that do not directly contribute to
the electrochemical storage of energy within the battery, such as
battery cell cases, cans, or pouches. This definition of battery is
consistent with the statute because battery modules and cells are the
sources ``from which the electric
[[Page 23378]]
motor of such vehicle draws electricity.'' Sections 30D(e)(1)(A) and
(2)(A). The battery module is the end point for the purpose of
calculating the value of battery components.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(4) would define ``battery cell'' as a
combination of battery components (other than battery cells) capable of
electrochemically storing energy from which the electric motor of a new
clean vehicle draws electricity. This definition of battery cell would
encompass the smallest combination of battery components necessary for
the function of energy storage.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(5) would define ``battery component'' as
a component that forms part of a battery and which is manufactured or
assembled from one or more components or constituent materials that are
combined through industrial, chemical, and physical assembly steps.
Battery components would include, but not be limited to, a cathode
electrode, anode electrode, solid metal electrode, separator, liquid
electrolyte, solid state electrolyte, battery cell, and battery module.
Constituent materials would not be considered a type of battery
component, although constituent materials could be manufactured or
assembled into battery components. Some battery components could be
made entirely of inputs that do not contain constituent materials.
Battery components would include any piece of the assembled battery
cell that contribute to electrochemical energy storage.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(10) would define ``manufacturing,'' with
respect to a battery component, as the industrial and chemical steps
taken to produce a battery component. Manufacturing would use
industrial and chemical steps starting with constituent materials and
other battery components that do not contain constituent materials to
create a new battery component.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(2) would define ``assembly,'' with
respect to battery components, as the process of combining battery
components into battery cells and battery modules.
ii. Step 2: Determine the Incremental Value of Each Battery Component
and North American Battery Components
In the second step for determining compliance with the Battery
Components Requirement, qualified manufacturers would need to determine
the incremental value for each battery component. The resulting
incremental value for a battery component would be attributable to
North America if the battery component is a ``North American battery
component'' as defined in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(12).
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(9) would define ``incremental value,''
with respect to a battery component, as the value (as defined in
proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(24)) determined by subtracting from the value
of that battery component the value of the manufactured or assembled
battery components, if any, that are contained in that battery
component.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(20) would define ``total incremental
value of North American battery components'' as the sum of the
incremental values of each North American battery component contained
in a battery described in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(b)(1).
iii. Step 3: Determine the Total Incremental Value of Battery
Components
In the third step for determining compliance with the Battery
Components Requirement, qualified manufacturers would need to total the
incremental value of battery components. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(21)
would define ``total incremental value of battery components'' as the
sum of the incremental values of each battery component contained in a
battery described in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(b)(1). The total
incremental value of battery components could also be calculated by
totaling the value of each battery module in the battery.
iv. Step 4: Calculate the Qualifying Battery Component Content
In the fourth step for determining compliance with the Battery
Components Requirement, qualified manufacturers would need to determine
the qualifying battery component content. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(16)
would define ``qualifying battery component content'' as the percentage
of the value of the battery components contained in the battery from
which the electric motor of a new clean vehicle draws electricity that
were manufactured or assembled in North America. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-
3(b)(3)(i) would provide that the qualifying battery component content
is the percentage that results from dividing the total incremental
value of North American battery components (determined in step 2) by
the total incremental value of battery components (determined in step
3).
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(b)(3)(ii) would require qualified
manufacturers to select a date for determining the values associated
with the total incremental value of North American battery components
and the total incremental value of battery components. Such date would
need to be after the last manufacturing or assembly step for the
battery components relevant to the certification described in section
30D(e)(2)(A) of the Code. This date must be uniformly applied for all
battery components contained in the battery.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(b)(3)(iii) would provide that a qualified
manufacturer may determine qualifying battery component content based
on the incremental values of the battery components actually contained
in the battery of a specific vehicle. Alternatively, for purposes of
calculating the qualifying battery component content for batteries in a
group of vehicles, a qualified manufacturer could average the
qualifying battery component content calculation over a limited period
of time (for example, a year, quarter, or month) with respect to
vehicles from the same model line, plant, class, or some combination of
thereof, with final assembly (as defined in section 30D(d)(5) of the
Code and proposed Sec. 1.30D-2(a)) within North America. The Treasury
Department and the IRS seek comment on whether to include any more
specific conditions or limitations on this ability to average these
calculations.
The percentage of qualifying battery component content that would
be calculated in Step 4 would ultimately be compared with the relevant
applicable battery components percentage provided in proposed Sec.
1.30D-3(b)(2) to determine whether a vehicle satisfies the Battery
Components Requirement described in section 30D(e)(2)(A) of the Code.
The Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on the
Critical Mineral and Battery Component Requirements as they would be
implemented in proposed Sec. 1.30D-3, including the distinction
between processing of applicable critical minerals and manufacturing
and assembly of battery components, and related definitions.
C. Excluded Entities
Section 30D(d)(7) of the Code excludes from the definition of ``new
clean vehicle'' any vehicle placed in service after December 31, 2024,
with respect to which any of the applicable critical minerals contained
in the battery of such vehicle (as described in section 30D(e)(1)(A))
were extracted, processed, or recycled by a foreign entity of concern
(as defined in section 40207(a)(5) of the Infrastructure Investment and
Jobs Act (42 U.S.C. 18741(a)(5))), or any vehicle placed in service
after December 31, 2023, with
[[Page 23379]]
respect to which any of the components contained in the battery of such
vehicle (as described in section 30D(e)(2)(A)) were manufactured or
assembled by a foreign entity of concern (as so defined). The Treasury
Department and the IRS intend to issue guidance with respect to section
30D(d)(7) at a later date.
IV. Special Rules
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4 would provide special rules with respect to
the section 30D credit.
A. No Double Benefit
Section 30D(f)(2) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(a)(1) would provide
that the amount of any deduction or other credit allowable under
chapter 1 for a vehicle for which a section 30D credit is allowable
must be reduced by the amount of the section 30D credit allowed under
section 30D(a) for such vehicle determined without regard to section
30D(c), which may treat all or a portion of the aggregate credit
allowed under section 30D(a) as a current year general business credit
under section 38(b).
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(a)(2) would provide that a section 30D
credit that has been allowed with respect to a vehicle in a taxable
year before the taxable year in which a credit under section 25E is
allowable for that vehicle does not reduce the amount of the allowable
section 25E credit. Accordingly, a taxpayer who otherwise satisfies the
requirements of section 25E would be eligible to claim the section 25E
credit for a vehicle for which another taxpayer previously claimed the
section 30D credit.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(a)(3) would provide that no credit is
allowed under section 45W with respect to any vehicle for which a
credit was allowed under section 30D. This rule, which is based on
section 45W(d)(3), precludes both the section 30D credit and the
section 45W credit from being allowed for the same vehicle, whether in
the same or different taxable years.
B. Limitation Based on Modified Adjusted Gross Income
Section 30D(f)(10) and proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(b) would provide that
no section 30D(a) credit is allowed for any taxable year if (i) the
lesser of (I) the modified AGI of the taxpayer for such taxable year or
(II) the modified AGI of the taxpayer for the preceding taxable year
exceeds (ii) the threshold amount (Modified AGI Limitation). The
threshold amount is $300,000 in the case of a joint return or a
surviving spouse (as defined in section 2(a) of the Code), $225,000 in
the case of a head of household (as defined in section 2(b) of the
Code), and $150,000 for all other taxpayers. ``Modified adjusted gross
income'' is defined in section 30D(f)(10)(C) as the taxpayer's AGI
increased by any amount excluded from gross income under sections 911,
931, or 933 of the Code. Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(b)(4) provides that if
the taxpayer's filing status changes (for example, from single to head
of household) in this two-year period, the taxpayer satisfies the
Modified AGI Limitation if the taxpayer's modified AGI does not exceed
the threshold amount in either taxable year based on the applicable
filing status for that taxable year.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(b)(5)(i) would provide that, except as
provided in proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(b)(5)(ii), in the case of a new
clean vehicle that is placed in service by a corporation or other
taxpayer that is not an individual for whom AGI is computed under
section 62, the Modified AGI Limitation does not apply. Corporations
and such other taxpayers do not have AGI computed under section 62, so
the special rule in section 30D(f)(10) establishing a Modified AGI
Limitation does not apply to these taxpayers.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(b)(5)(ii) would provide that in the event
that the new clean vehicle is placed in service by a partnership or an
S corporation, and the section 30D credit is claimed by individuals who
are direct or indirect partners of that partnership or shareholders of
that S corporation, the Modified AGI Limitation will apply to those
partners or shareholders. The Treasury Department and the IRS request
comments on whether a similar rule should be provided for trusts or
other types of entities that place in service a new clean vehicle.
C. Multiple Owners and Passthrough Entity Ownership of a Single Vehicle
In certain instances, multiple taxpayers may purchase, place in
service, and be titled as owners of a single vehicle. For example, a
married couple that files separate tax returns may jointly purchase and
take possession of a new clean vehicle that qualifies for the section
30D credit and both spouses may be titled as owners of the vehicle.
However, the structure of section 30D provides for one taxpayer to
claim the section 30D credit per vehicle placed in service. See
generally section 30D(a), (b), (f)(8), (f)(9) and section 6213(g)(2)(T)
of the Code. Section 30D does not contain rules for allocation or
proration of the section 30D credit with respect to a single vehicle to
multiple taxpayers placing that vehicle in service, and such an
allocation or proration would present challenges from a tax
administration perspective.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(c)(1) would provide that, except as provided
in proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(c)(2), the amount of the section 30D credit
attributable to a new clean vehicle may be claimed on only one tax
return. In the event multiple owners place in service a new clean
vehicle, no allocation or proration of the credit would be available.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(c)(3)(i) would provide that the name and
taxpayer identification number of the owner claiming the credit under
section 30D(a) should be listed on the seller's report pursuant to
section 30D(d)(1)(H). Accordingly, multiple owners of a new clean
vehicle would inform the seller which owner will claim the section 30D
credit so that the seller can identify that taxpayer on the seller's
report. The credit would be allowed only on the tax return of the owner
listed in the seller's report.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4(c)(2) would provide that in the case of a
new clean vehicle placed in service by a partnership or S corporation,
while the partnership or S corporation is the vehicle owner, the
section 30D credit is allocated among the partners of the partnership
under Sec. 1.704-1(b)(4)(ii) or among the shareholders of the S
corporation under sections 1366(a) and 1377(a) of the Code and claimed
on the tax returns of the partners or shareholder(s). Proposed Sec.
1.30D-4(c)(3)(i) would provide that in the case of a new clean vehicle
placed in service by a partnership or S corporation, the name and tax
identification number of the partnership or S corporation that placed
the new clean vehicle in service should be listed on the seller's
report pursuant to section 30D(d)(1)(H).
V. Severability
If any provision in this proposed rulemaking is held to be invalid
or unenforceable facially, or as applied to any person or circumstance,
it shall be severable from the remainder of this rulemaking, and shall
not affect the remainder thereof, or the application of the provision
to other persons not similarly situated or to other dissimilar
circumstances.
Effect on Other Documents
This proposed rulemaking hereby makes IRS Notices 2023-1, 2023-3
I.R.B. 373 and 2023-16, 2023-8 I.R.B. 479 obsolete.
Proposed Applicability Dates
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-1 is proposed to apply to new clean vehicles
placed in service after the date of publication of
[[Page 23380]]
the Treasury Decision adopting these rules as final rules in the
Federal Register.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-2 is proposed to apply to new clean vehicles
placed in service on or after January 1, 2023, for taxable years ending
after April 17, 2023. The amendments made to section 30D by the IRA
generally apply to vehicles placed in service after December 31, 2022,
with certain exceptions. The definitions in proposed Sec. 1.30D-2 were
substantially described in Notice 2023-1, which was released on
December 29, 2022.\6\ The definitions in proposed Sec. 1.30D-2
generally relate to statutory rules applicable to vehicles placed in
service on or after January 1, 2023. These proposed regulations are
proposed to apply to vehicles placed in service on or after January 1,
2023, for taxable years ending after the date these proposed
regulations are published in the Federal Register to improve certainty
for taxpayers and to provide clear rules for tax administration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Notice 2023-16, released February 3, 2023, modified Notice
2023-1, regarding the vehicle classification standard set forth in
Notice 2023-1 in a manner that allowed additional new clean vehicles
to be eligible for the section 30D credit. Notice 2023-16 provided
that taxpayers could rely on these modified expected definitions for
new clean vehicles placed in service on or after January 1, 2023.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-3 is proposed to apply to new clean vehicles
placed in service after April 17, 2023 for taxable years ending after
April 17, 2023. Pursuant to section 13401(a), (e), and (k)(3) of the
IRA, the critical minerals and battery components requirements of
section 13401(a) and (e) of the IRA amend section 30D with respect to
vehicles placed in service after the date on which these proposed
regulations are published in the Federal Register. Accordingly, the
Critical Minerals and Battery Components Requirements in proposed Sec.
1.30D-3 are proposed to apply to vehicles placed in service after the
date of publication of these proposed regulations for taxable years
ending after the date of publication of these proposed regulations.
Proposed Sec. 1.30D-4 is proposed to apply to new clean vehicles
placed in service after the date of publication of the Treasury
Decision adopting these rules as final rules in the Federal Register.
Taxpayers may rely on these proposed regulations for vehicles
placed in service prior to the date final regulations are published in
the Federal Register, provided the taxpayer follows the proposed
regulations in their entirety, and in a consistent manner.
Statement of Availability for IRS Documents
For copies of recently issued Revenue Procedures, Revenue Rulings,
Notices, and other guidance published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin,
please visit the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review--Economic Analysis
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 direct agencies to assess costs
and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting flexibility.
These proposed regulations have been designated by the Office of
Management and Budget's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs
(OIRA) as subject to review under Executive Order 12866 pursuant to the
Memorandum of Agreement (April 11, 2018) between the Treasury
Department and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) regarding
review of tax regulations. OIRA has determined that the proposed
rulemaking is significant and subject to review under Executive Order
12866 and section 1(b) of the Memorandum of Agreement. Accordingly, the
proposed regulations have been reviewed by OMB.
II. Paperwork Reduction Act
Any collection burden associated with rules described in these
proposed regulations is previously accounted for in OMB Control Number
1545-2137. These proposed regulations do not alter previously accounted
for information collection requirements and do not create new
collection requirements. OMB Control Number 1545-2137 covers Form 8936
and Form 8936-A regarding electric vehicle credits, including the new
requirement in section 30D(f)(9) to include on the taxpayer's return
for the taxable year the VIN of the vehicle for which the section 30D
credit is claimed. Revenue Procedure 2022-42 describes the procedural
requirements for qualified manufacturers to make periodic written
reports to the Secretary to provide information related to each vehicle
manufactured by such manufacturer that is eligible for the section 30D
credit as required in section 30D(d)(3), including the critical mineral
and battery component certification requirements in sections
30D(e)(1)(A) and (e)(2)(A). In addition, Revenue Procedure 2022-42 also
provides the procedures for sellers of new clean vehicles to report
information required by section 30D(d)(1)(H) for vehicles to be
eligible for the section 30D credit. The collections of information
contained in Revenue Procedure 2022-42 are described in that document
and were submitted to the Office of Management and Budget in accordance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act under control number 1545-2137.
The requirement to determine the final assembly location in
proposed Sec. 1.30D-2(b) by relying on (1) the vehicle's plant of
manufacture as reported in the vehicle identification number (VIN)
pursuant to 49 CFR 565 or (2) the final assembly point reported on the
label affixed to the vehicle as described in 49 CFR 583.5(a)(3) is
accounted for by the Department of Transportation in OMB Control
Numbers 2127-0510 and 2127-0573.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a valid
control number assigned by the Office of Management and Budget.
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6),
the Secretary hereby certifies that these proposed regulations will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities within the meaning of section 601(6) of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act. Pursuant to section 7805(f), this notice of proposed
rulemaking has been submitted to the Chief Counsel for the Office of
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comment on their
impact on small business.
The proposed regulations affect two types of business entities: (1)
qualified manufacturers that must trace and report on their critical
minerals and battery components in order to certify that their new
clean vehicles qualify for the section 30D credit, and (2) businesses
that may earn the section 30D credit when purchasing and placing in
service a new clean vehicle.
While the tracking and reporting of critical minerals and battery
components is likely to involve significant administrative costs,
according to public filings, all qualified manufacturers had total
revenues above $1B in 2022. There are a total of 21 qualified
manufacturers that have indicated that they manufacture vehicles
currently eligible for the
[[Page 23381]]
section 30D credit.\7\ Pursuant to Revenue Procedure 2022-42 and
following the publication of these proposed regulations, qualified
manufacturers will also have to certify that their vehicles qualify
under the Critical Minerals and Battery Components Requirements. The
proposed regulations provide definitions and general rules for the
section 30D credit, including rules for qualified manufacturers to
comply with the Critical Mineral and Battery Component Requirements.
Accordingly, the Treasury Department and the IRS intend that the
proposed rules provide clarity for qualified manufacturers for
consistent application of critical minerals and battery components
calculations and for taxpayers purchasing new clean vehicles that
qualify for the section 30D credit. The Treasury Department and the IRS
have determined that qualified manufacturers do not meet the applicable
definition of small entity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The list of manufacturers is available at the following IRS
website: https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/manufacturers-and-
models-for-new-qualified-clean-vehicles-purchased-in-2023-or-
after#:~:text=If%20you%20bought%20and%20placed,Internal%20Revenue%20C
ode%20Section%2030D.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Business purchasers of clean vehicles who take the section 30D
credit must satisfy reporting requirements that are largely the same as
those faced by individuals accessing the section 30D credit to purchase
clean vehicles. Taxpayers will continue to file Form 8936, Qualified
Plug-In Electric Drive Motor Vehicle Credit, to claim the section 30D
credit. As was the case for the section 30D credit prior to amendments
made by the IRA, taxpayers can rely on qualified manufacturers to
determine if the vehicle being purchased qualifies for the section 30D
credit and the credit amount. The estimated burden for individual and
business taxpayers filing this form is approved under OMB control
number 1545-0074 and 1545-0123. To make it easier for a taxpayer to
determine the potential section 30D credit available for a specific
vehicle, the proposed regulations provide business entities with tools
and definitions to ascertain whether any vehicles purchased would be
eligible for the credit. The VIN reporting required by section
30D(f)(9) and described in the proposed regulations was included in
prior section 30D reporting.
Accordingly, the Secretary certifies that these proposed
regulations will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. The Treasury Department and the
IRS request comments that provide data, other evidence, or models that
provide insight on this issue.
IV. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits and take certain
other actions before issuing a final rule that includes any Federal
mandate that may result in expenditures in any one year by a State,
local, or Tribal government, in the aggregate, or by the private
sector, of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for
inflation. In 2023, that threshold is approximately $198 million. This
rule does not include any Federal mandate that may result in
expenditures by State, local, or Tribal governments, or by the private
sector in excess of that threshold.
V. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism) prohibits an agency (to the
extent practicable and permitted by law) from promulgating any
regulation that has federalism implications, unless the agency meets
the consultation and funding requirements of section 6 of the Executive
order, if the rule either imposes substantial, direct compliance costs
on State and local governments, and is not required by statute, or
preempts State law. This proposed rule does not have federalism
implications and does not impose substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments or preempt State law within the meaning of
the Executive order.
Comments and Requests for a Public Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any comments that are submitted timely
to the IRS as prescribed in this preamble under the ADDRESSES heading.
The Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on all aspects of
the proposed regulations, including their economic impact and any
alternative approaches that should be considered during the rulemaking
process. In addition, the Treasury Department and the IRS request
comments on the specific issues noted in the previous sections of this
preamble.
Any comments submitted, whether electronically or on paper, will be
made available at https://www.regulations.gov or upon request. A public
hearing will be scheduled if requested in writing by any person who
timely submits electronic or written comments as prescribed in this
preamble under the DATES heading. Requests for a public hearing are
also encouraged to be made electronically. If a public hearing is
scheduled, notice of the date and time for the public hearing will be
published in the Federal Register. Announcement 2020-4, 2020-17 IRB 1,
provides that until further notice, public hearings conducted by the
IRS will be held telephonically. Any telephonic hearing will be made
accessible to people with disabilities.
Drafting Information
The principal author of the proposed regulations is the Office of
Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs & Special Industries). However,
other personnel from the Treasury Department and the IRS participated
in the development of the proposed regulations.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 1 INCOME TAXES
0
Paragraph 1.The authority citation for part 1 is amended by adding
entries in numerical order to read in part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Section 1.30D-1 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 30D.
Section 1.30D-2 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 30D.
Section 1.30D-3 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 30D.
Section 1.30D-4 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 30D and 26 U.S.C.
45W(d)(3).
0
Par 2. Sections 1.30D-0, 1.30D-1, 1.30D-2, 1.30D-3, and 1.30D-4 are
added to read as follows:
Sec.
* * * * *
1.30D-0 Table of contents.
1.30D-1 Credit for new clean vehicles.
1.30D-2 Definitions for purposes of section 30D.
1.30D-3 Critical mineral and battery component requirements.
1.30D-4 Special rules.
* * * * *
Sec. 1.30D-0 Table of contents.
This section lists the captions contained in Sec. Sec. 1.30D-1
through 1.30D-4.
Sec. 1.30D-1 Credit for new clean vehicles.
(a) In general.
(b) Treatment of credit.
(1) Business credit treated as part of general business credit.
(2) Apportionment of section 30D credit.
[[Page 23382]]
(3) Personal credit limited based on tax liability.
(c) Severability.
(d) Applicability date.
Sec. 1.30D-2 Definitions for purposes of section 30D.
(a) In general.
(b) Final assembly.
(c) Manufacturer's suggested retail price.
(d) North America.
(e) Placed in service.
(f) Section 30D regulations.
(g) Vehicle classifications.
(i) Van.
(ii) Sport utility vehicle.
(iii) Pickup truck.
(iv) Other vehicle.
(h) Severability.
(i) Applicability date.
Sec. 1.30D-3 Critical mineral and battery component requirements.
(a) Critical minerals requirement.
(1) In general.
(2) Applicable critical minerals percentage.
(3) Determining qualifying critical mineral content.
(i) In general.
(ii) Separate determinations required for each procurement
chain.
(iii) Time for determining value.
(iv) Application of qualifying critical mineral content to
vehicles.
(b) Battery components requirement.
(1) In general.
(2) Applicable battery components percentage.
(3) Determining qualifying battery component content.
(i) In general.
(ii) Time for determining value.
(iii) Application of qualifying battery component content to
vehicles.
(c) Definitions.
(1) Applicable critical mineral.
(2) Assembly.
(3) Battery.
(4) Battery cell.
(5) Battery component.
(6) Constituent materials.
(7) Country with which the United States has a free trade
agreement in effect.
(8) Extraction.
(9) Incremental value.
(10) Manufacturing.
(11) North America.
(12) North American battery component.
(13) Processing
(14) Procurement chain.
(15) Qualified manufacturer.
(16) Qualifying battery component content.
(17) Qualifying critical mineral.
(18) Qualifying critical mineral content.
(19) Recycling.
(20) Total incremental value of North American battery
components.
(21) Total incremental value of battery components.
(22) Total value of critical minerals.
(23) Total value of qualifying critical minerals.
(24) Value.
(25) Value added.
(d) Excluded entities.
(e) Severability.
(f) Applicability date.
Sec. 1.30D-4 Special rules
(a) No double benefit.
(1) In general.
(2) Application to credit for previously-owned clean vehicles
under section 25E.
(3) Application to credit for qualified clean vehicles under
section 45W.
(b) Limitation based on modified adjusted gross income.
(1) In general.
(2) Threshold amount.
(3) Modified adjusted gross income.
(4) Special rule for change in filing status.
(5) Application to taxpayers other than individuals.
(i) In general.
(ii) Application to passthrough entities.
(c) Multiple owners and passthrough entity ownership of a single
vehicle.
(1) In general.
(2) Passthrough entities.
(3) Seller Reporting.
(i) In general.
(ii) Passthrough entities.
(4) Example.
(d) Severability.
(e) Applicability date.
Sec. 1.30D-1 Credit for new clean vehicles.
(a) In general. Section 30D(a) of the Internal Revenue Code (Code)
allows as a credit against the tax imposed by chapter 1 of the Code
(chapter 1) for the taxable year of a taxpayer an amount equal to the
sum of the credit amounts determined under section 30D(b) with respect
to each new clean vehicle purchased by the taxpayer that the taxpayer
places in service during the taxable year. For purposes of the section
30D regulations (as defined in Sec. 1.30D-2(f)), the term section 30D
credit means the credit allowable to a taxpayer for a taxable year
under section 30D(a) and the section 30D regulations with respect to
all vehicles placed in service by the taxpayer during the taxable year.
Section 1.30D-2 provides definitions that apply for purposes of section
30D and the section 30D regulations. Section 1.30D-3 provides rules
regarding the critical mineral and battery component requirements of
section 30D(e). Section 1.30D-4 provides guidance regarding the
limitations and special rules in section 30D(f).
(b) Application with other credits--(1) Business credit treated as
part of general business credit--(i) In general. Section 30D(c)(1)
requires that so much of the section 30D credit that would be allowed
under section 30D(a) for any taxable year (determined without regard to
section 30D(c) and this paragraph (b)) that is attributable to a
depreciable vehicle must be treated as a general business credit under
section 38 of the Code that is listed in section 38(b)(30) for such
taxable year (and not allowed under section 30D(a)). In the case of a
depreciable vehicle the use of which is 50 percent or more business use
in the taxable year such vehicle is placed in service, the section 30D
credit that would be allowed under section 30D(a) for that taxable year
(determined without regard to section 30D(c) and this paragraph (b))
that is attributable to such depreciable vehicle must be treated as a
general business credit under section 38 of the Code that is listed in
section 38(b)(30) for such taxable year (and not allowed under section
30D(a)). See paragraph (b)(2) of this section for rules applicable in
the case of a depreciable vehicle the use of which is less than 50
percent business use in the taxable year such vehicle is placed in
service. See paragraph (b)(3) of this section for rules applicable to a
section 30D credit allowed under section 30D(a) pursuant to section
30D(c)(2) or paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) or (b)(3) of this section.
(ii) Depreciable vehicle. For purposes of this paragraph (b), a
depreciable vehicle is a vehicle of a character subject to an allowance
for depreciation.
(2) Apportionment of section 30D credit. In the case of a
depreciable vehicle the business use of which is less than 50 percent
of a taxpayer's total use of the vehicle for the taxable year in which
the vehicle is placed in service, the taxpayer's section 30D credit for
that taxable year with respect to that vehicle must be apportioned as
follows:
(i) The portion of the section 30D credit corresponding to the
percentage of the taxpayer's business use of the vehicle is treated as
a general business credit under section 30D(c)(1) and paragraph (b)(1)
of this section (and not allowed under section 30D(a) or paragraph
(b)(3) of this section).
(ii) The portion of the section 30D credit corresponding to the
percentage of the taxpayer's personal use of the vehicle is treated as
a section 30D credit allowed under section 30D(a) pursuant to section
30D(c)(2) and paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
(3) Personal credit limited based on tax liability. Section 26 of
the Code limits the aggregate amount of credits allowed to a taxpayer
by subpart A of part IV of subchapter A of chapter 1 (subpart A) based
on the taxpayer's tax liability. Under section 26(a), the aggregate
amount of credits allowed to a taxpayer by subpart A cannot exceed the
sum of the taxpayer's regular tax liability (as defined in section
26(b)) for the taxable year reduced by the foreign tax credit allowable
under section 27 of the Code, and the alternative minimum tax imposed
by section 55(a) for the taxable year. Section 30D(c)(2) provides that
the section 30D credit allowed under section 30D(a) for any taxable
year (determined after application of
[[Page 23383]]
section 30D(c)(1) and paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section) is
treated as a credit allowable under subpart A for such taxable year,
and the section 30D credit allowed under section 30D(a) is therefore
subject to the limitation imposed by section 26.
(c) Severability. The provisions of this section are separate and
severable from one another. If any provision of this section is stayed
or determined to be invalid, it is the agencies' intention that the
remaining provisions shall continue in effect.
(d) Applicability date. This section applies to new clean vehicles
placed in service after [DATE OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE].
Sec. 1.30D-2 Definitions for purposes of section 30D.
(a) In general. The definitions in paragraphs (b) through (g) of
this section apply for purposes of section 30D of the Internal Revenue
Code (Code) and the section 30D regulations.
(b) Final assembly means the process by which a manufacturer
produces a new clean vehicle at, or through the use of, a plant,
factory, or other place from which the vehicle is delivered to a dealer
or importer with all component parts necessary for the mechanical
operation of the vehicle included with the vehicle, whether or not the
component parts are permanently installed in or on the vehicle. To
establish where final assembly of a new clean vehicle occurred for
purposes of the requirement in section 30D(d)(1)(G) that final assembly
of a new clean vehicle occur within North America, the taxpayer may
rely on the following information:
(1) The vehicle's plant of manufacture as reported in the vehicle
identification number pursuant to 49 CFR 565; or
(2) The final assembly point reported on the label affixed to the
vehicle as described in 49 CFR 583.5(a)(3).
(c) Manufacturer's suggested retail price means the sum of the
prices described in paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section as
reported on the label that is affixed to the windshield or side window
of the vehicle, as described in 15 U.S.C. 1232.
(1) The retail price of the automobile suggested by the
manufacturer as described in 15 U.S.C. 1232(f)(1).
(2) The retail delivered price suggested by the manufacturer for
each accessory or item of optional equipment, physically attached to
such automobile at the time of its delivery to the dealer, which is not
included within the price of such automobile as stated pursuant to 15
U.S.C. 1232(f)(1), as described in 15 U.S.C. 1232(f)(2).
(d) North America means the territory of the United States, Canada,
and Mexico as defined in 19 CFR part 182, appendix A, section 1(1).
(e) Placed in service. A new clean vehicle is considered to be
placed in service on the date the taxpayer takes possession of the
vehicle.
(f) Section 30D regulations means Sec. 1.30D-1, this section, and
Sec. Sec. 1.30D-3 and 1.30D-4.
(g) Vehicle classifications--(1) In general. The vehicle
classification of a new clean vehicle is to be determined consistent
with the rules and definitions provided in 40 CFR 600.315-08 and this
paragraph (g) for vans, sport utility vehicles, and pickup trucks, and
other vehicles.
(2) Van means a vehicle classified as a van or minivan under 40 CFR
600.315-08(a)(2)(iii) and (iv), or otherwise so classified by the
Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 600.315-08(a)(3)(ii).
(3) Sport utility vehicle means a vehicle classified as a small
sport utility vehicle or standard sport utility vehicle under 40 CFR
600.315-08(a)(2)(v) and (vi), or otherwise so classified by the
Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40 CFR 600.315-08(a)(3)(ii).
(4) Pickup truck means a vehicle classified as a small pickup truck
or standard pickup truck under 40 CFR 600.315-08(a)(2)(i) and (ii), or
otherwise so classified by the Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40
CFR 600.315-08(a)(3)(ii).
(5) Other vehicle means any vehicle classified in one of the
classes of passenger automobiles listed in 40 CFR 600.315-08(a)(1), or
otherwise so classified by the Administrator of the EPA pursuant to 40
CFR 600.315-08(a)(3)(ii).
(h) Severability. The provisions of this section are separate and
severable from one another. If any provision of this section is stayed
or determined to be invalid, it is the agencies' intention that the
remaining provisions shall continue in effect.
(i) Applicability date. This section applies to new clean vehicles
placed in service on or after January 1, 2023, for taxable years ending
after April 17, 2023.
Sec. 1.30D-3 Critical mineral and battery component requirements.
(a) Critical minerals requirement--(1) In general. The critical
minerals requirement described in section 30D(e)(1)(A) of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code), with respect to the battery from which the
electric motor of a new clean vehicle draws electricity, is met if the
qualifying critical mineral content of such battery is equal to or
greater than the applicable critical minerals percentage (as defined in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section), as certified by the qualified
manufacturer, in such form or manner as prescribed by the Secretary of
the Treasury or her delegate (Secretary).
(2) Applicable critical minerals percentage. For purposes of
paragraph (a)(1) of this section, section 30D(e)(1)(B) provides the
applicable critical minerals percentage, which is based on the year in
which a vehicle is placed in service by the taxpayer and set forth in
paragraphs (a)(2)(i) through (v) of this section.
(i) In the case of a vehicle placed in service after April 17,
2023, and before January 1, 2024, the applicable critical minerals
percentage is 40 percent.
(ii) In the case of a vehicle placed in service during calendar
year 2024, the applicable critical minerals percentage is 50 percent.
(iii) In the case of a vehicle placed in service during calendar
year 2025, the applicable critical minerals percentage is 60 percent.
(iv) In the case of a vehicle placed in service during calendar
year 2026, the applicable critical minerals percentage is 70 percent.
(v) In the case of a vehicle placed in service after December 31,
2026, the applicable critical minerals percentage is 80 percent.
(3) Determining qualifying critical mineral content--(i) In
general. Qualifying critical mineral content with respect to a battery
described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section is calculated as the
percentage that results from dividing:
(A) The total value of qualifying critical minerals, by
(B) The total value of critical minerals.
(ii) Separate determinations required for each procurement chain.
The portion of an applicable critical mineral that is a qualifying
critical mineral must be determined separately for each procurement
chain.
(iii) Time for determining value. A qualified manufacturer must
select a date for determining the values described in paragraphs
(a)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of this section. Such date must be after the final
processing or recycling step for the applicable critical minerals
relevant to the certification described in section 30D(e)(1)(A).
(iv) Application of qualifying critical mineral content to
vehicles. A qualified manufacturer may determine qualifying critical
mineral content based on the value of the applicable critical minerals
actually contained in the battery of a specific vehicle. Alternatively,
for
[[Page 23384]]
purposes of calculating the qualifying critical mineral content for
batteries in a group of vehicles, a qualified manufacturer may average
the qualifying critical mineral content calculation over a period of
time (for example, a year, quarter, or month) with respect to vehicles
from the same model line, plant, class, or some combination of thereof,
with final assembly (as defined in section 30D(d)(5) of the Code and
Sec. 1.30D-2(b)) within North America.
(b) Battery components requirement--(1) In general. The battery
components requirement described in section 30D(e)(2)(A) of the Code,
with respect to the battery from which the electric motor of a new
clean vehicle draws electricity, is met if the qualifying battery
component content of such battery is equal to or greater than the
applicable battery components percentage (as defined in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section), as certified by the qualified manufacturer, in
such form or manner as prescribed by the Secretary.
(2) Applicable battery components percentage. For purposes of
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, section 30D(e)(2)(B) provides the
applicable battery components percentage, which is based on the year in
which a vehicle is placed in service by the taxpayer as set forth in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (vi) of this section.
(i) In the case of a vehicle placed in service after April 17,
2023, and before January 1, 2024, the applicable battery components
percentage is 50 percent.
(ii) In the case of a vehicle placed in service during calendar
year 2024 or 2025, the applicable battery components percentage is 60
percent.
(iii) In the case of a vehicle placed in service during calendar
year 2026, the applicable battery components percentage is 70 percent.
(iv) In the case of a vehicle placed in service during calendar
year 2027, the applicable battery components percentage is 80 percent.
(v) In the case of a vehicle placed in service during calendar year
2028, the applicable battery components percentage is 90 percent.
(vi) In the case of a vehicle placed in service after December 31,
2028, the applicable battery components percentage is 100 percent.
(3) Determining qualifying battery component content--(i) In
general. Qualifying battery component content with respect to a battery
described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section is calculated as the
percentage that results from dividing--
(A) The total incremental value of North American battery
components, by
(B) The total incremental value of battery components.
(ii) Time for determining value. A qualified manufacturer must
select a date for determining the incremental values described in
paragraphs (b)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of this section. Such date must be
after the last manufacturing or assembly step for the battery
components relevant to the certification described in section
30D(e)(2)(A) of the Code.
(iii) Application of qualifying battery component content to
vehicles. A qualified manufacturer may determine qualifying battery
component content based on the incremental values of the battery
components actually contained in the battery of a specific vehicle.
Alternatively, for purposes of calculating the qualifying battery
component content for batteries in a group of vehicles, a qualified
manufacturer may average the qualifying battery component content
calculation over a period of time (for example, a year, quarter, or
month) with respect to vehicles from the same model line, plant, class,
or some combination of thereof, with final assembly (as defined in
section 30D(d)(5) of the Code and Sec. 1.30D-2(b)) within North
America.
(c) Definitions. The following definitions apply for purposes of
this section:
(1) Applicable critical mineral means an applicable critical
mineral as defined in section 45X(c)(6) of the Code.
(2) Assembly, with respect to battery components, means the process
of combining battery components into battery cells and battery modules.
(3) Battery, for purposes of a new clean vehicle, means a
collection of one or more battery modules, each of which has two or
more electrically configured battery cells in series or parallel, to
create voltage or current. The term battery does not include items such
as thermal management systems or other parts of a battery cell or
module that do not directly contribute to the electrochemical storage
of energy within the battery, such as battery cell cases, cans, or
pouches.
(4) Battery cell means a combination of battery components (other
than battery cells) capable of electrochemically storing energy from
which the electric motor of a new clean vehicle draws electricity.
(5) Battery component means a component that forms part of a
battery and which is manufactured or assembled from one or more
components or constituent materials that are combined through
industrial, chemical, and physical assembly steps. Battery components
may include, but are not limited to, a cathode electrode, anode
electrode, solid metal electrode, separator, liquid electrolyte, solid
state electrolyte, battery cell, and battery module. Constituent
materials are not considered a type of battery component, although
constituent materials may be manufactured or assembled into battery
components. Some battery components may be made entirely of inputs that
do not contain constituent materials.
(6) Constituent materials means materials that contain applicable
critical minerals and are employed directly in the manufacturing of
battery components. Constituent materials may include, but are not
limited to, powders of cathode active materials, powders of anode
active materials, foils, metals for solid electrodes, binders,
electrolyte salts, and electrolyte additives, as required for a battery
cell.
(7) Country with which the United States has a free trade agreement
in effect--(i) In general. The term ``country with which the United
States has a free trade agreement in effect'' means any of those
countries identified in paragraph (c)(7)(ii) of this section or that
the Secretary may identify in the future. The criteria the Secretary
will consider in determining whether to identify a country under this
paragraph (c)(7) include whether an agreement between the United States
and that country, as to the critical minerals contained in electric
vehicle batteries or more generally, and in the context of the overall
commercial and economic relationship between that country and the
United States:
(A) Reduces or eliminates trade barriers on a preferential basis;
(B) Commits the parties to refrain from imposing new trade
barriers;
(C) Establishes high-standard disciplines in key areas affecting
trade (such as core labor and environmental protections); and/or
(D) Reduces or eliminates restrictions on exports or commits the
parties to refrain from imposing such restrictions.
(ii) Free trade agreements in effect. The countries with which the
United States currently has a free trade agreement in effect are:
Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican
Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Israel, Japan, Jordan,
South Korea, Mexico, Morocco, Nicaragua, Oman, Panama, Peru, and
Singapore.
(iii) Updates. The list of countries in paragraph (c)(7)(ii) may be
revised and updated through appropriate guidance published in the
Federal Register or in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (see Sec.
601.601(d) of this chapter).
[[Page 23385]]
(8) Extraction means the activities performed to extract or harvest
minerals or natural resources from the ground or a body of water,
including, but not limited to, by operating equipment to extract or
harvest minerals or natural resources from mines and wells, or to
extract minerals or natural resources from the waste or residue of
prior extraction. Extraction concludes when activities are performed to
convert raw mined or harvested products or raw well effluent to
substances that can be readily transported or stored for direct use in
critical mineral processing. Extraction includes the physical processes
involved in refining. Extraction does not include the chemical and
thermal processes involved in refining.
(9) Incremental value, with respect to a battery component, means
the value determined by subtracting from the value of that battery
component the value of the manufactured or assembled battery
components, if any, that are contained in that battery component.
(10) Manufacturing, with respect to a battery component, means the
industrial and chemical steps taken to produce a battery component.
(11) North America means the territory of the United States,
Canada, and Mexico as defined in 19 CFR part 182, appendix A, section
1(1).
(12) North American battery component means a battery component
substantially all of the manufacturing or assembly of which occurs in
North America, without regard to the location of the manufacturing or
assembly activities of any components that make up the particular
battery component.
(13) Processing means the non-physical processes involved in the
refining of non-recycled substances or materials, including the
treating, baking, and coating processes used to convert such substances
and materials into constituent materials. Processing includes the
chemical or thermal processes involved in refining. Processing does not
include the physical processes involved in refining.
(14) Procurement chain means a common sequence of extraction,
processing, or recycling activities that occur in a common set of
locations with respect to an applicable critical mineral, concluding in
the production of constituent materials. Sources of a single applicable
critical mineral may have multiple procurement chains if, for example,
one source of the applicable critical mineral undergoes the same
extraction, processing, or recycling process in different locations.
(15) Qualified manufacturer means a manufacturer described in
section 30D(d)(3) of the Code.
(16) Qualifying battery component content means the percentage of
the value of the battery components contained in the battery from which
the electric motor of a new clean vehicle draws electricity that were
manufactured or assembled in North America.
(17) Qualifying critical mineral means an applicable critical
mineral that is extracted or processed in the United States, or in any
country with which the United States has a free trade agreement in
effect, or recycled in North America.
(i) An applicable critical mineral is extracted or processed in the
United States, or in any country with which the United States has a
free trade agreement in effect, if:
(A) Fifty (50) percent or more of the value added to the applicable
critical mineral by extraction is derived from extraction that occurred
in the United States or in any country with which the United States has
a free trade agreement in effect; or
(B) Fifty (50) percent or more of the value added to the applicable
critical mineral by processing is derived from processing that occurred
in the United States or in any country with which the United States has
a free trade agreement in effect.
(ii) An applicable critical mineral is recycled in North America if
50 percent or more of the value added to the applicable critical
mineral by recycling is derived from recycling that occurred in North
America.
(18) Qualifying critical mineral content means the percentage of
the value of the applicable critical minerals contained in the battery
from which the electric motor of a new clean vehicle draws electricity
that were extracted or processed in the United States, or in any
country with which the United States has a free trade agreement in
effect, or recycled in North America.
(19) Recycling means the series of activities during which
recyclable materials containing critical minerals are transformed into
specification-grade commodities and consumed in lieu of virgin
materials to create new constituent materials; such activities result
in new constituent materials contained in the battery from which the
electric motor of a new clean vehicle draws electricity.
(20) Total incremental value of North American battery components
means the sum of the incremental values of each North American battery
component contained in a battery described in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section.
(21) Total incremental value of battery components means the sum of
the incremental values of each battery component contained in a battery
described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
(22) Total value of critical minerals means the sum of the values
of all applicable critical minerals contained in a battery described in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
(23) Total value of qualifying critical minerals means the sum of
the values of all the qualifying critical minerals contained in a
battery described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
(24) Value, with respect to property, means the arm's-length price
that was paid or would be paid for the property by an unrelated
purchaser determined in accordance with the principles of section 482
of the Code and regulations thereunder.
(25) Value added, with respect to recycling, extraction, or
processing of an applicable critical mineral, means the increase in the
value of the applicable critical mineral attributable to the relevant
activity.
(d) Excluded entities. [IRS will address excluded entities in the
final rule.]
(e) Severability. The provisions of this section are separate and
severable from one another. If any provision of this section is stayed
or determined to be invalid, it is the agencies' intention that the
remaining provisions shall continue in effect.
(f) Applicability date. This section applies to new clean vehicles
placed in service after April 17, 2023, for taxable years ending after
April 17, 2023.
Sec. 1.30D-4 Special rules.
(a) No double benefit--(1) In general. Under section 30D(f)(2) of
the Internal Revenue Code (Code), the amount of any deduction or other
credit allowable under chapter 1 of the Code for a vehicle for which a
credit is allowable under section 30D(a) must be reduced by the amount
of the section 30D credit allowed for such vehicle (determined without
regard to section 30D(c)).
(2) Application to credit for previously-owned clean vehicles under
section 25E. A section 30D credit that has been allowed with respect to
a vehicle in a taxable year before the year in which a credit under
section 25E of the Code is allowable for that vehicle does not reduce
the amount allowable under section 25E.
(3) Application to credit for qualified clean vehicles under
section 45W. Pursuant to section 45W(d)(3) of the
[[Page 23386]]
Code, no credit is allowed under section 45W with respect to any
vehicle for which a credit was allowed under section 30D.
(b) Limitation based on modified adjusted gross income--(1) In
general. No credit is allowed under section 30D(a) for any taxable year
if--
(i) The lesser of--
(A) The modified adjusted gross income of the taxpayer for such
taxable year, or
(B) The modified adjusted gross income of the taxpayer for the
preceding taxable year, exceeds
(ii) The threshold amount.
(2) Threshold amount. For purposes of paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, the threshold amount applies to individual taxpayers based on
the return filing status for the taxable year, as set forth in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section.
(i) In the case of a joint return or a surviving spouse (as defined
in section 2(a) of the Code), the threshold amount is $300,000,
(ii) In the case of a head of household (as defined in section 2(b)
of the Code), the threshold amount is $225,000.
(iii) In the case of a taxpayer not described in paragraph
(b)(2)(i) or (ii) of this section, the threshold amount is $150,000.
(3) Modified adjusted gross income. For purposes of section
30D(f)(10) and this paragraph (b), the term modified adjusted gross
income means adjusted gross income (as defined in section 62 of the
Code) increased by any amount excluded from gross income under section
911, 931, or 933 of the Code.
(4) Special rule for change in filing status. If the taxpayer's
filing status for the taxable year differs from the taxpayer's filing
status in the preceding taxable year, the taxpayer satisfies the
limitation described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section if the
taxpayer's modified AGI does not exceed the threshold amount in either
year based on the applicable filing status for that taxable year.
(5) Application to taxpayers other than individuals--(i) In
general. Except as provided in paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of this section,
the modified adjusted gross income limitation of this paragraph (b)
does not apply in the case of a new clean vehicle placed in service by
a corporation or other taxpayer that is not an individual for whom
adjusted gross income is computed under section 62.
(ii) Application to passthrough entities. In the case of a new
clean vehicle placed in service by a partnership or S corporation,
where the section 30D credit is claimed by individuals who are direct
or indirect partners of that partnership or shareholders of that S
corporation, the modified adjusted gross income limitation of this
paragraph (b) will apply to those partners or shareholders.
(c) Multiple owners and passthrough entity ownership of a single
vehicle--(1) In general. Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, the amount of the section 30D credit attributable to a new
clean vehicle may be claimed on only one tax return. In the event a new
clean vehicle is placed in service by multiple owners, no allocation or
proration of the section 30D credit is available.
(2) Passthrough entities. In the case of a new clean vehicle placed
in service by a partnership or S corporation, while the partnership or
S corporation is the vehicle owner, the section 30D credit is allocated
among the partners of the partnership under Sec. 1.704-1(b)(4)(ii) or
among the shareholders of the S corporation under sections 1366(a) and
1377(a) of the Code and claimed on the tax returns of the ultimate
partners' or of the S corporation shareholder(s).
(3) Seller reporting--(i) In general. The name and taxpayer
identification number of the vehicle owner claiming the section 30D
credit must be listed on the seller's report pursuant to section
30D(d)(1)(H). The credit will be allowed only on the tax return of the
owner listed in the seller's report.
(ii) Passthrough entities. In the case of a new clean vehicle
placed in service by a partnership or S corporation, the name and tax
identification number of the partnership or S corporation that placed
the new clean vehicle in service must be listed on the seller's report
pursuant to section 30D(d)(1)(H).
(4) Example. A married couple jointly purchases and places in
service a new clean vehicle that qualifies for the section 30D credit
and puts both of their names on the title. When the couple prepares to
file their Federal income tax return, they choose to file using the
married filing separately filing status. The section 30D credit may
only be claimed by one of the spouses on that spouse's tax return, and
the other spouse may not claim any amount of the section 30D credit
with respect to that new clean vehicle. The spouse that claims the
section 30D credit must be the same spouse listed on the seller report
received pursuant to section 30D(d)(1)(H).
(d) Severability. The provisions of this section are separate and
severable from one another. If any provision of this section is stayed
or determined to be invalid, it is the agencies' intention that the
remaining provisions shall continue in effect.
(e) Applicability date. This section applies to new clean vehicles
placed in service after [DATE OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE].
Douglas W. O'Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2023-06822 Filed 3-31-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P