Advanced Manufacturing Production Credit, 85798-85846 [2024-24840]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 208 / Monday, October 28, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[TD 10010]
RIN 1545–BQ85
Advanced Manufacturing Production
Credit
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This document sets forth final
regulations regarding the advanced
manufacturing production credit
established by the Inflation Reduction
Act of 2022 to incentivize the
production of eligible components
within the United States. Eligible
components include certain solar energy
components, wind energy components,
inverters, qualifying battery
components, and applicable critical
minerals. These final regulations also
address specific recordkeeping and
reporting requirements. These final
regulations affect eligible taxpayers who
produce and sell eligible components
and intend to claim the benefit of an
advanced manufacturing production
credit, including by making elective
payment or credit transfer elections.
DATES:
Effective date: These regulations are
effective December 27, 2024.
Applicability date: For date of
applicability, see §§ 1.45X–1(j), 1.45X–
2(f), 1.45X–3(g), and 1.45X–4(d).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mindy Chou, John Deininger, Derek
Gimbel, or Alexander Scott at (202)
317–6853 (not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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Authority
This document contains final
regulations (final regulations) that
amend the Income Tax Regulations (26
CFR part 1) to implement the statutory
provisions of section 45X of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code). The final
regulations are issued by the Secretary
of the Treasury or her delegate
(Secretary) under the authority granted
under sections 45X(a)(3)(B)(i) and (ii),
1502, 6001, 6417(h), 6418(h), and
7805(a) of the Code.
Section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i) of the Code
provides a specific delegation of
authority to the Secretary to prescribe
the form and manner for a taxpayer to
make an election such that ‘‘a sale of
components by such taxpayer to a
related person shall be deemed to have
been made to an unrelated person.’’
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Section 45X(a)(3)(B)(ii) provides a
specific delegation of authority to the
Secretary, ‘‘[a]s a condition of, and prior
to, any election described in [section
45X(a)(3)(B)(i)],’’ to ‘‘require such
information or registration as the
Secretary deems necessary for purposes
of preventing duplication, fraud, or any
improper or excessive amount
determined under [section 45X(a)(1)].’’
Section 1502 of the Code requires the
Secretary to ‘‘prescribe such regulations
as he may deem necessary in order that
the tax liability of any affiliated group
of corporations making a consolidated
return and of each corporation in the
group, both during and after the period
of affiliation, may be returned,
determined, computed, assessed,
collected, and adjusted, in such manner
as clearly to reflect the income-tax
liability and the various factors
necessary for the determination of such
liability, and in order to prevent
avoidance of such tax liability.’’ Section
1502 of the Code also provides that the
Secretary ‘‘may prescribe rules that are
different from the provisions of chapter
1 that would apply if such corporations
filed separate returns.’’
Section 6001 of the Code provides an
express delegation of authority to the
Secretary, stating that, ‘‘[e]very person
liable for any tax imposed by this title,
or for the collection thereof, shall keep
such records, render such statements,
make such returns, and comply with
such rules and regulations as the
Secretary may from time to time
prescribe. Whenever in the judgment of
the Secretary it is necessary, [s]he may
require any person, by notice served
upon such person or by regulations, to
make such returns, render such
statements, or keep such records, as the
Secretary deems sufficient to show
whether or not such person is liable for
tax under this title.’’
Sections 6417(h) and 6418(h) of the
Code direct the Secretary to issue such
regulations or other guidance as may be
necessary to carry out the purposes of
each section, respectively.
Finally, section 7805(a) of the Code
authorizes the Secretary ‘‘to prescribe
all needful rules and regulations for the
enforcement of [the Code], including all
rules and regulations as may be
necessary by reason of any alteration of
law in relation to internal revenue.’’
Background
I. Overview of Section 45X
Section 45X was added to the Code by
section 13502(a) of Public Law 117–169,
136 Stat. 1818 (August 16, 2022),
commonly known as the Inflation
Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA). In general,
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for purposes of the general business
credit under section 38 of the Code,
section 45X provides for the advanced
manufacturing production credit
(section 45X credit) with respect to
eligible components produced by the
taxpayer and sold during the taxable
year to an unrelated person. Section 45X
applies to eligible components
produced and sold after December 31,
2022.
Under section 45X(a)(1), the total
section 45X credit amount for the
taxable year equals the sum of the credit
amounts determined under section
45X(b) with respect to each eligible
component (as defined in section
45X(c)(1)). Under section 45X(a)(2), any
eligible component produced and sold
by the taxpayer is taken into account
only if the production and sale is in a
trade or business of the taxpayer.
Section 45X(a)(3) generally provides
rules regarding the sale of eligible
components to an unrelated person.
However, section 45X(a)(3)(B) provides
a special rule whereby if a taxpayer
makes an election in the form and
manner prescribed by the Secretary, a
sale of eligible components by the
taxpayer to a related person will be
treated as if made to an unrelated
person, referred to in these final
regulations as the related person
election (Related Person Election). As a
condition of, and prior to, a taxpayer
making the Related Person Election, the
Secretary may require such information
or registration as the Secretary deems
necessary for purposes of preventing
duplication, fraud, or any improper or
excessive credit amount.
II. Credit Amounts for Eligible
Components
Section 45X(b)(1) generally provides
the credit amount determined with
respect to any eligible component,
including any other eligible component
it incorporates, subject to the credit
phase out rules provided at section
45X(b)(3). Section 45X(b)(1)(A) through
(M) and section 45X(b)(2) set forth the
credit amounts for each type of eligible
component. The credit amounts are
generally subject to phase out rules
under section 45X(b)(3), but the phase
out rules do not apply to any applicable
critical mineral. For any eligible
component (except applicable critical
minerals) sold after December 31, 2029,
the credit amount for such component
equals the product of the amount
determined under section 45X(b)(1) for
such component multiplied by the
applicable phase out percentage under
section 45X(b)(3)(B)(i) through (iv). In
the case of an eligible component sold
during calendar year 2030, 2031, and
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2032, the phase out percentages are 75
percent, 50 percent, and 25 percent,
respectively. For any eligible
component sold after December 31,
2032, the phase out percentage is zero
percent, and no section 45X credit is
allowed other than for applicable
critical minerals.
Section 45X(b)(4) provides capacity
limitations used to compute the credit
amount for battery cells under section
45X(b)(1)(K)(ii) and battery modules
under section 45(b)(1)(L)(ii). Section
45X(b)(4)(A) provides that the capacity
determined with respect to a battery cell
or battery module must not exceed a
capacity-to-power-ratio of 100:1. Section
45X(b)(4)(B) defines ‘‘capacity-to-powerratio’’ as the ratio of the capacity of a
battery cell or battery module to the
maximum discharge amount of such cell
or module.
III. Eligible Components
Section 45X(c)(1)(A) defines an
eligible component to mean any solar
energy component, any wind energy
component, any inverter described in
section 45X(c)(2)(B) through (G), any
qualifying battery component, and any
applicable critical mineral. Section
45X(c)(1)(B) clarifies that eligible
components do not include any
property that is produced at a facility if
the basis of any property that is part of
such facility is taken into account for
purposes of the qualifying advanced
energy project credit allowed under
section 48C after August 16, 2022 (the
date of enactment of the IRA).
Section 45X(c)(2)(A) generally defines
an inverter as an end product that is
suitable to convert direct current (DC)
electricity from one or more solar
modules or certified distributed wind
energy systems into alternating current
(AC) electricity. Section 45X(c)(2)(B)
through (G) defines the following
different types of eligible inverters:
central inverter, commercial inverter,
distributed wind inverter,
microinverter, residential inverter, and
utility inverter.
Section 45X(c)(3)(A) defines a solar
energy component as a solar module,
photovoltaic cell, photovoltaic wafer,
solar grade polysilicon, torque tube,
structural fastener, or polymeric
backsheet. Section 45X(c)(3)(B) defines
these different types of eligible solar
energy components as well as a solar
tracker.
Section 45X(c)(4)(A) defines a wind
energy component as blades, nacelles,
towers, offshore wind foundations, and
related offshore wind vessels. Section
45X(c)(4)(B) defines these different
types of eligible wind energy
components.
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Section 45X(c)(5)(A) defines a
qualifying battery component as
electrode active materials, battery cells,
and battery modules. Section
45X(c)(5)(B) defines these different
types of qualifying battery components.
Section 45X(c)(6) defines applicable
critical minerals. The following
minerals are eligible for the section 45X
credit if converted or purified to
specified purities or forms: aluminum,
antimony, arsenic, barite, beryllium,
bismuth, cerium, cesium, chromium,
cobalt, dysprosium, erbium, europium,
fluorspar, gadolinium, gallium,
germanium, graphite, hafnium,
holmium, indium, iridium, lanthanum,
lithium, lutetium, magnesium,
manganese, neodymium, nickel,
niobium, palladium, platinum,
praseodymium, rhodium, rubidium,
ruthenium, samarium, scandium,
tantalum, tellurium, terbium, thulium,
tin, titanium, tungsten, vanadium,
ytterbium, yttrium, zinc, and zirconium.
IV. Special Rules
Section 45X(d)(1) provides that
persons are related to each other for
purposes of the section 45X credit if
they would be treated as a single
employer under section 52(b) of the
Code and § 1.52–1(b). Section 52(b) and
§ 1.52–1(b) generally provide that trades
or businesses that are partnerships,
trusts, estates, corporations, or sole
proprietorships under common control
are members of a controlled group and
are treated as a single employer. Section
52(b) requires the regulations under
section 52(b) to be based on principles
similar to the principles that apply
under section 52(a), which generally
provide that corporations that are
members of a controlled group of
corporations are treated as a single
employer. Section 52(a) provides that a
controlled group of corporations is
defined with reference to section
1563(a) of the Code. Section 52(b) and
§ 1.52–1 provide rules based on
principles similar to those under section
52(a), but with certain modifications to
account for different types of ownership
interests.
Section 45X(d)(2) provides that sales
of eligible components are taken into
account under section 45X only for
eligible components that are produced
within the United States (including
continental shelf areas described in
section 638(1) of the Code), or a U.S.
territory (including continental shelf
areas described in section 638(2)).1
1 The preamble to these section 45X final
regulations refers to U.S. territory to mean a
possession as defined in section 638(2).
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Section 45X(d)(3) directs the
Secretary to promulgate regulations
adopting rules similar to the rules of
section 52(d) to apportion credit
amounts between estates or trusts and
their beneficiaries on the basis of the
income of the estates or trusts allocable
to each, and to pass-thru any
apportioned credit amounts to the
beneficiaries.
Section 45X(d)(4) provides that a
person is treated as having sold an
eligible component to an unrelated
person if such component is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another
eligible component that is sold to an
unrelated person.
V. Prior Guidance
On October 24, 2022, the Department
of the Treasury (Treasury Department)
and the IRS published Notice 2022–47,
2022–43 IRB 312, requesting comments
on issues arising under section 45X that
may require guidance. On December 15,
2023, after full consideration of all the
stakeholder input received in response
to Notice 2022–47, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published a
notice of proposed rulemaking and a
notice of public hearing (REG–107423–
23) in the Federal Register (88 FR
86844) to provide guidance on the
advanced manufacturing production
credit under section 45X (Proposed
Regulations). While the Proposed
Regulations are summarized in the
Summary of Contents and Explanation
of Revisions portion of this preamble,
the provisions of the Proposed
Regulations are explained in greater
detail in the preamble to the Proposed
Regulations.
On March 6, 2023, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published
Notice 2023–18, 2023–10 IRB 508,
establishing the qualifying advanced
energy project allocation program
(section 48C(e) program). On June 20,
2023, the Treasury Department and the
IRS published Notice 2023–44, 2023–25
IRB 924, providing additional guidance
on the section 48C(e) program,
including rules for the interaction
between sections 45X and 48C. The
rules regarding the interaction between
sections 45X and 48C provided in
Notices 2023–18 and 2023–44 were
addressed in the Proposed Regulations
and have been incorporated into these
final regulations. Section 5.05(2) of
Notice 2023–18 and section 3 of Notice
2023–44 are superseded by these final
regulations.
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Summary of Comments and
Explanation of Revisions
I. Overview
This Summary of Comments and
Explanation of Revisions summarizes
the Proposed Regulations, all
substantive comments submitted in
response to the Proposed Regulations,
and revisions adopted by these final
regulations. The Treasury Department
and the IRS received 193 written
comments in response to the Proposed
Regulations. The comments are
available for public inspection at
https://www.regulations.gov or upon
request. A public hearing was held in
person and telephonically on February
22, 2024. After full consideration of the
comments and testimony, these final
regulations adopt the Proposed
Regulations with modifications in
response to the comments and
testimony as described in this Summary
of Comments and Explanation of
Revisions.
Comments merely summarizing the
statute or the Proposed Regulations,
recommending statutory revisions to
section 45X or other statutes, and
addressing issues that are outside the
scope of this rulemaking (such as
revising other Federal regulations and
recommending changes to IRS forms)
are generally not addressed in this
Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions or adopted in these final
regulations. Some commenters
requested additional time to submit
comments. The Proposed Regulations
required all comments to be received by
February 13, 2024; however, comments
received later but before these final
regulations were substantially
developed were carefully considered in
drafting these final regulations. The
final regulations retain the same basic
structure as the Proposed Regulations
with certain revisions.
II. General Rules Applicable to the
Advanced Manufacturing Production
Credit
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A. In general
Proposed § 1.45X–1 would have
provided general rules regarding the
section 45X credit including generally
applicable definitions, rules regarding
the computation of the credit amount,
the definition of ‘‘produced by the
taxpayer,’’ the requirement to produce
eligible components in the United
States, the production and sale in a
trade or business requirement, the sale
of integrated components, the
interaction between sections 45X and
48C, and an anti-abuse rule.
Commenters addressed certain aspects
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of these proposed rules, as described in
Part II. of this Summary of Comments
and Explanation of Revisions. These
final regulations generally adopt
proposed § 1.45X–1, with the
modifications described in this Part II.
of the Summary of Comments and
Explanations of Revisions.
B. Definition of Produced by the
Taxpayer
1. In General
Section 45X(a)(1) allows a section 45X
credit with respect to each eligible
component which is produced by the
taxpayer and sold to an unrelated
person during the taxable year.
Proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(1) would have
defined ‘‘produced by the taxpayer’’ to
mean a process conducted by the
taxpayer that substantially transforms
constituent elements, materials, or
subcomponents into a complete and
distinct eligible component that is
functionally different from that which
would result from mere assembly or
superficial modification of the elements,
materials, or subcomponents. Proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(1)(i) would have provided
that ‘‘produced by the taxpayer’’ does
not include partial transformation that
does not result in substantial
transformation of constituent elements,
materials, and subcomponents into a
complete and distinct eligible
component as described in proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(1). Proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(1)(ii) would have provided that
‘‘produced by the taxpayer’’ does not
include minor assembly of two or more
constituent elements, materials, or
subcomponents, or superficial
modification of the final eligible
component, if the taxpayer does not also
engage in the process resulting in a
substantial transformation described in
proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(1). Proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(1)(iii) would have provided
examples illustrating the definition of
‘‘produced by the taxpayer.’’
Several commenters requested that
the final regulations specifically state
that taxpayers may produce eligible
components using recycled materials.
While the preamble to the Proposed
Regulations stated that primary and
secondary production are included in
the definition of ‘‘produced by the
taxpayer,’’ that issue was not addressed
in the text of the Proposed Regulations.
The preamble to the Proposed
Regulations further stated that primary
production involves producing an
eligible component using non-recycled
materials while secondary production
involves producing an eligible
component using recycled materials.
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The Treasury Department and the IRS
agree with the request to clarify the
general rule that production includes
primary and secondary production, and
these final regulations revise proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(1) and (2) to add secondary
production to the definition of produced
by the taxpayer.
A few commenters stated the
definition of ‘‘produced by the
taxpayer’’ should be defined
consistently with section 263A of the
Code to the extent possible and
expressed concern that using different
definitions will cause ‘‘increased
technical uncertainty, additional
compliance burden, especially for small
business taxpayers, and unnecessary
litigation and controversy.’’ Another
commenter stated that the Proposed
Regulations introduced new definitions,
such as ‘‘substantial transformation’’ as
production qualifiers, ‘‘raising concerns
about its apparent conflict with the
enacted statutes.’’
The term ‘‘produced by the taxpayer’’
is not defined in section 45X, nor is
there any indication in section 45X
suggesting that Congress intended the
use of any existing statutory definition,
such as the standard in section 263A.
Section 45X provides a credit based on
the production of numerous eligible
components and a variety of production
processes are utilized by manufacturers
in the production of these eligible
components.
Given the variety of production
processes and the highly technical
nature of production, the Treasury
Department and the IRS, in close
coordination with the Department of
Energy, proposed a definition that
would apply broadly to eligible
components. In addition, the proposed
definition of ‘‘produced by the
taxpayer’’ focused on requiring
production of a complete and distinct
eligible component and, accordingly,
introduces a substantial transformation
requirement to distinguish production
from partial transformation, mere
assembly, and superficial modification.
The proposed definition of ‘‘produced
by the taxpayer’’ along with the
amendment clarifying that production
includes secondary production is the
appropriate standard to implement the
section 45X credit. The definition
provides the necessary flexibility to
account for the highly technical nature
of the production processes associated
with eligible components. This standard
also ensures that the section 45X credit
is claimed by the taxpayer responsible
for the key production activity and that
such activity occurs in the United States
or a United States territory. In contrast
to section 45X, section 263A is designed
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to ensure that taxpayers capture the
direct and indirect costs associated with
producing inventoriable goods for
capitalization purposes. Moreover, in
section 263A, the definition of
production applies to a broad range of
produced items, whereas the definition
in section 45X applies to a limited
number of statutorily enumerated
eligible components. For these reasons,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
have concluded that the definition of
‘‘produced by the taxpayer’’ in the
Proposed Regulations with the
clarifying amendment addressing
secondary production appropriately
implements section 45X(a)(1)(A), and
thus decline to accept the commenter’s
recommendation to define ‘‘produced
by the taxpayer’’ for purposes of section
45X consistent with the similar term
under section 263A.
Several commenters requested that
the final regulations provide more
specific guidance for certain eligible
components to illustrate whether certain
activities or processes result in
substantial transformation versus partial
transformation, mere assembly, or
superficial modification. One
commenter, for example, requested that
the final rules confirm that the term
‘‘produced’’ in the phrase ‘‘produced by
the taxpayer’’ is applied within the
context of the standard production
process of each eligible component,
such that the standard production
process for each eligible component is
deemed to be ‘‘substantial
transformation’’ that meets the
requirements of proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(1). The commenter provided an
example of the production of a solar
module, which ‘‘involves the final
assembly of the other solar components,
many of which separately qualify for
their own section 45X credit, into the
overall module.’’ The Treasury
Department and the IRS recognize that
certain eligible components, such as
solar modules and battery modules
using battery cells, are produced
primarily by assembling other
components. In these limited cases, the
substantial transformation requirement
is met by the taxpayer that assembles
the constituent components to produce
the solar module or battery module
using battery cells. Because assembly is
the activity that primarily produces
these eligible components, the assembly
necessary to achieve production of a
solar module or battery module using
battery cells should not generally be
viewed as disqualifying ‘‘minor
assembly.’’ The Treasury Department
and the IRS also recognize that certain
eligible components, such as nacelles,
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that have undergone substantial
transformation to be considered
‘‘produced by the taxpayer’’ may be
produced and sold to a third party in a
manner in which only minor assembly
remains left to complete. In these cases,
provided all other requirements of
section 45X are met, the party that
produces and sells the eligible
components in such manner is not
precluded from claiming the section
45X credit. The third party that
completes the eligible component by
performing minor assembly is not
entitled to the section 45X credit
because that third party is not
considered to produce the eligible
component. For these reasons, and for
clarity and consistency, the final
regulations replace each instance of
‘‘mere assembly’’ in the Proposed
Regulations, with ‘‘minor assembly.’’
A commenter suggested adding an
additional example to proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(1)(iii) to clarify whether
the integration of electrical
subcomponents and software necessary
to enable the functionality of an inverter
is disqualifying minor assembly, and
another commenter requested
clarification on whether the coating of a
battery separator is ‘‘superficial
modification’’ or ‘‘substantial
transformation.’’ A few commenters also
requested that the final rules further
clarify ‘‘substantial transformation’’ to
ensure manufacturers claiming section
45X credits are actually producing an
eligible component in the United States
and suggested using examples to
differentiate between substantial and
partial transformation for specific
components, such as inverters for solar
energy.
As previously discussed, section 45X
provides a credit based on the
production of numerous eligible
components and a variety of production
processes are utilized by manufacturers
in the production of these eligible
components. Thus, listing specific
production processes for each eligible
component is not practicable and could
also imply that other variations of
production processes do not qualify as
production. The Treasury Department
and the IRS have determined that the
inquiry into whether production
activities or processes result in
substantial transformation for a specific
eligible component is highly fact
dependent and conclude that the
examples in proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(1)(iii), which are included in the
final regulations, provide sufficient
guidance to determine what types of
activities or production steps do not
qualify as substantial transformation.
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2. Special Rule for Production of Certain
Eligible Components
Proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(2) would have
provided that for solar grade
polysilicon, electrode active materials,
and applicable critical minerals,
produced by the taxpayer means
processing, conversion, refinement, or
purification of source materials, such as
brines, ores, or waste streams, to derive
a distinct eligible component. Several
commenters requested that in addition
to processing, conversion, refinement,
and purification, the final regulations
clarify that the production process
includes extraction, while others
requested maintaining the position in
the Proposed Regulations to exclude
costs of extraction. The Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
amend the final regulations to expressly
include the term ‘‘extraction,’’ as the
action of extraction alone does not
produce an eligible component. For the
discussion and analysis of whether
extraction costs are includible as
production costs in the production of
electrode active materials or applicable
critical minerals, see Part IV.E.1.e. of
this Summary of Comments and
Explanation of Revisions.
Another commenter asked whether
recycling aluminum transformer wire
(cleaning, melting, and bailing it) to
send to an aluminum smelter
constitutes ‘‘secondary aluminum
production.’’ The Treasury Department
and the IRS note that under both
proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(2) and § 1.45X–
1(c)(2) of these final regulations,
substantial transformation for an
applicable critical mineral requires that
the applicable critical mineral be
‘‘processed, converted, refined, or
purified to derive a distinct eligible
component.’’ Because a taxpayer in
these circumstances would not derive a
distinct eligible component, this would
not be an eligible component produced
by the taxpayer within the meaning of
section 45X(a)(1)(A).
These final regulations make a
clarifying revision to the definition of
produced by the taxpayer under
proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(2) so that it
references substantial transformation.
While no comments were received on
this issue, this revision is needed to
appropriately align the definition of
‘‘produced by the taxpayer’’ in § 1.45X–
1(c)(2) with the requirements to qualify
as an eligible taxpayer in § 1.45X–
1(c)(3).
3. Eligible Taxpayer
a. In General
Proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(3)(i) would
have provided that the taxpayer
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claiming a section 45X credit with
respect to an eligible component must
be the person that performs the actual
production activities that bring about a
substantial transformation resulting in
the eligible component and that sells
such eligible component to an unrelated
person.
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b. Contract Manufacturing Arrangement
Proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(3)(ii)(A) would
have provided that, if the production of
an eligible component is performed in
whole or in part subject to a contract
that is a contract manufacturing
arrangement, then the party to such
contract that may claim the section 45X
credit with respect to such eligible
component, provided all other
requirements in section 45X are met, is
the taxpayer that performs the actual
production activities that bring about a
substantial transformation resulting in
the eligible component. The preamble to
the Proposed Regulations stated that
this proposed rule was intended to
provide an administrable rule that
provides clarity and certainty in
determining which taxpayer may claim
the section 45X credit in a contract
manufacturing arrangement.
c. Contract Manufacturing Defined
Proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(3)(ii)(B) would
have defined the term ‘‘contract
manufacturing arrangement’’ to mean
any agreement providing for the
production of an eligible component if
the agreement is entered into before the
production of the eligible component to
be delivered under the contract is
completed. Proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(3)(ii)(B) would have further
provided that a routine purchase order
for off-the-shelf property is not treated
as a contract manufacturing
arrangement. Proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(3)(ii)(B) also would have provided
that an agreement will be treated as a
routine purchase order for off-the-shelf
property if the contractor is required to
make no more than de minimis
modifications to the property to tailor it
to the customer’s specific needs, or if at
the time the agreement is entered into,
the contractor knows or has reason to
know that the contractor can satisfy the
agreement out of existing stocks or
normal production of finished goods.
This definition of the term ‘‘routine
purchase order’’ is based on the
definition found in § 1.263A–
2(a)(1)(ii)(B)(2)(ii). The Treasury
Department and the IRS requested
comments in the preamble to the
Proposed Regulations on whether this
definition should be further clarified or
modified. Comments on the definition
of manufacturing arrangements are
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discussed in Part II.B.3.d. of this
Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions.
d. Special Rule for Contract
Manufacturing Arrangements
Proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(3)(iii) would
have explained the special rule allowing
parties to a contract manufacturing
arrangement to agree on which party to
the contract will claim the section 45X
credit for eligible components produced
subject to such contract. Proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(3)(iv) would have
explained the certification requirements
for the special rule. Several commenters
expressed support for the contract
manufacturing rules, but one
commenter expressed concern about the
treatment of contract manufacturing
arrangements in effect prior to the
applicability date of the Proposed
Regulations. This commenter
recommended that the final regulations
adopt a safe harbor rule that would
function as an exception to the general
rule and provide that when one party is
contractually entitled to purchase all or
substantially all (for example, at least 90
percent) of the output of the fabricator’s
production of a given component for the
taxable year, the purchaser would be
treated as the producer for purposes of
section 45X. The Treasury Department
and the IRS decline to adopt the
commenter’s request to add a safe
harbor for contract manufacturing
arrangements in place before the
applicability date of the Proposed
Regulations, but note that a taxpayer
may still have the option of applying the
special rule in § 1.45X–1(c)(3)(iii) of
these final regulations for contract
manufacturing arrangements entered
into before the applicability date,
provided all requirements of the special
rule are met.
The preamble to the Proposed
Regulations stated that the Treasury
Department and the IRS intend for the
production cost incurred rules in
proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(2) to apply to a
credit claimant in a contract
manufacturing arrangement. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
requested comments on whether the
proposed rules need further clarification
or modification as applied to contract
manufacturing arrangements. One
commenter requested allowing
taxpayers that extract and recycle raw
materials and taxpayers that process
such materials and incorporate them
into applicable critical minerals to
apply the contract manufacturing
arrangement provisions, in the event
that costs of extraction and direct and
indirect material costs are not includible
in the eligible production costs of
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producing an applicable critical
mineral. The Treasury Department and
the IRS think that the clarification
requested by this commenter is no
longer necessary because these final
regulations permit the inclusion of
extraction and certain material costs in
the cost of producing an applicable
critical mineral if certain requirements
are met. See Parts IV.E.1.e. and V.C. of
this Summary of Comments and
Explanation of Revisions for further
discussion.
Proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(3)(v) would
have provided examples illustrating the
application of the special rule. One
commenter requested that proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(3)(v)(C) (Example 3)
specifically state that the domestic
production requirement requires that
each wind tower section must be
produced in the United States. Proposed
§ 1.45X–(1)(c)(3)(v)(C) (Example 3)
states that a taxpayer could claim a
credit for a tower for which it had three
different producers each produce one
section, provided that the parties all
agree that the taxpayer is the sole party
that can claim the credit and ‘‘all other
requirements of section 45X are met.’’
The Treasury Department and the IRS
have determined that the domestic
production requirement is already
included by this language and thus,
additional clarification is not necessary.
Another commenter questioned
whether, in proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(3)(v)(C) (Example 3), V must sell
the completed wind tower to Z for the
special rule in proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(3)(iii) to apply. In the example, V
enters into a contract manufacturing
arrangement with W, X, and Y to make
the wind tower, which V sells to Z. All
parties to the contract manufacturing
arrangement and Z are unrelated. The
commenter stated that if V, W, X, and
Y sign a certification statement and Y
claims the section 45X credit, Y could
claim the section 45X credit in 2025
because that is when it sold the eligible
component to V. Contrary to the
commenter’s conclusion with respect to
Y’s ability to claim a section 45X credit
in 2025, Y is not eligible for the section
45X credit until the eligible component,
which is the wind tower comprised of
all three wind tower sections, is
produced and then sold to an unrelated
person (in this case Z). Under the
contract manufacturing arrangement, W,
X, and Y are collectively viewed as
producing the entire eligible component
(wind tower) because all three sections
together result in a single eligible
component. Along with the production
of the entire wind tower, V has to sell
the completed wind tower to an
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unrelated person before the designated
party is eligible for a section 45X credit.
A commenter suggested revisions to
the proposed rules to allow an
allocation of any portion of the credit to
parties who extract the mineral and
perform initial refining processes, rather
than allowing a credit to the taxpayer
that purifies the critical mineral to the
statutory minimum. Section 45X(c)(6)
defines a list of applicable critical
minerals with specific minimum purity
levels which must be met for the
taxpayer to have produced an eligible
component. The Treasury Department
and the IRS do not have the authority
to modify these statutory requirements.
However, the Treasury Department and
the IRS seek to clarify that a taxpayer
who performs extracting and refining
activities may benefit from the contract
manufacturing provisions described in
this section. The final regulations
accordingly add § 1.45X–1(c)(3)(v)(D)
(Example 4) to demonstrate how the
contract manufacturing provisions may
apply in the situation described by the
commenter.
4. Timing of Production and Sale
Proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(4)(i) would
have provided that production of
eligible components for which a
taxpayer is claiming a section 45X credit
may begin before December 31, 2022,
but production of eligible components
must be completed, and the eligible
components must be sold, after
December 31, 2022. Proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(4)(ii) would have provided an
example illustrating the timing of the
production and sale rule in proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(4)(i).
Some commenters requested further
clarity on when production and sale of
an eligible component may take place.
One commenter requested that the final
rules provide that a specific minimum
percentage of production of an eligible
component must occur after 2022 and
that no sale of the eligible component be
reported by the taxpayer before 2023.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt these percentage test
suggestions because Congress clearly
recognized that some production could
occur prior to 2023 but did not specify
an exact amount of production that
must occur in taxable years either before
or after 2023. Moreover, if a sale
occurred before 2023, which requires a
facts and circumstances analysis based
in part on contractual terms, the
component sold is not eligible for the
section 45X credit. Accordingly, the
final regulations adopt proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(4)(i) and the example in
proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(4)(ii) without
modification.
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Another commenter stated that the
Proposed Regulations do not specify
whether production activities that
qualify for the section 45X credit have
to occur after the effective date of the
rule or whether the activities can be
retroactive. The commenter suggests the
final rule specify the applicable period
for the production activities and provide
a reasonable transition rule for
taxpayers who produce eligible
components before the effective date of
the final regulations. The Treasury
Department and the IRS have
determined that the Proposed
Regulations and these final regulations
are clear as to the timing of production
and sale requirements under section
45X. For clarification, and as described
earlier, section 13502(c) of the IRA
provides that section 45X applies to
components produced and sold after
December 31, 2022. The preamble to the
Proposed Regulations clarified
application of the section 45X effective
date, stating that each of proposed
§§ 1.45X–1 through 1.45X–4 would have
applied to eligible components for
which production is ‘‘completed’’ and
sales occur after December 31, 2022, and
during taxable years ending on or after
the date of publication of these final
regulations. Proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(4)(i)
would have provided that production of
eligible components may begin before
December 31, 2022, and only required
production of eligible components be
completed, and sales must occur, after
December 31, 2022. Proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(4)(ii) would have provided an
example illustrating proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(4)(i). These final regulations adopt
these proposed rules. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have
statutory authority to provide for a
section 45X credit in a situation in
which production was completed on or
before December 31, 2022.
C. Produced in the United States
Consistent with section 45X(d)(2),
proposed § 1.45X–1(d)(1) would have
provided that sales are taken into
account for purposes of the section 45X
credit only for eligible components that
are produced within the United States,
as defined in section 638(1) of the Code,
or a United States territory. Proposed
§ 1.45X–1(d)(2) would have clarified
that constituent elements, materials, and
subcomponents used in the production
of eligible components are not subject to
the domestic production requirement
provided in proposed § 1.45X–1(d)(1).
Thus, while the eligible component
must be produced domestically, its
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constituent elements, materials, and
subcomponents need not be.2
Some commenters agreed with this
approach in the Proposed Regulations.
According to these commenters, the
Proposed Regulations appropriately
allowed the credit for eligible
components produced in the United
States provided that the activities
necessary to transform them into
eligible components are conducted in
the United States. Furthermore, these
commenters expressed concern that a
contrary rule ignores the reality that
some constituent elements, materials,
and subcomponents cannot be sourced
in the United States and would
discourage investment in production
activities that rely on foreign-sourced
constituent elements, materials, and
subcomponents. However, other
commenters disagreed with the
proposed approach, suggesting that
allowing eligible components to be
produced using foreign subcomponents
is inconsistent with the section 45X
credit’s objective of incentivizing
domestic production of eligible
components.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
note that, while section 45X specifically
requires domestic production of an
eligible component for credit eligibility,
it is silent regarding the location of
production or sourcing of constituent
elements, materials, and
subcomponents. Accordingly, imposing
a domestic production requirement for
constituent elements, materials, and
subcomponents is not supported by the
statutory language of section 45X. For
these reasons, the Treasury Department
and the IRS decline to adopt these
suggestions and adopt the proposed rule
without change.
Beyond agreement or disagreement
with this proposed rule, some
commenters inquired about its scope.
One commenter asked whether the
domestic production rule applicable to
eligible components also applies to
eligible components that are both an
eligible component and a ‘‘constituent
element, material or subcomponent’’ of
another eligible component. Another
commenter asked whether raw materials
and intermediate products used to
produce eligible components are
included in the definition of
‘‘constituent elements, materials or
subcomponents.’’
2 See Joint Committee on Taxation, General
Explanation of Tax Legislation Enacted in the 117th
Congress, JCS–1–23 (December 21, 2023) at 267
(‘‘The credit only applies to sales where the eligible
components are produced within the United States
or U.S. territories. This requirement is not intended
to apply to subcomponents or materials used to
produce eligible components.’’).
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The Treasury Department and the IRS
confirm that all three of these categories
of items are included in the definition
of ‘‘constituent elements, materials, and
subcomponents.’’ An eligible
component that is a ‘‘constituent
element, material or subcomponent’’ of
another eligible component is not
subject to the domestic production rule,
and thus, an eligible component may
incorporate another eligible component
that is also a foreign-sourced
‘‘constituent element, material or
subcomponent’’ and still be eligible for
a section 45X credit. In addition, raw
materials and intermediate products
generally qualify as constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents.
A commenter also requested
confirmation in the final regulations
that there is no requirement that eligible
components be used in the United
States for section 45X credit eligibility.
Consistent with section 45X(d)(2),
proposed § 1.45X–1(d)(1) would have
provided that sales are taken into
account for purposes of the section 45X
credit only for eligible components that
are produced within the United States
(or a United States territory). Thus, the
Proposed Regulations specify only the
location of production of the eligible
component, and not the location of the
sale or the use of such eligible
component. Accordingly, the Treasury
Department and the IRS conclude that
the additional confirmation requested
by the commenter is unnecessary, as
there would be no statutory basis for
requiring domestic sale or use.
D. Production and Sale in a Trade or
Business
Proposed § 1.45X–1(e) would have
stated that an eligible component must
be produced and sold in a trade or
business of the taxpayer, with the term
‘‘trade or business’’ defined as a trade or
business within the meaning of section
162 of the Code.
A commenter requested that proposed
§ 1.45X–1(e) expressly include eligible
components that are produced and then
used to replace defective units pursuant
to a contractual obligation entered into
at the time of the original sale. The
commenter stated that these warranty
transactions do not appear to violate any
of the anti-abuse provisions at proposed
§ 1.45X–1(i). If an eligible component is
produced and sold to an unrelated
person in the normal course of a trade
or business, and the eligible component
is then replaced with a new eligible
component produced by the same
taxpayer, there is no new sale to an
unrelated person for the replacement
eligible component, but the replacement
eligible component relates back to the
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original sales transaction. The precise
issue is whether section 45X should be
read to effectively incentivize the
production of two eligible components
where each is related to a single sales
transaction. The Treasury Department
and the IRS decline to adopt this
suggestion because only one credit may
be claimed with respect to the sale of an
eligible component.
E. Sale of Integrated Components
1. In General
Section 45X(d)(4) provides that, for
purposes of section 45X, a person is
treated as having sold an eligible
component to an unrelated person if
such component is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another
eligible component which is sold to an
unrelated person. Proposed § 1.45X–
1(f)(1) was intended to be consistent
with section 45X(d)(4), and thus would
have provided that a taxpayer is treated
as having produced and sold an eligible
component to an unrelated person if
such component is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another
eligible component that is then sold to
an unrelated person.
Although no comments were received
regarding this general rule in the
Proposed Regulations, the Treasury
Department and the IRS want to clarify
that section 45X(d)(4) provides only for
deemed sale treatment and not deemed
production. A taxpayer must produce
(rather than merely purchase or acquire)
an eligible component that is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another
eligible component that is then sold to
an unrelated person in order for the
deemed sale rule to apply. Thus, these
final regulations clarify that a taxpayer
is ‘‘treated as having sold’’ an eligible
component to an unrelated person if the
taxpayer produced such component and
the component is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another
eligible component that is then sold to
an unrelated person, rather than
‘‘treated as having produced and sold’’
an eligible component that the taxpayer
did not itself produce that is then
integrated, incorporated, or assembled
into another eligible component and
then sold to an unrelated person.
Proposed § 1.45X–1(f)(1) is clarified
accordingly in these final regulations.
2. Application of Section 45X(d)(4) to
Produced Products
Proposed § 1.45X–1(f)(2)(i) would
have clarified that a taxpayer may claim
a section 45X credit for each eligible
component that the taxpayer produces
and sells to an unrelated person,
including any eligible component the
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taxpayer produces that was used as an
element, material, or subcomponent and
integrated, incorporated, or assembled
into another complete and distinct
eligible component or another complete
and distinct product (that is not itself an
eligible component) that the taxpayer
also produces and sells to an unrelated
person. Proposed § 1.45X–1(f)(2)(ii)
would have provided an example of the
credit eligibility of a sale of a product
with incorporated eligible components
to a related person.
Commenters expressed agreement
with proposed § 1.45X–1(f)(2)(i). One
commenter stated that the clarification
in § 1.45X–1(f)(2)(i) avoids the need for
some vertically integrated producers of
eligible components that incorporate the
eligible components into another
product that is not an eligible
component to artificially restructure in
order to create an intercompany sale.
Another commenter requested a flexible
interpretation of section 45X(d)(4) that
would apply the section 45X credit as
an additive credit across the supply
chain to the final assembler. The
commenter stated such an interpretation
is consistent with the language in
section 45X(b)(1), which provides that
the section 45X credit amount is
determined with respect to any eligible
component, including any eligible
component it incorporates. For example,
in the commenter’s view, a taxpayer that
produces a structural fastener would be
eligible to receive a credit for its
production of an eligible component as
would the integrator, incorporator,
assembler of the structural fastener into
another eligible component. Although
the Treasury Department and the IRS
agree that section 45X(b)(1) provides
that the credit amount is determined
with respect to any eligible component
produced by the taxpayer, including any
eligible component the taxpayer
incorporates that was also produced by
the taxpayer, the Treasury Department
and the IRS disagree with the
implication that the calculation of the
section 45X credit should be additive
based on the number of eligible
components used to produce an item in
a case in which each eligible component
is not produced by the taxpayer. Only
the producer of an eligible component
would be eligible for a section 45X
credit. Proposed § 1.45X–1(f)(1) and (2)
are finalized with no modifications
because the Treasury Department and
the IRS conclude the rules provide
clarity as currently written.
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F. Interaction Between Sections 45X and
48C
1. In General
Consistent with section 45X(c)(1)(B),
proposed § 1.45X–1(g)(1) would have
provided that, for purposes of section
45X, an eligible component must be
produced at a section 45X facility and
does not include any property
(produced property) that is produced at
a facility if the basis of any property that
is part of the production unit that
produces the produced property is
eligible property that is included in a
section 48C facility and is taken into
account for purposes of a credit allowed
under section 48C (section 48C credit)
after August 16, 2022.
Proposed § 1.45X–1(g)(2)(i) would
have provided that a section 45X facility
includes all tangible property that
comprises an independently functioning
production unit that produces one or
more eligible components. Proposed
§ 1.45X–1(g)(2)(ii) would have provided
that a production unit is comprised of
the tangible property that substantially
transforms material inputs to complete
the production process of an eligible
component.
Proposed § 1.45X–1(g)(3)(i) would
have provided that a section 48C facility
includes all eligible property included
in a qualifying advanced energy project
for which a taxpayer receives an
allocation of section 48C credits and
claims such credits after August 16,
2022. Proposed § 1.45X–1(g)(3)(ii)
would have defined eligible property
that is included in a section 48C facility.
With respect to the proposed rules on
the interaction between sections 45X
and 48C various comments were
received. A commenter requested that
the final rules not apply section
45X(c)(1)(B) to disallow the section 45X
credit in the event that the taxpayer
claiming the section 45X credit
incorporates into its eligible component
a subcomponent that was produced by
a section 48C facility, as long as that
same taxpayer was not eligible for the
section 48C credit with respect to the
section 48C facility that produced the
subcomponent. Revisions were made to
these final regulations to clarify that the
only equipment, or other tangible
property, that must be included in the
section 45X facility is the equipment
used by the taxpayer that is necessary to
be considered the producer of the
potential eligible component. As further
explained later, if production of a
subcomponent (or like property) is not
a requirement to be considered the
producer under section 45X, then the
equipment that is part of that section
48C facility used to produce the
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subcomponent is not part of the section
45X facility. As a result, it is possible
that the same taxpayer could receive a
section 48C credit on equipment used to
produce a subcomponent (or like
property), and a section 45X credit on
the production of an eligible
component.
One commenter requested an example
to help determine whether an eligible
component produced at a facility
located ‘‘adjacent’’ to a section 48C
facility that received a section 48C
credit impacts eligibility for the section
45X credit. The physical proximity of a
section 45X facility to a section 48C
facility does not determine whether a
product may be an eligible component
and revisions to these final regulations
were made to clarify that point.
Another commenter requested more
clarity to determine whether a facility
that shares upstream raw materials and
processes as a section 48C facility is still
eligible for a section 45X credit and
requested examples of upstream supply
chains and processes that are eligible
and ineligible for both sections 48C and
45X. Several commenters requested
additional clarity regarding the meaning
and extent of the term ‘‘production
unit.’’
Based on the comments and further
consideration of the Proposed
Regulations, revisions were made in
these final regulations to simplify the
rules and examples in proposed
§ 1.45X–1(g)(1) through (4). Specifically,
these final regulations make clear that
the general rule is that property that
would otherwise qualify as an eligible
component (otherwise qualified
property) is only an eligible component
if the property is produced at a section
45X facility and no part of that section
45X facility is also a section 48C facility.
These final regulations also revise the
definition of section 45X facility,
clarifying that a section 45X facility is
the independently functioning tangible
property used by the taxpayer that is
necessary to be considered the producer
of the otherwise qualified property
within the meaning of § 1.45X–1(c)(1) or
(2), as applicable. The Proposed
Regulations would have relied on the
concept of a ‘‘production unit’’ to define
the scope of a section 45X facility, but
there was overlap between the term
production unit as proposed and the
definition of a section 45X facility. After
careful consideration, the Treasury
Department and the IRS determined that
the proposed term ‘‘production unit’’
introduced unnecessary complexity,
particularly in light of the revisions to
the definition of section 45X facility in
these final regulations. Accordingly,
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these final regulations do not use the
term production unit.
The definition of section 45X facility
in these final regulations includes
independently functioning tangible
property that is used and that is
necessary for the otherwise qualified
property to be considered produced by
the taxpayer within the meaning of
§ 1.45X–1(c)(1) or (2), as applicable.
Accordingly, tangible property used to
produce a subcomponent or other
property which is later integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into a
distinct and final eligible component is
not part of the section 45X facility. This
rule, however, does not apply if the
other property is of a type that the
taxpayer must produce for the resulting
eligible component to be considered
produced by the taxpayer. This analysis
can depend on the definition of the
eligible component being ultimately
produced. For example, section
45X(c)(3)(B)(ii)(I)(bb) requires a single
manufacturer to produce a photovoltaic
wafer through formation of an ingot
from polysilicon and subsequent slicing.
Thus, the section 45X facility with
respect to the photovoltaic wafers
would include any equipment that is
tangible property that is used to produce
the ingot and any equipment that is
tangible property that is used to perform
the subsequent slicing. In contrast,
equipment used to produce front glass
of a solar module under section
45X(c)(3)(B)(v) could be excluded from
a section 45X facility because it is not
necessary to use the front glass
equipment to be considered the
producer of the solar module for section
45X. This rule may benefit a taxpayer
that produces a subcomponent or other
property of an eligible component using
equipment that is also eligible property
for purposes of the section 48C credit,
but uses other equipment not related to
the section 48C credit to produce the
eligible component.
Lastly, these final regulations add a
specific rule for contract manufacturing
arrangements in § 1.45X–1(g)(2)(ii) to
address any uncertainty with respect to
how to determine a section 45X facility
in that situation. This rule clarifies that
the tangible property used to produce
the otherwise qualified property
(regardless of who claims the credit)
must be considered.
4. Examples of Sections 45X and 48C
Interaction
Proposed § 1.45X–1(g)(4)(i) through
(v) would have provided examples to
illustrate the application of these rules.
A few commenters requested that,
contrary to proposed § 1.45X–1(g)(4)(ii)
(Example 2), ingot and wafer production
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should be treated as two separate
manufacturing activities so that an ingot
facility is eligible for the section 48C
credit while a wafer facility is eligible
for the section 45X credit. As required
by section 45X(c)(3)(B)(ii)(I)(bb),
however, a photovoltaic wafer must be
produced by a single manufacturer
either by forming an ingot from molten
polysilicon (for example, Czochralski
method) and then subsequently slicing
it into wafers, or by forming molten or
evaporated solar grade polysilicon or
deposition into a sheet or layer (that is,
thin-film deposition). As the statute
requires production of a photovoltaic
wafer by a single manufacturer that both
forms an ingot and slices it into wafers,
it is not appropriate to treat ingot and
wafer production as two separate
manufacturing activities. Rather, as both
activities are necessary, it follows that
the tangible property used to complete
each activity must be within a single
section 45X facility with respect to the
eligible component produced. No
comments were received on the other
examples in proposed § 1.45X–1(g)(4)(i)
through (v). However, all of the
examples in proposed § 1.45X–1(g)(4)(i)
through (v) were modified consistent
with the revisions in § 1.45X–1(g)(1)
through (3).
A few commenters suggested that
parties in a contract manufacturing
arrangement under proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(3)(iii) could circumvent the
prohibition under section 45X(c)(1)(B)
that disallows a section 45X credit for
items produced at a section 48C facility.
More specifically, commenters
suggested that a taxpayer could enter
into a contract manufacturing
arrangement under proposed § 1.45X–
1(c)(3)(iii) to produce photovoltaic
wafers that are then used to
manufacture photovoltaic cells. If the
taxpayer itself integrated, incorporated,
or assembled the photovoltaic cells into
solar modules, the taxpayer might claim
a section 45X credit for all three
products upon their sale, even though
the photovoltaic wafers were
manufactured by the contract
manufacturer at a section 48C facility
while the photovoltaic cells were
manufactured at a section 45X facility,
if the taxpayer was unaware that the
contract manufacturer manufactured the
photovoltaic wafers at a section 48C
facility. The Proposed Regulations did
not allow this, and the final regulations
would continue to disallow a section
45X credit for the photovoltaic wafers in
this scenario. To the extent that the
photovoltaic wafers were produced at a
section 48C facility, the photovoltaic
wafers would not qualify as an eligible
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component to any party to the contract
manufacturing arrangement. As
described earlier, these final regulations
add a rule in § 1.45X–1(g)(2)(ii) to
clarify the rules in a contract
manufacturing arrangement situation,
and the examples in § 1.45X–1(g)(4)
have also been modified.
G. Anti-Abuse Rule
As explained in the preamble to the
Proposed Regulations, proposed
§ 1.45X–1(i)(1) would have provided a
general anti-abuse rule that would make
the section 45X credit unavailable in
extraordinary circumstances in which,
based on a consideration of all the facts
and circumstances, the primary purpose
of the production and sale of an eligible
component is to obtain the benefit of the
section 45X credit in a manner that is
wasteful, such as discarding, disposing
of, or destroying the eligible component
without putting it to a productive use.
Proposed § 1.45X–1(i)(1) would have
provided that the rules of section 45X
and the section 45X regulations must be
applied in a manner consistent with the
purposes of section 45X and the section
45X regulations (and the regulations in
this chapter under sections 6417 and
6418 related to the section 45X credit).
A purpose of section 45X and the
section 45X regulations (and the
regulations in this chapter under
sections 6417 and 6418 related to the
section 45X credit) is to provide
taxpayers an incentive to produce
eligible components in a manner that
contributes to the development of
secure and resilient supply chains.
Accordingly, the section 45X credit is
not allowable if the primary purpose of
the production and sale of an eligible
component is to obtain the benefit of the
section 45X credit in a manner that is
wasteful, such as discarding, disposing
of, or destroying the eligible component
without putting it to a productive use.
A determination of whether the
production and sale of an eligible
component is inconsistent with the
purposes of section 45X and the section
45X regulations (and the regulations in
this chapter under sections 6417 and
6418 related to the section 45X credit)
is based on all facts and circumstances.
Proposed § 1.45X–1(i)(2) would have
provided an example illustrating this
anti-abuse rule.
One commenter suggested that, in
applying the anti-abuse rule, the
taxpayer claiming a section 45X credit
should not be held responsible for the
activities of the customer after a sale has
occurred (unless the customer is a
related entity); the determination of
whether a component is defective
should be made at the factory gate; and
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‘‘productive use’’ should include the
sale of an eligible component to an
entity engaged in the business of
directly (such as a utility) or indirectly
(such as a project developer) deploying
the batteries. Proposed § 1.45X–1(i)(1)
provides that a determination of
whether the production and sale of an
eligible component is inconsistent with
the purposes of section 45X and the
section 45X regulations (and the
regulations under sections 6417 and
6418 related to the section 45X credit)
is based on all the facts and
circumstances. Under a facts and
circumstances analysis, no single factor
is determinative, and the considerations
listed by the commenter would have to
be evaluated in the context of all other
facts and circumstances. The Treasury
Department and the IRS thus decline to
list specific parameters that
automatically result in a finding of a
favorable or unfavorable primary
purpose.
Another commenter suggested adding
additional examples to proposed
§ 1.45X–1(i) to make clear that the
section 45X credit is never allowable
with respect to any cost the primary
purpose of which is to increase the
amount of the section 45X credit. While
both examples offered by the
commenter involve possible abuses, the
anti-abuse rule is intended to cover a
broad range of abuses. Proposed
§ 1.45X–1(i) would have provided that a
determination of whether the
production and sale of an eligible
component is inconsistent with the
purposes of section 45X and the section
45X regulations is based on all facts and
circumstances, and no single factor is
determinative. Accordingly, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt the commenter’s
suggestion.
III. Sale to Unrelated Person
A. In General
Proposed § 1.45X–2(a) would have
stated that the amount of the section
45X credit for any taxable year is equal
to the sum of the credit amounts
determined under section 45X(b) (and
described in proposed §§ 1.45X–3 and
1.45X–4) with respect to each eligible
component that is produced by the
taxpayer and, during the taxable year,
sold by the taxpayer to an unrelated
person. Applicable Federal income tax
principles apply to determine whether a
transaction is in substance a sale (or the
provision of a service, or some other
disposition). Proposed § 1.45X–2(a) also
would have cross-referenced proposed
§ 1.45X–1(d) and (e) for additional
requirements relating to sales. Section
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45X(d)(1) provides that persons are
treated as related to each other if such
persons would be treated as a single
employer under the regulations
prescribed under section 52(b).
Proposed § 1.45X–2(b) would have
provided definitions of the terms
‘‘person,’’ ‘‘related person,’’ and
‘‘unrelated person’’ for purposes of the
section 45X credit.
A few commenters requested
additional clarity in the final rules on
how a sale is defined and when a sale
is determined for the purpose of section
45X. One commenter recommended that
a sale be defined for 45X as the point
when a taxpayer signs a binding
contractual agreement with a buyer in
the taxpayer’s trade or business for the
purchase of an eligible component.
Section 45X provides special rules
addressing sales of eligible components
to related persons that may be treated as
sales to unrelated persons, and a general
rule that an eligible component
produced and sold by the taxpayer is
only taken into account if such
production and sale is in a trade or
business of the taxpayer, but otherwise
does not provide any specific rules
regarding whether and when a sale have
occurred. Proposed § 1.45X–2(a) would
have provided that applicable Federal
income tax principles apply to
determine whether a transaction is in
substance a sale (or the provision of a
service, or some other disposition), and
those same principles apply in
determining when a transaction is a
sale. More specific rules on the
determination of whether and when a
sale occurs is beyond the scope of these
final regulations. Accordingly, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
maintain the standard in proposed
§ 1.45X–2(a) and finalize the proposed
rule without modification.
Another commenter requested further
clarification on the sale of eligible
components in two scenarios. In the
first scenario, Company A is a U.S.
based company producing eligible
components that it sells to Company B,
which is not directly using the eligible
components but resells to Company C to
use in a manufacturing process or
otherwise in its trade or business. For
this first scenario, the commenter
requested clarification on whether
Company A is eligible to claim the
section 45X credit for the domestic
production and sale of the eligible
components. In the second scenario, the
commenter assumed the same facts as in
the first scenario, but Company B or
Company C is using Company A’s
eligible component outside the United
Sates. In this second scenario, the
commenter requested clarification on
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whether Company A remains eligible to
claim the section 45X credit for the
domestic production and sale of the
eligible components.
In both scenarios under the Proposed
Regulations, Company A is eligible to
claim the section 45X credit for the
domestic production and sale of the
eligible components if the production
and sale is in a trade or business of
Company A, regardless of whether the
first purchaser is using the eligible
component in its trade or business or
sells to a subsequent purchaser for use
in the subsequent purchaser’s trade or
business, and regardless of whether the
purchaser or subsequent purchaser uses
the eligible component in the United
States. Because the Proposed
Regulations clearly provide this result,
no further revision is necessary in these
final regulations.
B. Special Rules for Sales to a Related
Person
Consistent with section 45X(a)(3)(A),
proposed § 1.45X–2(c)(1) would have
provided a special rule that, for
purposes of section 45X(a), a taxpayer is
treated as selling an eligible component
to an unrelated person if such
component is sold to such person by a
person who is related to the taxpayer.
Proposed § 1.45X–2(c)(2) would have
provided an example to illustrate this
special rule.
Given the importance of whether
parties are related persons or unrelated
persons, a commenter proposed a
particular fact pattern and requested
clarification on who the purchaser is
and whether they were related or
unrelated to the producer and seller. In
general, section 45X(d)(1) and proposed
§ 1.45X–2(b)(2) provides that persons
are treated as related to each other if
such persons would be treated as a
single employer under the regulations
prescribed under section 52(b). A
request for application of the section
52(b) regulations by the Treasury
Department and the IRS to a particular
fact pattern requiring a facts and
circumstances analysis is outside the
scope of these final regulations.
Another commenter requested that
the final rules clarify whether a Related
Person Election is necessary when
eligible components are sold by the
producer to an unrelated person, who
subsequently sells them to a person
related to the producer of such eligible
components. The commenter proposes
amending proposed § 1.45X–2(c) to
clarify that direct or indirect sales to a
related person qualify if the producer
knows or has reason to know the
unrelated person is intending to sell the
same eligible components to a person
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85807
related to the producer. To provide
assurance to commenter, a Related
Person Election is not necessary in this
situation because the first sale was to an
unrelated party, but the Treasury
Department and the IRS have
determined that the rules as set out by
proposed § 1.45X–2(c) do not require
further clarification on this point. In
addition, if there are circumstances in
which purported sales are made to
unrelated persons to circumvent the
requirements of section 45X, proposed
§ 1.45X–2(a) provides that applicable
Federal income tax principles apply to
determine whether a transaction will be
respected as a sale.
C. Related Person Election
1. Availability of Election—In General
Proposed § 1.45X–2(d)(1)(i) would
have provided that a taxpayer may make
a Related Person Election under section
45X(a)(3)(B) to treat a sale of eligible
components by such taxpayer to a
related person as if made to an
unrelated person. As a condition of, and
prior to, a taxpayer making a Related
Person Election, the Secretary may
require such information or registration
as the Secretary deems necessary for
purposes of preventing duplication,
fraud, or any improper or excessive
credit amount determined under section
45X(a)(1). Proposed § 1.45X–2(d)(1)(ii)
would have provided the rules
regarding the Related Person Election
for members of a consolidated group (as
defined in § 1.1502–1(h)).
One commenter requested that
taxpayers be allowed to exercise the
Related Person Election in situations
where it is difficult for the taxpayer to
determine whether two entities are
related under the section 52(b)
regulations. Allowing the exercise of the
Related Person Election as commenter
requested would conflict with the
language in section 45X(d)(1), which
requires the parties be treated as a single
employer under the section 52(b)
regulations, not just that it be difficult
to determine the status. Therefore, these
final regulations do not adopt the
commenter’s request.
2. Anti-Abuse Rule
Proposed § 1.45X–2(d)(4) would have
provided an anti-abuse rule for the
Related Person Election consistent with
section 45X(a)(3)(B)(ii) for preventing
duplication, fraud, or any improper or
excessive amount of the section 45X
credit. Proposed § 1.45X–2(d)(4)(i)
would have provided that a Related
Person Election may not be made if the
taxpayer fails to provide the information
required by proposed § 1.45X–2(d)(2)
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with respect to the relevant eligible
components, the taxpayer provides
information that shows such
components were put to an improper
use as defined in proposed § 1.45X–
2(d)(4)(ii) or were defective as defined
in proposed § 1.45X–2(d)(4)(iii), or such
components were actually put to an
improper use or were defective.
Proposed § 1.45X–2(d)(4)(ii) would
have provided that an eligible
component is put to an improper use if
it is so used by the related person to
which the eligible component is sold.
The term improper use would mean a
use that is wasteful, such as discarding,
disposing of, or destroying the eligible
component without putting it to a
productive use. The Treasury
Department and the IRS requested
comments in the preamble to the
Proposed Regulations on the definition
of the term improper use and whether
any clarifications to its scope are
necessary.
Proposed § 1.45X–2(d)(4)(iii) would
have provided that a defective
component means a component that
does not meet the requirements of
section 45X and the section 45X
regulations. The Treasury Department
and the IRS requested comments in the
preamble to the Proposed Regulations
on the definition of defective
components and whether clarifications
to its scope are necessary.
In response to the Treasury
Department and the IRS’s request for
comments, one commenter requested
additional guidance regarding when an
eligible component can be deemed
defective under section 45X. The
commenter recommended clarification
that an eligible component can be
deemed defective and therefore
ineligible for a tax credit under section
45X ‘‘up until the point of sale of the
eligible component to an unrelated
party.’’ However, in circumstances
where a taxpayer has made a valid
Related Person Election, a sale of
eligible components to a related person
is treated as if made to an unrelated
person, thus making a sale to an
unrelated person not relevant for section
45X credit determination purposes. The
preamble to the Proposed Regulations
stated that the Treasury Department and
the IRS are concerned that the Related
Person Election may be used by
taxpayers to claim a credit for eligible
components that are defective, not
capable of being used for its intended
purpose, do not meet the requirements
for the section 45X credit, and therefore
are not eligible for the section 45X
credit. The Treasury Department and
the IRS agree that if an eligible
component is not defective at the time
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of sale, defects arising after the point of
sale may occur in the ordinary course of
a business and do not generally raise the
improper claim concerns regarding
defective components described in the
Preamble to the Proposed Regulations.
Accordingly, the final rules modify
proposed § 1.45X–2(d)(4)(iii) to clarify
that components with respect to which
defects arise after the deemed sale are
not considered defective components
for purposes of the anti-abuse rule.
Another commenter suggested that
the definitions of improper use and
defective components should provide
an exception for a defective component
that can be sold or given to a related or
unrelated person conducting legitimate
recycling operations and allowing
defective components to earn a section
45X credit provided they are properly
recycled in the United States. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this request because
section 45X does not authorize allowing
a section 45X credit for a defective
component that does not meet the
definition of an eligible component and
is not capable of being used for its
intended purpose without further
substantial modification.
D. Sales of Integrated Components to a
Related Person
1. In General
Section 45X(d)(4) provides that for
purposes of section 45X, a person is
treated as having sold an eligible
component to an unrelated person if
such component is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another
eligible component that is sold to an
unrelated person. See Part II.E. of this
Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions for rules applicable to
eligible components that are integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into other
eligible components and sold to an
unrelated person.
Proposed § 1.45X–2(e)(1) would have
provided that, for purposes of section
45X and the section 45X regulations
(and the regulations in this chapter
under sections 6417 and 6418 related to
the section 45X credit), a taxpayer that
produces and sells an eligible
component to a related person who then
integrates, incorporates, or assembles
the taxpayer’s eligible component into
another complete and distinct eligible
component that is subsequently sold to
an unrelated person may claim a section
45X credit in the taxable year of the sale
to the unrelated person.
Proposed § 1.45X–2(e)(2) would have
provided examples to illustrate the
treatment of sales of multiple
incorporated eligible components to
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related and unrelated persons. One
commenter questioned the practical
application of the requirements in
proposed § 1.45X–2(e)(2)(i) (Example 1)
and expressed concern that although
Company X and Y are related, the
proposed rule would require a
significant amount of coordination of
information. This coordination would
be necessary for the credit to be claimed
in the proper tax year in which the
ultimate product (photovoltaic cells
produced by Y using photovoltaic
wafers produced by X and purchased by
Y) was sold to Company Z. Proposed
§ 1.45X–2(e)(2)(i) (Example 1) illustrates
the rule in section 45X(d)(4) requiring
an ultimate actual sale to an unrelated
person of an eligible component.
Because section 45X(d)(4) expressly
conditions the deemed sale on an actual
subsequent sale to an unrelated person
by the related person, the Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the
authority to change this statutorily
imposed conditional timing requirement
despite any practical difficulties
taxpayers may experience in obtaining
such information. Taxpayers may,
however, make a Related Person
Election as illustrated in the example in
§ 1.45X–2(e)(3)(ii) and claim the section
45X credit upon the sale to the related
person. This would obviate the need for
such taxpayer to know when the related
person actually makes the subsequent
sale to an unrelated person. For these
reasons, the final regulations adopt
proposed § 1.45X–2(e)(2)(i) (Example 1)
without modification.
2. Special Rules Applicable to Related
Person Election
Proposed § 1.45X–2(e)(3) would have
provided that if a taxpayer makes a
valid Related Person Election under
section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i) and proposed
§ 1.45X–2(d)(1), and the taxpayer
produces and then sells an eligible
component to a related person, who
then integrates, incorporates, or
assembles the taxpayer’s eligible
component into another complete and
distinct eligible component that is
subsequently sold to an unrelated
person, the taxpayer’s sale of the eligible
component to the related person is
treated (solely for purposes of the
section 45X credit and the section 45X
regulations, and the regulations in this
chapter under sections 6417 and 6418
related to the section 45X credit) as if
made to an unrelated person in the
taxable year in which the sale to the
related person occurs. One commenter
expressed support for this proposed
rule, as it applies thoughtfully to
vertically integrated electric vehicle
manufacturers engaging in sales of
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multiple integrated eligible components
to related and unrelated persons (with a
Related Person Election). No other
comments were received on this special
rule, so it is adopted in these final
regulations without revision.
IV. Eligible Components
A. In General
Proposed § 1.45X–3(a) would have
defined the term ‘‘eligible component’’
as any solar energy component, any
wind energy component, any inverter,
any qualifying battery component, and
any applicable critical mineral, as each
is respectively defined in the Proposed
Regulations. For solar energy
components, wind energy components,
inverters, and qualifying battery
components, proposed § 1.45X–3(b)
through (e) would have provided
definitions, rules for determining the
credit amount, and documentation
requirements. Proposed § 1.45X–3(f)
would also have provided rules for
applying the phase out of the section
45X credit. Proposed § 1.45X–4 would
have provided such information for
applicable critical minerals (other than
rules for applying the phase out, which
does not apply to applicable critical
minerals).
Commenters addressed certain
aspects of these proposed rules, as
described in this Part IV. of the
Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions. These final regulations
generally adopt the rules as proposed in
§ 1.45X–3, with the modifications
described in this Part IV. of the
Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions.
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B. Solar Energy Components—in
General
Consistent with section 45X(c)(3),
proposed § 1.45X–3(b) would have
provided that solar energy component
means a solar module, photovoltaic cell,
photovoltaic wafer, solar grade
polysilicon, torque tube, structural
fastener, or polymeric backsheet.
Several commenters requested that the
final regulations add other non-listed
solar energy components (or
alternatively, to provide a safe harbor) to
allow for section 45X credit eligibility.
Examples of other non-listed solar
energy components commenters raised
include the encapsulant used to protect
the photovoltaic cells and hold the
entire system together; charge transport
materials used in photovoltaic cells;
photovoltaic wire; solar mirror facets;
and solar thermal receivers. A
commenter also suggested adopting a
functionally interdependent and
integral part test analogous to section 48
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of the Code to include additional solar
energy components.
Section 45X(c)(3) expressly identifies
the qualifying solar energy components
that are eligible for the section 45X
credit. The Treasury Department and
the IRS do not have the authority to add
to the set of solar energy components
that are identified by statute, for
example, by applying a functional
interdependence or integral part test.
For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt the commenters’ requests in these
final regulations.
1. Photovoltaic Cell
Proposed § 1.45X–3(b)(1)(ii) would
have provided that the credit amount for
a photovoltaic cell is equal to the
product of 4 cents multiplied by the
capacity of such photovoltaic cell. The
proposed rule provided that the
capacity of each photovoltaic cell is
expressed on a direct current watt basis
and capacity is the nameplate capacity
in direct current watts using Standard
Test Conditions (STC), as defined by the
International Electrotechnical
Commission (IEC). The proposed rule
further provided that in the case of a
tandem technology produced in serial
fashion, such as a monolithic
multijunction cell composed of two or
more sub-cells, capacity must be
measured at the point of sale at the end
of the single cell production unit; and,
in the case of a four-terminal tandem
technology produced by mechanically
stacking two distinct cells or
interconnected layers, capacity must be
measured for each cell at each point of
sale.
A few commenters expressed concern
that the proposed rule treats twoterminal and four-terminal tandem
technologies differently, and that by
labeling a monolithic two-terminal
configuration as composed of sub-cells,
the proposed rule would require this
technology to be measured as a single
cell rather than two distinct tandem
cells. In contrast, proposed § 1.45X–
3(b)(1)(ii) provides that mechanically
stacked four-terminal tandem
technology consists of ‘‘two distinct
cells.’’ In the commenters’ view, the
proposed rule would allow fourterminal cells to be measured before
they are combined, while two-terminal
cells would be measured after they are
combined, resulting in higher capacity
for four-terminal cells and increased
credit amounts for four-terminal cells. A
commenter also suggested that proposed
§ 1.45X–3(b)(1)(ii) is currently
problematic for future tandem
technology cell production and, perhaps
unintentionally, directs the
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development of certain tandem
technologies.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
agree with the commenters’ concerns
regarding disparate treatment between
four-terminal and two-terminal cells
and capacity and credit amounts.
Accordingly, these final regulations
revise proposed § 1.45X–3(b)(1)(ii) to
add additional text at the end as
follows: ‘‘Where that cell is sold to a
customer who will use it as the bottom
cell in a tandem module, its capacity
should be measured with the customer’s
intended top cell placed between the
bottom cell and the one-sun light
source.’’
2. Photovoltaic Wafer
Consistent with section
45X(c)(3)(B)(ii), proposed § 1.45X–
3(b)(2)(i) would have defined a
photovoltaic wafer to mean a thin slice,
sheet, or layer of semiconductor
material of at least 240 square
centimeters that comprises the substrate
or absorber layer of one or more
photovoltaic cells. A photovoltaic wafer
must be produced by a single
manufacturer by forming an ingot from
molten polysilicon (for example,
Czochralski method) and then
subsequently slicing it into wafers,
forming molten or evaporated
polysilicon into a sheet or layer, or
depositing a thin-film semiconductor
photon absorber into a sheet or layer
(that is, thin-film deposition).
Some commenters suggested revisions
to the definition of a photovoltaic wafer
to include non-traditional methods of
producing wafers. For example, a
commenter requested expanding the
definition to include wafers produced
by any of the emerging ‘kerfless’ or
‘direct’ wafer technologies, as well as
the polysilicon used by these
technologies. The Treasury Department
and the IRS have determined that direct
wafer technologies fall within the
statutory definition of photovoltaic
wafers, if they are produced directly
from evaporated solar grade polysilicon
but disagree that any further
clarification is needed in these final
regulations.
A commenter requested that the final
regulations clarify that ingots must be
produced within the United States for
solar wafers to be eligible for the section
45X credit. As required by section
45X(c)(3)(B)(ii)(I)(bb), to qualify for a
section 45X credit, a photovoltaic wafer
must be produced by a single
manufacturer either by forming an ingot
and then subsequently slicing it into
wafers, or by forming molten or
evaporated solar grade polysilicon or
deposition into a sheet or layer. Thus,
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to qualify for a section 45X credit, both
the ingot and the wafer must be
produced domestically in accordance
with section 45X(d)(2). Proposed
§ 1.45X–1(d)(2) would have clarified
that constituent elements, materials, and
subcomponents used in the production
of eligible components are not subject to
the domestic production requirement
provided in proposed § 1.45X–1(d)(1).
Because the ingot production is part of
the wafer production, ingots are not
constituent elements, materials, or
subcomponents. The Treasury
Department and the IRS have
determined it is unnecessary to specify
that the ingot must be domestically
produced as section 45X and proposed
§ 1.45X–3(b)(2)(i) require the wafer to be
domestically produced, which includes
production of the ingot. See also Part
II.F.2. of this Summary of Comments
and Explanation of Revisions for a
discussion of proposed § 1.45X–
1(g)(4)(ii) (Example 2) concerning the
production of ingots and wafers.
3. Polymeric Backsheet
Consistent with section
45X(c)(3)(B)(iii), proposed § 1.45X–
3(b)(3) would have defined polymeric
backsheet to mean a sheet on the back
of a solar module that acts as an electric
insulator and protects the inner
components of such module from the
surrounding environment.
Certain commenters recommended
that the term be considered to include
a product that qualifies solely based on
the property’s functionality and not the
property’s composition, in order for
backsheets made of glass to be eligible
components. One commenter stated that
its product is used in solar panels and
therefore its request is consistent with
Congressional intent of expediting the
transition to clean energy, the
underlying intent of section 45X to
create parity among technologies, and
incentivizing the creation of a U.S.based supply chain for current and
future solar technologies. The
commenter thought that other energy
components were defined based on their
function, not their ‘‘composition’’ (for
example, inverter, photovoltaic cell, and
solar module) and believes that glass
performs the same function as a
backsheet made of plastic. The
commenter suggested that clarity on
whether a backsheet made of glass is
part of the definition of ‘‘polymeric
backsheet’’ is important because it will
help with decisions on pursuing a
section 48C credit and for avoiding
penalties under section 6694 of the
Code (preparer penalty) or section 6662
of the Code (substantial
understatement). Another commenter
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recommended adding back glass as a
solar energy component because it is
better for the environment in that a
domestic facility that uses recycled glass
from retired solar modules is ‘‘cleaner’’
than an overseas facility.
In considering these comments, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
determined that the best reading of the
statute is that the term ‘‘polymeric
backsheet’’ is limited to backsheets
made of polymeric materials that also
meet the functional definition provided
in section 45X(c)(3)(B)(iii). This
excludes most glass backsheets because
they are typically not composed of a
polymer, but of soda-lime glass. The
final regulations add the word
‘‘polymeric’’ into the definition as a
clarification. In reaching this
determination, the Treasury Department
and the IRS considered that when
drafting the statute, Congress
affirmatively included ‘‘polymeric’’ in
the term and this inclusion should be
given effect. Thus, the final regulations
clarify that the definition is limited to
a sheet on the back of solar modules
composed, at least in part, of a polymer,
that acts as an electric insulator and
protects the inner components of such
module from the surrounding
environment.
4. Solar Grade Polysilicon
Consistent with section
45X(c)(3)(B)(iv), proposed § 1.45X–
3(b)(4) would have defined solar grade
polysilicon to mean silicon that is
suitable for use in photovoltaic
manufacturing and purified to a
minimum purity of 99.999999 percent
silicon by mass. A commenter requested
that the final rules state that the
production of the silicon gas that is used
for direct wafer production may receive
the section 45X credit for polysilicon for
the mass of silicon in the gas. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined, in close consultation with
the Department of Energy, that gas used
for direct wafer production includes
molecules of silicon contained within
another substance. Accordingly, such
gas is not a complete and distinct
eligible component within the meaning
of proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(1)(i). For this
reason, the Treasury Department and
the IRS decline to adopt this request in
these final regulations.
A few commenters requested
guidance on how the purity level for
solar grade polysilicon should be
determined. One commenter requested
that the final rules clarify that only
impurities that are ‘‘material to the
industry’’ should be counted in
determining whether the minimum
purity level is met. Because these final
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regulations add the purity standard in
SEMI Specification PV17–1012 Category
1 to proposed § 1.45X–3(b)(4), which
distinguishes between material and
immaterial impurities, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt the commenter’s suggestion of
clarifying that the statutory purity level
refers only to impurity levels that are
‘‘material to the industry.’’
A commenter recommended adopting
the standards for polysilicon feedstock
in SEMI Specification PV17–1012. The
Treasury Department and the IRS, in
close consultation with the Department
of Energy, have determined that SEMI
Specification PV17–1012 Category 1
meets the purity standard of 99.999999
percent, while Categories 2 through 5 do
not. The Treasury Department and the
IRS thus agree with this request but only
for Category 1, and these final
regulations accordingly revise proposed
§ 1.45X–3(b)(4) to add the purity
standard in SEMI Specification PV17–
1012 Category 1.
5. Solar Module
Proposed § 1.45X–3(b)(5)(ii) would
have stated that the credit amount for a
solar module is equal to the product of
7 cents multiplied by the capacity of
such module. The proposed rule also
provided that the capacity of each solar
module is expressed on a direct current
watt basis, and that capacity is the
nameplate capacity in direct current
watts using STC, as defined by the IEC.
A commenter requested producers be
required to use ‘‘flash’’ values to
determine the value of the tax credit for
modules. The preamble to the Proposed
Regulations explained that nameplate
capacity is an appropriate, accurate, and
consistent standard for the measurement
of solar module capacity that can be
used to measure the capacity of other
eligible components. Using an industry
standard such as nameplate capacity
that is widely applicable to various
eligible components provides greater
taxpayer certainty, reduces taxpayer
compliance burdens, and aids IRS
administration. For these reasons, the
Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined that the best application of
the statute is to require the use of
nameplate capacity to measure the
capacity of a solar module. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
therefore decline to adopt this
suggestion to permit the use of ‘‘flash’’
value capacity measurements in these
final regulations.
6. Solar Tracker
Consistent with section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vi), proposed § 1.45X–
3(b)(6) would have provided that a solar
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tracker means a mechanical system that
moves solar modules according to the
position of the sun and to increase
energy output. Section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)
provides that torque tubes (as defined in
proposed § 1.45X–3(b)(7)) or structural
fasteners (as defined in proposed
§ 1.45X–3(b)(8)) are solar tracker
components that are eligible
components for purposes of the section
45X credit.
Commenters requested that the
definition of a solar tracker (not an
eligible component) in section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vi) be modified to allow
solar thermal collectors, heliostats, and
fixed tilt systems (additional items) to
be solar tracker components as defined
in section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vii). A solar
tracker is defined in 45X(c)(3)(B)(vi) as
a ‘‘mechanical system that moves solar
modules according to the position of the
sun to increase energy output.’’ To be a
solar tracker, a device must be a
mechanical system that moves a solar
module. The Treasury Department and
the IRS do not have authority to expand
the definition of solar tracker to include
additional items such as the ones
suggested that increase energy output
without moving solar modules.
Moreover, modification of the definition
of a solar tracker in the manner the
commenter requested would not result
in such additional items qualifying as
eligible components because a solar
tracker is not a solar energy component
that is an eligible component under
section 45X(c)(1)(A)(i). Section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vii) provides that torque
tubes and structural fasteners are the
only two solar tracker components that
may qualify as eligible components. The
Treasury Department and the IRS do not
have authority to expand the categories
of eligible solar tracker components. For
these reasons, the Treasury Department
and the IRS decline to adopt this request
in the final regulations.
7. Torque Tube
Consistent with section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(I), proposed § 1.45X–
3(b)(7)(i) would have provided that
torque tube means a structural steel
support element (including longitudinal
purlins) that: (i) is part of a solar tracker;
(ii) is of any cross-sectional shape; (iii)
may be assembled from individually
manufactured segments; (iv) spans
longitudinally between foundation
posts; (v) supports solar panels and is
connected to a mounting attachment for
solar panels (with or without separate
module interface rails); and (vi) is
rotated by means of a drive system.
Commenters suggested various
statutory revisions to the definition of
torque tube in section
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45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(I). A commenter
recommended replacing the definition
with a more generalized term such as
‘‘Tracker Structural Frame’’ to allow for
other common solar collector
morphologies. Another commenter
requested removing or revising section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(I)(dd) to include single
foundation mounted structures or
ground-mounted carousel structures.
One commenter proposed clarifying that
aluminum bearings, steel damper arms,
steel saddle brackets, and steel bottom
brackets are included in the definition
of torque tubes or structural fasteners.
Alternatively, the commenter suggested
providing either: (i) a non-exclusive list
of items that are included in the
definition of torque tube or structural
fasteners, or (ii) a test similar to the
functionally interdependent or integral
part tests under proposed § 1.48–
9(f)(2)(ii) and (f)(3) to determine when a
component is included in the definition
of a torque tube or structural fastener.
Because section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(I)
specifically defines torque tube for
purposes of section 45X, the Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the
authority to expand the definition of
torque tubes and solar tracker
components in the final regulations to
include additional solar energy
components. As previously discussed,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
also lack authority to incorporate a
functional interdependence or integral
part tests that would allow other
components not specified in the statute
to qualify for the section 45X credit. For
these reasons, the Treasury Department
and the IRS decline to adopt these
comments in the final regulations.
8. Structural Fastener
Consistent with section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(II), proposed § 1.45X–
3(b)(8)(i) would have defined a
structural fastener to mean a component
that is used: (i) to connect the
mechanical and drive system
components of a solar tracker to the
foundation of such solar tracker; (ii) to
connect torque tubes to drive
assemblies; or (iii) to connect segments
of torque tubes to one another.
Several commenters requested
revisions to the definition of structural
fastener in proposed § 1.45X–3(b)(8)(i).
For example, commenters requested that
the definition of structural fastener be
extended ‘‘beyond steel and iron torque
tubes to specifically allow for
innovations made from other materials,’’
such as durable plastic; that solar frames
made from greenhouse gas reducing
steel and roll-form fabricated frames (as
opposed to the current industry
standard, imported extruded aluminum
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frames) qualify as structural fasteners,
solar modules, or torque tubes; and that
the definition of structural fasteners be
expanded to include those that secure
the photovoltaic module to the torque
tube or module interface rails. The
Treasury Department and the IRS do not
have the authority to expand the
definition of structural fasteners and
solar tracker components in the final
regulations to include additional solar
energy components. However, the
Treasury Department and the IRS note
that a component that is used for any of
the functions described in section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(II) would be considered
a structural fastener for purposes of
section 45X. The Treasury Department
and the IRS think that proposed
§ 1.45X–3(b)(8)(i) and the statutory
definition of a structural fastener is
sufficiently clear to address the
requested clarifications. Proposed
§ 1.45X–3(b)(8)(i) is therefore adopted in
these final regulations without revision.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(b)(8)(iii) would
have required that, for substantiation
purposes, a taxpayer must document
that a structural fastener is used in a
manner described in proposed § 1.45X–
3(b)(8)(i)(A), (B), or (C), with a bill of
sale or other similar documentation that
explicitly describes such use. One
commenter specifically supported the
substantiation requirement for structural
fasteners in proposed § 1.45X–
3(b)(8)(iii). Another commenter
requested the final rules require
taxpayers to substantiate that the
structural fasteners for which they are
claiming the section 45X credit include
only the manufactured component (bolt
or rivet) itself. The Treasury Department
and the IRS have determined there is no
need for further clarification of the
substantiation requirement for structural
fasteners in addition to the specific
requirements relating to use in proposed
§ 1.45X–3(b)(8)(iii) and the general
substantiation requirements in section
6001 of the Code. For this reason, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this comment in the
final regulations.
C. Wind Energy Components
1. In General
Consistent with section 45X(c)(4),
proposed § 1.45X–3(c) would have
provided that a wind energy component
means a blade, nacelle, tower, offshore
wind foundation, or related offshore
wind vessel. Commenters generally
requested expanding proposed § 1.45X–
3(c) to include other non-listed wind
energy components such as structural
fasteners. Section 45X(c)(4) specifically
provides a list of qualifying wind energy
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eligible components. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the
authority to expand the statutorily
enumerated list of wind energy
components eligible for a section 45X
credit. For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt the commenters request in these
final regulations.
2. Nacelle
Consistent with section
45X(c)(4)(B)(iii), proposed § 1.45–
3(c)(3)(i) would have defined a nacelle
to mean the assembly of the drivetrain
and other tower-top components of a
wind turbine (with the exception of the
blades and the hub) within their cover
housing.
A commenter stated that guidance
should distinguish between
manufacturing of eligible wind energy
components (for example, in a
manufacturing facility) from the
installation of wind energy components
at the relevant project site, as the latter
does not constitute manufacturing or
production of eligible components. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined that the definition of
‘‘produced by the taxpayer’’ provided in
proposed § 1.45X–1(c)(1) is sufficient to
clarify that production of an eligible
component requires substantially
transforming constituent elements,
materials, or subcomponents into a
complete and distinct eligible
component that is functionally different
from that which would result from
disqualifying minor assembly or
superficial modification of the elements,
materials or subcomponents.
Another commenter requested that
the final regulations recognize that,
where a new drivetrain and associated
equipment (the pitch bearing, pitch
system, main shaft, main bearing,
gearbox, flex coupling, and slip ring) are
produced for use in repowering of
existing wind turbines and installed
into an existing nacelle cover housing
with certain other used equipment
(including yaw bearing and baseplate),
the nacelle is eligible for the section 45X
credit. Under this commenter’s
approach, the drivetrain of the nacelle
must be new to be eligible for the
section 45X credit. Another commenter
also suggests inclusion of a ‘‘reasonable
computation’’ of the section 45X credit
for repowered eligible components.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
note that repowering is a form of onsite
re-manufacturing that is typically
accomplished through a hybrid of
primary and secondary production that
utilizes a mix of existing and new
components. To produce a nacelle
within the definition of proposed
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§ 1.45X–3(c)(3)(i), the taxpayer would
need to meet the requirements of the
definition of ‘‘produced by the
taxpayer’’ provided in proposed
§ 1.45X–1(c)(1), including by
substantially transforming the
combination of existing and new
subcomponents into a new nacelle that
is distinct from the original nacelle. In
some circumstances, nacelle repowering
may constitute production of an eligible
component. For example, a taxpayer
that manufactures and installs a new
drivetrain and associated
subcomponents within housing atop a
wind tower will be considered to have
substantially transformed the
combination of new and existing
subcomponents, so that taxpayer will
have produced an eligible nacelle. In
contrast, a taxpayer that merely replaces
the controller in a nacelle with a new
one will not have substantially
transformed the combination of new
and existing subcomponents, so that
taxpayer will not have produced an
eligible nacelle. Routine maintenance or
part replacement would fall under the
definition of disqualifying minor
assembly or ‘‘superficial modification.’’
3. Related Offshore Wind Vessel
Consistent with section
45X(c)(4)(B)(iv), proposed
§ 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i) would have defined
related offshore wind vessel to mean
any vessel that is purpose-built or
retrofitted for purposes of the
development, transport, installation,
operation, or maintenance of offshore
wind energy components. Proposed
§ 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i) would have clarified
that a vessel is purpose-built for
development, transport, installation,
operation, or maintenance of offshore
wind energy components if it is built to
be capable of performing such functions
and it is of a type that is commonly used
in the offshore wind industry. Proposed
§ 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i) would have further
clarified that a vessel is retrofitted for
development, transport, installation,
operation, or maintenance of offshore
wind energy components if such vessel
was incapable of performing such
functions prior to being retrofitted, the
retrofit causes the vessel to be capable
of performing such functions, and the
retrofitted vessel is of a type that is
commonly used in the offshore wind
industry.
Under proposed § 1.45X–3(c)(4)(ii),
consistent with section 45X(b)(1)(F)(i),
the credit amount for a related offshore
wind vessel would have been equal to
10 percent of the sales price of the
vessel. Under the Proposed Regulations
the sales price of the vessel does not
include the price of maintenance,
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services, or other similar items that may
be sold with the vessel. For a related
offshore wind vessel with respect to
which a Related Person Election under
section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i) has been made,
the election would not cause the sale
price of such vessel to be treated as
having been determined with respect to
a transaction between uncontrolled
taxpayers for purposes of section 482 of
the Code and the regulations
thereunder.
One commenter requested
clarification on the valuation of
retrofitted offshore wind vessels and
requested guidance on whether the
section 45X credit applies to the cost of
the retrofit itself, the value-add of the
retrofit, the cost of the final sale of a
retrofitted vessel, or some other amount.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
confirm that the credit amount specified
in section 45X(b)(1)(F)(i)—ten percent of
the sales price of such vessel—
specifically applies to any related
offshore wind vessel which is purposebuilt or retrofitted as provided in
section 45X(c)(4)(B)(iv).
A commenter stated that the
definition of an offshore wind vessel is
too narrow and that more standard
vessel types (for example, tugboats and
barges) that are capable of doing
offshore wind work should also be
eligible for the section 45X credit if they
are being constructed or retrofitted for
the purpose of offshore wind work. The
Treasury Department and the IRS note
that section 45X(c)(4)(B)(iv) and
proposed § 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i) would have
defined a related offshore wind vessel to
mean ‘‘any vessel’’ that is purpose-built
or retrofitted for purposes of the
development, transport, installation,
operation, or maintenance of offshore
wind energy components. Proposed
§ 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i) would have clarified
that a vessel is purpose-built for
development, transport, installation,
operation, or maintenance of offshore
wind energy components if it is built to
be capable of performing such functions
and it is of a type that is commonly used
in the offshore wind industry. Proposed
§ 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i) would have further
clarified that a vessel is retrofitted for
development, transport, installation,
operation, or maintenance of offshore
wind energy components if such vessel
was incapable of performing such
functions prior to being retrofitted, the
retrofit causes the vessel to be capable
of performing such functions, and the
retrofitted vessel is of a type that is
commonly used in the offshore wind
industry. Thus, if a vessel meets the
definition of a related offshore wind
vessel in proposed § 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i),
there are no limitations as to the type of
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vessel that may be an eligible
component.
The commenter’s requested
clarification would require an
application of the standard in proposed
§ 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i) to specific cases for
which a categorical determination of
eligibility for additional vessel types
would not be appropriate in these final
regulations because such a
determination would depend on the
specific facts of each case.
Although no comments were received
on proposed § 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i), the
Treasury Department and the IRS revise
proposed § 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i) in these
final regulations to clarify that Federal
income tax principles apply in
determining the accuracy of the sales
price used to calculate the section 45X
credit. This revision provides greater
certainty as to what principles apply for
purposes of the section 45X credit and
is in addition to the specific exclusions
from a vessel’s sales price in proposed
§ 1.45X–3(c)(4)(i), which included
maintenance, services, or other similar
items that may be sold with the vessel.
4. Total Rated Capacity of the
Completed Wind Turbine
Proposed § 1.45X–3(c)(6) would have
provided that, for purposes of proposed
§ 1.45X–3(c), the total rated capacity of
the completed wind turbine means, for
the completed wind turbine for which a
blade, nacelle, offshore wind
foundation, or tower was manufactured
and sold, the nameplate capacity at the
time of sale as certified to the relevant
national or international standards, such
as IEC 61400, or American National
Standards Institute (ANSI)/American
Clean Power Association (ACP) 101–1–
2021, the Small Wind Turbine Standard
(Standard). Under proposed
§ 1.45X–3(c)(6), certification of the
turbine to such Standards must be
documented by a certificate issued by
an accredited certification body and the
total rated capacity of a wind turbine
must be expressed in watts.
One commenter expressed support for
the proposal requiring that qualifying
wind turbine components must be made
and sold for use on certified wind
turbines. Another commenter
recommended including both American
Wind Energy Association (AWEA) 9.1–
2009 and ANSI/ACP 101–1–2021 as
acceptable wind turbine certification
standards. The commenter explained
that ANSI/ACP 101–1–2021 is a revision
of the AWEA standard (the original
small wind certification standard, and
all currently certified small wind
systems are certified to this standard)
that streamlines the certification
process, but there is no requirement that
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turbines with the original certification
must recertify to the new ANSI/ACP
standard. Thus, the commenter states
that including both standards in the
final rules will allow currently certified
turbines made in the United States to
earn section 45X credits as well as new
turbines currently in the certification
process following the newer standard.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
agree with this request and these final
regulations revise proposed § 1.45X–
3(c)(6) to add both AWEA 9.1–2009 and
ANSI/ACP 101–1–2021 as acceptable
wind turbine certification standards.
A commenter sought clarification as
to whether a wind tower producer may
rely on a certification of the total rated
capacity of the turbine obtained from
the original equipment manufacturer
(OEM) that produces the completed
wind turbine in which the wind tower
is incorporated, provided the certificate
was issued by an accredited certification
body. The commenter noted that
requiring wind tower producers to
independently verify the capacity of the
completed turbine would cause ‘‘undue
expense and delay.’’ To provide
assurance to the commenter, a wind
tower producer may rely on an OEM’s
certification of the total rated capacity of
the completed wind turbine in which
the tower was incorporated, but the
Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined that the rules as set out by
proposed § 1.45X–3(c)(6) and (7) do not
require further clarification on this
point.
D. Inverters
1. In General
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2),
proposed § 1.45X–3(d) would define an
inverter as an end product that is
suitable to convert direct current (DC)
electricity from one or more solar
modules or certified distributed wind
energy systems into alternating current
(AC) electricity. Proposed § 1.45X–3(d)
would have further provided that an
end product is suitable to convert DC
electricity from one or more solar
modules or certified distributed wind
energy systems into AC electricity if, in
the form sold by the manufacturer, it is
able to connect with such modules or
systems and convert DC electricity to
AC electricity from such connected
source. For purposes of section 45X, the
term inverter includes a central inverter,
commercial inverter, distributed wind
inverter, microinverter, or residential
inverter. Proposed § 1.45X–3(d) would
have clarified the definition of each of
these types of inverters, including the
required rated outputs.
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The preamble to the Proposed
Regulations stated that section 45X(c)(2)
requires certain types of inverters be
‘‘suitable to’’ or ‘‘suitable for’’ a
statutorily required use or application to
be considered an eligible component.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(d) would also have
provided the calculation of the credit
amount for each type of inverter. In
general, the credit amount for each type
of inverter would be equal to the
product of the inverter’s total rated
capacity and the amount prescribed in
section 45X(b)(2)(B) for such inverter.
One commenter requested the final
rules provide a credit for utility-scale
power converters and that a ‘‘utilityscale power converter’’ be defined in a
manner consistent with section 2.1.9 of
Underwriters Laboratories Standard
1741 (2002). Specifically, the
commenter requested modifying the
final rules to provide a credit for
products that only convert direct
current to direct current or alternating
current to direct current. Because
section 45X(c)(2)(A) specifically defines
the term inverter to mean ‘‘an end
product which is suitable to convert
direct current electricity . . . into
alternating current electricity,’’ the
Treasury Department and the IRS do not
have the authority to expand the
definition of inverter in the final
regulations to include these additional
products. For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt this comment in the final
regulations.
Another commenter requested that,
for each type of inverter provided for
under section 45X(c)(2), the rated
output of alternating current power be
defined as ‘‘the maximum continuous
grid-tied power rating the inverter is
capable of handling.’’ The commenter
asserts that the suggested change will
‘‘ensure consistent interpretation across
technologies despite consumer-driven
decisions impacting output.’’ Section
45X(c)(2) uses the term ‘‘rated output’’
to define, in part, a commercial inverter,
distributed wind inverter,
microinverter, residential inverter, or
utility inverter. The Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt this comment in the final
regulations because the term rated
output is in the statutory definition for
these inverters.
Several commenters requested that
the final rules provide a section 45X
credit for inverters that convert direct
current from sources other than solar
modules or certified distributed wind
energy systems as long as these inverters
meet the technical requirements of an
inverter defined under section
45X(c)(2). Section 45X(c)(2)(A)
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specifically defines the term inverter to
mean ‘‘an end product which is suitable
to convert direct current electricity from
one or more solar modules or certified
distributed wind energy systems into
alternating current electricity.’’ Other
types of inverters such as bidirectional
electric vehicle inverters or utility and
commercial inverters that are in practice
used with battery modules can meet the
existing suitability standard within the
definition without additional
clarification required. For this reason,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this comment in the
final regulations.
2. Central Inverter
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2)(B),
proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(2)(i) would have
defined a central inverter as an inverter
that is suitable for large utility-scale
systems and has a capacity that is
greater than 1,000 kilowatts, expressed
on an alternating current watt basis.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(2)(i) would have
further clarified that an inverter is
suitable for large utility-scale systems if,
in the form sold by the manufacturer, it
is capable of serving as a component in
a large utility-scale system and meets
the core engineering specifications for
such application. Proposed § 1.45X–
3(d)(2)(ii) would have provided a credit
equal to the product of 0.25 cents
multiplied by the total rated capacity of
the central inverter where the total rated
capacity is expressed on an alternating
current watt basis.
One commenter requested the credit
amount available for a central inverter
be changed to match the credit available
for utility inverters because utility
inverters are eligible for a credit that is
six times higher than central inverters.
Because section 45X(b)(2)(B) provides
the credit amounts available for central
inverters and utility inverters, the
Treasury Department and the IRS do not
have the authority to make the
requested change. For this reason, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this comment in the
final regulations.
3. Commercial Inverter
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a. Definition
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2)(C),
proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(3)(i) would have
provided that a commercial inverter
means an inverter that is suitable for
commercial or utility-scale applications,
has a rated output of 208, 480, 600 or
800 volt three-phase power, and has a
capacity expressed on an alternating
current watt basis that is not less than
20 kilowatts and not greater than 125
kilowatts.
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One commenter requested the
definition of a commercial inverter be
changed to provide a credit for inverters
with a rated output greater than 800 volt
three-phase power. Section
45X(c)(2)(C)(ii) defines a commercial
inverter, in part, as having ‘‘a rated
output of 208, 480, 600, or 800 volt
three-phase power.’’ The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the
authority to expand the definition of a
commercial inverter in the final
regulations to those with a rated output
greater than 800 volt three-phase power.
For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt this comment in the final
regulations.
A few commenters requested that the
final rules modify the definition of a
commercial inverter to include a DC
optimized commercial inverter system,
and that, when DC optimizers are paired
with a commercial inverter, the credit
amount available for commercial
inverters should be determined in a
manner similar to the credit
computation for direct current
optimized inverter systems (DC
optimized inverter systems, as the term
would have been defined in Proposed
§ 1.45X–3(d)(5)(iii)(B) and discussed in
Part IV.D.3.a. of this Summary of
Comments and Explanation of
Revisions). Generally, these commenters
requested that, with the modified
definition of commercial inverter, the
available credit be computed as a
product of $0.02 multiplied by the
lesser of the sum of the alternating
current capacity of each DC optimizer
when paired with the inverter in the DC
optimized inverter system or the
alternating current capacity of the
inverter in the DC optimized inverter
system. No language in the statutory text
or proposed rules prohibits the use of
direct current optimizers with
commercial inverters. Thus, it is
unnecessary to modify the final rules to
state that DC optimizers may be used
with a commercial inverter.
Section 45X(b)(1)(I) provides that the
amount of the section 45X credit for an
inverter is equal to the applicable
amount with respect to each type of
inverter multiplied by the capacity of
such inverter (expressed on a per
alternating current watt basis). The
Treasury Department and the IRS do not
have the authority to change the method
for computing the credit for commercial
inverters. In contrast, language that
appears only in the definition of
‘‘microinverter’’ in section 45X(c)(2)(E)
(‘suitable to connect to one solar
module’) does require clarification
about how to apply the definition to DC
optimized systems and multi-module
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microinverters. Because this language
does not appear in the definition of
‘‘commercial inverter’’ in section
45X(c)(2)(C), there is no analogous need
to clarify the application of the
definition or credit calculation. For this
reason, the Treasury Department and
the IRS decline to adopt these requests
pertaining to commercial inverters in
the final regulations.
b. Credit Amount
Proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(3)(iii) would
have provided a credit equal to the
product of 2 cents multiplied by the
total rated capacity of the commercial
inverter where the total rated capacity is
expressed on an alternating current watt
basis.
Commenters requested that DC
optimizers be allowed to be paired with
commercial or utility scale system
configurations, like microinverters. This
comment is not adopted for the reasons
provided in Part IV.D.3.a. of this
Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions.
4. Microinverters
a. Definition
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2)(E),
proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(5)(i) would have
defined a microinverter as an inverter
that is suitable to connect with one solar
module; has a rated output of 120 or 240
volt single-phase power, or 208 or 480
volt three-phase power; and has a
capacity, expressed on an AC watt basis,
that is not greater than 650 watts. One
commenter requested the final rules
change the maximum capacity limit for
the microinverter from 650 watts to 700
watts to accommodate future
technological advancements. Because
section 45X(c)(2)(E)(iii) provides the
maximum capacity of a microinverter,
the Treasury Department and the IRS do
not have the authority to make the
requested change. For this reason, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this comment in the
final regulations.
b. Suitable To Connect to One Solar
Module—in General
Proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(5)(iii)(A)
would have clarified that an inverter is
suitable to connect to one solar module
if, in the form sold by the manufacturer,
it is capable of connecting to one or
more solar modules and regulating the
DC electricity from each module
independently before that electricity is
converted into alternating current
electricity.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(5)(iii)(B)
would have clarified that a DC
optimized inverter system may qualify
as a microinverter. Proposed § 1.45X–
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3(d)(5)(iii)(B) would have defined a DC
optimized inverter system to mean an
inverter that is comprised of an inverter
connected to multiple DC optimizers
that are each designed to connect to one
solar module. Proposed § 1.45X–
3(d)(5)(iii)(B) would have provided that
a DC optimized inverter system is
suitable to connect with one solar
module if, in the form sold by the
manufacturer, it is capable of
connecting to one or more solar
modules and regulating the DC
electricity from each module
independently before that electricity is
converted into alternating current
electricity. Proposed § 1.45X–
3(d)(5)(iv)(B) would have provided that
a DC optimized inverter system qualifies
as a microinverter if each DC optimizer
paired with the inverter in a DC
optimized inverter system meets the
requirements of section 45X(c)(2)(E) and
a taxpayer must produce and sell the
inverter and the DC optimizers in the
DC optimized inverter system together
as a combined end product.
Several commenters agreed with the
proposed rule permitting DC optimizers
paired with an inverter to qualify as
microinverters and receive the
corresponding credit amount. One
commenter suggested revising the
definition of a DC optimized inverter
systems to more clearly define the
qualifying system components of a DC
optimized inverter system. This
commenter proposed that qualifying
system components include items that
control the DC output of one or more
solar modules and are integral to the
function of the inverter and modules.
The Treasury Department and the IRS,
in consultation with the Department of
Energy, conclude that the additional
confirmation the commenter is
requesting is not necessary as it would
not provide additional clarity. For this
reason, the Treasury Department and
the IRS decline to adopt this suggestion
in the final regulations.
Several commenters requested that
the final rules remove the requirement
that a taxpayer produce and sell both
the inverter and the DC optimizers in
the DC optimized inverter system as a
combined end product. One commenter
expressed the view that the requirement
distorts the market, provides an unfair
advantage to companies that already
manufacture both items, and requires
companies to seek out partnerships
solely for the purpose of obtaining the
section 45X credit. Other commenters
that manufacture both products state
that the proposed requirement is
inconsistent with standard industry
practices where a manufacturer sells the
items separately. In contrast, one
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commenter supported the ‘‘combined
end product’’ requirement and
suggested it also be applied to multimodule inverters to prevent multiple
entities from claiming section 45X
credits for the same system. Section
45X(c)(2)(A) defines an inverter as an
end product that is suitable to convert
DC electricity from one or more solar
modules or certified distributed wind
energy systems into AC electricity. For
each type of inverter listed under
section 45X(c)(2), section 45X(b)(1)(I)
provides the applicable credit is
determined as an amount equal to the
product of each inverter’s applicable
amount multiplied by the capacity of
such inverter. The section 45X credit is
separately computed for each inverter.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
do not have the authority to allow a
credit solely for a DC optimizer, because
it does not convert DC electricity into
AC electricity as the definition of
inverter in section 45X(c)(2) requires.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
also do not have the authority to change
the number of inverter units used to
compute the available credit amount.
For these reasons, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt these comments in these final
regulations. However, while proposed
§ 1.45X–3(d)(5)(iv)(B) requires that the
inverter and DC optimizer in the DC
optimized inverter system must be
produced and sold as a combined end
product, the Treasury Department and
the IRS clarify that the inverter and the
DC optimizer do not need to be
physically packaged together at sale,
and the inverter and DC optimizer do
not need to be fully interconnected and
assembled at the time of sale.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(5) would have
clarified that a multi-module inverter
may also qualify as a microinverter.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(5)(iii)(C) would
have defined a multi-module inverter to
mean an inverter that is comprised of an
inverter with independent connections
and DC optimizing components for two
or more modules. Proposed § 1.45X–
3(d)(5)(iii)(C) would have further
provided that a multi-module
microinverter is suitable to connect with
one solar module if it is capable of
connecting to one or more solar
modules and regulating the DC
electricity from each module
independently before that electricity is
converted into alternating current
electricity. Proposed § 1.45X–
3(d)(5)(iv)(C) would have provided that
multimodule inverter qualifies as a
microinverter if it meets the
requirements of section 45X(c)(2)(E).
One commenter suggested revising
the definition of a multi-module
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inverter to more clearly define the
qualifying system components of a
multi-module inverter. The commenter
suggested that qualifying system
components should be those items that
control the DC output of one or more
solar modules and are integral to the
function of the inverter and modules.
The same commenter also suggested
revising the definition of a multimodule inverter to clarify that for a
multi-module inverter to qualify as a
microinverter, a taxpayer must produce
and sell the inverter and the DC
optimizers together as a combined end
product. A different commenter agreed
with this suggestion.
A few commenters suggested revising
the definition of a multi-module
inverter to provide that a multi-module
inverter includes a DC optimized
inverter system such that each DC
optimizer may connect with more than
one solar module and the credit amount
in such a system is computed similarly
to a DC optimized inverter system,
except that the DC optimizers are not
required to be sold with the inverter as
a ‘‘combined end product.’’ Other
commenters disagreed with this
suggestion and support the proposed
rule that would not have allowed solar
modules to share a connection to a
multi-module inverter.
The reasons provided for retaining the
rule for DC optimized inverter systems
also apply to adopting the requirement
for multi-module inverters. The
Treasury Department and the IRS think
that requiring taxpayers to produce and
sell the inverter and the DC optimizers
together as a combined end product will
create parity with DC optimized inverter
systems and avoid potential abuse. For
these reasons, the Treasury Department
and the IRS adopt these comments in
the final regulations.
c. Credit Amount
Proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(5)(iv)(A)
would have provided that generally, the
credit amount for a microinverter is
equal to the product of 11 cents
multiplied by the total rated capacity of
the microinverter where the total rated
capacity is expressed on an alternating
current watt basis.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(5)(iv)(B) would
have clarified how to determine the
credit amount for a DC optimized
inverter system that qualifies as a
microinverter. Proposed § 1.45X–
3(d)(5)(iv)(B) would have provided that
the credit amount for a DC optimized
inverter system that qualifies as a
microinverter is equal to the product of
11 cents multiplied by the lesser of the
sum of the alternating current capacity
of each DC optimizer when paired with
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the inverter in the DC optimized
inverter system or the alternating
current capacity of the inverter in the
DC optimized inverter system where
capacity is measured in watts of
alternating current converted from DC
electricity by the inverter in a DC
optimized inverter system.
One commenter requested that the
alternating current capacity of each DC
optimizer when paired with the inverter
in the DC optimized inverter system be
calculated as the product of the
optimizer’s rated input power capacity,
the optimizer’s DC-to-DC conversion
efficiency percentage, and the inverter’s
DC-to-AC conversion efficiency
percentage. Section 45X(b)(1)(I)
provides the applicable credit is
determined as an amount equal to the
product of each inverter’s applicable
amount multiplied by the capacity of
such inverter (expressed on a per
alternating current watt basis). The
requirement that capacity is ‘‘expressed
on an alternating current watt basis’’
already factors in any DC-to-DC
conversion efficiency upstream of the
DC-to-AC conversion, and the inverter’s
DC-to-AC conversion efficiency
percentage is accounted for by the use
of ‘‘capacity of such inverter’’
(expressed on a per alternating current
watt basis). Therefore, these
requirements are duplicative of rules
contained in the statutory text. For this
reason, the Treasury Department and
the IRS decline to adopt this suggestion
in the final regulations.
5. Utility Inverter
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2)(G),
proposed § 1.45X–3(d)(7)(i) would have
defined a utility inverter as an inverter
that is suitable for commercial or utilityscale systems, has a rated output of not
less than 600 volt three-phase power,
and has a capacity expressed on an
alternating current watt basis that is
greater than 125 kilowatts and not
greater than 1000 kilowatts.
One commenter requested reducing
the required rated output from ‘‘not less
than 600 volt three-phase power’’ to
‘‘not less than 480 volt three-phase
power.’’ Section 45X(c)(2)(G)(ii) defines
a utility inverter, in part, as having ‘‘a
rated output of not less than 600 volt
three-phase power.’’ The Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt the commenter’s request because
defining a utility inverter to include
those with a rated output of not less
than 480 volt three-phase power would
be inconsistent with the statute.
E. Qualifying Battery Components
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(1) would
define a qualifying battery component
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as electrode active materials, battery
cells, or battery modules.
1. Electrode Active Materials
a. In General
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(i)(A) would
have defined electrode active materials
to include cathode electrode materials,
anode electrode materials, and
electrochemically active materials that
contribute to the electrochemical
processes necessary for energy storage.
In general, electrode active materials are
materials that are capable of being used
within a battery for energy storage.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(i)(A) would
also have provided that the following
materials in a battery or vehicle would
not qualify for the section 45X credit as
an electrode active material: battery
management systems, terminal
assemblies, cell containments, gas
release valves, module containments,
module connectors, compression plates,
straps, pack terminals, bus bars, thermal
management systems, and pack jackets.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(v) would have
clarified that a taxpayer may claim only
one section 45X credit with respect to
a material that qualifies as both an
electrode active material and an
applicable critical mineral.
Some commenters recommended
altering the definition of electrode
active materials as defined in section
45X(c)(5)(B)(i) and in proposed § 1.45X–
3(e)(2)(i)(A). The Treasury Department
and the IRS do not have the authority
to alter the definition of electrode active
materials as provided by the statute. For
this reason, the Treasury Department
and the IRS decline to adopt these
recommendations in the final
regulations.
One commenter raised a concern that
certain definitions in the Proposed
Regulations applicable to electrode
active materials would inadvertently
exclude separators from being treated as
an eligible component because those
definitions do not include language
specific to the separator production
process. As proposed § 1.45X–
3(e)(2)(i)(D) specifically included
separators in the definition of
electrochemically active materials, such
changes to definitions are unnecessary,
and the Treasury Department and the
IRS decline to adopt the commenter’s
recommendation.
b. Cathode Electrode Materials and
Anode Electrode Materials
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(i)(B) would
have defined ‘‘cathode electrode
materials’’ to mean the materials that
comprise the cathode of a commercial
battery technology, such as binders, and
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current collectors (that is, cathode foils).
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(i)(C) would
have defined ‘‘anode electrode
materials’’ to mean the materials that
comprise the anode of a commercial
battery technology, including anode
foils.
A commenter recommended that the
definition of cathode electrode materials
in proposed § 1.45–3(e)(2)(i)(B) and of
anode electrode materials in proposed
§ 1.45–3(e)(2)(i)(C) be clarified to specify
that the materials be ‘‘battery-grade’’ so
the precursor materials are eligible for
the section 45X credit. Because these
proposed definitions would require that
the materials comprise the cathode or
anode of a commercial battery
technology, the Treasury Department
and the IRS conclude that specifying
that such materials be ‘‘battery-grade’’
would be redundant. For this reason,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt these recommendations
in the final regulations.
Another commenter recommended
that the definition of cathode electrode
materials be clarified to address its
concern that the qualifier ‘‘commercial
battery technology’’ excludes hydrogen
fuel cells contrary to the definition of
the term in the statute, which contains
no such qualifier. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the
authority to alter the definition of
electrode active materials as battery
components as provided by the statute.
For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt this recommendation in the final
regulations. The Treasury Department
and the IRS note, however, that
although electrode active materials in
general must be capable of being used
within a battery for energy storage, such
materials would still be eligible for the
section 45X credit if they are also
capable of being used in other
applications, such as hydrogen fuel
cells.
c. Electrochemically Active Materials
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(i)(D) would
define ‘‘electrochemically active
materials that contribute to the
electrochemical processes necessary for
energy storage’’ to mean the batterygrade materials that enable the
electrochemical storage within a
commercial battery technology. In
addition to the list of electrochemically
active materials provided in section
45X(c)(5)(B)(i) (that is, solvents,
additives, and electrolytic salts), these
may include electrolytes, catholytes,
anolytes, separators, and metal salts and
oxides.
One commenter requested the
definition of electrochemically active
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materials explicitly include solid-state
electrolytes. Solid-state electrolytes are
included in the definition of
electrochemically active materials
because Proposed § 1.45X 3(e)(2)(i)(D)
includes ‘‘electrolytes,’’ with no
particular form required. The Treasury
Department and the IRS conclude that
specifying that such materials are
included in this definition would be
redundant. For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt these recommendations in the
final regulations.
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d. Battery Grade Materials
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(i)(F) would
have defined ‘‘battery-grade materials’’
to mean the processed materials found
in a final battery cell or an analogous
unit, or the direct battery-grade
precursors to those processed materials.
A few commenters requested the final
rules clarify the meaning of direct
battery-grade precursors. Commenters
also requested the final rules provide
that silane gas, ultra-high molecular
weight polyethylene, and needle coke
meet the definition of electrochemically
active materials as direct battery-grade
precursors. While the Treasury
Department and the IRS understand the
desire for assurance, listing specific
precursors that qualify as
electrochemically active materials
would not be possible or advisable
because it could imply that unlisted
materials do not qualify as
electrochemically active materials,
particularly as battery technologies may
evolve over time. For this reason, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt these recommendations
in these final regulations.
e. Production Costs Incurred
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(iv) would
have provided that costs incurred for
purposes of determining the credit
amount includes costs as defined in
§ 1.263A–1(e) that are paid or incurred
within the meaning of section 461 of the
Code by the taxpayer for the production
of an electrode active material only.
Thus, under the Proposed Regulations,
production costs with respect to an
electrode active material would not
include any costs incurred after the
production of the electrode active
material.
The Proposed Regulations would not
have allowed direct material costs as
defined in § 1.263A–1(e)(2)(i)(A),
indirect material costs as defined in
§ 1.263A–1(e)(3)(ii)(E), or any costs
related to the extraction or acquisition
of raw materials to be taken into account
as production costs. This limitation
disallowed, for purposes of calculating
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the credit: the inclusion of the cost of
acquiring the raw material used to
produce the electrode active materials;
the cost of materials used for
conversion, purification, or recycling of
the raw material; and other material
costs related to the production of
electrode active materials. The Proposed
Regulations applied section 263A and
the regulations under section 263A
(section 263A regulations) solely to
identify the types of costs that are
includible in production costs incurred
for the purpose of computing the
amount of the section 45X credit. The
Proposed Regulations did not apply
section 263A or the section 263A
regulations for any other purposes, such
as to determine whether a taxpayer is
engaged in production activities.
The preamble to the Proposed
Regulations explained that the rationale
for the proposed rule was that the credit
for the production of electrode active
materials provides incentives for
taxpayers to conduct activities that add
value to the production of electrode
active materials. Merely purchasing raw
materials may enable a taxpayer to
produce an electrode active material but
it is not by itself an activity that adds
value. In addition, excluding the costs
of acquiring electrode active materials
mitigates the risk of crediting the
production costs for the same
underlying material more than once as
that material is used in various stages of
the production process. For these
reasons, material costs were not
creditable costs under the Proposed
Regulations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
requested comments on the proposed
rule for determining the costs incurred
with respect to the production of
electrode active materials. Specifically,
comments were sought as to whether
and how extraction and other similar
value-added activities in the production
of raw materials used in electrode active
materials should be taken into account
and how extraction should be defined,
including whether the term should be
defined consistent with proposed
§ 1.30D–3(c)(8). Comments were also
requested with respect to applicable
critical minerals, which are summarized
in Part V.C. of this Summary of
Comments and Explanation of
Revisions. Many of these comments had
similarities, and the reasoning and
revisions in these final regulations are
described in this Part IV.E.1.e. of this
Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions and are adopted for both
electrode active materials and
applicable critical minerals.
Approximately 72 of the comments
received addressed the definition and
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scope of production costs generally.
Many commenters recommended that,
contrary to the Proposed Regulations, all
costs with respect to the production of
electrode active materials be included in
production costs for purpose of
determining the credit, including direct
material costs as defined in § 1.263A–
1(e)(2)(i)(A), indirect material costs as
defined in § 1.263A–1(e)(3)(ii)(E), and
costs related to the extraction of raw
materials.
A significant number of commenters
focused their recommendations on
material costs or the costs of extraction,
but there was agreement among many of
them that ‘‘costs of production’’ should
be interpreted broadly to include all
costs. In support of this position,
commenters asserted that section
45X(b)(1)(J) and (M) do not place limits
or otherwise qualify production costs
eligible for the credit and that the
regulations should not impose
limitations not explicitly present in the
Code itself. Some of these commenters
also argued that, because the costs
excluded from production costs in the
Proposed Regulations are often a
substantial or predominant portion of
the total costs of producing some
electrode active materials, substantial
limitations on the inclusion of these
costs would contradict Congress’s goal
of incentivizing the production of
electrode active materials. Commenters
also disputed that direct and indirect
costs are not incurred in value-adding
activities.
Some commenters also disagreed that
the potential for over crediting (that is,
crediting the same production costs
multiple times) justifies denying a credit
for these costs. A subset of these
commenters disagreed that over
crediting was a legitimate concern,
arguing instead that section 45X
provides a credit for costs incurred at
different stages of production
attributable to the same underlying
material. Others agreed that over
crediting might not be permissible but
that the concern was insufficient to
deny entirely credits for all costs that
might be impermissibly claimed more
than once for the same underlying
material. In the view of these
commenters, prohibiting crediting these
same production costs multiple times
would be the proper approach rather
than entirely denying all credits for
these costs. Some commenters noted
that, in the case of certain specifically
identified electrode active materials,
there was no risk of crediting the same
production costs multiple times and
thus direct and indirect costs should be
included in the costs of production for
these electrode active materials. A third
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set of commenters argued that credits
should be permissible once under
section 45X(b)(1)(M) for applicable
critical minerals and again under
section 45X(b)(1)(J) for electrode active
materials.
In the case of electrode active
materials that are precursors for the
production of other electrode active
materials, one commenter
recommended that the cost of the
precursor electrode active materials
only be included in the cost of
production for which a credit may be
claimed if the precursor electrode active
materials are completely consumed in
the production process and are not used
for any other commercial purpose.
A number of commenters proposed
solutions to the problem of potentially
crediting the same production costs
multiple times. One solution
commenters proposed was to reduce the
basis of property for which a credit has
been claimed by an upstream producer.
Commenters also proposed a system
under which a taxpayer would only be
eligible for a credit on costs of material
for which no other taxpayer had
previously claimed a credit. This
arrangement could be administered
through a system of certifications in
which taxpayers would be required to
verify that its suppliers had not
previously claimed credits for costs
associated with the same materials for
which the taxpayer is claiming credits.
A commenter also urged that producers
of electrode active materials be able to
claim a credit if they can establish that
the acquired electrode active materials
and applicable critical minerals used in
the production of electrode active
materials were acquired from extraction
or production outside the United States
and thus were previously ineligible for
a section 45X credit.
In addition to general comments
regarding the inclusion of direct,
indirect, and extraction costs,
commenters recommended clarification
about more specific costs, including
costs associated with transportation.
Another commenter requested the final
rules be modified to include costs of the
production of anodes used in the
aluminum production to convert
alumina into aluminum. Other
commenters asserted that the costs of
processing and purification of materials
in the production of electrode active
materials add value and should, on that
basis, be included in the scope of the
credit.
Several commenters recommended
that the direct and indirect costs of the
production of electrode active materials
from recycled feedstock should be
classified as production costs for
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purposes of the credit. According to one
commenter, recycling processes begin
with waste products at what is
essentially a new supply chain.
A commenter supported the Proposed
Regulations’ exclusion of direct
material, indirect material, and
extraction costs from production costs
eligible for the credit. This commenter
was concerned that a contrary rule
would invite fraud, waste, and abuse
and that, in the case of extraction costs,
would be difficult to administer without
the creation of a tracing system.
With respect to costs related to
extraction, the Proposed Regulations
would have excluded extraction costs
because extraction could be far
removed, particularly in the case of
electrode active materials, in the supply
chain from the ultimate production of
the eligible component. However,
commenters highlighted the critical
importance of extraction to the
production of both applicable critical
minerals and electrode active materials
as well as the close connection these
costs often have to the final production
of these materials.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
have reconsidered the treatment of
extraction costs in these final
regulations for taxpayers that extract
raw materials domestically and for
taxpayers that acquire either
domestically or foreign-sourced
extracted raw materials. For both
electrode active materials and
applicable critical minerals, the final
regulations in §§ 1.45X–3(e)(2)(iv) and
1.45X–4(c)(3), respectively, allow
taxpayers to include extraction costs
related to the extraction of raw materials
in the United States or a United States
territory, but only if those costs are paid
or incurred by the taxpayer that claims
the section 45X credit with respect to
the relevant electrode active material or
applicable critical mineral. The
Treasury Department and the IRS note
that the section 45X credit is available
only to taxpayers that produce and sell
an eligible component. Thus, the final
regulations provide that extraction costs
may be included in production costs
consistent with the rules provided
under section 263A only if such costs
are incurred by the taxpayer that claims
the section 45X credit with respect to
the relevant applicable critical mineral
or electrode active material. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined that this inclusion of
extraction costs incurred by the
taxpayer most accurately captures the
meaning ‘‘the costs incurred by the
taxpayer with respect to the production
of’’ applicable critical minerals and
electrode active materials under section
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45X(b)(1)(J) and (M). If, however, a
taxpayer acquires extracted raw material
as a direct (or indirect) material cost, the
material costs may be included as
production costs consistent with the
rules provided under section 263A
regardless of whether the extracted
material is domestically- or foreignsourced.
With respect to direct and indirect
material costs, the Proposed Regulations
would have excluded direct and
indirect material costs from production
costs for both applicable critical
minerals and electrode active materials.
The Proposed Regulations excluded
material costs from production costs
based on an interpretation of the term
‘‘costs incurred by the taxpayer with
respect to production’’ in section
45X(b)(1)(J) and (M) as being limited to
value-added activities in the production
process. Electrode active materials and
applicable critical minerals differ from
all other eligible components described
in section 45X because their credit
amounts are calculated as a percentage
of production costs rather than
specifying a fixed dollar amount or rate.
The preamble to the Proposed
Regulations stated that the mere
purchase of materials does not itself add
value in a production process despite
being a necessary part of such process.
Furthermore, it is unlikely that Congress
intended to allow production costs
associated with applicable critical
minerals or electrode active materials to
be credited multiple times, due to the
high risk of fraud, waste, and abuse; the
administrative burden of preventing
these outcomes; and the limited
effectiveness in supporting domestic
production of new eligible components.
The exclusion of direct and indirect
material costs addressed these concerns.
Numerous commenters highlighted
the importance and appropriateness of
including material costs in production
costs. There was, however,
disagreement as to whether and to what
extent the costs of non-U.S. produced
constituent elements, materials, and
subcomponents used in the production
of electrode active materials should be
included in production costs. Some
commenters recommended that the
costs of all materials be included while
others urged limitations to only credit
materials produced domestically. One
commenter proposed that the final
regulations modify the proposed rule
regarding constituent elements,
materials, and subcomponents used in
the production of applicable critical
minerals to distinguish between imports
of materials otherwise available from
domestic sources and imported
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materials that are not available from
domestic sources.
The Treasury Department and the IRS,
after consultation with the Department
of Energy, have reconsidered the
proposed exclusion of all material costs
based on these comments. The final
regulations adopt a rule allowing
taxpayers that produce applicable
critical minerals and electrode active
materials as specified in the statute to
include direct and indirect materials
costs (as described in the referenced
section 263A regulations) in production
costs if certain conditions are met, but
only if those direct or indirect material
costs do not relate to the purchase of
materials that are an eligible component
at the time of acquisition (such as an
electrode active material or applicable
critical mineral). In addition, two
examples illustrating the revised
production costs rule are included in
§ 1.45X–3(e)(2)(iv)(A)(2).
In finalizing this rule, the Treasury
Department and the IRS considered the
provisions of section 45X and
determined this final rule appropriately
implements the statute as a whole.
Section 45X(a)(1) and (2) limit the
section 45X credit to the sum of the
credit amounts determined under
section 45X(b) with respect to each
eligible component that is produced by
the taxpayer and, during such taxable
year, sold to an unrelated person in the
taxpayer’s trade or business. The statute
allows a section 45X credit for the sale
of an applicable critical mineral or
electrode active material produced and
sold by the taxpayer in its business. The
section 45X credit for an applicable
critical mineral or electrode active
material is equal to 10 percent of the
costs incurred by the taxpayer with
respect to production, under section
45X(b)(1)(M) and (J), respectively.
In calculating a taxpayer’s costs
incurred in the production of applicable
critical minerals and electrode active
materials, it is necessary to consider
situations involving the integration of
eligible components (whether directly
made by the taxpayer or purchased from
another taxpayer) in the course of
producing an applicable critical mineral
or electrode active material. Generally,
integrating one eligible component into
another produced eligible component
results in two credits pursuant to
section 45X(d)(4) if the taxpayer
produced both, while integrating a
purchased eligible component into
another produced eligible component
will only result in a credit for the
eligible component produced by the
taxpayer. In the case of an applicable
critical mineral or electrode active
material, however, the section 45X
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credit calculation differs from the other
eligible components. Thus, further
examination was needed to determine
how a credit should be calculated in
such a case.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
considered the treatment of a vertically
integrated taxpayer. For example,
assume a taxpayer produced an
applicable critical mineral or electrode
active material and incurred $50X of
costs with respect thereto (EC 1) and
integrated EC 1 into a separate
applicable critical mineral or electrode
active material (EC 2), incurring an
additional $100X of costs with respect
to the production of EC 2 (total
production costs of $150X), with EC 2
ultimately being sold by the taxpayer to
an unrelated person. In calculating the
section 45X credit, pursuant to section
45X(d)(4), taxpayer is treated as having
sold an eligible component to an
unrelated person if such component is
integrated, incorporated, or assembled
into another eligible component which
is sold to an unrelated person. It is
important to note that section 45X
makes no distinction between integrated
eligible components that were
purchased or produced by the taxpayer.
As section 45X(d)(4) directs the
taxpayer to treat itself as selling both EC
1 and EC 2 to the unrelated person, it
is necessary to determine a credit for
each EC 1 and EC 2 when both were
produced by the taxpayer.
In this example, the $50X of
production costs attributable to EC 1
were not incurred with respect to the
production of EC 2, since the
production of EC 2—in other words, the
substantial transformation of EC 1 into
EC 2—does not include the production
of EC 1. Thus, the taxpayer would be
eligible for a total section 45X credit of
$15X: $5X (10% of $50X) for EC 1 and
$10X (10% of $100X) for EC 2. If the
$50X of production costs attributable to
EC 1 were included for both EC 1 and
EC 2, then the same costs would be
double credited. Double crediting would
result in the taxpayer generating a $20X
credit from the sale of EC 1 and EC2,
which would provide an increased
credit amount as compared to the credit
amount that should result from the
$150X of actual production costs
incurred (or, stated differently, a section
45X credit that was 13.33 percent of the
taxpayer’s actual $150X of production
costs in the example). The correct result
is taxpayer should be viewed as having
incurred $50X of production costs for
EC 1 and $100X of production costs for
EC 2, resulting in a $15X credit, which
also matches 10 percent of the
taxpayer’s actual production costs
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85819
($150X) and does not create a double
crediting of costs.
Alternatively, consider a taxpayer
that, instead of producing EC 1,
purchases EC 1 for $60X. The taxpayer
then spends another $100X producing
EC 2, using EC 1. Similar to the
vertically integrated taxpayer, when the
taxpayer sells EC 2, pursuant to section
45X(d)(4), the taxpayer is treated as
having sold EC 1 and EC 2 to an
unrelated person. The difference is that
in this case the taxpayer did not
produce EC 1, and therefore the
taxpayer does not satisfy section
45X(a)(1)(A) for a section 45X credit for
the sale of EC 1. If the taxpayer were
permitted to include the costs for EC 1
($60X) in calculating the credit for EC
2, then the taxpayer would receive a
larger credit for producing EC 2 than if
the taxpayer had produced both EC 1
and EC 2. Without a clearer indication
in the statute that Congress intended to
treat these two fact patterns differently,
in a way that disadvantages vertically
integrated production, the statute as a
whole is appropriately implemented
when the result is the same credit
amount for EC 2 ($10X in these
examples) whether the taxpayer
purchases or produces EC 1.
In comparing the two results of these
examples under the final rule, the
vertically integrated taxpayer gets a
larger total section 45X credit by
directly engaging in more credit
generating activities, while the nonvertically integrated taxpayer receives a
section 45X credit commensurate with
its activities of producing EC 2, but no
credit for integrated eligible components
that it did not produce. These results are
consistent with the general rule of
section 45X(a)(1) and (2) and avoid
allowing taxpayers to use the same cost
in multiple credit calculations.
Section 45X(d)(2) provides that only
sales of eligible components produced
within the United States, or a United
States territory, are taken into account
for purposes of section 45X and is
additional support for the rule that does
not include foreign applicable critical
minerals or electrode active materials in
production costs, regardless of whether
purchased or produced by the taxpayer.
Allowing a foreign produced applicable
critical mineral or electrode active
material to increase the section 45X
credit conflicts with section 45X(d)(2),
particularly when considered with the
rule under section 45X(d)(4). The
Treasury Department and the IRS also
note that section 45X(d)(2) confirms that
treatment as an ‘‘eligible component’’ is
not dependent on where production
occurred, and so a foreign applicable
critical mineral or electrode active
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material is an eligible component
subject to the rule in section 45X(d)(4).
The final rule is also consistent with
the overall purpose of section 45X and
addresses the concerns described in the
preamble of the Proposed Regulations.
While the final rule adopts certain
commenters’ position that incurring
material costs is necessary and may add
value to a production process, the
Treasury Department and IRS maintain
that the inclusion of material costs must
be balanced against the risk of multiple
crediting of the same costs and the
creation of incentives that are contrary
to the purpose of section 45X. The final
rule accomplishes this balance. Further,
although applicable critical minerals
and electrode active materials, or any
other eligible component, produced
outside the United States do not pose a
risk of multiple crediting, permitting the
production costs of a non-U.S. produced
applicable critical mineral or electrode
active material to be included in
production costs would provide an
incentive for the purchase of electrode
active materials or applicable critical
minerals produced abroad, which is
inconsistent with the overall statutory
scheme and purpose of section 45X (that
is, to encourage domestic production of
eligible components). Thus, excluding
all costs of acquiring materials that are
eligible components (for example, an
applicable critical mineral or electrode
active material at the time of
acquisition) as a direct or indirect
material cost with respect to the
production of another applicable critical
mineral or electrode active material
appropriately implements the statute. It
is also appropriate to have the same
rules for applicable critical minerals and
electrode active materials with respect
to production costs, as the statutory
language regarding calculation of the
credit for applicable critical minerals
and electrode active materials is the
same.
These final regulations also include
certain substantiation requirements for a
taxpayer that is claiming a section 45X
credit with respect to an applicable
critical mineral or electrode active
material. The preamble to the Proposed
Regulations supported not including all
direct and indirect material costs by
referencing the possibility that the same
production costs may be credited
multiple times and the potential for
increased fraud and abuse related to
claiming the section 45X credit.
Proposed § 1.45X–4(c)(4) would have
required the taxpayer to document that
their product meets the criteria for an
applicable critical mineral as described
in section 45X(c)(6) with a certificate of
analysis (COA) provided by the taxpayer
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to the person to which the taxpayer sold
the applicable critical mineral. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
requested comments on this
substantiation requirement, including
whether a similar requirement should
be applied to electrode active materials.
Based on a review of the comments,
including comments specifically
suggesting certification statements, and
the need to balance the expansion of
costs included as production costs with
respect to the Proposed Regulations
while mitigating the risk of fraud, waste
and abuse, these final regulations revise
the substantiation rules in proposed
§ 1.45X–4(c)(4) for applicable critical
minerals and added substantiation rules
for electrode active materials in
§ 1.45X–3(e)(2)(iv)(C). In order to
include direct or indirect materials costs
as defined in § 1.263A–1(e)(2)(i)(A) and
(e)(3)(ii)(E) as production costs when
calculating a section 45X credit for the
production and sale of an applicable
critical mineral or electrode active
material, a taxpayer must include, as at
attachment to the return on which the
section 45X credit is claimed,
certifications from any supplier,
including the supplier’s employer
identification number and that is signed
under penalties of perjury, from which
the taxpayer purchased any constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents
of the taxpayer’s eligible component,
stating that the supplier is not claiming
the section 45X credit with respect to
any of the material acquired by the
taxpayer, nor is the supplier aware that
any prior supplier in the chain of
production of that material claimed a
section 45X credit for the material. A
taxpayer must also prepare the
following information, and maintain
that information in the taxpayer’s books
and records: (1) a document that
provides an analysis of any constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents
that concludes the material did not meet
the definition of an eligible component
(for example, did not meet the
definition of applicable critical mineral
or electrode active material) at the time
of acquisition by the taxpayer (the
document may be prepared by the
taxpayer or ideally by an independent
third-party); (2) a list of all direct and
indirect material costs and the amount
of such costs that were included within
the taxpayer’s total production cost for
each electrode active material or
applicable critical mineral, as
applicable; and (3) a document related
to the taxpayer’s production activities
with respect to the direct and indirect
material costs that establishes the
materials were used in the production of
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the electrode active material or
applicable critical mineral, as applicable
(the document may be prepared by the
taxpayer or ideally by an independent
third-party). Finally, the taxpayer must
provide any other information related to
the direct or indirect materials specified
in guidance and comply with the
directions for providing such
information as specified in guidance.
Failure to provide this documentation
with the return filing, or providing a
‘‘available upon request’’ statement, will
constitute a failure to substantiate the
claim. The Treasury Department and the
IRS have determined, in consultation
with the Department of Energy, that
these revisions to the Proposed
Regulations are necessary in order to
properly substantiate credit amounts
claimed under section 45X for
applicable critical minerals and
electrode active materials.
2. Battery Cells—Definition
a. In General
Consistent with section
45X(c)(5)(B)(ii), proposed § 1.45X–
3(e)(3)(i) would have defined the term
battery cell as an electrochemical cell
comprised of one or more positive
electrodes and one or more negative
electrodes, with an energy density of not
less than 100 watt-hours per liter, and
capable of storing at least 12 watt-hours
of energy.
Commenters asked for additional
guidance clarifying the volumetric
energy density calculation methodology
given the variety of battery shapes,
sizes, and construction methodologies
that exist in the market. The Treasury
Department and the IRS understand
these comments to be made with respect
to calculating energy density under
proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(3)(i)(B) and agree
that clarification would be helpful.
Energy density can refer to volumetric
energy density but is commonly used to
refer to gravimetric (mass-based) energy
density. These final regulations clarify
that energy density is referring to
volumetric energy density in § 1.45X–
3(e)(3)(i)(B).
One commenter asked that the final
rules provide that hydrogen fuel cells be
included under the definition of battery
cells by amending the definition of a
battery cell to waive the requirement
that a battery cell be capable of storing
at least 12 watt-hours of energy and
permitting this requirement to be met by
‘‘a large hydrogen storage tank.’’ The
Treasury Department and the IRS do not
have the authority to amend the
definition of a battery cell in the final
regulations or to waive the requirement
that it be capable of storing at least 12
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watt-hours of energy. For this reason,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this comment in the
final regulations.
At least one commenter raised a
matter involving a vertically integrated
manufacturer of electric vehicles that,
together with a related person, operates
a battery cell production facility.
According to the commenter, the
commenter purchases battery cells from
this production facility and assembles,
integrates, and incorporates them into
battery modules at battery assembly
facilities located in other States.
Modules produced at these assembly
facilities are then shipped to various
electric vehicle production facilities. As
described by the commenter, the
process of taking completed battery cells
and integrating, incorporating, and
assembling them into completed battery
packs happens across several different
facilities, all of which are operated by
the commenter and its affiliates that are
separate legal entities. Each facility is
neither solely a battery module facility
nor solely a battery pack facility. The
commenter requested that the final
regulations allow a vertically integrated
manufacturer and related parties to elect
which facility will receive the credit in
situations where the manufacturer and
related parties complete all stages of the
production process and can substantiate
that the corresponding credit will not be
duplicated. The Treasury Department
and the IRS appreciate the complex
operations that may be inherent in
battery production. However, the statute
requires a determination of the taxpayer
that produces an eligible component
and does not authorize the relief
requested by the commenter.
b. Capacity Measurement
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(3)(ii) would
have provided that taxpayers must
measure the capacity of a battery cell in
accordance with a national or
international standard, such as IEC
60086–1 (Primary Batteries), or an
equivalent standard. Taxpayers can
reference the United States Advanced
Battery Consortium (USABC) Battery
Test Manual for additional guidance.
Several commenters agreed with the
proposed definition because it provided
taxpayers the ability and needed
flexibility to determine the appropriate
standard, but others recommended
additional guidance or information be
included in these final regulations. A
commenter requested that the final
regulations ‘‘retain the criteria that the
standard used by the taxpayer must be
one issued by a recognized standards
setting body.’’ While not specifically
using that language, these final
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regulations do maintain that concept by
continuing to require measurement in
accordance with a national or
international standard.
Another commenter requested that
the final regulations eliminate the
reference to ‘‘an equivalent standard’’ to
IEC 60068–1 because ‘‘IEC 60086–1 is
not applicable to rechargeable battery
chemistries, and it is unknown therefore
what an equivalent standard would be.’’
The Treasury Department and the IRS
have determined that this clarification is
unnecessary because the reference to
IEC 60068–1 or ‘‘an equivalent
standard’’ merely provides a nonexclusive example of an acceptable
national or international standard for
capacity measurement. These final
regulations therefore do not adopt the
commenter’s suggestion.
Other commenters suggested the
addition of various specific national or
international standards to the language
provided in proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(3)(ii)
regarding the standards to be used for
battery cell capacity measurement. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
understand the desire for assurance but
have determined that these proposed
additions, if included as examples, will
not add further clarity to the final
regulations. The Treasury Department
and the IRS further do not think that
there is a basis to include any of these
proposed additions as the exclusive
standard or standards for capacity
measurement. The final regulations
therefore do not adopt these
commenters’ suggestions regarding
particular national or international
standards to be used for capacity
measurement in § 1.45X–3(e)(3)(ii).
Another commenter recommended
that the final regulations require that
battery cell ‘‘capacity’’ must be
mathematically normalized to a 100hour discharge time, regardless of the
time otherwise dictated by the
appropriate national or international
standard. The Treasury Department and
the IRS do not think there is a basis to
adopt this requirement, as this would
displace other national or international
standards with a new requirement that
is not in the statute. Therefore, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt additional specific
standards in these final regulations
beyond those provided in the Proposed
Regulations.
Some commenters noted that the
USABC Battery Test Manual, which
proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(3)(ii) states may
be used for additional guidance
regarding measurement of the capacity
of a battery cell, is not applicable to all
battery cell applications and
technologies that may be eligible for the
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section 45X credit. One commenter
suggested removing the reference to the
USABC Battery Test Manual for this
reason. Because the inclusion of this
reference is intended to inform
taxpayers of a resource that may be
helpful in some cases, even if it may not
be applicable in all cases, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt this suggestion.
Another commenter suggested an
additional requirement to conduct a
performance test in a certified
laboratory once every three years to
verify the capacity of the battery cell. It
was unclear from the comment when
this performance testing would be
required. Section 45X requires the
production and sale of eligible
components. Because an eligible
component must meet the requirements
under section 45X at the time of sale, it
would be inappropriate to verify
capacity once every three years. Thus,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this additional capacity
measurement requirement in the final
regulations.
3. Battery Modules—Definition
Under section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii), the
term battery module, in the case of a
module using battery cells, is a module
with two or more battery cells which are
configured electrically, in series or
parallel, to create voltage or current, as
appropriate, to a specified end use, with
an aggregate capacity of not less than 7
kilowatt-hours (or, in the case of a
module for a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle,
not less than 1 kilowatt-hour). Similarly,
under section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii), a battery
module with no cells means a module
with an aggregate capacity of not less
than 7 kilowatt-hours (or, in the case of
a module for a hydrogen fuel cell
vehicle, not less than 1 kilowatt-hour).
Consistent with section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii),
proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i) would have
defined battery module to mean a
module described in proposed § 1.45X–
3(e)(4)(i)(A) (with cells) or (B) (without
cells) with an aggregate capacity of not
less than 7 kilowatt-hours (or, in the
case of a module for a hydrogen fuel cell
vehicle, not less than 1 kilowatt-hour).
Some commenters suggested lowering
the aggregate capacity limitation to
incentivize domestic production of all
battery types used in various industrial
applications. One commenter
recommended eliminating the capacity
thresholds entirely for battery modules
when used in medical or military
applications. While the Treasury
Department and the IRS appreciate
commenters’ desire to incentivize
domestic battery manufacturing, section
45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(II) provides the
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aggregate capacity thresholds that
battery modules must meet in order to
be eligible components. The Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
adopt the commenters’ request to alter
or eliminate the aggregate capacity
requirements for battery modules as
such revisions would be inconsistent
with the statute. Thus, these final
regulations adopt proposed § 1.45X–
3(e)(4)(i) without change.
a. Modules Using Battery Cells
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(A) would
have defined a module using battery
cells as a module with two or more
battery cells that are configured
electrically, in series or parallel, to
create voltage or current (as
appropriate), to a specified end use,
meaning an end-use configuration of
battery technologies. Under the
proposed rule, an end-use configuration
is the product that ultimately serves a
specified end use. It is the collection of
interconnected cells, configured to that
specific end-use and interconnected
with the necessary hardware and
software required to deliver the required
energy and power (voltage and current)
for that use. The preamble to the
Proposed Regulations explained that, as
applied to batteries commonly used in
electric vehicles, proposed § 1.45X–
3(e)(4)(i)(A) would have permitted a
credit for the production and sale of the
battery pack in an electric vehicle, but
it would not have permitted a credit for
the production of a module that is not
the end-use configuration. The Treasury
Department and the IRS requested
comments on this proposed
interpretation of the phrase ‘‘to a
specified end use’’ in section
45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa).
Many commenters raised concerns
with the interpretation of the phrase ‘‘to
a specified end use’’ in proposed
§ 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(A). Some commenters
asserted that requiring that modules be
in an end-use configuration would be
overly restrictive for certain product
categories. For example, certain types of
modules may be transported to the enduse site only partially assembled due to
safety considerations, with final
assembly performed by the battery
manufacturer, the customer, or a thirdparty contractor.
Similarly, a few commenters
expressed concern that no taxpayer may
be eligible for the battery module credit
in certain cases. One commenter
suggested that this result might occur if
module manufacturers do not
manufacture a pack in its end-use
configuration. Further, those who
purchase such items and convert them
to their end-use configuration may
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struggle to demonstrate their activities
amount to substantial transformation.
One commenter suggested changing
proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(A) to
provide that ‘‘an end-use configuration
is the product that ultimately serves a
specified end use—whether delivered
pre-assembled or assembled on-site.’’
Further, the commenter recommended
an additional sentence at the end of
proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(A) to
identify the section 45X claimant in
cases where assembly occurs by
someone other than the taxpayer.
Several commenters stated that
proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(A) created
confusion because the definition of
battery module could, in some
circumstances, include the items that
are referred to in industry as ‘‘battery
packs.’’ One commenter noted that
while battery cells and modules
predominantly originate from battery
manufacturers, battery packs are
assembled by electric vehicle
manufacturers before being installed in
electric vehicles.
Some commenters requested that, if
the definition of battery modules
includes battery packs in the case of
electric vehicle battery modules, the
process to transform what is
colloquially referred to in industry as a
battery module into what is known as a
‘‘battery pack’’ be clarified in the final
regulations to constitute disqualifying
minor assembly or ‘‘partial
transformation.’’ Another commenter
requested that the final regulations state
that the rules are agnostic as to the form
or manner in which a battery module
with cells is incorporated into the
electric vehicle.
Other commenters supported the
proposed definition of battery module
with cells, stating that this definition
appropriately captures the intention of
the section 45X credit. One commenter
asserted that the battery pack
production covered by the proposed
definition is a more valuable activity
than the production of a single battery
module and is the activity closer to the
downstream consumer.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
appreciate the comments received
regarding battery modules and have
determined, in close consultation with
the Department of Energy, that
additional clarification is needed.
Section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa) defines
battery module using battery cells as ‘‘a
module using battery cells, with two or
more battery cells which are configured
electrically, in series or parallel, to
create voltage or current, as appropriate,
to a specified end use[. . .].’’ Section
45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(II) provides a capacity
threshold limitation of ‘‘[an] aggregate
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capacity of not less than 7 kilowatthours (or, in the case of a module for a
hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, not less than
1 kilowatt-hour)’’ that such battery
module using battery cells (as defined in
section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa)) must
meet.
In reviewing comments, the Treasury
Department and the IRS understand that
the explanation in the preamble of the
Proposed Regulations regarding
application to electric vehicles may not
have aligned with industry
understanding and the statutory text.
Upon review of the comments received,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
wish to restate that the requirement
found in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa),
that battery modules using battery cells
that contain battery cells configured to
a specified end use, applies regardless
whether the items are typically called
‘‘battery modules’’ or ‘‘battery packs’’ in
industry practice. These final
regulations are therefore clarified to
provide that a battery module using
battery cells becomes an eligible
component upon first meeting the
requirements of section
45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa) and
(c)(5)(B)(iii)(II), notwithstanding when
this transformation may occur in a
manufacturing production chain.
At least one commenter requested a
rule allowing the entity that assembles
the pack to assign tax credits to the joint
venture that manufactured the module.
Alternatively, if the definition of
specified end use is not adopted with
respect to joint ventures, the regulations
should instead allow for joint venture
partners to assign battery-related section
45X credits to the joint venture as the
parties see fit, or in cases where the
parties do not choose to assign the
credits to one of the parents, the joint
venture itself. This comment is not
adopted as issues specific to joint
ventures are outside the scope of these
final regulations. For discussion of
‘‘produced by the taxpayer’’ and the
associated rules for who may claim the
section 45X credit, see Part II.B. of this
Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions.
b. Modules With No Battery Cells
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(B) would
have defined the term ‘‘module with no
battery cells’’ as a product with a
standardized manufacturing process and
form that is capable of storing and
dispatching useful energy; that contains
an energy storage medium that remains
in the module (for example, it is not
consumed through combustion); and
that is not a custom-built electricity
generation or storage facility. This
proposed definition would allow battery
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technologies, such as flow batteries and
thermal batteries, to be eligible for the
section 45X credit, but would not
permit technologies that do not meet
this definition, such as standalone fuel
storage tanks or fuel tanks connected to
engines or generation systems, to qualify
as a module with no battery cells.
Several commenters supported the
proposed definition of a battery module,
and specifically the inclusion of thermal
batteries. Commenters also asked for
clarification regarding a technologyneutral application of the proposed
definition of a battery module. Other
commenters suggested specific
clarifications to the final regulations
regarding certain types of thermal
battery systems, such as thermal ice
storage or thermal bricks. Some
commenters requested that the final
regulations incorporate similar language
used in the section 48 proposed
regulations to facilitate this technologyneutral treatment. For example, these
commenters suggested that the final
regulations should adopt the language
in proposed § 1.48–9(e)(10)(ii) by
specifically stating that ‘‘batteries of all
types (such as lithium ion, vanadium
flow, sodium sulfur, and lead-acid)’’ are
eligible components. Commenters
asserted that there is symmetry between
the investment tax credits for energy
storage property and advanced
manufacturing credits for energy storage
products. Additionally, commenters
raised that technology-neutral treatment
aligns with Congressional intent to
establish eligibility criteria based on
performance thresholds, not technology.
The Treasury Department and the IRS,
in close consultation with the
Department of Energy, agree with
commenters that a battery module with
no battery cells does not require a
specific storage medium nor are there
chemistry-based requirements for
qualifying battery modules. However,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to include specific language as
a non-exhaustive list of possible storage
mediums. Including a non-exhaustive
list of current storage mediums on an
industry-by-industry basis is not
practical and may inadvertently create
confusion for other emerging
technologies on whether those mediums
would qualify for the section 45X credit.
Some commenters disagreed with the
requirement in proposed § 1.45X–
3(e)(4)(i)(B) that the storage medium
remain in the module, asserting that the
requirement ‘‘may inadvertently
exclude technologies’’ such as
compressed air ‘‘that can deliver on the
intent of the regulations.’’ The Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
amend proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(B) in
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response to this comment. The Treasury
Department and the IRS, in consultation
with the Department of Energy, have
determined that the proposed rule
appropriately implements the statute.
The requirement that the storage
medium remain in the module gives
meaning to both ‘‘battery’’ and to
‘‘module.’’ For batteries, this
requirement describes a feature common
to electrochemical and more nascent
types of batteries and distinguishes
batteries from technologies that rely on
fuel. For modules, this requirement
helps segregate qualifying technologies
from those that are self-contained and
not merely one component of a larger
system.
Manufacturing the constituent
components of battery modules without
manufacturing the entire energy storage
system does not result in the production
of a module with no battery cells under
the final regulations. For example, in
thermal energy storage applications, the
taxpayer must produce and sell the
entire system and not just the storage
medium. A manufacturer that only
produces a thermal storage medium (for
example, molten salt) in a thermal
energy storage system would not be
eligible for the credit. Requiring the
production of the entire energy storage
system from ‘‘energy in’’ through
‘‘energy out’’ provides similar treatment
for purposes of the section 45X credit to
the production of a battery module
using battery cells.
Numerous comments requested
additional clarification of ‘‘custom-built
electricity . . . storage facility.’’
Commenters noted that the definition in
proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(B) creates
ambiguity as to which modifications
made in order to meet site or use
specifications would trigger the
‘‘custom-built’’ disqualifier. Several
commenters asserted that the Proposed
Regulations create additional limitations
on battery modules without cells that do
not apply to the other eligible
components. Commenters contended
that the terms in the Proposed
Regulations, such as ‘‘manufacturing,’’
‘‘standardized,’’ and ‘‘not custom-built,’’
do not appear in the statutory text and
diverge from the general approach taken
by the Proposed Regulations with
respect to other eligible components.
Some commenters asserted that nearly
all thermal battery implementations are
associated with custom-built generation
and storage facilities.
These commenters requested that the
final regulations clarify that the eligible
components may be assembled with
other property to comprise a functioning
energy generation or storage facility.
Commenters also suggested additional
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clarity regarding the physical
boundaries of a battery module and
thought that using the proposed
definition of ‘‘produced by the
taxpayer’’ would allow for an eligible
component to be assembled on-site,
such as battery modules with no battery
cells that are too heavy and large to
transport fully assembled. Commenters
asserted that most or all batteries will
require some amount of on-site
installation. Commenters generally
requested that the final regulations
provide a clear and principled
definition of ‘‘custom-built’’ that
continues to support a technologyneutral and inclusive implementation of
section 45X.
Commenters provided various
alternatives to further clarify the
definition of ‘‘custom-built’’ in the
Proposed Regulations. One commenter
recommended clarifying the definition
of ‘‘a custom-built electricity storage
facility’’ as ‘‘a facility (1) that contains
an energy storage medium and (2) of
which all, or substantially all, of the
integral components are designed
specifically for the facility and are not
interchangeable with components of
other facilities that utilize the same or
similar electricity storage technology.’’
Another commenter asked that the final
regulations clarify that a module with
no battery cells is not treated as custombuilt if modules are produced by the
taxpayer using the same or similar
components or property generally used
by the taxpayer to produce such
modules but in different configurations
or amounts to accommodate the storage
needs or the site layout applicable to the
storage asset. A commenter
recommended clarifying the definition
that a module with modular
components manufactured offsite may
undergo final assembly at its installation
site without being considered a custombuilt facility and include an example
regarding final assembly on site.
Another suggestion included clarifying
that modules with no cells are items of
property that must be combined with
other tangible personal property to store
energy.
Separately, a commenter noted that
for contract manufacturing
arrangements, ‘‘a routine order for offthe-shelf-property’’ is not eligible for the
section 45X credit. The commenter
suggested the final regulations provide
that an agreement will be treated as a
routine purchase order for off-the-shelf
property if the contractor is required to
make no more than de minimis
modifications to the property to tailor it
to the customer’s specific needs.
However, if the manufacturer does make
more than de minimis modifications,
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the module may be custom-built. The
commenter asserted that the proposed
rule sets up a complicated dichotomy
under which manufacturers of modules
with no battery cells who enter into
contract manufacturing arrangements
will have to establish an undefined
standard that are neither off the shelf
nor custom-built.
Commenters also provided specific
examples regarding whether certain
technologies or configurations would be
considered custom-built. For example,
physical site conditions at a customer’s
site may require that the same
components used for one pumped heat
energy storage (PHES) are differently
arranged for another PHES. The use of
the PHES by a customer may require
modified storage durations (for example,
20 hours versus 10 hours), which would
require additional storage media and
vessels. The commenter asserted that
this should not be considered custombuilt. Commenters also noted that, for
closed-loop pumped storage
hydropower systems, pipes and other
related components are otherwise
produced in a standardized process, and
neither resemble nor are functionally
equivalent to standalone fuel storage
tanks or fuel tanks connected to engines
or generation systems custom-built
electricity generation or storage facility.
Commenters also raised that these
differences are based on the topography
of the site where the system is located
and not on the intended function of
these components or the system as a
whole.
One commenter requested that the
Treasury Department and the IRS
include hydrogen fuel cell systems
under the definition of a battery module
using battery cells. Proposed § 1.45X–
3(e)(4)(i)(B) would define the term
‘‘module with no battery cells’’ as a
product with a standardized
manufacturing process and form that is
capable of storing and dispatching
useful energy, that contains an energy
storage medium that remains in the
module (for example, it is not consumed
through combustion), and that is not a
custom-built electricity generation or
storage facility.
In general, the Treasury Department
and the IRS appreciate the complexity
of the issues raised by commenters.
Given the myriad of technologies,
industry-specific applications, and
customary business practices, the final
regulations provide additional
clarifications. The Treasury Department
and the IRS understand the need for
clear, administrable rules for both
taxpayers and the IRS. The comments
also illustrate the impracticality of
providing rules to specifically address
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all situations. The Treasury Department
and the IRS, in close consultation with
the Department of Energy, have
determined that the definition provided
in proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(B) strikes
the appropriate balance between brightline rules and the necessary flexibility
for evolving industries. The Treasury
Department and the IRS therefore
decline to adopt suggested revisions to
the definition of ‘‘module with no
battery cells’’ in the final regulations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS,
in close consultation with the
Department of Energy, also have
determined that requiring battery
modules be modular in the sense that
they are both self-contained and not
highly customized appropriately
implements the statutory definition
provided in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii).
Because of this, the preamble to the
Proposed Regulations further clarified
that this proposed definition would
allow battery technologies such as flow
batteries and thermal batteries to be
eligible for the section 45X credit, but it
would not permit technologies that do
not meet this definition such as
standalone fuel storage tanks or fuel
tanks connected to engines or
generation systems to qualify as a
module with no battery cells. For these
reasons, the Treasury Department and
the IRS decline to adopt this comment
in the final regulations.
One commenter recommended
adopting the definition of modules
using battery cells for the definition of
modules with no battery cells, with the
addition that the module should
receive, store, and deliver energy for
conversion to electricity. However,
adopting the commenter’s
recommended definition would not be
appropriate for modules with no battery
cells because the definition of modules
using battery cells requires the inclusion
of battery cells in the module.
Accordingly, The Treasury Department
and the IRS decline to adopt the
commenter’s recommendation.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
agree with commenters who suggest that
the examples illustrating the contrast
between ‘‘substantial transformation’’
and disqualifying minor assembly,
explained in Part II.B. of this Summary
of Comments and Explanation of
Revisions provide useful guidelines for
taxpayers and the IRS in determining
what is a standardized manufacturing
process and not a custom-built
electricity generation or storage facility.
Thus, incidental onsite assembly of
prefabricated modular components for
final assembly that are generally
produced in the ordinary course of a
taxpayer’s trade or business would
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constitute a standardized manufacturing
process for purposes of § 1.45X–
3(e)(4)(i)(B). Battery modules with no
battery cells that undergo a substantial
transformation onsite or are specially
manufactured for a single customer
would constitute a custom-built
electricity generation or storage facility.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to provide a de minimis
threshold which would exclude certain
manufacturing or configurations that
would otherwise qualify for the section
45X credit using the principles
described in Part II.B. of this Summary
of Comments and Explanation of
Revisions.
c. Capacity Measurement
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(ii)(A) would
have provided that, for modules using
battery cells, taxpayers must measure
the capacity of a module with a testing
procedure that complies with a national
or international standard published by a
recognized standard setting
organization. The capacity of a battery
module using battery cells may not
exceed the total capacity of the battery
cells in the module. Proposed § 1.45X–
3(e)(4)(ii)(B) would have provided that,
for modules with no battery cells,
taxpayers must measure the capacity
using a testing procedure that complies
with a national or international standard
published by a recognized standard
setting organization. If no such standard
applies to a type of module with no
battery cells, taxpayers must measure
the capacity of such module as the
Secretary may prescribe in regulations
or other guidance. The Treasury
Department and the IRS requested
comments on what recognized national
or international standards are currently
available for measuring capacity of
modules with no battery cells and
whether further guidance may be
required.
One commenter suggested that the
aggregate capacity measurement
outlined in section 45X and the
Proposed Regulations for battery
modules is challenging to apply in the
context of thermal battery modules with
no cells. Another commenter explained
that battery capacity measurements are
subject to variations contingent upon
environmental conditions during
measurement and that capacity
assessment for both battery cells and
battery modules must occur within a
standard testing environment. Some
commenters agreed with the approach
in the Proposed Regulations of allowing
taxpayers to determine the appropriate
national or international standards
because taxpayers are in a better
position to determine the appropriate
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standard. Moreover, this approach
provides the flexibility necessary for
emerging technologies to qualify for the
credit. Such commenters requested that
the final regulations retain the criteria
that the taxpayer must use a testing
procedure issued by a recognized
standards setting body.
Other commenters explained that the
Treasury Department and the IRS
should prescribe a flexible approach to
capacity measurement for battery
modules with no battery cells such that
different technologies are appropriately
measured and provide alternative
testing procedures that complies with a
national or international standard
published by a recognized standard
setting organization that is relevant and
applicable for the varying technologies.
One commenter asserted that, in their
view, such standards may include
American Society of Mechanical
Engineers (ASME) or International
Standards Organization (ISO), but
specifically recommended that capacity
should be measured based on nameplate
capacity as provided in 40 CFR 96.202
in the absence of a bright-line standard.
Another commenter supported this
approach because of alleged difficulties
in determining the minimum capacity of
battery modules with no cells before
they are placed in service. Other
commenters suggested various
standards, including ASME PTC 53;
ANSI/American Society of Heating,
Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning
Engineers (ASHRAE) Standard 94.2–
2010; and ASHRAE 94 testing methods
(specifically, 94.1,94.2, and 94.3).
Another commenter recommended that
the final regulations require use of a
conversion factor of 1.16RT/kW = 14/12
and recommended that the regulations
provide a capacity measure if there is no
national or international standard for a
given technology.
A different commenter raised
concerns regarding capacity
measurement for battery modules with
no battery cells and suggested adding to
proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(iii)(B), ‘‘. . .
The capacity of each battery module is
expressed on a kilowatt-hour basis in
the actual useful energy unit that is
specific to the battery module without
cells. For example, both thermal and
thermochemical battery modules have
their capacity expressed on a kilowatthour-thermal basis.’’
The Treasury Department and the IRS,
after consultation with the Department
of Energy, have determined that
taxpayers producing thermal and
thermochemical battery modules with
no battery cells must convert the energy
storage to a kilowatt-hour basis and
provide both methodology and testing
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regarding this conversion. Taxpayers
must maintain this testing and
methodology as part of books and
records under section 6001. However,
the kilowatt-hour conversion cannot
exceed the direct conversion of the total
nameplate capacity of the thermal
battery module to kilowatt-hours (the
capacity that is sold to the consumer).
The taxpayer claiming the section 45X
credit must use the same methodology
consistently, subject to any updated
standard of the same methodology and
testing, for battery modules (with or
without cells) sold in the taxpayer’s
trade or business. The final regulations
incorporate these clarifications in
§ 1.45X–3(e)(4)(ii) regarding testing and
methodology with respect to battery
modules.
One commenter requested the final
rules remove the requirement that the
capacity of a battery module not exceed
the total capacity of the battery cells in
the module because the different
structures of each eligible component
may affect the capacity measurement of
the module. The Treasury Department
and the IRS, in consultation with the
Department of Energy, have determined
that this rule serves an important
function in reducing the potential to
manipulate testing conditions in the
measurement of capacity and in
encouraging the application of reliable
measurement standards for battery cells.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
therefore decline to remove the
requirement that the capacity of a
battery module not exceed the total
capacity of the battery cells in the
module.
Another commenter requested that
the final regulations provide that the
entity that manufactures a battery
module that exceeds the statutory 7
kilowatt-hours threshold limitation in
section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(II) receives the
$10/kWh module credit. As discussed
in Part IV.E.3.a. of this Summary of
Comments and Explanation of
Revisions, the taxpayer that produces
and sells the eligible component (when
a battery module first becomes the
eligible component) may claim the
section 45X credit. Whether an eligible
component is produced by the taxpayer
is generally discussed in Part II.B. of
this Summary of Comments and
Explanation of Revisions.
A commenter noted that proposed
§ 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i), which provides the
definition for battery modules ‘‘with an
aggregate capacity of not less than 7
kilowatt-hours,’’ aligns with section
30D. The language in section 30D is
based on the capacity of the complete
battery installed on the vehicle. The
commenter asserted that the parallel
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language describing the capacity
threshold in section 45X and in section
30D indicates that the eligible
component for the section 45X credit for
battery modules are the items
commonly referred to in industry as
‘‘battery packs.’’ This comment is not
adopted. As explained in Part IV.E.3.a.
of this Summary of Comments and
Explanation of Revisions, a battery
module (within the meaning of section
45X) is an eligible component,
regardless of whether industry
nomenclature would describe that
module as a ‘‘battery pack.’’
Proposed § 1.45X–3(e)(5)(i) would
have provided a special rule where the
capacity determined with respect to a
battery cell or battery module must not
exceed a capacity-to-power ratio of
100:1. At least one commenter requested
clarification on the definition of
‘‘capacity to power ratio.’’ The
commenter noted that term could mean
either the maximum energy that the
battery cell and module can hold or the
maximum output that the battery cell
and module can release instantaneously.
The final regulations retain the
proposed rule defining ‘‘capacity to
power ratio’’ in § 1.45X–3(e)(5). The
Treasury Department and the IRS
confirm that the rule, with respect to a
battery cell or battery module, the
capacity-to-power ratio refers to both
the power and the capacity as a cap on
the section 45X credit amount, rather
than an eligibility criterion. Power is the
battery cell’s maximum rate of
discharge; capacity is the maximum
amount of energy the component can
store.
F. Phase-Out Rule
Consistent with section 45X(b)(3),
proposed § 1.45X–3(f)(1) would have
provided that, in the case of any eligible
component sold after December 31,
2029, the amount of the section 45X
credit determined with respect to such
eligible component is equal to the
product of the amount determined
under proposed § 1.45X–3(b) through (e)
with respect to such eligible component,
multiplied by the phase out percentage
under proposed § 1.45X–3(f)(2).
Consistent with section 45X(b)(3)(C),
proposed § 1.45X–3(f)(3) would have
provided that the phase out rules
described in proposed § 1.45X–3(f)(1)
and (2) apply to all eligible components
except applicable critical minerals.
Proposed § 1.45X–3(f)(2) would have
provided the phase out percentage is
equal to 75 percent for eligible
components sold during calendar year
2030; 50 percent for eligible
components sold during calendar year
2031; 25 percent for eligible
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components sold during calendar year
2032, and zero percent for eligible
components sold after calendar year
2032.
A commenter expressed concern that
the phase out rules create disparate
treatment of an applicable critical
mineral produced by a taxpayer that
with further value-added processing
would result in the production of an
electrode active material and provided
the example of the production of natural
graphite active anode materials. The
commenter stated that if the production
of the applicable critical mineral and
production of the electrode active
material occurs in a vertically integrated
company, the taxpayer may only claim
a section 45X credit for one component.
Thus, the commenter requests the phase
out rule be modified to not apply to
electrode active materials.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt the commenter’s
request. The Treasury Department and
the IRS do not have the authority to
allow a section 45X credit for the
production of an electrode active
material in amounts in excess of what
is permitted under section 45X(b)(3).
For these reasons, these final
regulations adopt proposed § 1.45X–3(f)
without modification.
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V. Applicable Critical Minerals
Proposed § 1.45X–4 would have
provided definitions for the listed
applicable critical minerals (generally in
accordance with section 45X(c)(6)), the
credit amounts, and rules regarding
production costs for purposes of
determining credit amounts.
Commenters addressed certain aspects
of these proposed rules, as described in
this Part V. of the Summary of
Comments and Explanation of
Revisions. These final regulations
generally adopt the rules as proposed in
§ 1.45X–4, with the modifications
described in this Part V. of the Summary
of Comments and Explanation of
Revisions.
A. In General
Section 45X(c)(6) defines applicable
critical minerals that are eligible
components for purposes of the section
45X credit. Consistent with section
45X(c)(6), proposed § 1.45X–4 provides
that an applicable critical mineral
means any of the minerals that are listed
in section 45X(c)(6) and defined in
proposed § 1.45X–4(b).
Several commenters requested that
the final rules generally clarify and
expand the eligibility of metals and
metal alloys (including alloys made
from primary and secondary metal
production) under the purity
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requirements. Section 45X generally
provides specific minimum purity
requirements or forms for applicable
critical minerals. Metals or metal alloys
under the specified purity requirements
that do not meet specified forms do not
qualify for the section 45X credit. Thus,
the Treasury Department and the IRS do
not have the statutory authority to add
additional metals and alloys to the list
of applicable critical minerals in these
final regulations.
B. Definitions
1. Aluminum
Section 45X(c)(6)(A) provides that
aluminum that is converted from
bauxite to a minimum purity of 99
percent alumina by mass or purified to
a minimum purity of 99.9 percent
aluminum by mass qualifies as an
applicable critical mineral. Proposed
§ 1.45X–4(b)(1) would have defined
aluminum to mean aluminum that is
converted from bauxite to a minimum
purity of 99 percent alumina by mass or
purified to a minimum purity of 99.9
percent aluminum by mass. The
preamble to the Proposed Regulations
stated that section 45X(c)(6)(A) should
be interpreted in light of the dynamics
of the aluminum industry and the role
that critical materials like aluminum
play in the renewable energy and energy
storage industry. Proposed § 1.45X–
4(b)(1) would have interpreted section
45X(c)(6)(A) to mean aluminum,
including commodity-grade aluminum,
described in section 45X(c)(6)(A)(i) and
(ii). Proposed § 1.45X–4(b)(1) would
have defined ‘‘commodity-grade
aluminum’’ as aluminum that has been
produced directly from aluminum that
is described in proposed § 1.45X–
4(b)(1)(i) or (ii), is limited to primary
production of unwrought forms, and is
in a form that is sold on international
commodity exchanges, which would
include commercial grade aluminum
that is 99.7 percent aluminum by mass.
A commenter expressed support for
the definition of aluminum in the
proposed rule, and stated that the
statutory definition could be read to
apply only to the refining of alumina
and, as a result, not benefit domestic
primary aluminum producers, nor
achieve the spirit of the legislation to
increase domestic manufacturing. The
commenter noted confusion with the
statutory definition, which stated in
part, that aluminum ‘‘which is
converted from bauxite to a minimum
purity of 99 percent alumina by mass’’
meets the definition of aluminum—
however, alumina is converted from
bauxite, not aluminum. Thus, the
commenter noted that the proposed rule
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correctly states the primary aluminum
production process and will help
United States primary aluminum
producers bolster domestic operations
and strengthen global competitiveness.
A commenter requested that the final
regulations provide that aluminum
oxide (alumina) is a form of aluminum
for the purposes of section
45X(c)(6)(A)(i). The Treasury
Department and the IRS note that
section 45X(c)(6)(A)(i) provides
eligibility for the credit for aluminum
that is converted from bauxite to a
minimum purity of 99 percent alumina
by mass. One commenter requested that
the definition of primary aluminum
include molten metal. The Treasury
Department and the IRS note that
section 45X(c)(6)(A)(ii) does not restrict
the form of aluminum purified to a
minimum purity of 99.9 percent
aluminum by mass. One commenter
proposed lowering the eligible purity for
aluminum to 96 percent. The Treasury
Department and the IRS view this
request as inconsistent with the statute.
A few commenters requested the
definition of primary aluminum include
all unwrought primary aluminum
smelted from aluminum oxide (that is,
alumina). One commenter requested
that the final rules clarify that
aluminum produced through secondary
production is eligible for the section
45X credit. The preamble to the
Proposed Regulations stated that
proposed § 1.45X–4(b)(1) clarifies that
the term ‘‘commodity-grade aluminum’’
is limited to primary production of
unwrought forms by specifying that
commodity-grade aluminum must be
‘‘produced directly’’ from certain forms
of aluminum. The Treasury Department
and the IRS understand that the ability
to ascertain and substantiate the process
or processes used at an earlier point in
the lifecycle of feedstock aluminum for
secondary production is limited. The
Treasury Department and the IRS are
concerned that such limitations would
pose significant substantiation and
administrability issues if secondary
production were permitted for
commodity-grade aluminum under
proposed § 1.45X–4(b)(1).
A few commenters requested that the
final rules replace the requirement that
commodity-grade aluminum be ‘‘in a
form sold on international commodity
exchanges’’ with the requirement that
such aluminum ‘‘has the ability to meet
the chemical specifications of
aluminum sold on international
commodity exchanges,’’ because not all
aluminum sold to third-party customers
is traded through the London Metal
Exchange, which imposes the shape
requirements. The commenters state
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that commercial grade aluminum is
made into products that are alloyed to
different specifications and shapes that
are not traded through commodity
markets, and the final rules should not
distinguish among the end markets.
Although the Treasury Department and
the IRS view the requirement that
commodity-grade aluminum be ‘‘in a
form sold on international commodity
exchanges’’ as providing important
clarity and certainty for taxpayers and
the IRS, as well as an objective and
observable standard to determine
eligibility, the Treasury Department and
the IRS will continue to consider these
comments as they work to finalize
proposed § 1.45X–4(b)(1).
One commenter requested the final
regulations clarify ‘‘aluminum that is
converted from alumina with a
minimum purity of 99 percent on a fired
basis should qualify as an applicable
critical mineral.’’ The Treasury
Department and the IRS think that the
additional language specifying whether
the purity is measured on a fired basis
or dried basis is not necessary due to the
specific purity standards already listed
in section 45X and the proposed rules.
In addition, although these terms are
often included on a Certificate of
Analysis (COA), the Treasury
Department and IRS anticipate that
using these terms may cause confusion
in circumstances in which these terms
are not included on a COA.
With respect to all of the comments
related to the definition of aluminum,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
have determined that additional
consideration is necessary prior to
finalizing proposed § 1.45X–4(b)(1),
which the Treasury Department and the
IRS intend to do at a later date. For that
reason, § 1.45X–4(b)(1) is reserved in
these final regulations.
2. Neodymium
Consistent with section 45X(c)(6)(R),
proposed § 1.45X–4(b)(18) would have
provided that the term neodymium
means neodymium that is converted to
neodymium-praseodymium oxide that
is purified to a minimum purity of 99
percent neodymium-praseodymium
oxide by mass; converted to neodymium
oxide that is purified to a minimum
purity of 99.5 percent neodymium oxide
by mass; or purified to a minimum
purity of 99.9 percent neodymium by
mass.
One commenter requested that the
final rules provide that the following are
eligible for the section 45X credit: (1)
neodymium if purified to the industry
standard minimum purity of 99.0
percent neodymium by mass; (2)
neodymium converted to neodymium-
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praseodymium and purified to a
minimum purity of 99.0 percent
neodymium-praseodymium by mass; (3)
neodymium-praseodymium that is
purified to a minimum purity of 99.0
percent neodymium-praseodymium by
mass; and (4) neodymium-iron-boron
alloy or neodymium-praseodymiumiron-boron alloy purified to 99.0 percent
by mass. The Treasury Department and
the IRS do not have the statutory
authority to modify the definition of
neodymium or to modify purity
percentages in proposed § 1.45X–
4(b)(18) and these final regulations
adopt this proposed rule without
change.
3. Vanadium
Consistent with section 45X(c)(6)(X),
proposed § 1.45X–4(b)(24) would have
provided that the term vanadium means
vanadium that is converted to
ferrovanadium or vanadium pentoxide.
One commenter requested that the
definition of vanadium includes
vanadium when it is purified to a
minimum purity of 99 percent
vanadium by mass. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the
statutory authority to modify the
definition of vanadium to include purity
percentages, and these final regulations
adopt this proposed rule without
change.
4. Magnesium
Consistent with section
45X(c)(6)(Z)(x), proposed § 1.45X–
4(b)(26)(x) would have provided that the
term magnesium means magnesium
purified to a minimum purity of 99
percent by mass. One commenter
requested that the definition of
magnesium be expanded to include
magnesium oxide and magnesium
hydroxide at purity levels that range
from 90–98 percent. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the
statutory authority to modify the
definition of magnesium or to modify
purity percentages in proposed § 1.45X–
4(b)(26)(x), and these final regulations
adopt this proposed rule without
change.
C. Credit Amount—in General
Section 45X(b)(1) generally provides
the credit amount determined with
respect to any eligible component,
including any eligible component it
incorporates, subject to the credit phase
out provided at section 45X(b)(3).
Section 45X(b)(3)(C) provides that the
credit phase out does not apply with
respect to any applicable critical
mineral.
Section 45X(b)(1)(M) provides that, in
the case of any applicable critical
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85827
mineral, the credit amount is an amount
equal to 10 percent of the costs incurred
by the taxpayer with respect to
production of such mineral. Proposed
§ 1.45X–4(c)(3) would have provided
that the costs incurred for purposes of
determining the credit amount includes
costs as defined in § 1.263A–1(e) that
are paid or incurred within the meaning
of section 461 of the Code by the
taxpayer for the production of an
applicable critical mineral only. As
explained in the preamble to the
Proposed Regulations, this rule has the
effect of excluding any costs incurred
after the production of the applicable
critical mineral. The Proposed
Regulations applied section 263A and
the section 263A regulations solely to
identify the types of costs that are
includible in production costs incurred
for purposes of computing the credit
amount. The Proposed Regulations did
not apply section 263A or the section
263A regulations for any other
purposes, such as to determine whether
a taxpayer is engaged in production
activities.
Under the Proposed Regulations,
direct or indirect materials costs, as
defined in § 1.263A–1(e)(2)(i)(A) and
(e)(3)(ii)(E), respectively, and any costs
related to the extraction or acquisition
of raw materials would not be taken into
account as production costs. The
Proposed Regulations would have
attributed a wide range of costs to the
production of an applicable critical
mineral as costs incurred in producing
the applicable critical mineral,
including, but not limited to, labor,
electricity used in the production of the
applicable critical mineral, storage
costs, depreciation or amortization,
recycling, and overhead. However, the
cost of acquiring the raw material used
to produce the applicable critical
mineral; the cost of materials used for
conversion, purification, or recycling of
the raw material; and other material
costs related to the production of the
applicable critical mineral were not
taken into account.
The Proposed Regulations provided a
credit for the costs associated with
production activities that add value to
the applicable critical mineral and are
conducted by the taxpayer that
produces the applicable critical mineral.
Because purchasing raw materials may
enable a taxpayer to produce an
applicable critical mineral but it is not
by itself an activity that adds value, the
Proposed Regulations excluded material
costs from creditable costs. This
exclusion of material costs mitigates the
risk of crediting the same costs multiple
times.
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Many commenters made similar
arguments with respect applicable
critical minerals and the inclusion of
direct material costs as defined in
§ 1.263A–1(e)(2)(i)(A), indirect material
costs as defined in § 1.263A–
1(e)(3)(ii)(E), and costs related to the
extraction of raw materials in their
production costs for purposes of
determining the credit. Commenters
argued that there was insufficient
textual support for a limitation, and any
such limitation would work against the
purposes of the credit. As with electrode
active materials, commenters asserted
that direct costs were often a substantial
or predominant cost of producing
applicable critical minerals. Denying
credits for these costs would, in the
opinion of commenters, be contrary to
the goal of incentivizing extraction and
production of applicable critical
minerals. Commenters also disputed
that direct and indirect costs are not
incurred in value-adding activities.
A number of commenters also
disputed that a credit should only be
available once for the same material.
Several commenters argued that the
statutory language and structure did, at
a minimum, give taxpayers credits for
production of applicable critical
minerals and, when those applicable
critical minerals were used to produce
electrode active materials, additional
credits for the production of the
electrode active materials. According to
these commenters, the dual credits
reflect the fact that these are separate
productive activities for which section
45X provides separate credits. A
commenter also urged that producers of
applicable critical minerals be able to
claim a credit if they can establish that
the applicable critical minerals used in
the production were acquired from
production or extraction outside the
United States and thus were previously
ineligible for a section 45X credit. For
applicable critical minerals that are
produced using other precursor
applicable critical minerals, a
commenter recommended that the cost
of the precursor applicable critical
minerals be excluded from the cost of
producing the applicable critical
minerals.
A number of commenters proposed
solutions to the problem of crediting the
same production costs multiple times.
One solution commenters proposed was
to reduce the basis of property for which
a credit has been claimed by an
upstream producer. Commenters also
proposed a system under which a
taxpayer would only be eligible for a
credit on costs of material for which no
other taxpayer had previously claimed a
credit. This arrangement could be
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administered through a system of
certification or tracing in which
taxpayers would be required to verify
that its suppliers had not claimed
previously claimed credits for costs
associated with the same materials for
which the taxpayer is claiming credits.
Commenters generally agreed that
producers should not need to be
vertically integrated to claim credits.
Instead, these commenters argued that
each producer in the supply chain
should be eligible to claim credits for,
at a minimum, their addition to the
value of the applicable critical minerals
produced.
Some commenters addressed the
requirement in section 45X(d)(2) that
extraction or production of applicable
critical minerals occur within the
United States or a possession of the
United States. A commenter urged that
only the cost of extraction of applicable
critical minerals occurring in the
geology of the United States or its
possessions should qualify for the
section 45X credit in calculating the
cost of production of such mineral.
Other commenters urged that credits be
permitted to taxpayers that process
applicable critical minerals extracted
outside the United States provided that
the processing occurs within the United
States or its possessions. One
commenter proposed that the final
regulations modify the proposed rule
regarding constituent elements,
materials, and subcomponents used in
the production of applicable critical
minerals to distinguish between imports
of materials otherwise available from
domestic sources and imported
materials that are not available from
domestic sources. Although this
suggested proposal deviates from the
Proposed Regulations, it would still
allow for credits associated with costs of
foreign-sourced constituent elements,
materials, and subcomponents but only
where domestic alternatives are not
available.
Three commenters supported the
Proposed Regulations’ exclusion of
direct, indirect, and extraction costs
from production costs eligible for the
credit. One commenter was concerned
that a contrary rule would invite fraud,
waste, and abuse and that, in the case
of extraction costs, would be difficult to
administer without the creation of a
tracing system. Two commenters
specifically identified extraction costs
as something that should be excluded
from the costs of production for the
credit. One recommended more explicit
clarification that the cost of the
extraction of raw materials is excluded
from creditable production costs.
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With respect to these comments, refer
to Part IV.E.1.e. of this Summary of
Comments and Explanation of
Revisions, which describes the revisions
to the proposed rules for production
costs of both electrode active materials
and applicable critical minerals that are
in these final regulations.
Proposed § 1.45X–4(c)(4) would have
required the taxpayer to document that
their product meets the criteria for an
applicable critical mineral as described
in section 45X(c)(6) with a certificate of
analysis provided by the taxpayer to the
person to which the taxpayer sold the
applicable critical mineral. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
requested comments on this
substantiation requirement, including
whether a similar requirement should
be applied to electrode active materials.
With respect to this proposed rule, refer
to Part IV.E.1.e. of this Summary of
Comments and Explanation of
Revisions, which describes the revisions
to the proposed rules for substantiation
of both electrode active materials and
applicable critical minerals that are in
these final regulations.
VI. Other Comments Received
Regarding Ancillary Issues
In response to the Proposed
Regulations, certain commenters
responded concerning the application of
sections 6417 and 6418. A commenter
noted that the Proposed Regulations do
not explain the process for making a
section 6417 elective pay election for a
section 45X credit and recommends the
final regulations provide more details
and guidance on the payment amount
and potential considerations. Another
commenter requested additional
clarification on application procedures,
methods, reporting items, refund/
transfer periods, and other
supplementary procedures relevant to
the provisions of section 6417. Similar
comments were received with respect to
the transferability provisions of section
6418 that may apply to the section 45X
credit. A separate commenter requested
clarification regarding a transfer of tax
credits from vessel manufacturer
(shipyard) to vessel owner, and the
possible effects of different ownership
arrangements of related offshore wind
vessels.
The comments related to sections
6417 and 6418 are outside the scope of
these final regulations under section
45X, as the comments relate to rules
under sections 6417 and 6418. Final
regulations under sections 6417, 89 FR
17546 (March 11, 2024), corrected in 89
FR 26786 (April 16, 2024), and
corrected in 89 FR 66562 (August 16,
2024) and 6418, 89 FR 34770 (April 30,
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2024), corrected in 89 FR 67859 (August
22, 2024), are available and provide
relevant information on the elective
payment election under section 6417,
making a transfer election under section
6418, and the impacts of various
ownership structures on the ability and
requirements when making an election
under either section 6417 or section
6418.
A commenter suggested that the
Proposed Regulations should have
addressed whether the section 45X
credit can be carried back to offset prior
year tax liabilities or whether it can be
transferred to other taxpayers. The
commenter suggested that the final
regulations allow the credit to be carried
back for a reasonable period of time or
to be transferred to other eligible
taxpayers under certain conditions and
limitations. This request is outside the
scope of these final regulations, but as
a clarification, section 39 of the Code
describes rules related to the carryback
and carryforward of unused credits,
including section 39(a)(4) which
provides a 3-year carryback period for
any applicable credit (as defined in
section 6417(b)). Section 1.6418–5(h)
also provides a rule clarifying that a
transferee of a specified credit portion
under section 6418 can apply section
39(a)(4) to the extent the specified credit
portion is described in section 6417(b)
(list of applicable credits, taking into
account any placed in service
requirements in section 6417(b)(2), (3),
and (5)).
A commenter requested that the final
regulations define what constitutes a
disposition or a cessation of eligibility
for the purpose of recapturing the credit
within five years of being placed in
service. According to the commenter,
the final rules should define the terms
‘‘disposition’’ and ‘‘cessation of
eligibility’’ and provide examples and
exceptions. As a clarification, the
section 45X credit is not subject to the
recapture provisions of section 50 of the
Code because it is not an investment
credit under section 46 of the Code.
Further, there is no statutory authority
under the provisions of section 45X to
require recapture of the credit. Thus,
these final regulations do not include
any rules related to recapture.
A commenter noted that the Proposed
Regulations do not address whether the
section 45X credit can be specially
allocated to certain partners or whether
the credit can be modified by a
partnership agreement for partnerships
that produce and sell eligible
components, possibly ‘‘creating
inconsistencies or unfairness for some
partners who may have different
interests or expectations.’’ The
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commenter requested that the final
regulations include a rule allowing the
section 45X credit to be specially
allocated or modified by a partnership
agreement. Because the commenter’s
request is addressed under section 704
and § 1.704–1(b)(4)(ii) and does not
relate to credit eligibility under section
45X, the Treasury Department and IRS
decline to adopt a rule addressing
partnership allocations in these final
regulations.
VII. Severability
If any provision in this 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.
Applicability Dates
These regulations apply to eligible
components for which production is
completed and sales occur after
December 31, 2022, and during taxable
years ending on or after October 28,
2024. Taxpayers may choose to apply
these regulations to eligible components
for which production is completed and
sales occur after December 31, 2022, and
during taxable years ending before
October 28, 2024, provided that
taxpayers follow these regulations in
their entirety and in a consistent
manner.
Effect on Other Documents
Section 5.05(2) of Notice 2023–18 and
section 3 of Notice 2023–44, which
relate to the interaction between
sections 45X and 48C, are superseded
for eligible components for which
production is completed and sales occur
after October 28, 2024.
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review
Pursuant to the Memorandum of
Agreement, Review of Treasury
Regulations under Executive Order
12866 (June 9, 2023), tax regulatory
actions issued by the IRS are not subject
to the requirements of section 6(b) of
Executive Order 12866, as amended.
Therefore, a regulatory impact
assessment is not required.
II. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520) (PRA) generally
requires that a Federal agency obtain the
approval of the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) before collecting
information from the public, whether
such collection of information is
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85829
mandatory, voluntary, or required to
obtain or retain a benefit.
The collections of information in
these final regulations contain reporting
and recordkeeping requirements that are
required to validate eligibility to claim
a section 45X credit. These collections
of information would generally be used
by the IRS for tax compliance purposes
and by taxpayers to facilitate proper
reporting and compliance. The general
recordkeeping requirements mentioned
within these final regulations are
considered general tax records under
§ 1.6001–1(e). Specific certification
statements under § 1.45X–1(c)(3) and
statements required in §§ 1.45X–
3(e)(2)(iv)(C) and 1.45X–4(c)(4) are
considered general tax records and are
required for the IRS to validate the
taxpayer that may claim a section 45X
credit. For PRA purposes, general tax
records are already approved by OMB
under 1545–0074 for individuals, 1545–
0123 for business entities, and under
1545–0092 for trust and estate filers.
These final regulations also provide
reporting requirements related to
making the Related Person Election as
described in § 1.45X–2(d) and
calculating the section 45X credit
amount as described in § 1.45X–1. The
Related Person Election will be made by
taxpayers with Forms 1040, 1041, 1120–
S, 1065, and 1120, on Form 7207,
Advanced Manufacturing Production
Credit (or any successor forms); and
credit calculations will be made on
Form 3800 and supporting forms
including Form 7207 (and any successor
forms). These forms are approved under
1545–0074 for individuals, 1545–0123
for business entities, 1545–2306 for trust
and estate filers of Form 7207, and
1545–0895 for trust and estate filers of
Form 3800. These final regulations are
not changing or creating new collection
requirements not already approved by
OMB or will be approved under 5 CFR
1320.10 by OMB.
No public comments were received by
the IRS directed specifically at the PRA
or on the collection requirements, but
commenters generally articulated the
burdens associated with the
documentation requirements contained
in the Proposed Regulations. As
described in the relevant portions of this
preamble, the Treasury Department and
the IRS have determined that the
documentation requirements are
necessary to administer the provisions
of section 45X.
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes
certain requirements with respect to
Federal rules that are subject to the
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notice and comment requirements of
section 553(b) of the Administrative
Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) and
that are likely to have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Unless an
agency determines that a proposal is not
likely to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities, section 603 of the RFA requires
the agency to present a final regulatory
flexibility analysis (FRFA) of the final
regulations. The Treasury Department
and the IRS have not determined
whether the final regulations will likely
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
This determination requires further
study. Because there is a possibility of
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities, a
FRFA is provided in these final
regulations.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the
Code, the Proposed Regulations were
submitted to the Chief Counsel of the
Office of Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration for comment
on its impact on small business, and no
comments were received.
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A. Need for and Objectives of the Rule
The final regulations provide greater
clarity to taxpayers that intend to claim
a section 45X credit. The final
regulations provide necessary
definitions, the time and manner to
make the Related Person Election and
rules regarding the determination of
credit amounts. The Treasury
Department and the IRS intend and
expect that giving taxpayers guidance
that allows them to claim the section
45X credit will beneficially impact
various industries. In particular, the
section 45X credit encourages the
domestic production of eligible
components and incentivizes taxpayers
to invest in clean energy projects that
generate eligible credits.
B. Affected Small Entities
The RFA directs agencies to provide
a description of, and if feasible, an
estimate of, the number of small entities
that may be affected by the proposed
rules, if adopted. The Small Business
Administration Office of Advocacy
(SBA) estimates in its 2023 Frequently
Asked Questions that 99.9 percent of
American businesses meet its definition
of a small business. The applicability of
these final regulations does not depend
on the size of the business, as defined
by the SBA.
As described more fully in the
preamble to this final regulation and in
this initial regulatory flexibility analysis
(IRFA), section 45X and these final
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regulations may affect a variety of
different entities across several different
clean energy industries as multiple
types of eligible components are
provided for under the statute and
manufacturers may produce more than
one type. Although there is uncertainty
as to the exact number of small
businesses within this group, the
current estimated number of
respondents to these final rules is
13,450 taxpayers. The estimated total
annual reporting burden and estimated
average annual burden per respondent
will be computed when Form 7207 and
the instructions to Form 7207 are
updated to reflect these final
regulations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
utilize tax data as the basis for its RFA
analysis. Tax entities supply
information on tax forms, which
information is processed and recorded
by the IRS. This data is then available
to the IRS office of Research, Applied
Analytics and Statistics and to the
Treasury Department’s Office of Tax
Policy for use in estimating the impact
of tax regulation on businesses. Tax data
is the more appropriate data as it
provides nearly universal coverage of
the entities that are affected by these tax
regulations. All taxpayers and many
potential taxpayers are represented in
the universe of tax data. Second, the tax
data more accurately reflect the level of
organization to which tax regulations
are applicable because tax data is
collected on the entity rather than the
enterprise level. Overwhelmingly,
business tax regulations apply to the
entity level making tax data a natural fit
for the analysis of regulatory impact.
Further, with limited exceptions, tax
regulations apply to all entities
organized in a particular manner
regardless of industry or size. Finally,
analysis of the implications of tax
regulations for the purposes of the PRA
and any Special Analyses, including the
Regulatory Impact Analysis, are carried
out using tax data. Generally, restricting
analysis for the RFA to tax data prevents
difficulties in reconciling the different
analyses within a given regulation.
Reliance on tax data has some
drawbacks. In general, tax forms do not
collect information unless it is directly
relevant to the calculation of tax
liability. The Northern American
Industry Classification System (NAICS)
codes referenced by the Office of
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration are included on tax
forms for informational purposes and
may not be reliable. For example, past
the first two-digits of the NAICS code,
economic sector level, entries may be
left blank in the raw data. In addition,
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for a tax entity that is comprised of
multiple different enterprises that each
operate in a different industry, the
NAICS code reported on a tax form may
not reflect the appropriate industry for
the regulation under analysis.
Furthermore, most tax returns have no
independent verification of the accuracy
of NAICS codes. Notwithstanding this
concern, tax data remains the most
appropriate data for analysis of the
implications of tax regulations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
have considered other data alternatives
including Census data sources, such as
the Statistics of U.S. Businesses (SUSB)
suggested by SBA’s Office of Advocacy.
The 2020 SUSB includes only six
million firms and eight million
establishments while the proposed tax
data includes approximately 18 million
business entities. Unlike the SUSB data,
the tax data includes more small
businesses, not only ones with at least
one employee. Tax data provides a more
inclusive estimate of businesses affected
by tax regulations. In conclusion, while
tax data is an appropriate resource for
evaluating the impact of tax regulations,
this data does not permit some of the
usual analysis presented to the SBA.
Furthermore, since the NAICS codes
reported on the tax return may not
accurately reflect the industry of the
entity, applying separate standards by
industry is inadvisable.
Thus, the Treasury Department and
the IRS have determined that reliance
on NAICS codes would not accurately
reflect the entities affected by these
regulations. Further, the Treasury
Department and the IRS currently do
not have useable tax data that reflects
the entities that will be affected by these
regulations. While there is uncertainty
as to the exact number of small
businesses within this group, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
continue to estimate that approximately
13,450 taxpayers will be impacted.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
expect to receive more information on
the impact on small businesses after
taxpayers start to claim the section 45X
credit using the guidance and
procedures provided in these final
regulations.
C. Impact of the Rules
The final regulations provide rules for
how taxpayers can claim the section
45X credit. Taxpayers that claim the
section 45X credit will have
administrative costs related to reading
and understanding the rules as well as
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements because of the Related
Person Election, computation of the
section 45X credit and tax return
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requirements. The costs will vary across
different-sized entities and across the
type of production activities in which
such entities are engaged.
The Related Person Election allows a
taxpayer to make an irrevocable election
annually with their Federal income tax
return by providing the information
required on Form 7207 (or any
successor form), including, for example,
the name, EIN of the taxpayer; a
description of the taxpayer’s trade or
business; the name, address and EINs of
all related persons; a list of the eligible
components that are sold, and the
intended purpose of the eligible
components sold by the related person.
To make the Related Person Election
and claim the section 45X credit, the
taxpayer must file an annual Federal
income tax return. The reporting and
recordkeeping requirements for that
Federal income tax return would be
required for any taxpayer that is
claiming a general business credit,
regardless of whether the taxpayer was
making a Related Person Election under
section 45X.
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D. Alternatives Considered
The Treasury Department and the IRS
considered alternatives to these final
regulations. For example, the Treasury
Department and the IRS considered
whether to impose certain pre-return
filing requirements as a condition of
making the Related Person Election as
authorized in section 45X(a)(3)(B)(ii) to
prevent duplication, fraud, or improper
or excessive credits. These final
regulations were designed to minimize
burdens for taxpayers while ensuring
that the IRS has sufficient information
to determine eligibility for the section
45X credit. The Treasury Department
and the IRS determined that requiring
registration before a taxpayer makes the
Related Person Election is unnecessary
at this time. These final regulations
would allow taxpayers to make an
irrevocable Related Person Election
annually with their Federal income tax
return by providing the information
required on Form 7207 (or any
successor form), which would provide
the IRS with sufficient information to
assist in preventing duplication, fraud,
or the claiming of improper or excessive
credits if eligible components are
produced and then sold to related
persons.
E. Duplicative, Overlapping, or
Conflicting Federal Rules
The final rule would not duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with any relevant
Federal rules. As discussed previously,
the final rule would merely provide
procedures and definitions to allow
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taxpayers to claim the section 45X
credit. The Treasury Department and
the IRS invite input from interested
members of the public about identifying
and avoiding overlapping, duplicative,
or conflicting requirements.
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 (updated annually for
inflation). These final regulations do 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 from publishing any
rule that has federalism implications if
the rule either imposes substantial,
direct compliance costs on State and
local governments, and is not required
by statute, or preempts State law, unless
the agency meets the consultation and
funding requirements of section 6 of the
Executive order. These final regulations
do not have federalism implications and
do not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local
governments or preempt State law
within the meaning of the Executive
order.
VI. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
Executive Order 13175 (Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribal
governments) prohibits an agency from
publishing any rule that has Tribal
implications if the rule either imposes
substantial, direct compliance costs on
Indian Tribal governments, and is not
required by statute, or preempts Tribal
law, unless the agency meets the
consultation and funding requirements
of section 5 of the Executive order. This
final rule does not have substantial
direct effects on one or more federally
recognized Indian tribes and does not
impose substantial direct compliance
costs on Indian Tribal governments
within the meaning of the Executive
order.
VII. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
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85831
designated this rule as a major rule as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Statement of Availability of IRS
Documents
IRS notices and other guidance cited
in this preamble are published in the
Internal Revenue Bulletin (or
Cumulative Bulletin) and are available
from the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S. Government Publishing Office,
Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting
the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Drafting Information
The principal authors of these final
regulations are Mindy Chou, John
Deininger, Derek Gimbel, John Lovelace,
and Alexander Scott. However, other
personnel from the Office of Chief
Counsel, the Treasury Department, and
the IRS participated in the development
of these regulations.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Adoption of Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, the Treasury Department
and the IRS amend 26 CFR part 1 as
follows:
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 is amended by adding entries
in numerical order for §§ 1.45X–1
through 1.45X–4 to read in part as
follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Section 1.45X–1 also issued under 26
U.S.C. 45X, 6001, 6417(h) and 6418(h).
Section 1.45X–2 also issued under 26
U.S.C. 45X and 1502.
Section 1.45X–3 also issued under 26
U.S.C. 6001.
Section 1.45X–4 also issued under 26
U.S.C. 6001.
*
*
*
*
*
Par. 2. Sections 1.45X–0 through
1.45X–4 are added to read as follows:
■
Sec.
*
*
*
*
*
1.45X–0 Table of contents.
1.45X–1 General rules applicable to the
advanced manufacturing production
credit.
1.45X–2 Sale to unrelated person.
1.45X–3 Eligible components.
1.45X–4 Applicable critical minerals.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 1.45X–0 Table of contents.
This section lists the major captions
contained in §§ 1.45X–1 through 1.45X–4.
§ 1.45X–1 General rules applicable to the
advanced manufacturing production
credit.
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(a) Overview.
(b) Credit amount.
(c) Definition of produced by the taxpayer.
(d) Produced in the United States.
(e) Production and sale in a trade or
business.
(f) Sale of integrated components.
(g) Interaction between sections 45X and
48C.
(h) [Reserved]
(i) Anti-abuse rule.
(j) Applicability date.
§ 1.45X–2 Sale to unrelated person.
(a) In general.
(b) Definitions.
(c) Special rule for sale to related person.
(d) Related person election.
(e) Sales of integrated components to
related person.
(f) Applicability date.
§ 1.45X–3 Eligible components.
(a) In general.
(b) Solar energy components.
(c) Wind energy components.
(d) Inverters.
(e) Qualifying battery component.
(f) Phase out rule.
(g) Applicability date.
§ 1.45X–4 Applicable critical minerals.
(a) In general.
(b) Definitions.
(c) Credit amount.
(d) Applicability date.
§ 1.45X–1 General rules applicable to the
advanced manufacturing production
credit.
(a) Overview—(1) In general. This
section provides general rules regarding
the advanced manufacturing production
credit determined under section 45X of
the Code (section 45X credit). Paragraph
(a)(2) of this section provides definitions
of certain terms that apply for purposes
of section 45X and the section 45X
regulations (as defined in paragraph
(a)(2)(xv) of this section). Paragraphs (b)
through (j) of this section provide the
basic rules regarding the section 45X
credit, including the definition of the
term produced by the taxpayer, and
rules to determine the taxpayer that
produces an eligible component and
whether such taxpayer is entitled to
claim a section 45X credit in contract
manufacturing arrangements; where the
production of eligible components must
occur; the treatment of integrated,
incorporated or assembled eligible
components; and the interaction
between sections 45X and 48C of the
Code. See § 1.45X–2 for rules regarding
sales to unrelated persons, sales to
related persons, and the related person
election (Related Person Election),
including rules regarding the time,
place, and manner of making the
Related Person Election. See § 1.45X–3
for the definitions of all eligible
components (except applicable critical
minerals) and the credit amounts
available for each of these eligible
components, including certain phase-
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out percentages. See § 1.45X–4 for the
definitions of applicable critical
minerals and the rules regarding the
determination of the credit amount for
applicable critical minerals.
(2) Generally applicable definitions.
This paragraph (a)(2) provides
definitions of terms that apply for
purposes of section 45X and the section
45X regulations.
(i) Applicable critical mineral. The
term applicable critical mineral means
any of the minerals that are listed in
section 45X(c)(6) and defined in
§ 1.45X–4(b).
(ii) Code. The term Code means the
Internal Revenue Code.
(iii) Contract manufacturing
arrangement. The term contract
manufacturing arrangement is defined
in paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(B) of this section.
(iv) Electrode active materials. The
term electrode active materials is
defined in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(i) and
described in § 1.45X–3(e)(2).
(v) Eligible component. The term
eligible component is defined in section
45X(c)(1)(A) and described in §§ 1.45X–
3 and 1.45X–4.
(vi) Eligible taxpayer. The term
eligible taxpayer is defined in paragraph
(c)(3) of this section.
(vii) Extraction. The term extraction is
defined in § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(iv)(B).
(viii) Guidance. The term guidance
means guidance published in the
Federal Register or Internal Revenue
Bulletin, as well as administrative
guidance such as forms, instructions,
publications, or other guidance on the
IRS.gov website. See §§ 601.601 and
601.602 of this chapter.
(ix) IRA. The term IRA means Public
Law 117–169, commonly known as the
Inflation Reduction Act of 2022.
(x) IRS. The term IRS means the
Internal Revenue Service.
(xi) Produced by the taxpayer. The
term produced by the taxpayer is
defined in paragraph (c) of this section,
and the related terms production
activities and production process have
the meaning given those terms in
paragraph (c) of this section.
(xii) Related person. The term related
person is defined in § 1.45X–2(b)(2).
(xiii) Related Person Election. The
term Related Person Election is defined
in § 1.45X–2(d)(1).
(xiv) Secretary. The term Secretary
means the Secretary of the Treasury or
her delegate.
(xv) Section 45X regulations. The
term section 45X regulations means the
provisions of this section, §§ 1.45X–2
through 1.45X–4, and the regulations in
this chapter under sections 6417 and
6418 of the Code that relate to the
section 45X credit.
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(xvi) Unrelated person. The term
unrelated person is defined in section
45X(a)(3) and described in § 1.45X–
2(b)(3).
(b) Credit amount. Except as
otherwise provided in section 45X(b)(3)
and § 1.45X–3(f), for purposes of section
38 of the Code, the amount of the
section 45X credit for any taxable year
is equal to the sum of the credit
amounts provided under section 45X(b)
and described in §§ 1.45X–3 and 1.45X–
4 with respect to each eligible
component that is produced by the
taxpayer and, within the taxable year,
sold by the taxpayer to an unrelated
person. See § 1.45X–2 for rules
regarding sales of eligible components
to related persons that may be treated as
if sold to unrelated persons for purposes
of section 45X(a).
(c) Definition of produced by the
taxpayer—(1) In general. The term
produced by the taxpayer means a
process conducted by the taxpayer that
substantially transforms constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents
into a complete and distinct eligible
component that is functionally different
from that which would result from
minor assembly or superficial
modification of the elements, materials,
or subcomponents, and includes both
primary and secondary production.
Primary production involves producing
an eligible component using nonrecycled materials while secondary
production involves producing an
eligible component using recycled
materials.
(i) Partial transformation. The term
produced by the taxpayer does not
include partial transformation that does
not result in substantial transformation
of constituent elements, materials, or
subcomponents into a complete and
distinct eligible component as described
in this paragraph (c)(1).
(ii) Minor assembly or superficial
modification. The term produced by the
taxpayer does not include minor
assembly of two or more constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents,
or superficial modification of the final
eligible component, if the taxpayer does
not also engage in the process resulting
in a substantial transformation
described in paragraph (c)(1) or (2) of
this section.
(iii) Examples. The following
examples illustrate the application of
this paragraph (c)(1).
(A) Example 1. Taxpayers X, Y, and
Z each produce one of three sections of
a wind tower that together make up the
wind tower. No taxpayer has produced
an eligible component within the
meaning of section 45X(a)(1)(A) because
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no taxpayer has produced all sections of
the wind tower.
(B) Example 2. Same facts as
paragraph (c)(1)(iii)(A) of this section
(Example 1), but taxpayers X, Y, and Z
instead form Partnership XYZ.
Partnership XYZ produces all three
sections of the wind tower. Partnership
XYZ has produced an eligible
component within the meaning of
section 45X(a)(1)(A).
(C) Example 3. Taxpayer V puts the
external casing on a battery module
(within the meaning of § 1.45X–
3(e)(4)(i)(A)) that already had cells,
battery management systems, and other
components integrated into it. Taxpayer
V has engaged in minor assembly and
has not produced an eligible component
within the meaning of section
45X(a)(1)(A).
(D) Example 4. Taxpayer U purchases
two finished halves of a wind turbine
nacelle and combines them into a single
nacelle. Taxpayer U has engaged in
minor assembly and has not produced
an eligible component within the
meaning of section 45X(a)(1)(A).
(E) Example 5. Taxpayer T purchases
a dry cell battery and fills the electrolyte
of the battery. Taxpayer T has engaged
in minor assembly and has not
produced an eligible component within
the meaning of section 45X(a)(1)(A).
(F) Example 6. Taxpayer W purchases
a prefabricated wind turbine blade and
applies paint and finishes. Taxpayer W
has engaged in superficial modification
of the blade and has not produced an
eligible component within the meaning
of section 45X(a)(1)(A).
(2) Special rule for certain eligible
components—(i) In general. For solar
grade polysilicon, electrode active
materials, and applicable critical
minerals, the term produced by the
taxpayer means processing, converting,
refining, or purifying source materials,
such as brines, ores, or waste streams,
to substantially transform the source
materials to derive a distinct eligible
component, and includes both primary
and secondary production. For the
production process for electrode active
materials and applicable critical
minerals, the term conversion is defined
in § 1.45X–3(e)(2)(ii)(A) or § 1.45X–
4(c)(2)(i), respectively, and the term
purification is defined in § 1.45X–
3(e)(2)(ii)(B) or § 1.45X–4(c)(2)(ii),
respectively.
(ii) Example. Taxpayers X, Y and Z
are unrelated C corporations that have
calendar year taxable years. In 2024, X
extracts raw lithium from natural
mineral deposits and purifies the
extracted material to 90% lithium by
mass. X subsequently hires Y to further
purify the lithium material furnished by
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X to a purity of no less than 99.9%
lithium by mass as required by section
45X(c)(6)(P) and § 1.45X–4(b)(16)(ii). In
2025, Y purifies the material to 99.9%
lithium by mass (qualifying lithium). X
subsequently sells the qualifying
lithium to Z in 2026. X may not claim
a section 45X credit for the qualifying
lithium sold to Z because the qualifying
lithium was not produced by X within
the meaning of this paragraph (c)(2) of
this section, given that X did not
transform the lithium material to derive
a distinct eligible component (i.e.,
lithium which satisfies the minimum
purity of 99.9% lithium by mass
prescribed by section 45X(c)(6)(P)).
(3) Eligible taxpayer—(i) In general.
Except as otherwise provided in
paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section, a
taxpayer claiming a section 45X credit
with respect to an eligible component
must be the taxpayer that directly
performs the production activities that
bring about a substantial transformation
resulting in the eligible component and
must sell such eligible component to an
unrelated person.
(ii) Contract manufacturing
arrangement—(A) In general. If the
production of an eligible component is
performed in whole or in part pursuant
to a contract that is a contract
manufacturing arrangement, then,
provided the other requirements of
section 45X are met, the party to such
contract that may claim the section 45X
credit with respect to such eligible
component is the party that performs
the actual production activities that
bring about a substantial transformation
resulting in the eligible component.
(B) Contract manufacturing
arrangement defined. The term contract
manufacturing arrangement means any
agreement (or agreements) providing for
the production of an eligible component
if the agreement is entered into before
the production of the eligible
component to be delivered under the
contract is completed. A routine
purchase order for off-the-shelf property
is not treated as a contract
manufacturing arrangement for
purposes of this paragraph (c)(3). An
agreement will be treated as a routine
purchase order for off-the-shelf property
if the contractor is required to make no
more than de minimis modifications to
the property to tailor it to the customer’s
specific needs, or if at the time the
agreement is entered into, the contractor
knows or has reason to know that the
contractor can satisfy the agreement out
of existing stocks or normal production
of finished goods.
(iii) Special rule for contract
manufacturing arrangements. If an
eligible component is produced by a
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taxpayer pursuant to a contract
manufacturing arrangement, the parties
to such agreement may determine by
agreement the party that may claim the
section 45X credit. If a taxpayer enters
into contract manufacturing
arrangements with multiple fabricators
to produce an eligible component, the
parties to such agreements may
determine by agreement the party that
may claim the section 45X credit. The
IRS will not challenge the agreement of
the parties provided all the parties
submit signed certification statements in
the manner required in Form 7207,
Advanced Manufacturing Production
Credit, or its instructions (as described
in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section)
indicating that all parties agree as to the
party that may claim the section 45X
credit.
(iv) Certification statement
requirements. A certification statement
indicating that all parties to a contract
manufacturing arrangement agree as to
the party that will claim the section 45X
credit must include—
(A) All required information set forth
in guidance; and
(B) A properly signed penalty of
perjury statement that includes the
following: under penalties of perjury, I
declare that I have examined this
statement, including accompanying
documents, and to the best of my
knowledge and belief, the facts
presented in support of this statement
are true, correct, and complete.
(v) Examples. The following examples
illustrate the application of this
paragraph (c)(3).
(A) Example 1: Contract
manufacturing with sale. Taxpayers X,
Y and Z are unrelated C corporations
that have calendar year taxable years. In
2024, pursuant to a contract
manufacturing arrangement as described
in paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(B) of this section,
X hires Y to produce a solar module.
The contract is a tolling arrangement
and provides that Y will produce the
solar module according to X’s designs
and specifications and using the
materials and subcomponents that X
provides. X and Y enter an agreement
providing that X is the sole party that
may claim a section 45X credit for the
production and sale of the solar module,
and X and Y each sign a certification
statement as described in paragraph
(c)(3)(iv) of this section reflecting this
agreement. In 2025, Y produces and
delivers the solar module to X, and in
2026, X sells the solar module to Z. X
may claim a section 45X credit in
taxable year 2026 for the solar module
it sold to Z provided all other
requirements of section 45X are met and
the certification statements signed by X
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and Y meet the requirements described
in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section
and are properly submitted by X. Y
could claim a section 45X credit if the
agreement between X and Y had
designated Y as the sole party that could
claim a section 45X credit for the
production and sale of the solar module
provided all other requirements of
section 45X are met and the certification
statements signed by X and Y meet the
requirements described in paragraph
(c)(3)(iv) of this section and are properly
submitted by Y.
(B) Example 2: Contract
manufacturing with no sale. Assume the
facts are the same as in paragraph
(c)(3)(v)(A) of this section (Example 1),
except that X does not sell the solar
module and instead X uses it to generate
electricity for use in X’s trade or
business. Because there has been no
sale, neither X nor Y may claim a
section 45X credit for the solar module
regardless of whether X and Y submit
signed certification statements
described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this
section.
(C) Example 3: Multiple contract
manufacturing arrangements. Taxpayers
V, W, X, Y, and Z are unrelated C
corporations that have calendar year
taxable years. In 2024, pursuant to three
separate contract manufacturing
arrangements as described in paragraph
(c)(3)(ii)(B) of this section, V hires W, X,
and Y to produce the bottom, middle
and top segments, respectively, of a
single wind tower that V designed. W,
X, Y, and V enter into an agreement
providing that V is the sole party that
may claim a section 45X credit for the
production and sale of the wind tower,
and W, X, Y, and V each sign a
certification statement as described in
paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section
reflecting this agreement. In 2024, W
and X both produce and deliver their
respective wind tower segments to the
installation site, and in 2025, Y
produces and delivers its wind tower
segment to the installation site. In 2026,
V sells the completed wind tower to Z.
V may claim a section 45X credit in
taxable year 2026 for the wind tower it
sold to Z provided all other
requirements of section 45X are met and
the certification statements signed by V,
W, X, and Y meet the requirements
described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this
section and are properly submitted by
V. W or X or Y could be the party that
could claim a section 45X credit if the
agreement between V, W, X and Y had
designated W or X or Y as the sole party
that could claim a section 45X credit for
the production and sale of the wind
tower provided all other requirements of
section 45X are met and the certification
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statements signed by V, W, X, and Y
meet the requirements described in
paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section and
are properly submitted by the party
designated as the sole party that could
claim a section 45X credit.
(D) Example 4: Applicable Critical
Mineral Processing with Certification.
Taxpayers X, Y, and Z are unrelated C
corporations that have calendar year
taxable years. In 2024, X extracts raw
lithium from natural mineral deposits
and purifies the extracted material to
90% lithium by mass. X subsequently
hires Y to further process the lithium
material pursuant to a contract
manufacturing arrangement as described
in paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(B) of this section.
Specifically, the contract is a tolling
arrangement and provides that X
remains the owner for Federal income
tax purposes throughout the purification
process and that Y will further purify
the lithium material furnished by X to
a purity of no less than 99.9% lithium
by mass as required by section
45X(c)(6)(P) and § 1.45X–4(b)(16)(ii). X
and Y enter an agreement providing that
X is the sole party that may claim a
section 45X credit for the production
and sale of the applicable critical
mineral, and X and Y each sign a
certification statement as described in
paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section
reflecting this agreement. In 2025, Y
purifies the material to 99.9% lithium
by mass (qualifying lithium) and
delivers it to X. X subsequently sells the
qualifying lithium to Z in 2026. X may
claim a section 45X credit in taxable
year 2026 for the qualifying lithium sold
to Z, provided that all other
requirements of section 45X are met,
and the certification statements signed
by X and Y meet the requirements
described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this
section and are properly submitted by
X. Y could claim a section 45X credit if
the agreement between X and Y had
designated Y as the sole party that could
claim a section 45X credit for the
qualifying lithium, provided that all
other requirements of section 45X are
met, and the certification statements
signed by X and Y meet the
requirements described in paragraph
(c)(3)(iv) of this section and are properly
submitted by Y. Neither X nor Y could
claim a section 45X credit in the
absence of a designating agreement and
certification statement (described in
paragraphs (c)(3)(iii) and (iv) of this
section, respectively) for the reasons
stated in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this
section.
(4) Timing of production and sale—(i)
In general. Production of eligible
components for which a taxpayer is
claiming a section 45X credit may begin
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before December 31, 2022. Production of
eligible components must be completed,
and sales of eligible components must
occur, after December 31, 2022.
(ii) Example. Taxpayer X has a
calendar year taxable year. Taxpayer X
begins production of a related offshore
wind vessel (as defined in section
45X(4)(B)(iv) and described in § 1.45X–
3(c)(4)) in January 2022. Production is
completed in December 2024 and the
sale to an unrelated person occurs in
2025. Taxpayer X is eligible to claim the
section 45X credit in 2025, assuming
that all other requirements of section
45X are met.
(d) Produced in the United States—(1)
In general. Sales are taken into account
for purposes of the section 45X credit
only for eligible components that are
produced within the United States, as
defined in section 638(1) of the Code, or
a United States territory, which for
purposes of section 45X and the section
45X regulations has the meaning of the
term possession provided in section
638(2).
(2) Subcomponents. Constituent
elements, materials, and subcomponents
used in the production of eligible
components are not subject to the
domestic production requirement
provided in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section.
(e) Production and sale in a trade or
business. An eligible component
produced and sold by the taxpayer is
taken into account for purposes of the
section 45X credit only if the
production and sale are in a trade or
business (within the meaning of section
162 of the Code) of the taxpayer.
(f) Sale of integrated components—(1)
In general. For purposes of the section
45X credit, section 45X(d)(4) provides
that a taxpayer that produces an eligible
component is treated as having sold
such eligible component to an unrelated
person if such component is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another
eligible component that is then sold to
an unrelated person.
(i) Integrated, incorporated, or
assembled. The term integrated,
incorporated, or assembled means the
production activities by which an
eligible component that is a constituent
element, material, or subcomponent is
substantially transformed into another
complete and distinct eligible
component that is not solar grade
polysilicon, an electrode active material,
or an applicable critical mineral. The
term integrated, incorporated, or
assembled does not mean the minor
assembly or superficial modification of
an eligible component used as an
element, material, or subcomponent and
other elements, materials, or
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subcomponents that results in a distinct
product.
(ii) Special rule for eligible
components resulting in solar grade
polysilicon, electrode active materials,
or applicable critical minerals. For solar
grade polysilicon, electrode active
materials, and applicable critical
minerals, the term integrated,
incorporated, or assembled means the
production activities in which an
eligible component is processed,
converted, refined, or purified to derive
a distinct eligible component that is
solar grade polysilicon, an electrode
active material, or an applicable critical
mineral. The term integrated,
incorporated, or assembled does not
mean minor assembly or superficial
modification of an eligible component
used as an element, material, or
subcomponent and other elements,
materials, or subcomponents that results
in a distinct product.
(2) Application—(i) In general. A
taxpayer may claim a section 45X credit
for each eligible component the
taxpayer produces and sells to an
unrelated person, including any eligible
component the taxpayer produces that
was used as a constituent element,
material, or subcomponent and
integrated, incorporated, or assembled
into another complete and distinct
eligible component or another complete
and distinct product (that is not itself an
eligible component) that the taxpayer
also produces and sells to an unrelated
person.
(ii) Example: Sale of product with
incorporated eligible components to
unrelated person. In 2022, X, a domestic
corporation that has a calendar year
taxable year, begins production of
electrode active materials (EAMs) that
are completed in 2023 and incorporated
into battery cells that X also produces.
In 2024, X incorporates those battery
cells into battery modules (within the
meaning of § 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(A)) and
integrates the battery modules into
electric vehicles. X sells the electric
vehicles to Z, an unrelated person, in
2024. X may claim a section 45X credit
for the EAMs, the battery cells, and the
battery modules in 2024.
(g) Interaction between sections 45X
and 48C—(1) In general. For purposes of
the section 45X credit, consistent with
section 45X(c)(1)(B), property that
would otherwise qualify as an eligible
component (otherwise qualified
property) is only an eligible component
if the property is produced at a section
45X facility (as defined in paragraph
(g)(2) of this section) and no part of that
section 45X facility is also a section 48C
facility (as defined in paragraph (g)(3) of
this section).
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(2) Section 45X facility—(i) In general.
A section 45X facility comprises the
independently functioning tangible
property used by the taxpayer that is
necessary to be considered the producer
of the otherwise qualified property
within the meaning of paragraph (c)(1)
or (2) of this section, as applicable. The
tangible property that comprises a
section 45X facility may be in more than
one location.
(ii) Special rule for contract
manufacturing arrangement. In the case
of a contract manufacturing arrangement
where the parties have agreed to who
can claim a section 45X credit under
paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section, the
section 45X facility under paragraph
(g)(2)(i) of this section is determined by
taking into account the tangible
property used to produce the otherwise
qualified property, regardless of which
party to the arrangement claims the
credit.
(3) Section 48C facility—(i) In general.
A section 48C facility includes all
eligible property included in a
qualifying advanced energy project for
which a taxpayer receives an allocation
of section 48C credits under the
allocation program established under
section 48C(e) and claims such credits
after August 16, 2022.
(ii) Eligible property. Eligible property
is property that—
(A) Is necessary for the production or
recycling of property described in
section 48C(c)(1)(A)(i), re-equipping an
industrial or manufacturing facility
described in section 48C(c)(1)(A)(ii), or
re-equipping, expanding, or establishing
an industrial facility described in
section 48C(c)(1)(A)(iii);
(B) Is tangible personal property, or
other tangible property (not including a
building or its structural components),
but only if such property is used as an
integral part of the qualified investment
credit facility; and
(C) With respect to which
depreciation (or amortization in lieu of
depreciation) is allowable.
(4) Examples. The following examples
illustrate the application of this
paragraph (g), and assume any other
requirements of section 45X that are not
described have been met:
(i) Example 1: Two independent
section 45X facilities—(A) Facts.
Taxpayer owns and operates a
manufacturing site that contains
tangible property made up of Equipment
A and Equipment B, each set of which
functions independently and which is
arranged in serial fashion. Equipment A
is used by the taxpayer to produce
otherwise qualified property 1.
Equipment B is used to produce
otherwise qualified property 2, a
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85835
different type of product than otherwise
qualified property 1. Taxpayer was
allocated a section 48C credit under the
section 48C(e) program for a section 48C
facility that includes Equipment A and
subsequently placed the section 48C
facility and Equipment A in service in
taxable year 2026. Taxpayer claimed a
section 48C credit related to Equipment
A for taxable year 2026.
(B) Analysis. The section 45X facility
with respect to otherwise qualified
property 1 is the tangible property made
up of Equipment A, which is the
independently functioning tangible
property used by the taxpayer that is
necessary to be considered the producer
of the otherwise qualified property
within the meaning of paragraph (c)(1)
or (2) of this section. However,
Equipment A is also eligible property
that is considered part of a section 48C
facility as defined in paragraph (g)(3) of
this section. Therefore, otherwise
qualified property 1 is not an eligible
component under paragraph (g)(1) of
this section because part (all in this
case) of the section 45X facility where
otherwise qualified property 1 was
produced is also considered a section
48C facility. There is a separate section
45X facility with respect to otherwise
qualified property 2. That section 45X
facility is the tangible property made up
of Equipment B. Equipment A is not
included in the section 45X facility as
it is not used to produce otherwise
qualified property 2. None of the
tangible property comprising the section
45X facility with respect to otherwise
qualified property 2 is considered part
of a section 48C facility. Thus,
otherwise qualified property 2 is an
eligible component under paragraph
(g)(1) of this section.
(ii) Example 2: Single section 45X
facility at different locations—(A) Facts.
Taxpayer owns and operates two
manufacturing sites at different
locations. The tangible property at
manufacturing site 1 is Equipment A,
which is used to continue and finish the
first part of the production process for
otherwise qualified property. The
tangible property at manufacturing site
2 is Equipment B, which is used to
complete the production process of the
same otherwise qualified property.
Taxpayer was allocated a section 48C
credit under the section 48C(e) program
for Equipment A.
(B) Analysis. Equipment A and B
comprise a single section 45X facility
regardless of location under paragraph
(g)(2)(i) of this section because both
Equipment A and B were used to
produce the otherwise qualified
property and the use of Equipment A
and B are necessary to consider the
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taxpayer the producer, consistent with
the meaning of produced by the
taxpayer in paragraph (c)(1) or (2) of this
section. However, part of the property
comprising the section 45X facility is
also a section 48C facility under
paragraph (g)(3) of this section because
Equipment A is eligible property that is
part of a section 48C facility. As a result,
the otherwise qualified property is not
considered an eligible component, and
the sale of the otherwise qualified
property will not generate a section 45X
credit.
(iii) Example 3: Independent tangible
property and production of
component—(A) Facts. Taxpayer owns
and operates two manufacturing sites.
Manufacturing Site 1 contains tangible
property that is Equipment A, which is
used to produce photovoltaic cells.
Manufacturing Site 2 contains tangible
property that is Equipment B and
tangible property that is Equipment C,
which are arranged in serial fashion.
Equipment B is used to produce
photovoltaic cells. Equipment C is used
to produce solar modules, in part, by
combining the photovoltaic cells
produced by Equipment A and
Equipment B. Taxpayer was allocated a
section 48C credit under the section
48C(e) program for a section 48C facility
that includes Equipment B.
Subsequently, Taxpayer places the
section 48C facility and Equipment B in
service in taxable year 2026. Taxpayer
claimed a section 48C credit for
Equipment B in taxable year 2026.
(B) Analysis. Equipment A and
Equipment B each comprise a section
45X facility since each independently
functions to produce otherwise
qualified property, photovoltaic cells.
No part of the section 45X facility
comprised of Equipment A is eligible
property that is included in a section
48C facility. Thus, the photovoltaic cells
produced in the section 45X facility
comprised of Equipment A are eligible
components. The photovoltaic cells that
are produced in the section 45X facility
comprised of Equipment B are
otherwise qualified property that cannot
qualify as eligible components because
part (all in this case) of the section 45X
facility comprised of Equipment B
where the photovoltaic cells are
produced is also considered a section
48C facility. Solar modules, a different
otherwise qualified property, are
produced in using Equipment C, which
is itself a separate section 45X facility.
Equipment C does not have to include
any of the tangible property included in
Production Unit A or B under paragraph
(g)(2)(i) of this section because it is not
necessary for the Taxpayer to use that
equipment to be considered the
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producer of the solar modules for
purposes of section 45X. As a result, no
part of section 45X facility comprised of
Equipment C where the solar modules
are produced is considered a section
48C facility, and the solar modules are
considered an eligible component for
purposes of section 45X.
(iv) Example 4: Manufacturing under
a contract manufacturing
arrangement—(A) Facts. X is hired by Y
to manufacture photovoltaic cells, but X
and Y agree under paragraph (c)(3)(iii)
of this section that Y will be the party
to claim any section 45X credit resulting
from the sale of the photovoltaic cells.
X owns and operates a manufacturing
site that contains equipment that is
tangible property used to produce the
photovoltaic cells. X was allocated a
section 48C credit under the section
48C(e) program for a section 48C facility
that includes the equipment used to
produce the photovoltaic cells. The
equipment is eligible property that is
part of the section 48C facility that was
placed in service in taxable year 2026.
X claimed a section 48C credit for the
equipment in taxable year 2026.
(B) Analysis. Under paragraph
(g)(2)(ii) of this section, in determining
the section 45X facility related to the
photovoltaic cells (the otherwise
qualified property), Y must consider the
equipment that X used in producing the
photovoltaic cells. In this case, that
means that part of the section 45X
facility is also considered a section 48C
facility, as the equipment used to
produce the photovoltaic cells is also
eligible property that is part of a section
48C facility. Therefore, the photovoltaic
cells are not eligible components for
purposes of section 45X to X or Y, and
there is no section 45X credit generated
if the photovoltaic cells are sold.
(v) Example 5: Two independent
production units manufacturing under a
contract manufacturing arrangement—
(A) Facts. Assume the facts are the same
as in paragraph (g)(4)(iv) of this section
(Example 4), except that Y and X also
agreed for X to produce photovoltaic
wafers using other equipment that is
tangible property that is different than
the equipment X uses to produce the
photovoltaic cells.
(B) Analysis. While Y must consider
the equipment that X uses to produce
the photovoltaic wafers (the otherwise
qualified property) under paragraph
(g)(2)(ii) of this section to determine the
section 45X facility associated with the
photovoltaic wafer production, Y is not
required to include any of the
equipment used by X to produce the
photovoltaic cells because it was not
necessary to use that equipment to be
considered the producer of the
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photovoltaic wafers. As a result, no part
of the section 45X facility related to
photovoltaic wafers is part of a section
48C facility. Therefore, the photovoltaic
wafers are eligible components for
purposes of section 45X and Y will be
entitled to claim a section 45X credit
upon the sale.
(h) [Reserved]
(i) Anti-abuse rule—(1) In general.
The rules of section 45X and the section
45X regulations must be applied in a
manner consistent with the purposes of
section 45X and the section 45X
regulations (and the regulations in this
chapter under sections 6417 and 6418
related to the section 45X credit). A
purpose of section 45X and the section
45X regulations (and the regulations in
this chapter under sections 6417 and
6418 related to the section 45X credit)
is to provide taxpayers an incentive to
produce eligible components in a
manner that contributes to the
development of secure and resilient
supply chains. Accordingly, the section
45X credit is not allowable if the
primary purpose of the production and
sale of an eligible component is to
obtain the benefit of the section 45X
credit in a manner that is wasteful, such
as discarding, disposing of, or
destroying the eligible component
without putting it to a productive use.
A determination of whether the
production and sale of an eligible
component is inconsistent with the
purposes of section 45X and the section
45X regulations (and the regulations in
this chapter under sections 6417 and
6418 related to the section 45X credit)
is based on all facts and circumstances.
(2) Example—(i) Facts. Taxpayer is
engaged in the activity of producing and
selling multiple units of Eligible
Component 1 (EC1). Taxpayer engages
in no other activities. The cost of
producing each unit of EC1 is less than
the amount of the section 45X credit
that would be available if each EC1
qualified for the section 45X credit.
Taxpayer sells some of its units of EC1
to related persons and makes a Related
Person Election pursuant to section
45X(a)(3)(B)(i). Taxpayer also sells some
of its units of EC1 to unrelated persons.
Taxpayer sells all units of EC1 at an
amount equal to cost plus a markup to
reflect an anticipated accommodation
fee and establishes corresponding
accounts receivable at the time of the
respective sales. In addition, Taxpayer
knows or reasonably expects that after
acquiring the units of EC1, the related
and unrelated transferees will not resell
the units of EC1 or use them in their
trades or businesses. Taxpayer intends
to obtain the benefit from the section
45X credit by claiming such credits
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itself or monetizing such credits through
an election under section 6417 or
section 6418. Taxpayer eliminates the
aforementioned accounts receivable at
the time it claims the section 45X credit
or receives related payments attributable
to the section 45X credit, and further
makes payments to the related and
unrelated transferees as accommodation
fees computed as a percentage of such
benefits.
(ii) Analysis. Based on all of the facts
and circumstances in paragraph (i)(2)(i)
of this section, the primary purpose of
Taxpayer’s production and sale of EC1
is to obtain the benefit of the section
45X credit in a manner that is wasteful
and will not be treated as the
production and sale of eligible
components in a trade or business of
Taxpayer for purposes of section
45X(a)(1) and (2). Taxpayer is not
eligible for the section 45X credit with
respect to units of EC1 that it produced
and sold. See sections 6417(d)(6)
(excessive payments) and 6418(g)(2)
(excessive credit transfer).
(j) Applicability date. This section
applies to eligible components for
which production is completed and
sales occur after December 31, 2022, and
during a taxable year ending on or after
October 28, 2024.
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§ 1.45X–2
Sale to unrelated person.
(a) In general. The amount of the
section 45X credit for any taxable year
is equal to the sum of the credit
amounts determined under section
45X(b) (and described in §§ 1.45X–3 and
1.45X–4) with respect to each eligible
component that is produced by the
taxpayer and, during the taxable year,
sold by the taxpayer to an unrelated
person. Applicable Federal income tax
principles apply to determine whether a
transaction is in substance a sale (or the
provision of a service, or some other
disposition). See § 1.45X–1(d) and (e)
for additional requirements relating to
sales.
(b) Definitions. This paragraph (b)
provides definitions of terms that apply
for purposes of this section.
(1) Person. The term person means an
individual, a trust, estate, partnership,
association, company, or corporation, as
provided in section 7701(a)(1) of the
Code. For purposes of this section, an
entity disregarded as separate from a
person (for example, under § 301.7701–
3 of this chapter) is not a person.
(2) Related person. The term related
person means a person who is related to
another person if such persons would be
treated as a single employer under the
regulations in this chapter under section
52(b) of the Code.
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(3) Unrelated person. The term
unrelated person means a person who is
not a related person as defined in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(c) Special rule for sale to related
person—(1) In general. For purposes of
section 45X(a), a taxpayer is treated as
selling an eligible component to an
unrelated person if such component is
sold to such person by a person who is
a related person with respect to the
taxpayer.
(2) Example. X and Y are members of
a group of trades or businesses under
common control under section 52(b),
and thus are related persons under
section 45X(d)(1). Each of X and Y has
a calendar year taxable year. Z is an
unrelated person. X is in the trade or
business of producing and selling solar
modules. X produces and sells solar
modules to Y in 2023. Y sells the solar
modules to Z in 2024. X may claim a
section 45X credit for the sale of the
solar modules in 2024, the taxable year
of X in which Y sells the solar modules
to Z.
(d) Related person election—(1)
Availability of election—(i) In general.
In such form and manner as the
Secretary may prescribe, a taxpayer may
make an election under section
45X(a)(3)(B) (Related Person Election),
to treat a sale of eligible components by
such taxpayer to a related person as if
made to an unrelated person. As a
condition of, and prior to, a taxpayer
making a Related Person Election (as
described in paragraph (d)(2) of this
section), the Secretary may require such
information or registration as the
Secretary deems necessary for purposes
of preventing duplication, fraud, or any
improper or excessive credit amount
determined under section 45X(a)(1).
(ii) Members of a consolidated group.
A Related Person Election is made by a
member of a consolidated group (as
defined in § 1.1502–1(h)) in the manner
described in paragraph (d)(3)(ii) of this
section. A member of a consolidated
group that sells eligible components in
an intercompany transaction (as defined
in § 1.1502–13(b)(1)) may make the
Related Person Election to claim the
section 45X credit in the year of the
intercompany sale. For the treatment of
the selling member’s gain or loss from
that sale, see § 1.1502–13.
(2) Time and manner of making
election—(i) In general. A taxpayer must
make an affirmative Related Person
Election annually on the taxpayer’s
timely filed original Federal income tax
return, including extensions in such
form and in such manner as may be
prescribed in guidance. The Related
Person Election will be applicable to all
sales of eligible components to related
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persons by the taxpayer for each trade
or business that the taxpayer engages in
during the taxable year that resulted in
a credit claim and for which the
taxpayer has made the Related Person
Election.
(ii) Required information. For all sales
of eligible components to related
persons, the taxpayer must provide all
required information set forth in
guidance. Such information may
include, for example, the taxpayer’s
name, employer identification number
(EIN), a description of the taxpayer’s
trade or business (including principal
business activity code); the name(s) and
EINs of all related persons; a listing of
the eligible components that are sold;
and the intended purpose of any sales
of eligible components to or from
related persons.
(3) Scope and effect of election—(i) In
general. A separate Related Person
Election must be made with respect to
related person sales made by a taxpayer
for each eligible trade or business of the
taxpayer. The election applies only to
such trade or business for which the
Related Person Election is made. An
election under this section applies to all
sales to related persons (including
between members of the same
consolidated group) of eligible
components produced by the taxpayer
during the taxable year with respect to
each trade or business for which the
Related Person Election is made and is
irrevocable for the taxable year for
which the election is made. An election
under paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section
applies solely for purposes of the
section 45X credit and the section 45X
regulations (and the regulations in this
chapter under sections 6417 and 6418
related to the section 45X credit).
(ii) Application to consolidated
groups. For a trade or business of a
consolidated group, a Related Person
Election must be made by the agent for
the group on behalf of the members
claiming the section 45X credit and
filed with the group’s timely filed
original Federal income tax return,
including extensions, with respect to
each trade or business that the
consolidated group conducts. See
§ 1.1502–77 (providing rules regarding
the status of the common parent as
agent for its members). A separate
election must be filed on behalf of each
member claiming the section 45X credit,
and each election must include the
name and EIN of the agent for the group
and the member on whose behalf the
election is being made.
(iii) Application to partnerships. The
Related Person Election for a
partnership must be made on the
partnership’s timely filed original
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Federal income tax return, including
extensions, with respect to each trade or
business that the partnership conducts.
The election applies only to such trade
or business for which the Related
Person Election is made. An election by
a partnership does not apply to any
trade or business conducted by a partner
outside the partnership.
(4) Anti-abuse rule—(i) In general. A
Related Person Election may not be
made if, with respect to the eligible
components relevant to such election,
the taxpayer fails to provide the
information described in paragraph
(d)(2) of this section, provides
information described in paragraph
(d)(2) of this section that shows that
such components are described in
paragraph (d)(4)(ii) or (iii) of this
section, or such components are
described in paragraph (d)(4)(ii) or (iii)
of this section.
(ii) Improper use. For purposes of this
paragraph (d)(4) the term improper use
means a use that is wasteful, such as
discarding, disposing of, or destroying
the eligible component without putting
it to a productive use by the related
person to which the eligible component
is sold.
(iii) Defective components. The term
defective component means a
component that does not meet the
requirements of section 45X and the
section 45X regulations.
(e) Sales of integrated components to
related person—(1) In general. For
purposes of section 45X and the section
45X regulations (and the regulations in
this chapter under sections 6417 and
6418 related to the section 45X credit),
a taxpayer that produces and then sells
an eligible component to a related
person, who then integrates,
incorporates, or assembles the
taxpayer’s eligible component into
another complete and distinct eligible
component that is subsequently sold to
an unrelated person, may claim a
section 45X credit (or make an election
under section 6417 or section 6418)
with respect to the taxable year in
which the related person’s sale to the
unrelated person occurs.
(2) Examples. The following examples
illustrate the rules provided in
paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(i) Example 1: Sales of multiple
incorporated eligible components to
related persons. X and Y are C
corporations that are members of a
group of trades or businesses under
common control under section 52(b),
and thus are related persons under
section 45X(d)(1) and paragraph (b)(2) of
this section. Each of X and Y has a
calendar year taxable year. Z is an
unrelated person. X and Y are in the
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trade or business of producing and
selling photovoltaic wafers and cells. X
produces and sells photovoltaic wafers
to Y in 2023. Y incorporates the
photovoltaic wafers into photovoltaic
cells and sells the photovoltaic cells to
Z in 2024. X may claim a section 45X
credit for the sale of the photovoltaic
wafers in 2024, the taxable year of X in
which Y sells the photovoltaic cells to
Z.
(ii) Example 2: Sales of multiple
incorporated eligible components to
related and unrelated persons. W, X,
and Y are domestic C corporations that
are members of a group of trades or
businesses under common control
under section 52(b), and thus are related
persons under section 45X(d)(1) and
paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Each of
W, X, and Y has a calendar year taxable
year. W produces electrode active
materials (EAMs) and sells the EAMs to
X in 2023. In 2024, X incorporates the
EAMs into battery cells that it produces
and sells the battery cells to Y. In 2025,
Y incorporates the battery cells into
battery modules (within the meaning of
§ 1.45X–3(e)(4)(i)(A)) that it produces
and sells the battery modules to Z, an
unrelated person. W may claim a
section 45X credit for EAMs sold to X,
X may claim a section 45X credit for the
battery cells sold to Y, and Y may claim
a section 45X credit for the battery
modules sold to Z in 2025, the taxable
year of each of W, X, and Y in which
the battery modules are sold to Z.
(3) Special rules applicable to related
person election—(i) In general. If a
taxpayer makes a valid Related Person
Election under section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i)
and paragraph (d)(1) of this section, and
the taxpayer produces and then sells an
eligible component to a related person,
who then integrates, incorporates, or
assembles the taxpayer’s eligible
component into another complete and
distinct eligible component that is
subsequently sold to an unrelated
person, the taxpayer’s sale of the eligible
component to the related person is
treated (solely for purposes of the
section 45X credit and the section 45X
regulations, and the regulations in this
chapter under sections 6417 and 6418
related to the section 45X credit) as if
made to an unrelated person in the
taxable year in which the sale to the
related person occurs.
(ii) Example: Sales of multiple
integrated eligible components to
related and unrelated persons with a
related person election. W, X, and Y are
domestic C corporations that are
members of a group of trades or
businesses under common control and
thus are related persons under section
45X(d)(1) and paragraph (b)(2) of this
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section. Each of W, X, and Y has a
calendar year taxable year. W produces
electrode active materials (EAMs) and
sells the EAMs to X in 2023. W makes
a valid Related Person Election under
paragraph (d)(1) of this section in 2023
with regard to the sale. In 2024, X
incorporates the EAMs into battery cells
that it produces and sells the battery
cells to Y. X makes a valid Related
Person Election under paragraph (d)(1)
of this section in 2024 with regard to the
sale. In 2025, Y incorporates the battery
cells into battery modules that it
produces and sells the battery modules
to Z, an unrelated person. W may claim
a section 45X credit for the sale of the
EAMs in 2023 because the sale to X is
treated as if made to an unrelated
person solely for purposes of section
45X(a). X may claim a section 45X
credit for the sale of the battery cells in
2024 because the sale to Y is treated as
if made to an unrelated person solely for
purposes of section 45X(a). Y may claim
a section 45X credit for the sale of
battery modules in 2025 because Z is an
unrelated person.
(f) Applicability date. This section
applies to eligible components for
which production is completed and
sales occur after December 31, 2022, and
during a taxable year ending on or after
October 28, 2024.
§ 1.45X–3
Eligible components.
(a) In general. For purposes of the
section 45X credit, eligible component
means any solar energy component (as
defined in paragraph (b) of this section),
any wind energy component (as defined
in paragraph (c) of this section), any
inverter (as defined in paragraph (d) of
this section), any qualifying battery
component (as defined in paragraph (e)
of this section), and any applicable
critical mineral (as defined in § 1.45X–
4(b)). See paragraph (f) of this section
for certain phase-out rules applicable to
eligible components other than
applicable critical minerals.
(b) Solar energy components. Solar
energy component means a solar
module, photovoltaic cell, photovoltaic
wafer, solar grade polysilicon, torque
tube, structural fastener, or polymeric
backsheet, each as defined in this
paragraph (b).
(1) Photovoltaic cell—(i) Definition.
Photovoltaic cell means the smallest
semiconductor element of a solar
module that performs the immediate
conversion of light into electricity that
is either a thin film photovoltaic cell or
a crystalline photovoltaic cell.
(ii) Credit amount. For a photovoltaic
cell, the credit amount is equal to the
product of 4 cents multiplied by the
capacity of such photovoltaic cell. The
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capacity of each photovoltaic cell is
expressed on a direct current watt basis.
Capacity is the nameplate capacity in
direct current watts using Standard Test
Conditions (STC), as defined by the
International Electrotechnical
Commission (IEC). In the case of a
tandem technology produced in serial
fashion, such as a monolithic
multijunction cell composed of two or
more sub-cells, capacity must be
measured at the point of sale at the end
of the single cell production unit. In the
case of a four-terminal tandem
technology produced by mechanically
stacking two distinct cells or
interconnected layers, capacity must be
measured for each cell at each point of
sale. If a cell is sold to a customer who
will use it as the bottom cell in a tandem
module, its capacity should be
measured with the customer’s intended
top cell placed between the bottom cell
and the one-sun light source.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer
must document the capacity of a
photovoltaic cell in a bill of sale or
design documentation, such as an IEC
certification (for example, IEC 61215 or
IEC 60904).
(2) Photovoltaic wafer—(i) Definition.
Photovoltaic wafer means a thin slice,
sheet, or layer of semiconductor
material of at least 240 square
centimeters that comprises the substrate
or absorber layer of one or more
photovoltaic cells. A photovoltaic wafer
must be produced by a single
manufacturer by forming an ingot from
molten polysilicon (for example,
Czochralski method) and then
subsequently slicing it into wafers,
forming molten or evaporated
polysilicon into a sheet or layer, or
depositing a thin-film semiconductor
photon absorber into a sheet or layer
(that is, thin-film deposition).
(ii) Credit amount. For a photovoltaic
wafer, the credit amount is $12 per
square meter.
(3) Polymeric backsheet—(i)
Definition. Polymeric backsheet means a
sheet on the back of a solar module,
composed, at least in part, of a polymer,
that acts as an electric insulator and
protects the inner components of such
module from the surrounding
environment.
(ii) Credit amount. For a polymeric
backsheet, the credit amount is 40 cents
per square meter.
(4) Solar grade polysilicon—(i)
Definition. Solar grade polysilicon
means silicon that is suitable for use in
photovoltaic manufacturing and
purified to a minimum purity of
99.999999 percent silicon by mass.
Satisfaction of the minimum purity
requirement will be determined in
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accordance with the standards provided
in SEMI Specification PV17–1012,
Category 1.
(ii) Credit amount. For solar grade
polysilicon, the credit amount is $3 per
kilogram.
(5) Solar module—(i) Definition. Solar
module means the connection and
lamination of photovoltaic cells into an
environmentally protected final
assembly that is—
(A) Suitable to generate electricity
when exposed to sunlight; and
(B) Ready for installation without an
additional manufacturing process.
(ii) Credit amount. For a solar
module, the credit amount is equal to
the product of 7 cents multiplied by the
capacity of such module. The capacity
of each solar module is expressed on a
direct current watt basis. Capacity is the
nameplate capacity in direct current
watts using STC, as defined by the IEC.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer
must document the capacity of a solar
module in a bill of sale or design
documentation, such as an IEC
certification (for example, IEC 61215 or
IEC 61646).
(6) Solar tracker. Solar tracker means
a mechanical system that moves solar
modules according to the position of the
sun and to increase energy output. A
torque tube (as defined in paragraph
(b)(7) of this section) or structural
fastener (as defined in paragraph (b)(8)
of this section) are solar tracker
components that are eligible
components for purposes of the section
45X credit.
(7) Torque tube—(i) Definition.
Torque tube means a structural steel
support element (including longitudinal
purlins) that—
(A) Is part of a solar tracker;
(B) Is of any cross-sectional shape;
(C) May be assembled from
individually manufactured segments;
(D) Spans longitudinally between
foundation posts;
(E) Supports solar panels and is
connected to a mounting attachment for
solar panels (with or without separate
module interface rails); and
(F) Is rotated by means of a drive
system.
(ii) Credit amount. For a torque tube,
the credit amount is 87 cents per
kilogram.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer
must document that a torque tube is part
of a solar tracker with a specification
sheet, bill of sale, or other similar
documentation that explicitly describes
its application as part of a solar tracker.
(8) Structural fastener—(i) Definition.
Structural fastener means a component
that is used—
(A) To connect the mechanical and
drive system components of a solar
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85839
tracker to the foundation of such solar
tracker;
(B) To connect torque tubes to drive
assemblies; or
(C) To connect segments of torque
tubes to one another.
(ii) Credit amount. For a structural
fastener, the credit amount is $2.28 per
kilogram.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer
must document that a structural fastener
is used in a manner described in
paragraph (b)(8)(i)(A), (B), or (C) of this
section with a bill of sale or other
similar documentation that explicitly
describes such use.
(c) Wind energy components. Wind
energy component means a blade,
nacelle, tower, offshore wind
foundation, or related offshore wind
vessel, each as defined in this paragraph
(c).
(1) Blade—(i) Definition. Blade means
an airfoil-shaped blade that is
responsible for converting wind energy
to low-speed rotational energy.
(ii) Credit amount. For a blade, the
credit amount is equal to the product of
2 cents multiplied by the total rated
capacity of the completed wind turbine
for which the blade is designed.
(2) Offshore wind foundation—(i)
Definition. Offshore wind foundation
means the component (including
transition piece) that secures an offshore
wind tower and any above-water turbine
components to the seafloor using—
(A) Fixed platforms, such as offshore
wind monopiles, jackets, or gravitybased foundations; or
(B) Floating platforms and associated
mooring systems.
(ii) Credit amount. For a fixed
offshore wind foundation platform, the
credit amount is equal to the product of
2 cents multiplied by the total rated
capacity of the completed wind turbine
for which the fixed offshore wind
foundation platform is designed. For a
floating offshore wind foundation
platform, the credit amount is equal to
the product of 4 cents multiplied by the
total rated capacity of the completed
wind turbine for which the floating
offshore wind foundation platform is
designed.
(3) Nacelle—(i) Definition. Nacelle
means the assembly of the drivetrain
and other tower-top components of a
wind turbine (with the exception of the
blades and the hub) within their cover
housing.
(ii) Credit amount. For a nacelle, the
credit amount is equal to the product of
5 cents multiplied by the total rated
capacity of the completed wind turbine
for which the nacelle is designed.
(4) Related offshore wind vessel—(i)
Definition. Related offshore wind vessel
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means any vessel that is purpose-built
or retrofitted for purposes of the
development, transport, installation,
operation, or maintenance of offshore
wind energy components. A vessel is
purpose-built for development,
transport, installation, operation, or
maintenance of offshore wind energy
components if it is built to be capable
of performing such functions and it is of
a type that is commonly used in the
offshore wind industry. A vessel is
retrofitted for development, transport,
installation, operation, or maintenance
of offshore wind energy components if
such vessel was incapable of performing
such functions prior to being retrofitted,
the retrofit causes the vessel to be
capable of performing such functions,
and the retrofitted vessel is of a type
that is commonly used in the offshore
wind industry.
(ii) Credit amount. For a related
offshore wind vessel, the credit amount
is equal to 10 percent of the sales price
of the vessel. The sales price of the
vessel, determined under Federal
income tax principles, does not include
the price of maintenance, services, or
other similar items that may be sold
with the vessel. For a related offshore
wind vessel with respect to which an
election under section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i)
has been made, such election will not
cause the sale price of such vessel to be
treated as having been determined with
respect to a transaction between
uncontrolled taxpayers for purposes of
section 482 of the Code and the
regulations in this chapter.
(5) Tower—(i) Definition. Tower
means a tubular or lattice structure that
supports the nacelle and rotor of a wind
turbine.
(ii) Credit amount. For a tower, the
credit amount is equal to the product of
3 cents multiplied by the total rated
capacity of the completed wind turbine
for which the tower is designed.
(6) Total rated capacity of the
completed wind turbine. For purposes
of this section, total rated capacity of
the completed wind turbine means, for
the completed wind turbine for which a
blade, nacelle, offshore wind
foundation, or tower was manufactured
and sold, the nameplate capacity at the
time of sale as certified to the relevant
national or international standards, such
as IEC 61400, or ANSI/ACP 101–1–
2021, the Small Wind Turbine Standard
(Standard). Certification of the turbine
to such Standards must be documented
by a certificate issued by an accredited
certification body. The total rated
capacity of a wind turbine must be
expressed in watts.
(7) Substantiation. Taxpayers must
maintain specific documentation
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regarding wind energy components for
which a section 45X credit is claimed.
For blades, nacelles, offshore wind
foundations, or towers, a taxpayer must
document the turbine model for which
such component is designed and the
total rated capacity of the completed
wind turbine in technical
documentation associated with the sale
of such component. For related offshore
wind vessel, such documentation could
include the contract to construct or
retrofit (along with retrofit plans), sales
contract, U.S. Coast Guard bill of sale,
U.S. Coast Guard Certificate of
Documentation (COD), and U.S. Coast
Guard Certificate of Inspection (COI).
(d) Inverters—(1) In general. Inverter
means an end product that is suitable to
convert direct current (DC) electricity
from one or more solar modules or
certified distributed wind energy
systems into alternating current
electricity. An end product is suitable to
convert DC electricity from one or more
solar modules or certified distributed
wind energy systems into alternating
current electricity if, in the form sold by
the manufacturer, it is able to connect
with such modules or systems and
convert DC electricity to alternating
current electricity from such connected
source. The term inverter includes a
central inverter, commercial inverter,
distributed wind inverter,
microinverter, or residential inverter.
Only an inverter that meets at least one
of the requirements in paragraphs (d)(2)
through (7) of this section is an eligible
component for purposes of the section
45X credit.
(2) Central inverter—(i) Definition.
Central inverter means an inverter that
is suitable for large utility-scale systems
and has a capacity that is greater than
1,000 kilowatts. The capacity of a
central inverter is expressed on an
alternating current watt basis. An
inverter is suitable for large utility-scale
systems if, in the form sold by the
manufacturer, it is capable of serving as
a component in a large utility-scale
system and meets the core engineering
specifications for such application.
(ii) Credit amount. For a central
inverter the total rated capacity of
which is expressed on an alternating
current watt basis, the credit amount is
equal to the product of 0.25 cents
multiplied by the total rated capacity of
the central inverter.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer
must document that a central inverter
meets the core engineering
specifications for use in a large utilityscale system and has a capacity that is
greater than 1,000 kilowatts with a
specification sheet, bill of sale, or other
similar documentation that explicitly
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describes such specifications and
capacity.
(3) Commercial inverter—(i)
Definition. Commercial inverter means
an inverter that—
(A) Is suitable for commercial or
utility-scale applications;
(B) Has a rated output of 208, 480,
600, or 800 volt three-phase power; and
(C) Has a capacity expressed on an
alternating current watt basis that is not
less than 20 kilowatts and not greater
than 125 kilowatts.
(ii) Suitable for commercial or utilityscale applications. An inverter is
suitable for commercial or utility-scale
applications if, in the form sold by the
manufacturer, it is capable of serving as
a component in commercial or utilityscale systems and meets the core
engineering specifications for such
application.
(iii) Credit amount. For a commercial
inverter the total rated capacity of
which is expressed on an alternating
current watt basis, the credit amount is
equal to the product of 2 cents
multiplied by the total rated capacity of
the commercial inverter.
(iv) Substantiation. The taxpayer must
document that a commercial inverter
meets the core engineering
specifications for use in commercial or
utility-scale applications, the inverter’s
rated output, and the inverter’s capacity
in a specification sheet, bill of sale, or
other similar documentation.
(4) Distributed wind inverter—(i) In
general. Distributed wind inverter means
an inverter that is used in a residential
or non-residential system that utilizes
one or more certified distributed wind
energy systems and has a total rated
output, expressed on an alternating
current watt basis, of not greater than
150 kilowatts.
(ii) Certified distributed wind energy
system. Certified distributed wind
energy system means a wind energy
system that is certified by an accredited
certification agency to meet Standard
9.1–2009 of the American Wind Energy
Association; IEC 61400–1, 61400–2,
61400–11, 61400–12; or ANSI/ACP 101–
1–2021, the Standard, including any
subsequent revisions to or modifications
of such Standard that have been
approved by ANSI.
(iii) Credit amount. For a distributed
wind inverter the total rated capacity of
which is expressed on an alternating
current watt basis, the credit amount is
equal to the product of 11 cents
multiplied by the total rated capacity of
the distributed wind inverter.
(iv) Substantiation. The taxpayer must
document that a distributed wind
inverter is used in a residential or nonresidential system that utilizes one or
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more certified distributed wind energy
systems with a specification sheet, bill
of sale, or other similar documentation
that explicitly describes such use and
the total rated output of the inverter on
an alternating current watt basis.
(5) Microinverter—(i) Definition.
Microinverter means an inverter that—
(A) Is suitable to connect with one
solar module;
(B) Has a rated output described in
paragraph (d)(5)(ii) of this section; and
(C) Has a capacity, expressed on an
alternating current watt basis, that is not
greater than 650 watts.
(ii) Rated output. For purposes of
paragraph (d)(5)(i)(B) of this section, for
an inverter to be a microinverter, the
inverter must have a rated output of—
(A) 120 or 240 volt single-phase
power; or
(B) 208 or 480 volt three-phase power.
(iii) Suitable to connect to one solar
module—(A) In general. An inverter is
suitable to connect to one solar module
if, in the form sold by the manufacturer,
it is capable of connecting to one or
more solar modules and regulating the
DC electricity from each module
independently before that electricity is
converted into alternating current
electricity.
(B) Application to direct current (DC)
optimized inverter systems. A DC
optimized inverter system means an
inverter that is comprised of an inverter
connected to multiple DC optimizers
that are each designed to connect to one
solar module. A DC optimized inverter
system is suitable to connect with one
solar module if, in the form sold by the
manufacturer, it is capable of
connecting to one or more solar
modules and regulating the DC
electricity from each module
independently before that electricity is
converted into alternating current
electricity.
(C) Application to multi-module
inverters. A multi-module inverter
means an inverter that is comprised of
an inverter with independent
connections and DC optimizing
components for two or more modules. A
multi-module microinverter is suitable
to connect with one solar module if it
is capable of connecting to one or more
solar modules and regulating the DC
electricity from each module
independently before that electricity is
converted into alternating current
electricity.
(iv) Credit amount—(A) In general.
For a microinverter the total rated
capacity of which is expressed on an
alternating current watt basis, the credit
amount is equal to the product of 11
cents multiplied by the total rated
capacity of the microinverter.
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(B) DC optimized inverter systems. A
DC optimized inverter system qualifies
as a microinverter if it meets the
requirements of paragraph (d)(5)(i) of
this section. For purposes of paragraph
(d)(5)(i)(C) of this section, a DC
optimized inverter system’s capacity is
determined separately for each DC
optimizer paired with the inverter in a
DC optimized inverter system. If each
DC optimizer paired with the inverter in
a DC optimized inverter system meets
the requirements of paragraph (d)(5)(i)
of this section, then the DC optimized
inverter system qualifies as a
microinverter. The credit amount for a
DC optimized inverter system that
qualifies as a microinverter is equal to
the product of 11 cents multiplied by
the lesser of the sum of the alternating
current capacity of each DC optimizer
when paired with the inverter in the DC
optimized inverter system or the
alternating current capacity of the
inverter in the DC optimized inverter
system. For purposes of this paragraph
(d)(5)(iv)(B), capacity must be measured
in watts of alternating current converted
from DC electricity by the inverter in a
DC optimized inverter system. For a DC
optimized inverter system to qualify as
a microinverter, a taxpayer must
produce and sell the inverter and the DC
optimizers in the DC optimized inverter
system together as a combined end
product.
(C) Multi-module inverters. A multimodule inverter qualifies as a
microinverter if it meets the
requirements of paragraph (d)(5)(i) of
this section. For purposes of paragraph
(d)(5)(i)(C) of this section, a multimodule inverter’s capacity is
determined separately for each internal
DC optimizer paired with the inverter.
The credit amount for a multi-module
inverter is equal to the product of 11
cents multiplied by the total alternating
current capacity of the DC optimizers in
the multi-module inverter when paired
with the inverter in the system. For
purposes of this paragraph (d)(5)(iv)(C),
capacity must be measured in watts of
alternating current converted from DC
electricity by the inverter in a multimodule microinverter.
(v) Substantiation. The taxpayer must
document that a microinverter meets the
core engineering specifications to be
suitable to connect with one solar
module, the inverter’s rated output, and
the inverter’s capacity in a specification
sheet, bill of sale, or other similar
documentation. In the case of a DC
optimized inverter system, the taxpayer
must also document that the DC
optimizers and the inverter in such
system were sold as a combined end
product.
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(6) Residential inverter—(i) Definition.
Residential inverter means an inverter
that—
(A) Is suitable for a residence;
(B) Has a rated output of 120 or 240
volt single-phase power; and
(C) Has a capacity expressed on an
alternating current watt basis that is not
greater than 20 kilowatts.
(ii) Suitable for a residence. An
inverter is suitable for a residence if, in
the form sold by the manufacturer, it is
capable of serving as a component in a
residential system and meets the core
engineering specifications for such
application.
(iii) Credit amount. For a residential
inverter the total rated capacity of
which is expressed on an alternating
current watt basis, the credit amount is
equal to the product of 6.5 cents
multiplied by the total rated capacity of
the residential inverter.
(iv) Substantiation. The taxpayer must
document that a residential inverter
meets the core engineering
specifications for use in a residence, the
inverter’s rated output, and the
inverter’s capacity in a specification
sheet, bill of sale, or other similar
documentation.
(7) Utility inverter—(i) Definition.
Utility inverter means an inverter that—
(A) Is suitable for commercial or
utility-scale systems;
(B) Has a rated output of not less than
600 volt three-phase power; and
(C) Has a capacity expressed on an
alternating current watt basis that is
greater than 125 kilowatts and not
greater than 1000 kilowatts.
(ii) Suitable for commercial or utilityscale systems. An inverter is suitable for
commercial or utility-scale systems if, in
the form sold by the manufacturer, it is
capable of serving as a component in
such systems and meets the core
engineering specifications for such
application.
(iii) Credit amount. For a utility
inverter the total rated capacity of
which is expressed on an alternating
current watt basis, the credit amount is
equal to the product of 1.5 cents
multiplied by the total rated capacity of
the utility inverter.
(iv) Substantiation. The taxpayer must
document that a utility inverter meets
the core engineering specifications for
use in commercial or utility-scale
systems, the inverter’s rated output, and
the inverter’s capacity in a specification
sheet, bill of sale, or other similar
documentation.
(e) Qualifying battery component—(1)
In general. Qualifying battery
component means electrode active
materials, battery cells, or battery
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modules, each as defined in this
paragraph (e).
(2) Electrode active materials—(i)
Definitions—(A) Electrode active
materials. Electrode active materials
means cathode electrode materials,
anode electrode materials, and
electrochemically active materials that
contribute to the electrochemical
processes necessary for energy storage.
Electrode active materials do not
include battery management systems,
terminal assemblies, cell containments,
gas release valves, module
containments, module connectors,
compression plates, straps, pack
terminals, bus bars, thermal
management systems, and pack jackets.
(B) Cathode electrode materials.
Cathode electrode materials means the
materials that comprise the cathode of a
commercial battery technology, such as
binders, and current collectors (for
example, cathode foils).
(C) Anode electrode materials. Anode
electrode materials means the materials
that comprise the anode of a commercial
battery technology, including anode
foils.
(D) Electrochemically active
materials. Electrochemically active
materials that contribute to the
electrochemical processes necessary for
energy storage means battery-grade
materials that enable the
electrochemical storage within a
commercial battery technology. In
addition to solvents, additives, and
electrolyte salts, electrochemically
active materials that contribute to the
electrochemical processes necessary for
energy storage may include electrolytes,
catholytes, anolytes, separators, and
metal salts and oxides.
(E) Example. A commercial battery
technology contains Cathode Active
Material (CAM), which is a powder used
in the battery that is made by processing
and combining Battery-Grade Materials
A and B. Battery-Grade Material A is a
derivative of Material C, which has been
refined to the necessary level to enable
electrochemical storage. The production
costs for CAM and its direct inputs
(Battery-Grade Material A and BatteryGrade Material B) are eligible for the
section 45X credit for electrode active
materials, but the unrefined Material C
is not.
(F) Battery-grade materials. Batterygrade materials means the processed
materials found in a final battery cell or
an analogous unit, or the direct batterygrade precursors to those processed
materials.
(ii) Credit amount. For an electrode
active material, the credit amount is
equal to 10 percent of the costs incurred
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by the taxpayer with respect to
production of such materials.
(iii) Production processes for
electrode active materials—(A)
Conversion. For purposes of section
45X, the term conversion means a
chemical transformation from one
species to another.
(B) Purification. For purposes of
section 45X, the term purification
means increasing the mass fraction of a
certain element.
(iv) Production costs incurred—(A) In
general—(1) Definition of production
costs incurred. Costs incurred by the
taxpayer with respect to production of
an electrode active material includes all
costs as defined in § 1.263A–1(e) that
are paid or incurred within the meaning
of section 461 of the Code by the
taxpayer for the production of such
electrode active material including
direct materials costs as defined in
§ 1.263A–1(e)(2)(i)(A), or indirect
materials costs as defined in § 1.263A–
1(e)(3)(ii)(E), but does not include direct
or indirect materials costs that relate to
the purchase of materials that are an
eligible component at the time of
acquisition (for example, an electrode
active material as defined in paragraph
(e)(2)(i) of this section or applicable
critical mineral as defined in § 1.45X–
4(b)). This definition of production costs
incurred also includes any costs
incurred by the taxpayer related to the
extraction, as defined in paragraph
(e)(2)(iv)(B) of this section, of raw
materials in the United States or a
United States territory, but only if those
costs are paid or incurred by the
taxpayer that claims the section 45X
credit with respect to the relevant
electrode active material. Section 263A
of the Code and the regulations in this
chapter under section 263A apply solely
to identify the types of costs that are
includible in production costs incurred
for purposes of computing the amount
of the section 45X credit, but do not
apply for any other purpose, such as to
determine whether a taxpayer is
engaged in production activities.
(2) Production costs for production of
incorporated eligible components. The
production costs that a taxpayer pays or
incurs in the production of an eligible
component (whether produced
domestically or not) that the taxpayer
then incorporates into a further distinct
electrode active material within the
meaning of § 1.45X–1(f)(1) are not
included in the costs incurred by the
taxpayer in producing the further
distinct electrode active material. A
taxpayer may not include the same
production costs in the calculation of
the credit amount for more than one
eligible component. For example, if the
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taxpayer pays or incurs production costs
of $50X for eligible component 1 and an
additional $100X of production costs for
eligible component 2 that included
integrating eligible component 1 within
the meaning of § 1.45X–1(f)(1), then the
production costs for eligible component
1 equal $50X and the production costs
for eligible component 2 equal $100X.
(3) Examples. The following examples
illustrate the rules of this section:
(i) Example 1. Taxpayers X, Y and Z
are unrelated C corporations that have
calendar year taxable years. In 2024, X
extracts raw nickel from natural mineral
deposits located in the United States
and purifies the extracted material to
99% nickel by mass (qualifying nickel)
as required by section 45X(c)(6)(S) and
§ 1.45X–4(b)(19)(ii). Y subsequently
purchases the qualifying nickel and uses
the material to produce battery-grade
nickel salts which qualify as electrode
active materials within the meaning of
paragraph (e)(2) of this section. Y sells
the battery-grade nickel salts to Z in tax
year 2026. Y may claim a section 45X
credit for the battery-grade nickel salts
in tax year 2026 because Y produced,
within the meaning of § 1.45X–1(c)(2),
an eligible component. In calculating its
production costs with respect to such
credit, Y may not include the purchase
price it paid to X for the qualifying
nickel because the qualifying nickel met
the minimum purity requirement
prescribed by section 45X(c)(6)(S) such
that the material constituted an
applicable critical mineral (and,
accordingly, an eligible component) at
the time at which Y acquired the
qualifying nickel.
(ii) Example 2. Assume the facts are
the same as in paragraph
(e)(2)(iv)(A)(2)(i) of this section
(Example 1), except that X purifies the
extracted raw nickel material to a purity
of 90% nickel by mass, rather than 99%
nickel by mass as required by section
45X(c)(6)(S) and § 1.45X–4(b)(19)(ii). Y
may claim a section 45X credit for the
battery-grade nickel salts in tax year
2026 because Y produced, within the
meaning of § 1.45X–1(c)(2), an eligible
component. In calculating its
production costs with respect to such
credit, Y may include the purchase
price of the 90% nickel material among
its production costs, provided that Y
satisfies the substantiation requirements
described in paragraph (e)(2)(iv)(C) of
this section, because, at the time at
which Y acquired such material, the
material did not meet the minimum
purity as required by section
45X(c)(6)(S) to constitute an applicable
critical mineral.
(B) Definition of extraction. The term
extraction means the activities
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performed to harvest minerals or natural
resources from the ground or from a
body of water. Extraction includes, but
is not limited to, operating equipment to
harvest minerals or natural resources
from mines and wells and the physical
processes involved in refining.
Extraction also includes operating
equipment to extract minerals or natural
resources from the waste or residue of
prior extraction, including crude oil
extraction to the extent that processes
applied to that crude oil yield an
applicable critical mineral or an
electrode active material as a byproduct.
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 or electrode active
material processing. Extraction does not
include activities that begin with a
recyclable commodity (as such activities
are recycling). Extraction does not
include the chemical and thermal
processes involved in refining.
(C) Substantiation. In order to include
direct or indirect materials costs as
defined in § 1.263A–1(e)(2)(i)(A) and
(e)(3)(ii)(E) as production costs when
calculating a section 45X credit for the
production and sale of an electrode
active material, a taxpayer, as part of
filing an annual tax return (or a return
for a short year within the meaning of
section 443 of the Code), must include
the information in paragraph
(e)(2)(iv)(C)(1) of this section as an
attachment to that return, prepare the
information required in paragraphs
(e)(2)(iv)(C)(2) through (4) of this section
and maintain that information in the
taxpayer’s books and records under
section 6001, and comply with
directions for the information required
in paragraph (e)(2)(iv)(C)(5) of this
section as specified in guidance:
(1) Certifications from any supplier,
including the supplier’s employer
identification number and that is signed
under penalties of perjury, from which
the taxpayer purchased any constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents
of the taxpayer’s electrode active
material, stating that the supplier is not
claiming the section 45X credit with
respect to any of the material acquired
by the taxpayer, nor is the supplier
aware that any prior supplier in the
chain of production of that material
claimed a section 45X credit for the
material.
(2) A document that provides an
analysis of any constituent elements,
materials, or subcomponents that
concludes the material did not meet the
definition of an eligible component (for
example, did not meet the definition of
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applicable critical mineral or electrode
active material) at the time of
acquisition by the taxpayer. The
document may be prepared by the
taxpayer or ideally by an independent
third-party.
(3) A list of all direct and indirect
material costs and the amount of such
costs that were included within the
taxpayer’s total production cost for each
electrode active material.
(4) A document related to the
taxpayer’s production activities with
respect to the direct and indirect
material costs that establishes the
materials were used in the production of
the electrode active material. The
document may be prepared by the
taxpayer or ideally by an independent
third-party.
(5) Any other information related to
the direct or indirect materials specified
in guidance.
(D) Failure to provide the
documentation described in paragraph
(e)(2)(iv)(C) of this section with the
return filing, or providing an available
upon request statement, will constitute
a failure to substantiate the claim.
(v) Materials that are both electrode
active materials and applicable critical
minerals—(A) In general. A material
that qualifies as an electrode active
material and an applicable critical
material is eligible for the section 45X
credit. A taxpayer may claim the section
45X credit with respect to such material
either as an electrode active material or
an applicable critical material, but not
both.
(B) Example. Lithium carbonate is an
electrode active material because it is a
direct battery-grade precursor to
electrolyte salts, which are processed
materials found in a final battery cell.
Lithium carbonate is also eligible for the
45X critical minerals credit. A taxpayer
who produces and sells lithium
carbonate may claim either the electrode
active material credit or the critical
mineral credit for its production and
sale of lithium carbonate but may not
take both credits.
(3) Battery cells—(i) Definition.
Battery cell means an electrochemical
cell—
(A) Comprised of one or more positive
electrodes and one or more negative
electrodes;
(B) With a volumetric energy density
of not less than 100 watt-hours per liter;
and
(C) Capable of storing at least 12 watthours of energy.
(ii) Capacity measurement. Taxpayers
must measure the capacity of a battery
cell in accordance with a national or
international standard, such as IEC
60086–1 (Primary Batteries), or an
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equivalent standard. Taxpayers can
reference the United States Advanced
Battery Consortium (USABC) Battery
Test Manual for additional guidance.
(iii) Credit amount. For a battery cell,
the credit amount is equal to the
product of $35 multiplied by the
capacity of such battery cell, subject to
the limitation provided in paragraph
(e)(5) of this section. The capacity of a
battery cell is expressed on a kilowatthour basis.
(4) Battery module definitions and
applicable rules—(i) Battery module
defined. The term battery module means
a module described in paragraph
(e)(4)(i)(A) or (B) of this section with an
aggregate capacity of not less than 7
kilowatt-hours (or, in the case of a
module for a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle,
not less than 1 kilowatt-hour).
(A) Modules using battery cells. A
module using battery cells, is a module
with two or more battery cells that are
configured electrically, in series or
parallel, to create voltage or current, as
appropriate, to a specified end use,
meaning an end-use configuration of
battery technologies. An end-use
configuration is the product that
combines cells into a module such that
any subsequent manufacturing is done
to the module rather than to the cells
individually. Where multiple points in
a supply chain may be eligible under
this section, the first module produced
and sold that meets the requirements of
this section and the kilowatt-hour
requirement in paragraph (e)(4)(i) of this
section will be the only module eligible.
(B) Modules with no battery cells. A
module with no battery cells means a
product with a standardized
manufacturing process and form that is
capable of storing and dispatching
useful energy, that contains an energy
storage medium that remains in the
module (for example, it is not consumed
through combustion), and that is not a
custom-built electricity generation or
storage facility. For example, neither
standalone fuel storage tanks nor fuel
tanks connected to engines or
generation systems qualify as modules
with no battery cells.
(ii) Capacity measurement—(A)
Modules using battery cells. Taxpayers
must measure the capacity of a module
using battery cells with a testing
procedure that complies with a national
or international standard published by a
recognized standard setting
organization. The capacity of a battery
module may not exceed the total
nameplate capacity of the battery cells
in the module. Taxpayers must measure
the capacity of a battery cell in
accordance with a national or
international standard, such as IEC
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60086–1 (Primary Batteries), or an
equivalent standard. Taxpayers can
reference the USABC Battery Test
Manual for additional guidance.
(B) Modules with no battery cells.
Taxpayers must measure the capacity of
a module with no battery cells with a
testing procedure that complies with a
national or international standard
published by a recognized standard
setting organization. Taxpayers
producing thermal and thermochemical
battery modules described in paragraph
(e)(4)(i)(B) of this section must convert
the energy storage to a kilowatt-hour
basis and provide both methodology
and testing regarding this conversion.
Such conversion of the kilowatt-hour
basis cannot exceed the total direct
conversion of the total nameplate
capacity of the thermal battery module
to kilowatt-hours.
(C) Substantiation of capacity
measurement. Taxpayers must maintain
the testing standard and methodology
with respect to the capacity
measurement described in paragraphs
(e)(4)(ii)(A) and (B) of this section as
part of books and records under section
6001 and § 1.6001–1. The testing
procedure and methodology must
consistently be used, subject to any
updated standard of the same
methodology and testing, for battery
modules (with or without cells) sold in
the taxpayer’s trade or business.
(iii) Credit amount—(A) Modules
using battery cells. For a battery module
with cells, the credit amount is equal to
the product of $10 multiplied by the
capacity of such battery module, subject
to the limitation provided in paragraph
(e)(5) of this section. The capacity of
each battery module is expressed on a
kilowatt-hour basis.
(B) Modules with no battery cells. For
a battery module without cells, the
credit amount is equal to the product of
$45 multiplied by the capacity of such
battery module, subject to the limitation
provided in paragraph (e)(5) of this
section. The capacity of each battery
module is expressed on a kilowatt-hour
basis.
(5) Limitation on capacity of battery
cells and battery modules—(i) In
general. For purposes of paragraphs
(e)(3)(iii) and (e)(4)(iii) of this section,
the capacity determined with respect to
a battery cell or battery module must not
exceed a capacity-to-power ratio of
100:1.
(ii) Capacity to power ratio. For
purposes of paragraph (e)(5)(i) of this
section, capacity-to-power ratio means,
with respect to a battery cell or battery
module, the ratio of the capacity of such
cell or module to the maximum
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discharge amount of such cell or
module.
(f) Phase out rule—(1) In general.
Except as provided in paragraph (f)(3) of
this section, in the case of any eligible
component sold after December 31,
2029, the amount of the section 45X
credit determined with respect to such
eligible component must be equal to the
product of—
(i) The amount determined under this
section with respect to such eligible
component, multiplied by
(ii) The phase out percentage under
paragraph (f)(2) of this section.
(2) Phase out percentages. The phase
out percentage is equal to—
(i) 75 percent for eligible components
sold during calendar year 2030;
(ii) 50 percent for eligible components
sold during calendar year 2031;
(iii) 25 percent for eligible
components sold during calendar year
2032, and
(iv) Zero percent for eligible
components sold after calendar year
2032.
(3) Exception for applicable critical
minerals. The phase out rules described
in paragraphs (f)(1) and (2) of this
section apply to all eligible components
except applicable critical minerals.
(g) Applicability date. This section
applies to eligible components for
which production is completed and
sales occur after December 31, 2022, and
during a taxable year ending on or after
October 28, 2024.
§ 1.45X–4
Applicable critical minerals.
(a) In general. The term applicable
critical mineral means any of the
minerals that are listed in section
45X(c)(6) and defined in paragraph (b)
of this section.
(b) Definitions. The following
definitions apply for the purpose of this
section—
(1) [Reserved]
(2) Antimony. The term antimony
means antimony that is—
(i) Converted to antimony trisulfide
concentrate with a minimum purity of
90 percent antimony trisulfide by mass;
or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99.65 percent antimony by mass.
(3) Barite. The term barite means
barite that is barium sulfate purified to
a minimum purity of 80 percent barite
by mass.
(4) Beryllium. The term beryllium
means beryllium that is—
(i) Converted to copper-beryllium
master alloy; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent beryllium by mass.
(5) Cerium. The term cerium means
cerium that is—
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(i) Converted to cerium oxide that is
purified to a minimum purity of 99.9
percent cerium oxide by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent cerium by mass.
(6) Cesium. The term cesium means
cesium that is—
(i) Converted to cesium formate or
cesium carbonate; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent cesium by mass.
(7) Chromium. The term chromium
means chromium that is—
(i) Converted to ferrochromium
consisting of not less than 60 percent
chromium by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent chromium by mass.
(8) Cobalt. The term cobalt means
cobalt that is—
(i) Converted to cobalt sulfate; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99.6 percent cobalt by mass.
(9) Dysprosium. The term dysprosium
means dysprosium that is—
(i) Converted to not less than 99
percent pure dysprosium iron alloy by
mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent dysprosium by mass.
(10) Europium. The term europium
means europium that is—
(i) Converted to europium oxide that
is purified to a minimum purity of 99.9
percent europium oxide by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent of europium by mass.
(11) Fluorspar. The term fluorspar
means fluorspar that is—
(i) Converted to fluorspar that is
purified to a minimum purity of 97
percent calcium fluoride by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent fluorspar by mass.
(12) Gadolinium. The term
gadolinium means gadolinium that is—
(i) Converted to gadolinium oxide that
is purified to a minimum purity of 99.9
percent gadolinium oxide by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent gadolinium by mass.
(13) Germanium. The term
germanium means germanium that is—
(i) Converted to germanium
tetrachloride; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99.99 percent germanium by mass.
(14) Graphite. The term graphite
means natural or synthetic graphite that
is purified to a minimum purity of 99.9
percent graphitic carbon by mass. The
term 99.9 percent graphitic carbon by
mass means graphite that is 99.9 percent
carbon by mass.
(15) Indium. The term indium means
indium that is—
(i) Converted to—
(A) Indium tin oxide; or
(B) Indium oxide that is purified to a
minimum purity of 99.9 percent indium
oxide by mass; or
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(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent indium by mass.
(16) Lithium. The term lithium means
lithium that is—
(i) Converted to lithium carbonate or
lithium hydroxide; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99.9 percent lithium by mass.
(17) Manganese. The term manganese
means manganese that is—
(i) Converted to manganese sulphate;
or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99.7 percent manganese by mass.
(18) Neodymium. The term
neodymium means neodymium that is—
(i) Converted to neodymiumpraseodymium oxide that is purified to
a minimum purity of 99 percent
neodymium-praseodymium oxide by
mass;
(ii) Converted to neodymium oxide
that is purified to a minimum purity of
99.5 percent neodymium oxide by mass;
or
(iii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99.9 percent neodymium by mass.
(19) Nickel. The term nickel means
nickel that is—
(i) Converted to nickel sulphate; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent nickel by mass.
(20) Niobium. The term niobium
means niobium that is—
(i) Converted to ferronibium; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent niobium by mass.
(21) Tellurium. The term tellurium
means tellurium that is—
(i) Converted to cadmium telluride; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99 percent tellurium by mass.
(22) Tin. The term tin means tin that
purified to low alpha emitting tin that—
(i) Has a purity of greater than 99.99
percent by mass; and
(ii) Possesses an alpha emission rate
of not greater than 0.01 counts per hour
per centimeter square.
(23) Tungsten. The term tungsten
means tungsten that is converted to
ammonium paratungstate or
ferrotungsten.
(24) Vanadium. The term vanadium
means vanadium that is converted to
ferrovanadium or vanadium pentoxide.
(25) Yttrium. The term yttrium means
yttrium that is—
(i) Converted to yttrium oxide that is
purified to a minimum purity of 99.999
percent yttrium oxide by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of
99.9 percent yttrium by mass.
(26) Other minerals. The following
minerals are also applicable critical
minerals provided that such mineral is
purified to a minimum purity of 99
percent by mass:
(i) Arsenic.
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20:56 Oct 25, 2024
Jkt 265001
(ii) Bismuth.
(iii) Erbium.
(iv) Gallium.
(v) Hafnium.
(vi) Holmium.
(vii) Iridium.
(viii) Lanthanum.
(ix) Lutetium.
(x) Magnesium.
(xi) Palladium.
(xii) Platinum.
(xiii) Praseodymium.
(xiv) Rhodium.
(xv) Rubidium.
(xvi) Ruthemium.
(xvii) Samarium.
(xviii) Scandium.
(xix) Tantalum.
(xx) Terbium.
(xxi) Thulium.
(xxii) Titanium.
(xxiii) Ytterbium.
(xxiv) Zinc.
(xxv) Zirconium.
(c) Credit amount—(1) In general. For
any applicable critical mineral, the
credit amount is equal to 10 percent of
the costs incurred by the taxpayer with
respect to production of such mineral.
(2) Production processes for
applicable critical minerals—(i)
Conversion. For purposes of section
45X, the term conversion means a
chemical transformation from one
species to another.
(ii) Purification. For purposes of
section 45X, the term purification
means increasing the mass fraction of a
certain element.
(3) Production costs incurred—(i) In
general. Costs incurred by the taxpayer
with respect to the production of
applicable critical minerals includes all
costs as defined in § 1.263A–1(e) that
are paid or incurred within the meaning
of section 461 of the Code by the
taxpayer for the production of an
applicable critical mineral, including
direct or indirect materials costs as
defined in § 1.263A–1(e)(2)(i)(A) and
(e)(3)(ii)(E), respectively, but only if
those direct or indirect material costs do
not relate to the purchase of materials
that are an eligible component at the
time of acquisition (for example, an
electrode active material as defined in
§ 1.45X–3(e)(2)(i) or applicable critical
mineral as defined in paragraph (b) of
this section). This definition of
production costs incurred would
include any costs incurred by the
taxpayer related to the extraction of raw
materials in the United States or a
United States territory, but only if those
costs are paid or incurred by the
taxpayer that claims the section 45X
credit with respect to the relevant
applicable critical mineral. Section
263A of the Code and the regulations in
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
85845
this chapter under section 263A apply
solely to identify the types of costs that
are includible in production costs
incurred for purposes of computing the
amount of the section 45X credit, but do
not apply for any other purpose, such as
to determine whether a taxpayer is
engaged in production activities.
(ii) Production costs for production of
incorporated eligible components. The
production costs that a taxpayer pays or
incurs in the production of an eligible
component (whether produced
domestically or not) that the taxpayer
then incorporates into a further distinct
applicable critical mineral within the
meaning of § 1.45X–1(f)(1) are not
included in the costs incurred by the
taxpayer in producing the further
distinct applicable critical mineral. A
taxpayer may not include the same
production costs in the calculation of
the credit amount for more than one
eligible component. For example, if the
taxpayer pays or incurs production costs
of $50X for eligible component 1 and an
additional $100X of production costs for
eligible component 2 that included
integrating eligible component 1 within
the meaning of § 1.45X–1(f)(1), then the
production costs for eligible component
1 equal $50X and the production costs
for eligible component 2 equal $100X.
(4) Substantiation. In order to include
direct or indirect materials costs as
defined in § 1.263A–1(e)(2)(i)(A) and
(e)(3)(ii)(E) as production costs when
calculating a section 45X credit for the
production and sale of an applicable
critical mineral, a taxpayer, as part of
filing an annual tax return (or a return
for a short year within the meaning of
section 443 of the Code), must include
the information in paragraph (c)(4)(i) of
this section as an attachment to that
return, prepare the information required
in paragraph (c)(4)(ii) through (iv) of
this section and maintain that
information in the taxpayer’s books and
records under section 6001, and comply
with directions for the information
required in paragraph (c)(4)(v) of this
section as specified in guidance:
(i) Certification from any supplier,
including the supplier’s employer
identification number and that is signed
under penalties of perjury, from which
the taxpayer purchased any constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents
of the taxpayer’s applicable critical
mineral, stating that the supplier is not
claiming the section 45X credit with
respect to any of the material acquired
by the taxpayer, nor is the supplier
aware that any prior supplier in the
chain of production of that material
claimed a section 45X credit for the
material.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 208 / Monday, October 28, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES2
(ii) A document that provides an
analysis of any constituent elements,
materials, or subcomponents that
concludes the material did not meet the
definition of an eligible component (for
example, an applicable critical mineral
or electrode active material) at the time
of acquisition by the taxpayer. The
document may be prepared by the
taxpayer or ideally by an independent
third-party.
(iii) A list of all direct and indirect
material costs and the amount of such
costs that were included within the
taxpayer’s total production cost for each
applicable critical mineral.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:56 Oct 25, 2024
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(iv) A document related to the
taxpayer’s production activities with
respect to the direct and indirect
material costs that establishes the
materials were used in the production of
the applicable critical mineral. The
document may be prepared by the
taxpayer or ideally by an independent
third-party.
(v) Any other information related to
the direct or indirect materials specified
in guidance.
(5) Failure to provide the
documentation described in paragraph
(c)(4) of this section with the return
filing, or providing an available upon
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
request statement, will constitute a
failure to substantiate the claim.
(d) Applicability date. This section
applies to eligible components for
which production is completed and
sales occur after December 31, 2022, and
during a taxable year ending on or after
October 28, 2024.
Douglas W. O’Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner.
Approved: October 17, 2024.
Aviva R. Aron-Dine,
Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
(Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2024–24840 Filed 10–24–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
E:\FR\FM\28OCR2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 208 (Monday, October 28, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 85798-85846]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-24840]
[[Page 85797]]
Vol. 89
Monday,
No. 208
October 28, 2024
Part V
Department of the Treasury
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Internal Revenue Service
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26 CFR Part 1
Advanced Manufacturing Production Credit; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 208 / Monday, October 28, 2024 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 85798]]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[TD 10010]
RIN 1545-BQ85
Advanced Manufacturing Production Credit
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document sets forth final regulations regarding the
advanced manufacturing production credit established by the Inflation
Reduction Act of 2022 to incentivize the production of eligible
components within the United States. Eligible components include
certain solar energy components, wind energy components, inverters,
qualifying battery components, and applicable critical minerals. These
final regulations also address specific recordkeeping and reporting
requirements. These final regulations affect eligible taxpayers who
produce and sell eligible components and intend to claim the benefit of
an advanced manufacturing production credit, including by making
elective payment or credit transfer elections.
DATES:
Effective date: These regulations are effective December 27, 2024.
Applicability date: For date of applicability, see Sec. Sec.
1.45X-1(j), 1.45X-2(f), 1.45X-3(g), and 1.45X-4(d).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mindy Chou, John Deininger, Derek
Gimbel, or Alexander Scott at (202) 317-6853 (not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority
This document contains final regulations (final regulations) that
amend the Income Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 1) to implement the
statutory provisions of section 45X of the Internal Revenue Code
(Code). The final regulations are issued by the Secretary of the
Treasury or her delegate (Secretary) under the authority granted under
sections 45X(a)(3)(B)(i) and (ii), 1502, 6001, 6417(h), 6418(h), and
7805(a) of the Code.
Section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i) of the Code provides a specific delegation
of authority to the Secretary to prescribe the form and manner for a
taxpayer to make an election such that ``a sale of components by such
taxpayer to a related person shall be deemed to have been made to an
unrelated person.'' Section 45X(a)(3)(B)(ii) provides a specific
delegation of authority to the Secretary, ``[a]s a condition of, and
prior to, any election described in [section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i)],'' to
``require such information or registration as the Secretary deems
necessary for purposes of preventing duplication, fraud, or any
improper or excessive amount determined under [section 45X(a)(1)].''
Section 1502 of the Code requires the Secretary to ``prescribe such
regulations as he may deem necessary in order that the tax liability of
any affiliated group of corporations making a consolidated return and
of each corporation in the group, both during and after the period of
affiliation, may be returned, determined, computed, assessed,
collected, and adjusted, in such manner as clearly to reflect the
income-tax liability and the various factors necessary for the
determination of such liability, and in order to prevent avoidance of
such tax liability.'' Section 1502 of the Code also provides that the
Secretary ``may prescribe rules that are different from the provisions
of chapter 1 that would apply if such corporations filed separate
returns.''
Section 6001 of the Code provides an express delegation of
authority to the Secretary, stating that, ``[e]very person liable for
any tax imposed by this title, or for the collection thereof, shall
keep such records, render such statements, make such returns, and
comply with such rules and regulations as the Secretary may from time
to time prescribe. Whenever in the judgment of the Secretary it is
necessary, [s]he may require any person, by notice served upon such
person or by regulations, to make such returns, render such statements,
or keep such records, as the Secretary deems sufficient to show whether
or not such person is liable for tax under this title.''
Sections 6417(h) and 6418(h) of the Code direct the Secretary to
issue such regulations or other guidance as may be necessary to carry
out the purposes of each section, respectively.
Finally, section 7805(a) of the Code authorizes the Secretary ``to
prescribe all needful rules and regulations for the enforcement of [the
Code], including all rules and regulations as may be necessary by
reason of any alteration of law in relation to internal revenue.''
Background
I. Overview of Section 45X
Section 45X was added to the Code by section 13502(a) of Public Law
117-169, 136 Stat. 1818 (August 16, 2022), commonly known as the
Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA). In general, for purposes of the
general business credit under section 38 of the Code, section 45X
provides for the advanced manufacturing production credit (section 45X
credit) with respect to eligible components produced by the taxpayer
and sold during the taxable year to an unrelated person. Section 45X
applies to eligible components produced and sold after December 31,
2022.
Under section 45X(a)(1), the total section 45X credit amount for
the taxable year equals the sum of the credit amounts determined under
section 45X(b) with respect to each eligible component (as defined in
section 45X(c)(1)). Under section 45X(a)(2), any eligible component
produced and sold by the taxpayer is taken into account only if the
production and sale is in a trade or business of the taxpayer.
Section 45X(a)(3) generally provides rules regarding the sale of
eligible components to an unrelated person. However, section
45X(a)(3)(B) provides a special rule whereby if a taxpayer makes an
election in the form and manner prescribed by the Secretary, a sale of
eligible components by the taxpayer to a related person will be treated
as if made to an unrelated person, referred to in these final
regulations as the related person election (Related Person Election).
As a condition of, and prior to, a taxpayer making the Related Person
Election, the Secretary may require such information or registration as
the Secretary deems necessary for purposes of preventing duplication,
fraud, or any improper or excessive credit amount.
II. Credit Amounts for Eligible Components
Section 45X(b)(1) generally provides the credit amount determined
with respect to any eligible component, including any other eligible
component it incorporates, subject to the credit phase out rules
provided at section 45X(b)(3). Section 45X(b)(1)(A) through (M) and
section 45X(b)(2) set forth the credit amounts for each type of
eligible component. The credit amounts are generally subject to phase
out rules under section 45X(b)(3), but the phase out rules do not apply
to any applicable critical mineral. For any eligible component (except
applicable critical minerals) sold after December 31, 2029, the credit
amount for such component equals the product of the amount determined
under section 45X(b)(1) for such component multiplied by the applicable
phase out percentage under section 45X(b)(3)(B)(i) through (iv). In the
case of an eligible component sold during calendar year 2030, 2031, and
[[Page 85799]]
2032, the phase out percentages are 75 percent, 50 percent, and 25
percent, respectively. For any eligible component sold after December
31, 2032, the phase out percentage is zero percent, and no section 45X
credit is allowed other than for applicable critical minerals.
Section 45X(b)(4) provides capacity limitations used to compute the
credit amount for battery cells under section 45X(b)(1)(K)(ii) and
battery modules under section 45(b)(1)(L)(ii). Section 45X(b)(4)(A)
provides that the capacity determined with respect to a battery cell or
battery module must not exceed a capacity-to-power-ratio of 100:1.
Section 45X(b)(4)(B) defines ``capacity-to-power-ratio'' as the ratio
of the capacity of a battery cell or battery module to the maximum
discharge amount of such cell or module.
III. Eligible Components
Section 45X(c)(1)(A) defines an eligible component to mean any
solar energy component, any wind energy component, any inverter
described in section 45X(c)(2)(B) through (G), any qualifying battery
component, and any applicable critical mineral. Section 45X(c)(1)(B)
clarifies that eligible components do not include any property that is
produced at a facility if the basis of any property that is part of
such facility is taken into account for purposes of the qualifying
advanced energy project credit allowed under section 48C after August
16, 2022 (the date of enactment of the IRA).
Section 45X(c)(2)(A) generally defines an inverter as an end
product that is suitable to convert direct current (DC) electricity
from one or more solar modules or certified distributed wind energy
systems into alternating current (AC) electricity. Section 45X(c)(2)(B)
through (G) defines the following different types of eligible
inverters: central inverter, commercial inverter, distributed wind
inverter, microinverter, residential inverter, and utility inverter.
Section 45X(c)(3)(A) defines a solar energy component as a solar
module, photovoltaic cell, photovoltaic wafer, solar grade polysilicon,
torque tube, structural fastener, or polymeric backsheet. Section
45X(c)(3)(B) defines these different types of eligible solar energy
components as well as a solar tracker.
Section 45X(c)(4)(A) defines a wind energy component as blades,
nacelles, towers, offshore wind foundations, and related offshore wind
vessels. Section 45X(c)(4)(B) defines these different types of eligible
wind energy components.
Section 45X(c)(5)(A) defines a qualifying battery component as
electrode active materials, battery cells, and battery modules. Section
45X(c)(5)(B) defines these different types of qualifying battery
components.
Section 45X(c)(6) defines applicable critical minerals. The
following minerals are eligible for the section 45X credit if converted
or purified to specified purities or forms: aluminum, antimony,
arsenic, barite, beryllium, bismuth, cerium, cesium, chromium, cobalt,
dysprosium, erbium, europium, fluorspar, gadolinium, gallium,
germanium, graphite, hafnium, holmium, indium, iridium, lanthanum,
lithium, lutetium, magnesium, manganese, neodymium, nickel, niobium,
palladium, platinum, praseodymium, rhodium, rubidium, ruthenium,
samarium, scandium, tantalum, tellurium, terbium, thulium, tin,
titanium, tungsten, vanadium, ytterbium, yttrium, zinc, and zirconium.
IV. Special Rules
Section 45X(d)(1) provides that persons are related to each other
for purposes of the section 45X credit if they would be treated as a
single employer under section 52(b) of the Code and Sec. 1.52-1(b).
Section 52(b) and Sec. 1.52-1(b) generally provide that trades or
businesses that are partnerships, trusts, estates, corporations, or
sole proprietorships under common control are members of a controlled
group and are treated as a single employer. Section 52(b) requires the
regulations under section 52(b) to be based on principles similar to
the principles that apply under section 52(a), which generally provide
that corporations that are members of a controlled group of
corporations are treated as a single employer. Section 52(a) provides
that a controlled group of corporations is defined with reference to
section 1563(a) of the Code. Section 52(b) and Sec. 1.52-1 provide
rules based on principles similar to those under section 52(a), but
with certain modifications to account for different types of ownership
interests.
Section 45X(d)(2) provides that sales of eligible components are
taken into account under section 45X only for eligible components that
are produced within the United States (including continental shelf
areas described in section 638(1) of the Code), or a U.S. territory
(including continental shelf areas described in section 638(2)).\1\
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\1\ The preamble to these section 45X final regulations refers
to U.S. territory to mean a possession as defined in section 638(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 45X(d)(3) directs the Secretary to promulgate regulations
adopting rules similar to the rules of section 52(d) to apportion
credit amounts between estates or trusts and their beneficiaries on the
basis of the income of the estates or trusts allocable to each, and to
pass-thru any apportioned credit amounts to the beneficiaries.
Section 45X(d)(4) provides that a person is treated as having sold
an eligible component to an unrelated person if such component is
integrated, incorporated, or assembled into another eligible component
that is sold to an unrelated person.
V. Prior Guidance
On October 24, 2022, the Department of the Treasury (Treasury
Department) and the IRS published Notice 2022-47, 2022-43 IRB 312,
requesting comments on issues arising under section 45X that may
require guidance. On December 15, 2023, after full consideration of all
the stakeholder input received in response to Notice 2022-47, the
Treasury Department and the IRS published a notice of proposed
rulemaking and a notice of public hearing (REG-107423-23) in the
Federal Register (88 FR 86844) to provide guidance on the advanced
manufacturing production credit under section 45X (Proposed
Regulations). While the Proposed Regulations are summarized in the
Summary of Contents and Explanation of Revisions portion of this
preamble, the provisions of the Proposed Regulations are explained in
greater detail in the preamble to the Proposed Regulations.
On March 6, 2023, the Treasury Department and the IRS published
Notice 2023-18, 2023-10 IRB 508, establishing the qualifying advanced
energy project allocation program (section 48C(e) program). On June 20,
2023, the Treasury Department and the IRS published Notice 2023-44,
2023-25 IRB 924, providing additional guidance on the section 48C(e)
program, including rules for the interaction between sections 45X and
48C. The rules regarding the interaction between sections 45X and 48C
provided in Notices 2023-18 and 2023-44 were addressed in the Proposed
Regulations and have been incorporated into these final regulations.
Section 5.05(2) of Notice 2023-18 and section 3 of Notice 2023-44 are
superseded by these final regulations.
[[Page 85800]]
Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions
I. Overview
This Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions summarizes
the Proposed Regulations, all substantive comments submitted in
response to the Proposed Regulations, and revisions adopted by these
final regulations. The Treasury Department and the IRS received 193
written comments in response to the Proposed Regulations. The comments
are available for public inspection at https://www.regulations.gov or
upon request. A public hearing was held in person and telephonically on
February 22, 2024. After full consideration of the comments and
testimony, these final regulations adopt the Proposed Regulations with
modifications in response to the comments and testimony as described in
this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions.
Comments merely summarizing the statute or the Proposed
Regulations, recommending statutory revisions to section 45X or other
statutes, and addressing issues that are outside the scope of this
rulemaking (such as revising other Federal regulations and recommending
changes to IRS forms) are generally not addressed in this Summary of
Comments and Explanation of Revisions or adopted in these final
regulations. Some commenters requested additional time to submit
comments. The Proposed Regulations required all comments to be received
by February 13, 2024; however, comments received later but before these
final regulations were substantially developed were carefully
considered in drafting these final regulations. The final regulations
retain the same basic structure as the Proposed Regulations with
certain revisions.
II. General Rules Applicable to the Advanced Manufacturing Production
Credit
A. In general
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1 would have provided general rules regarding
the section 45X credit including generally applicable definitions,
rules regarding the computation of the credit amount, the definition of
``produced by the taxpayer,'' the requirement to produce eligible
components in the United States, the production and sale in a trade or
business requirement, the sale of integrated components, the
interaction between sections 45X and 48C, and an anti-abuse rule.
Commenters addressed certain aspects of these proposed rules, as
described in Part II. of this Summary of Comments and Explanation of
Revisions. These final regulations generally adopt proposed Sec.
1.45X-1, with the modifications described in this Part II. of the
Summary of Comments and Explanations of Revisions.
B. Definition of Produced by the Taxpayer
1. In General
Section 45X(a)(1) allows a section 45X credit with respect to each
eligible component which is produced by the taxpayer and sold to an
unrelated person during the taxable year. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1)
would have defined ``produced by the taxpayer'' to mean a process
conducted by the taxpayer that substantially transforms constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents into a complete and distinct
eligible component that is functionally different from that which would
result from mere assembly or superficial modification of the elements,
materials, or subcomponents. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1)(i) would have
provided that ``produced by the taxpayer'' does not include partial
transformation that does not result in substantial transformation of
constituent elements, materials, and subcomponents into a complete and
distinct eligible component as described in proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(1). Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1)(ii) would have provided that
``produced by the taxpayer'' does not include minor assembly of two or
more constituent elements, materials, or subcomponents, or superficial
modification of the final eligible component, if the taxpayer does not
also engage in the process resulting in a substantial transformation
described in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1). Proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(1)(iii) would have provided examples illustrating the definition
of ``produced by the taxpayer.''
Several commenters requested that the final regulations
specifically state that taxpayers may produce eligible components using
recycled materials. While the preamble to the Proposed Regulations
stated that primary and secondary production are included in the
definition of ``produced by the taxpayer,'' that issue was not
addressed in the text of the Proposed Regulations. The preamble to the
Proposed Regulations further stated that primary production involves
producing an eligible component using non-recycled materials while
secondary production involves producing an eligible component using
recycled materials.
The Treasury Department and the IRS agree with the request to
clarify the general rule that production includes primary and secondary
production, and these final regulations revise proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(1) and (2) to add secondary production to the definition of
produced by the taxpayer.
A few commenters stated the definition of ``produced by the
taxpayer'' should be defined consistently with section 263A of the Code
to the extent possible and expressed concern that using different
definitions will cause ``increased technical uncertainty, additional
compliance burden, especially for small business taxpayers, and
unnecessary litigation and controversy.'' Another commenter stated that
the Proposed Regulations introduced new definitions, such as
``substantial transformation'' as production qualifiers, ``raising
concerns about its apparent conflict with the enacted statutes.''
The term ``produced by the taxpayer'' is not defined in section
45X, nor is there any indication in section 45X suggesting that
Congress intended the use of any existing statutory definition, such as
the standard in section 263A. Section 45X provides a credit based on
the production of numerous eligible components and a variety of
production processes are utilized by manufacturers in the production of
these eligible components.
Given the variety of production processes and the highly technical
nature of production, the Treasury Department and the IRS, in close
coordination with the Department of Energy, proposed a definition that
would apply broadly to eligible components. In addition, the proposed
definition of ``produced by the taxpayer'' focused on requiring
production of a complete and distinct eligible component and,
accordingly, introduces a substantial transformation requirement to
distinguish production from partial transformation, mere assembly, and
superficial modification. The proposed definition of ``produced by the
taxpayer'' along with the amendment clarifying that production includes
secondary production is the appropriate standard to implement the
section 45X credit. The definition provides the necessary flexibility
to account for the highly technical nature of the production processes
associated with eligible components. This standard also ensures that
the section 45X credit is claimed by the taxpayer responsible for the
key production activity and that such activity occurs in the United
States or a United States territory. In contrast to section 45X,
section 263A is designed
[[Page 85801]]
to ensure that taxpayers capture the direct and indirect costs
associated with producing inventoriable goods for capitalization
purposes. Moreover, in section 263A, the definition of production
applies to a broad range of produced items, whereas the definition in
section 45X applies to a limited number of statutorily enumerated
eligible components. For these reasons, the Treasury Department and the
IRS have concluded that the definition of ``produced by the taxpayer''
in the Proposed Regulations with the clarifying amendment addressing
secondary production appropriately implements section 45X(a)(1)(A), and
thus decline to accept the commenter's recommendation to define
``produced by the taxpayer'' for purposes of section 45X consistent
with the similar term under section 263A.
Several commenters requested that the final regulations provide
more specific guidance for certain eligible components to illustrate
whether certain activities or processes result in substantial
transformation versus partial transformation, mere assembly, or
superficial modification. One commenter, for example, requested that
the final rules confirm that the term ``produced'' in the phrase
``produced by the taxpayer'' is applied within the context of the
standard production process of each eligible component, such that the
standard production process for each eligible component is deemed to be
``substantial transformation'' that meets the requirements of proposed
Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1). The commenter provided an example of the
production of a solar module, which ``involves the final assembly of
the other solar components, many of which separately qualify for their
own section 45X credit, into the overall module.'' The Treasury
Department and the IRS recognize that certain eligible components, such
as solar modules and battery modules using battery cells, are produced
primarily by assembling other components. In these limited cases, the
substantial transformation requirement is met by the taxpayer that
assembles the constituent components to produce the solar module or
battery module using battery cells. Because assembly is the activity
that primarily produces these eligible components, the assembly
necessary to achieve production of a solar module or battery module
using battery cells should not generally be viewed as disqualifying
``minor assembly.'' The Treasury Department and the IRS also recognize
that certain eligible components, such as nacelles, that have undergone
substantial transformation to be considered ``produced by the
taxpayer'' may be produced and sold to a third party in a manner in
which only minor assembly remains left to complete. In these cases,
provided all other requirements of section 45X are met, the party that
produces and sells the eligible components in such manner is not
precluded from claiming the section 45X credit. The third party that
completes the eligible component by performing minor assembly is not
entitled to the section 45X credit because that third party is not
considered to produce the eligible component. For these reasons, and
for clarity and consistency, the final regulations replace each
instance of ``mere assembly'' in the Proposed Regulations, with ``minor
assembly.''
A commenter suggested adding an additional example to proposed
Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1)(iii) to clarify whether the integration of
electrical subcomponents and software necessary to enable the
functionality of an inverter is disqualifying minor assembly, and
another commenter requested clarification on whether the coating of a
battery separator is ``superficial modification'' or ``substantial
transformation.'' A few commenters also requested that the final rules
further clarify ``substantial transformation'' to ensure manufacturers
claiming section 45X credits are actually producing an eligible
component in the United States and suggested using examples to
differentiate between substantial and partial transformation for
specific components, such as inverters for solar energy.
As previously discussed, section 45X provides a credit based on the
production of numerous eligible components and a variety of production
processes are utilized by manufacturers in the production of these
eligible components. Thus, listing specific production processes for
each eligible component is not practicable and could also imply that
other variations of production processes do not qualify as production.
The Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that the inquiry
into whether production activities or processes result in substantial
transformation for a specific eligible component is highly fact
dependent and conclude that the examples in proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(1)(iii), which are included in the final regulations, provide
sufficient guidance to determine what types of activities or production
steps do not qualify as substantial transformation.
2. Special Rule for Production of Certain Eligible Components
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(2) would have provided that for solar
grade polysilicon, electrode active materials, and applicable critical
minerals, produced by the taxpayer means processing, conversion,
refinement, or purification of source materials, such as brines, ores,
or waste streams, to derive a distinct eligible component. Several
commenters requested that in addition to processing, conversion,
refinement, and purification, the final regulations clarify that the
production process includes extraction, while others requested
maintaining the position in the Proposed Regulations to exclude costs
of extraction. The Treasury Department and the IRS decline to amend the
final regulations to expressly include the term ``extraction,'' as the
action of extraction alone does not produce an eligible component. For
the discussion and analysis of whether extraction costs are includible
as production costs in the production of electrode active materials or
applicable critical minerals, see Part IV.E.1.e. of this Summary of
Comments and Explanation of Revisions.
Another commenter asked whether recycling aluminum transformer wire
(cleaning, melting, and bailing it) to send to an aluminum smelter
constitutes ``secondary aluminum production.'' The Treasury Department
and the IRS note that under both proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(2) and Sec.
1.45X-1(c)(2) of these final regulations, substantial transformation
for an applicable critical mineral requires that the applicable
critical mineral be ``processed, converted, refined, or purified to
derive a distinct eligible component.'' Because a taxpayer in these
circumstances would not derive a distinct eligible component, this
would not be an eligible component produced by the taxpayer within the
meaning of section 45X(a)(1)(A).
These final regulations make a clarifying revision to the
definition of produced by the taxpayer under proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(2) so that it references substantial transformation. While no
comments were received on this issue, this revision is needed to
appropriately align the definition of ``produced by the taxpayer'' in
Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(2) with the requirements to qualify as an eligible
taxpayer in Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3).
3. Eligible Taxpayer
a. In General
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(i) would have provided that the
taxpayer
[[Page 85802]]
claiming a section 45X credit with respect to an eligible component
must be the person that performs the actual production activities that
bring about a substantial transformation resulting in the eligible
component and that sells such eligible component to an unrelated
person.
b. Contract Manufacturing Arrangement
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(ii)(A) would have provided that, if
the production of an eligible component is performed in whole or in
part subject to a contract that is a contract manufacturing
arrangement, then the party to such contract that may claim the section
45X credit with respect to such eligible component, provided all other
requirements in section 45X are met, is the taxpayer that performs the
actual production activities that bring about a substantial
transformation resulting in the eligible component. The preamble to the
Proposed Regulations stated that this proposed rule was intended to
provide an administrable rule that provides clarity and certainty in
determining which taxpayer may claim the section 45X credit in a
contract manufacturing arrangement.
c. Contract Manufacturing Defined
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(ii)(B) would have defined the term
``contract manufacturing arrangement'' to mean any agreement providing
for the production of an eligible component if the agreement is entered
into before the production of the eligible component to be delivered
under the contract is completed. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(ii)(B)
would have further provided that a routine purchase order for off-the-
shelf property is not treated as a contract manufacturing arrangement.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(ii)(B) also would have provided that an
agreement will be treated as a routine purchase order for off-the-shelf
property if the contractor is required to make no more than de minimis
modifications to the property to tailor it to the customer's specific
needs, or if at the time the agreement is entered into, the contractor
knows or has reason to know that the contractor can satisfy the
agreement out of existing stocks or normal production of finished
goods. This definition of the term ``routine purchase order'' is based
on the definition found in Sec. 1.263A-2(a)(1)(ii)(B)(2)(ii). The
Treasury Department and the IRS requested comments in the preamble to
the Proposed Regulations on whether this definition should be further
clarified or modified. Comments on the definition of manufacturing
arrangements are discussed in Part II.B.3.d. of this Summary of
Comments and Explanation of Revisions.
d. Special Rule for Contract Manufacturing Arrangements
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(iii) would have explained the special
rule allowing parties to a contract manufacturing arrangement to agree
on which party to the contract will claim the section 45X credit for
eligible components produced subject to such contract. Proposed Sec.
1.45X-1(c)(3)(iv) would have explained the certification requirements
for the special rule. Several commenters expressed support for the
contract manufacturing rules, but one commenter expressed concern about
the treatment of contract manufacturing arrangements in effect prior to
the applicability date of the Proposed Regulations. This commenter
recommended that the final regulations adopt a safe harbor rule that
would function as an exception to the general rule and provide that
when one party is contractually entitled to purchase all or
substantially all (for example, at least 90 percent) of the output of
the fabricator's production of a given component for the taxable year,
the purchaser would be treated as the producer for purposes of section
45X. The Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt the
commenter's request to add a safe harbor for contract manufacturing
arrangements in place before the applicability date of the Proposed
Regulations, but note that a taxpayer may still have the option of
applying the special rule in Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(iii) of these final
regulations for contract manufacturing arrangements entered into before
the applicability date, provided all requirements of the special rule
are met.
The preamble to the Proposed Regulations stated that the Treasury
Department and the IRS intend for the production cost incurred rules in
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2) to apply to a credit claimant in a
contract manufacturing arrangement. The Treasury Department and the IRS
requested comments on whether the proposed rules need further
clarification or modification as applied to contract manufacturing
arrangements. One commenter requested allowing taxpayers that extract
and recycle raw materials and taxpayers that process such materials and
incorporate them into applicable critical minerals to apply the
contract manufacturing arrangement provisions, in the event that costs
of extraction and direct and indirect material costs are not includible
in the eligible production costs of producing an applicable critical
mineral. The Treasury Department and the IRS think that the
clarification requested by this commenter is no longer necessary
because these final regulations permit the inclusion of extraction and
certain material costs in the cost of producing an applicable critical
mineral if certain requirements are met. See Parts IV.E.1.e. and V.C.
of this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions for further
discussion.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(v) would have provided examples
illustrating the application of the special rule. One commenter
requested that proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(v)(C) (Example 3)
specifically state that the domestic production requirement requires
that each wind tower section must be produced in the United States.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-(1)(c)(3)(v)(C) (Example 3) states that a taxpayer
could claim a credit for a tower for which it had three different
producers each produce one section, provided that the parties all agree
that the taxpayer is the sole party that can claim the credit and ``all
other requirements of section 45X are met.'' The Treasury Department
and the IRS have determined that the domestic production requirement is
already included by this language and thus, additional clarification is
not necessary.
Another commenter questioned whether, in proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(3)(v)(C) (Example 3), V must sell the completed wind tower to Z
for the special rule in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(iii) to apply. In
the example, V enters into a contract manufacturing arrangement with W,
X, and Y to make the wind tower, which V sells to Z. All parties to the
contract manufacturing arrangement and Z are unrelated. The commenter
stated that if V, W, X, and Y sign a certification statement and Y
claims the section 45X credit, Y could claim the section 45X credit in
2025 because that is when it sold the eligible component to V. Contrary
to the commenter's conclusion with respect to Y's ability to claim a
section 45X credit in 2025, Y is not eligible for the section 45X
credit until the eligible component, which is the wind tower comprised
of all three wind tower sections, is produced and then sold to an
unrelated person (in this case Z). Under the contract manufacturing
arrangement, W, X, and Y are collectively viewed as producing the
entire eligible component (wind tower) because all three sections
together result in a single eligible component. Along with the
production of the entire wind tower, V has to sell the completed wind
tower to an
[[Page 85803]]
unrelated person before the designated party is eligible for a section
45X credit.
A commenter suggested revisions to the proposed rules to allow an
allocation of any portion of the credit to parties who extract the
mineral and perform initial refining processes, rather than allowing a
credit to the taxpayer that purifies the critical mineral to the
statutory minimum. Section 45X(c)(6) defines a list of applicable
critical minerals with specific minimum purity levels which must be met
for the taxpayer to have produced an eligible component. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the authority to modify these
statutory requirements. However, the Treasury Department and the IRS
seek to clarify that a taxpayer who performs extracting and refining
activities may benefit from the contract manufacturing provisions
described in this section. The final regulations accordingly add Sec.
1.45X-1(c)(3)(v)(D) (Example 4) to demonstrate how the contract
manufacturing provisions may apply in the situation described by the
commenter.
4. Timing of Production and Sale
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(4)(i) would have provided that production
of eligible components for which a taxpayer is claiming a section 45X
credit may begin before December 31, 2022, but production of eligible
components must be completed, and the eligible components must be sold,
after December 31, 2022. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(4)(ii) would have
provided an example illustrating the timing of the production and sale
rule in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(4)(i).
Some commenters requested further clarity on when production and
sale of an eligible component may take place. One commenter requested
that the final rules provide that a specific minimum percentage of
production of an eligible component must occur after 2022 and that no
sale of the eligible component be reported by the taxpayer before 2023.
The Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt these percentage
test suggestions because Congress clearly recognized that some
production could occur prior to 2023 but did not specify an exact
amount of production that must occur in taxable years either before or
after 2023. Moreover, if a sale occurred before 2023, which requires a
facts and circumstances analysis based in part on contractual terms,
the component sold is not eligible for the section 45X credit.
Accordingly, the final regulations adopt proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(4)(i) and the example in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(4)(ii) without
modification.
Another commenter stated that the Proposed Regulations do not
specify whether production activities that qualify for the section 45X
credit have to occur after the effective date of the rule or whether
the activities can be retroactive. The commenter suggests the final
rule specify the applicable period for the production activities and
provide a reasonable transition rule for taxpayers who produce eligible
components before the effective date of the final regulations. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that the Proposed
Regulations and these final regulations are clear as to the timing of
production and sale requirements under section 45X. For clarification,
and as described earlier, section 13502(c) of the IRA provides that
section 45X applies to components produced and sold after December 31,
2022. The preamble to the Proposed Regulations clarified application of
the section 45X effective date, stating that each of proposed
Sec. Sec. 1.45X-1 through 1.45X-4 would have applied to eligible
components for which production is ``completed'' and sales occur after
December 31, 2022, and during taxable years ending on or after the date
of publication of these final regulations. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(4)(i) would have provided that production of eligible components
may begin before December 31, 2022, and only required production of
eligible components be completed, and sales must occur, after December
31, 2022. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(4)(ii) would have provided an
example illustrating proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(4)(i). These final
regulations adopt these proposed rules. The Treasury Department and the
IRS do not have statutory authority to provide for a section 45X credit
in a situation in which production was completed on or before December
31, 2022.
C. Produced in the United States
Consistent with section 45X(d)(2), proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(d)(1)
would have provided that sales are taken into account for purposes of
the section 45X credit only for eligible components that are produced
within the United States, as defined in section 638(1) of the Code, or
a United States territory. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(d)(2) would have
clarified that constituent elements, materials, and subcomponents used
in the production of eligible components are not subject to the
domestic production requirement provided in proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(d)(1). Thus, while the eligible component must be produced
domestically, its constituent elements, materials, and subcomponents
need not be.\2\
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\2\ See Joint Committee on Taxation, General Explanation of Tax
Legislation Enacted in the 117th Congress, JCS-1-23 (December 21,
2023) at 267 (``The credit only applies to sales where the eligible
components are produced within the United States or U.S.
territories. This requirement is not intended to apply to
subcomponents or materials used to produce eligible components.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters agreed with this approach in the Proposed
Regulations. According to these commenters, the Proposed Regulations
appropriately allowed the credit for eligible components produced in
the United States provided that the activities necessary to transform
them into eligible components are conducted in the United States.
Furthermore, these commenters expressed concern that a contrary rule
ignores the reality that some constituent elements, materials, and
subcomponents cannot be sourced in the United States and would
discourage investment in production activities that rely on foreign-
sourced constituent elements, materials, and subcomponents. However,
other commenters disagreed with the proposed approach, suggesting that
allowing eligible components to be produced using foreign subcomponents
is inconsistent with the section 45X credit's objective of
incentivizing domestic production of eligible components.
The Treasury Department and the IRS note that, while section 45X
specifically requires domestic production of an eligible component for
credit eligibility, it is silent regarding the location of production
or sourcing of constituent elements, materials, and subcomponents.
Accordingly, imposing a domestic production requirement for constituent
elements, materials, and subcomponents is not supported by the
statutory language of section 45X. For these reasons, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to adopt these suggestions and adopt the
proposed rule without change.
Beyond agreement or disagreement with this proposed rule, some
commenters inquired about its scope. One commenter asked whether the
domestic production rule applicable to eligible components also applies
to eligible components that are both an eligible component and a
``constituent element, material or subcomponent'' of another eligible
component. Another commenter asked whether raw materials and
intermediate products used to produce eligible components are included
in the definition of ``constituent elements, materials or
subcomponents.''
[[Page 85804]]
The Treasury Department and the IRS confirm that all three of these
categories of items are included in the definition of ``constituent
elements, materials, and subcomponents.'' An eligible component that is
a ``constituent element, material or subcomponent'' of another eligible
component is not subject to the domestic production rule, and thus, an
eligible component may incorporate another eligible component that is
also a foreign-sourced ``constituent element, material or
subcomponent'' and still be eligible for a section 45X credit. In
addition, raw materials and intermediate products generally qualify as
constituent elements, materials, or subcomponents.
A commenter also requested confirmation in the final regulations
that there is no requirement that eligible components be used in the
United States for section 45X credit eligibility. Consistent with
section 45X(d)(2), proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(d)(1) would have provided
that sales are taken into account for purposes of the section 45X
credit only for eligible components that are produced within the United
States (or a United States territory). Thus, the Proposed Regulations
specify only the location of production of the eligible component, and
not the location of the sale or the use of such eligible component.
Accordingly, the Treasury Department and the IRS conclude that the
additional confirmation requested by the commenter is unnecessary, as
there would be no statutory basis for requiring domestic sale or use.
D. Production and Sale in a Trade or Business
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(e) would have stated that an eligible
component must be produced and sold in a trade or business of the
taxpayer, with the term ``trade or business'' defined as a trade or
business within the meaning of section 162 of the Code.
A commenter requested that proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(e) expressly
include eligible components that are produced and then used to replace
defective units pursuant to a contractual obligation entered into at
the time of the original sale. The commenter stated that these warranty
transactions do not appear to violate any of the anti-abuse provisions
at proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(i). If an eligible component is produced and
sold to an unrelated person in the normal course of a trade or
business, and the eligible component is then replaced with a new
eligible component produced by the same taxpayer, there is no new sale
to an unrelated person for the replacement eligible component, but the
replacement eligible component relates back to the original sales
transaction. The precise issue is whether section 45X should be read to
effectively incentivize the production of two eligible components where
each is related to a single sales transaction. The Treasury Department
and the IRS decline to adopt this suggestion because only one credit
may be claimed with respect to the sale of an eligible component.
E. Sale of Integrated Components
1. In General
Section 45X(d)(4) provides that, for purposes of section 45X, a
person is treated as having sold an eligible component to an unrelated
person if such component is integrated, incorporated, or assembled into
another eligible component which is sold to an unrelated person.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(f)(1) was intended to be consistent with section
45X(d)(4), and thus would have provided that a taxpayer is treated as
having produced and sold an eligible component to an unrelated person
if such component is integrated, incorporated, or assembled into
another eligible component that is then sold to an unrelated person.
Although no comments were received regarding this general rule in
the Proposed Regulations, the Treasury Department and the IRS want to
clarify that section 45X(d)(4) provides only for deemed sale treatment
and not deemed production. A taxpayer must produce (rather than merely
purchase or acquire) an eligible component that is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another eligible component that is then
sold to an unrelated person in order for the deemed sale rule to apply.
Thus, these final regulations clarify that a taxpayer is ``treated as
having sold'' an eligible component to an unrelated person if the
taxpayer produced such component and the component is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another eligible component that is then
sold to an unrelated person, rather than ``treated as having produced
and sold'' an eligible component that the taxpayer did not itself
produce that is then integrated, incorporated, or assembled into
another eligible component and then sold to an unrelated person.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(f)(1) is clarified accordingly in these final
regulations.
2. Application of Section 45X(d)(4) to Produced Products
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(f)(2)(i) would have clarified that a
taxpayer may claim a section 45X credit for each eligible component
that the taxpayer produces and sells to an unrelated person, including
any eligible component the taxpayer produces that was used as an
element, material, or subcomponent and integrated, incorporated, or
assembled into another complete and distinct eligible component or
another complete and distinct product (that is not itself an eligible
component) that the taxpayer also produces and sells to an unrelated
person. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(f)(2)(ii) would have provided an example
of the credit eligibility of a sale of a product with incorporated
eligible components to a related person.
Commenters expressed agreement with proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(f)(2)(i). One commenter stated that the clarification in Sec. 1.45X-
1(f)(2)(i) avoids the need for some vertically integrated producers of
eligible components that incorporate the eligible components into
another product that is not an eligible component to artificially
restructure in order to create an intercompany sale. Another commenter
requested a flexible interpretation of section 45X(d)(4) that would
apply the section 45X credit as an additive credit across the supply
chain to the final assembler. The commenter stated such an
interpretation is consistent with the language in section 45X(b)(1),
which provides that the section 45X credit amount is determined with
respect to any eligible component, including any eligible component it
incorporates. For example, in the commenter's view, a taxpayer that
produces a structural fastener would be eligible to receive a credit
for its production of an eligible component as would the integrator,
incorporator, assembler of the structural fastener into another
eligible component. Although the Treasury Department and the IRS agree
that section 45X(b)(1) provides that the credit amount is determined
with respect to any eligible component produced by the taxpayer,
including any eligible component the taxpayer incorporates that was
also produced by the taxpayer, the Treasury Department and the IRS
disagree with the implication that the calculation of the section 45X
credit should be additive based on the number of eligible components
used to produce an item in a case in which each eligible component is
not produced by the taxpayer. Only the producer of an eligible
component would be eligible for a section 45X credit. Proposed Sec.
1.45X-1(f)(1) and (2) are finalized with no modifications because the
Treasury Department and the IRS conclude the rules provide clarity as
currently written.
[[Page 85805]]
F. Interaction Between Sections 45X and 48C
1. In General
Consistent with section 45X(c)(1)(B), proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(1)
would have provided that, for purposes of section 45X, an eligible
component must be produced at a section 45X facility and does not
include any property (produced property) that is produced at a facility
if the basis of any property that is part of the production unit that
produces the produced property is eligible property that is included in
a section 48C facility and is taken into account for purposes of a
credit allowed under section 48C (section 48C credit) after August 16,
2022.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(2)(i) would have provided that a section
45X facility includes all tangible property that comprises an
independently functioning production unit that produces one or more
eligible components. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(2)(ii) would have
provided that a production unit is comprised of the tangible property
that substantially transforms material inputs to complete the
production process of an eligible component.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(3)(i) would have provided that a section
48C facility includes all eligible property included in a qualifying
advanced energy project for which a taxpayer receives an allocation of
section 48C credits and claims such credits after August 16, 2022.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(3)(ii) would have defined eligible property
that is included in a section 48C facility.
With respect to the proposed rules on the interaction between
sections 45X and 48C various comments were received. A commenter
requested that the final rules not apply section 45X(c)(1)(B) to
disallow the section 45X credit in the event that the taxpayer claiming
the section 45X credit incorporates into its eligible component a
subcomponent that was produced by a section 48C facility, as long as
that same taxpayer was not eligible for the section 48C credit with
respect to the section 48C facility that produced the subcomponent.
Revisions were made to these final regulations to clarify that the only
equipment, or other tangible property, that must be included in the
section 45X facility is the equipment used by the taxpayer that is
necessary to be considered the producer of the potential eligible
component. As further explained later, if production of a subcomponent
(or like property) is not a requirement to be considered the producer
under section 45X, then the equipment that is part of that section 48C
facility used to produce the subcomponent is not part of the section
45X facility. As a result, it is possible that the same taxpayer could
receive a section 48C credit on equipment used to produce a
subcomponent (or like property), and a section 45X credit on the
production of an eligible component.
One commenter requested an example to help determine whether an
eligible component produced at a facility located ``adjacent'' to a
section 48C facility that received a section 48C credit impacts
eligibility for the section 45X credit. The physical proximity of a
section 45X facility to a section 48C facility does not determine
whether a product may be an eligible component and revisions to these
final regulations were made to clarify that point.
Another commenter requested more clarity to determine whether a
facility that shares upstream raw materials and processes as a section
48C facility is still eligible for a section 45X credit and requested
examples of upstream supply chains and processes that are eligible and
ineligible for both sections 48C and 45X. Several commenters requested
additional clarity regarding the meaning and extent of the term
``production unit.''
Based on the comments and further consideration of the Proposed
Regulations, revisions were made in these final regulations to simplify
the rules and examples in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(1) through (4).
Specifically, these final regulations make clear that the general rule
is that property that would otherwise qualify as an eligible component
(otherwise qualified property) is only an eligible component if the
property is produced at a section 45X facility and no part of that
section 45X facility is also a section 48C facility. These final
regulations also revise the definition of section 45X facility,
clarifying that a section 45X facility is the independently functioning
tangible property used by the taxpayer that is necessary to be
considered the producer of the otherwise qualified property within the
meaning of Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1) or (2), as applicable. The Proposed
Regulations would have relied on the concept of a ``production unit''
to define the scope of a section 45X facility, but there was overlap
between the term production unit as proposed and the definition of a
section 45X facility. After careful consideration, the Treasury
Department and the IRS determined that the proposed term ``production
unit'' introduced unnecessary complexity, particularly in light of the
revisions to the definition of section 45X facility in these final
regulations. Accordingly, these final regulations do not use the term
production unit.
The definition of section 45X facility in these final regulations
includes independently functioning tangible property that is used and
that is necessary for the otherwise qualified property to be considered
produced by the taxpayer within the meaning of Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1) or
(2), as applicable. Accordingly, tangible property used to produce a
subcomponent or other property which is later integrated, incorporated,
or assembled into a distinct and final eligible component is not part
of the section 45X facility. This rule, however, does not apply if the
other property is of a type that the taxpayer must produce for the
resulting eligible component to be considered produced by the taxpayer.
This analysis can depend on the definition of the eligible component
being ultimately produced. For example, section 45X(c)(3)(B)(ii)(I)(bb)
requires a single manufacturer to produce a photovoltaic wafer through
formation of an ingot from polysilicon and subsequent slicing. Thus,
the section 45X facility with respect to the photovoltaic wafers would
include any equipment that is tangible property that is used to produce
the ingot and any equipment that is tangible property that is used to
perform the subsequent slicing. In contrast, equipment used to produce
front glass of a solar module under section 45X(c)(3)(B)(v) could be
excluded from a section 45X facility because it is not necessary to use
the front glass equipment to be considered the producer of the solar
module for section 45X. This rule may benefit a taxpayer that produces
a subcomponent or other property of an eligible component using
equipment that is also eligible property for purposes of the section
48C credit, but uses other equipment not related to the section 48C
credit to produce the eligible component.
Lastly, these final regulations add a specific rule for contract
manufacturing arrangements in Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(2)(ii) to address any
uncertainty with respect to how to determine a section 45X facility in
that situation. This rule clarifies that the tangible property used to
produce the otherwise qualified property (regardless of who claims the
credit) must be considered.
4. Examples of Sections 45X and 48C Interaction
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(4)(i) through (v) would have provided
examples to illustrate the application of these rules. A few commenters
requested that, contrary to proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(4)(ii) (Example
2), ingot and wafer production
[[Page 85806]]
should be treated as two separate manufacturing activities so that an
ingot facility is eligible for the section 48C credit while a wafer
facility is eligible for the section 45X credit. As required by section
45X(c)(3)(B)(ii)(I)(bb), however, a photovoltaic wafer must be produced
by a single manufacturer either by forming an ingot from molten
polysilicon (for example, Czochralski method) and then subsequently
slicing it into wafers, or by forming molten or evaporated solar grade
polysilicon or deposition into a sheet or layer (that is, thin-film
deposition). As the statute requires production of a photovoltaic wafer
by a single manufacturer that both forms an ingot and slices it into
wafers, it is not appropriate to treat ingot and wafer production as
two separate manufacturing activities. Rather, as both activities are
necessary, it follows that the tangible property used to complete each
activity must be within a single section 45X facility with respect to
the eligible component produced. No comments were received on the other
examples in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(4)(i) through (v). However, all
of the examples in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(4)(i) through (v) were
modified consistent with the revisions in Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(1) through
(3).
A few commenters suggested that parties in a contract manufacturing
arrangement under proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(iii) could circumvent
the prohibition under section 45X(c)(1)(B) that disallows a section 45X
credit for items produced at a section 48C facility. More specifically,
commenters suggested that a taxpayer could enter into a contract
manufacturing arrangement under proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(3)(iii) to
produce photovoltaic wafers that are then used to manufacture
photovoltaic cells. If the taxpayer itself integrated, incorporated, or
assembled the photovoltaic cells into solar modules, the taxpayer might
claim a section 45X credit for all three products upon their sale, even
though the photovoltaic wafers were manufactured by the contract
manufacturer at a section 48C facility while the photovoltaic cells
were manufactured at a section 45X facility, if the taxpayer was
unaware that the contract manufacturer manufactured the photovoltaic
wafers at a section 48C facility. The Proposed Regulations did not
allow this, and the final regulations would continue to disallow a
section 45X credit for the photovoltaic wafers in this scenario. To the
extent that the photovoltaic wafers were produced at a section 48C
facility, the photovoltaic wafers would not qualify as an eligible
component to any party to the contract manufacturing arrangement. As
described earlier, these final regulations add a rule in Sec. 1.45X-
1(g)(2)(ii) to clarify the rules in a contract manufacturing
arrangement situation, and the examples in Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(4) have
also been modified.
G. Anti-Abuse Rule
As explained in the preamble to the Proposed Regulations, proposed
Sec. 1.45X-1(i)(1) would have provided a general anti-abuse rule that
would make the section 45X credit unavailable in extraordinary
circumstances in which, based on a consideration of all the facts and
circumstances, the primary purpose of the production and sale of an
eligible component is to obtain the benefit of the section 45X credit
in a manner that is wasteful, such as discarding, disposing of, or
destroying the eligible component without putting it to a productive
use. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(i)(1) would have provided that the rules of
section 45X and the section 45X regulations must be applied in a manner
consistent with the purposes of section 45X and the section 45X
regulations (and the regulations in this chapter under sections 6417
and 6418 related to the section 45X credit). A purpose of section 45X
and the section 45X regulations (and the regulations in this chapter
under sections 6417 and 6418 related to the section 45X credit) is to
provide taxpayers an incentive to produce eligible components in a
manner that contributes to the development of secure and resilient
supply chains. Accordingly, the section 45X credit is not allowable if
the primary purpose of the production and sale of an eligible component
is to obtain the benefit of the section 45X credit in a manner that is
wasteful, such as discarding, disposing of, or destroying the eligible
component without putting it to a productive use. A determination of
whether the production and sale of an eligible component is
inconsistent with the purposes of section 45X and the section 45X
regulations (and the regulations in this chapter under sections 6417
and 6418 related to the section 45X credit) is based on all facts and
circumstances. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(i)(2) would have provided an
example illustrating this anti-abuse rule.
One commenter suggested that, in applying the anti-abuse rule, the
taxpayer claiming a section 45X credit should not be held responsible
for the activities of the customer after a sale has occurred (unless
the customer is a related entity); the determination of whether a
component is defective should be made at the factory gate; and
``productive use'' should include the sale of an eligible component to
an entity engaged in the business of directly (such as a utility) or
indirectly (such as a project developer) deploying the batteries.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(i)(1) provides that a determination of whether
the production and sale of an eligible component is inconsistent with
the purposes of section 45X and the section 45X regulations (and the
regulations under sections 6417 and 6418 related to the section 45X
credit) is based on all the facts and circumstances. Under a facts and
circumstances analysis, no single factor is determinative, and the
considerations listed by the commenter would have to be evaluated in
the context of all other facts and circumstances. The Treasury
Department and the IRS thus decline to list specific parameters that
automatically result in a finding of a favorable or unfavorable primary
purpose.
Another commenter suggested adding additional examples to proposed
Sec. 1.45X-1(i) to make clear that the section 45X credit is never
allowable with respect to any cost the primary purpose of which is to
increase the amount of the section 45X credit. While both examples
offered by the commenter involve possible abuses, the anti-abuse rule
is intended to cover a broad range of abuses. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(i)
would have provided that a determination of whether the production and
sale of an eligible component is inconsistent with the purposes of
section 45X and the section 45X regulations is based on all facts and
circumstances, and no single factor is determinative. Accordingly, the
Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt the commenter's
suggestion.
III. Sale to Unrelated Person
A. In General
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(a) would have stated that the amount of the
section 45X credit for any taxable year is equal to the sum of the
credit amounts determined under section 45X(b) (and described in
proposed Sec. Sec. 1.45X-3 and 1.45X-4) with respect to each eligible
component that is produced by the taxpayer and, during the taxable
year, sold by the taxpayer to an unrelated person. Applicable Federal
income tax principles apply to determine whether a transaction is in
substance a sale (or the provision of a service, or some other
disposition). Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(a) also would have cross-
referenced proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(d) and (e) for additional
requirements relating to sales. Section
[[Page 85807]]
45X(d)(1) provides that persons are treated as related to each other if
such persons would be treated as a single employer under the
regulations prescribed under section 52(b). Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(b)
would have provided definitions of the terms ``person,'' ``related
person,'' and ``unrelated person'' for purposes of the section 45X
credit.
A few commenters requested additional clarity in the final rules on
how a sale is defined and when a sale is determined for the purpose of
section 45X. One commenter recommended that a sale be defined for 45X
as the point when a taxpayer signs a binding contractual agreement with
a buyer in the taxpayer's trade or business for the purchase of an
eligible component. Section 45X provides special rules addressing sales
of eligible components to related persons that may be treated as sales
to unrelated persons, and a general rule that an eligible component
produced and sold by the taxpayer is only taken into account if such
production and sale is in a trade or business of the taxpayer, but
otherwise does not provide any specific rules regarding whether and
when a sale have occurred. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(a) would have
provided that applicable Federal income tax principles apply to
determine whether a transaction is in substance a sale (or the
provision of a service, or some other disposition), and those same
principles apply in determining when a transaction is a sale. More
specific rules on the determination of whether and when a sale occurs
is beyond the scope of these final regulations. Accordingly, the
Treasury Department and the IRS maintain the standard in proposed Sec.
1.45X-2(a) and finalize the proposed rule without modification.
Another commenter requested further clarification on the sale of
eligible components in two scenarios. In the first scenario, Company A
is a U.S. based company producing eligible components that it sells to
Company B, which is not directly using the eligible components but
resells to Company C to use in a manufacturing process or otherwise in
its trade or business. For this first scenario, the commenter requested
clarification on whether Company A is eligible to claim the section 45X
credit for the domestic production and sale of the eligible components.
In the second scenario, the commenter assumed the same facts as in the
first scenario, but Company B or Company C is using Company A's
eligible component outside the United Sates. In this second scenario,
the commenter requested clarification on whether Company A remains
eligible to claim the section 45X credit for the domestic production
and sale of the eligible components.
In both scenarios under the Proposed Regulations, Company A is
eligible to claim the section 45X credit for the domestic production
and sale of the eligible components if the production and sale is in a
trade or business of Company A, regardless of whether the first
purchaser is using the eligible component in its trade or business or
sells to a subsequent purchaser for use in the subsequent purchaser's
trade or business, and regardless of whether the purchaser or
subsequent purchaser uses the eligible component in the United States.
Because the Proposed Regulations clearly provide this result, no
further revision is necessary in these final regulations.
B. Special Rules for Sales to a Related Person
Consistent with section 45X(a)(3)(A), proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(c)(1)
would have provided a special rule that, for purposes of section
45X(a), a taxpayer is treated as selling an eligible component to an
unrelated person if such component is sold to such person by a person
who is related to the taxpayer. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(c)(2) would have
provided an example to illustrate this special rule.
Given the importance of whether parties are related persons or
unrelated persons, a commenter proposed a particular fact pattern and
requested clarification on who the purchaser is and whether they were
related or unrelated to the producer and seller. In general, section
45X(d)(1) and proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(b)(2) provides that persons are
treated as related to each other if such persons would be treated as a
single employer under the regulations prescribed under section 52(b). A
request for application of the section 52(b) regulations by the
Treasury Department and the IRS to a particular fact pattern requiring
a facts and circumstances analysis is outside the scope of these final
regulations.
Another commenter requested that the final rules clarify whether a
Related Person Election is necessary when eligible components are sold
by the producer to an unrelated person, who subsequently sells them to
a person related to the producer of such eligible components. The
commenter proposes amending proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(c) to clarify that
direct or indirect sales to a related person qualify if the producer
knows or has reason to know the unrelated person is intending to sell
the same eligible components to a person related to the producer. To
provide assurance to commenter, a Related Person Election is not
necessary in this situation because the first sale was to an unrelated
party, but the Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that the
rules as set out by proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(c) do not require further
clarification on this point. In addition, if there are circumstances in
which purported sales are made to unrelated persons to circumvent the
requirements of section 45X, proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(a) provides that
applicable Federal income tax principles apply to determine whether a
transaction will be respected as a sale.
C. Related Person Election
1. Availability of Election--In General
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(1)(i) would have provided that a taxpayer
may make a Related Person Election under section 45X(a)(3)(B) to treat
a sale of eligible components by such taxpayer to a related person as
if made to an unrelated person. As a condition of, and prior to, a
taxpayer making a Related Person Election, the Secretary may require
such information or registration as the Secretary deems necessary for
purposes of preventing duplication, fraud, or any improper or excessive
credit amount determined under section 45X(a)(1). Proposed Sec. 1.45X-
2(d)(1)(ii) would have provided the rules regarding the Related Person
Election for members of a consolidated group (as defined in Sec.
1.1502-1(h)).
One commenter requested that taxpayers be allowed to exercise the
Related Person Election in situations where it is difficult for the
taxpayer to determine whether two entities are related under the
section 52(b) regulations. Allowing the exercise of the Related Person
Election as commenter requested would conflict with the language in
section 45X(d)(1), which requires the parties be treated as a single
employer under the section 52(b) regulations, not just that it be
difficult to determine the status. Therefore, these final regulations
do not adopt the commenter's request.
2. Anti-Abuse Rule
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(4) would have provided an anti-abuse rule
for the Related Person Election consistent with section
45X(a)(3)(B)(ii) for preventing duplication, fraud, or any improper or
excessive amount of the section 45X credit. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-
2(d)(4)(i) would have provided that a Related Person Election may not
be made if the taxpayer fails to provide the information required by
proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(2)
[[Page 85808]]
with respect to the relevant eligible components, the taxpayer provides
information that shows such components were put to an improper use as
defined in proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(4)(ii) or were defective as
defined in proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(4)(iii), or such components were
actually put to an improper use or were defective.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(4)(ii) would have provided that an
eligible component is put to an improper use if it is so used by the
related person to which the eligible component is sold. The term
improper use would mean a use that is wasteful, such as discarding,
disposing of, or destroying the eligible component without putting it
to a productive use. The Treasury Department and the IRS requested
comments in the preamble to the Proposed Regulations on the definition
of the term improper use and whether any clarifications to its scope
are necessary.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(4)(iii) would have provided that a
defective component means a component that does not meet the
requirements of section 45X and the section 45X regulations. The
Treasury Department and the IRS requested comments in the preamble to
the Proposed Regulations on the definition of defective components and
whether clarifications to its scope are necessary.
In response to the Treasury Department and the IRS's request for
comments, one commenter requested additional guidance regarding when an
eligible component can be deemed defective under section 45X. The
commenter recommended clarification that an eligible component can be
deemed defective and therefore ineligible for a tax credit under
section 45X ``up until the point of sale of the eligible component to
an unrelated party.'' However, in circumstances where a taxpayer has
made a valid Related Person Election, a sale of eligible components to
a related person is treated as if made to an unrelated person, thus
making a sale to an unrelated person not relevant for section 45X
credit determination purposes. The preamble to the Proposed Regulations
stated that the Treasury Department and the IRS are concerned that the
Related Person Election may be used by taxpayers to claim a credit for
eligible components that are defective, not capable of being used for
its intended purpose, do not meet the requirements for the section 45X
credit, and therefore are not eligible for the section 45X credit. The
Treasury Department and the IRS agree that if an eligible component is
not defective at the time of sale, defects arising after the point of
sale may occur in the ordinary course of a business and do not
generally raise the improper claim concerns regarding defective
components described in the Preamble to the Proposed Regulations.
Accordingly, the final rules modify proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(4)(iii)
to clarify that components with respect to which defects arise after
the deemed sale are not considered defective components for purposes of
the anti-abuse rule.
Another commenter suggested that the definitions of improper use
and defective components should provide an exception for a defective
component that can be sold or given to a related or unrelated person
conducting legitimate recycling operations and allowing defective
components to earn a section 45X credit provided they are properly
recycled in the United States. The Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this request because section 45X does not authorize
allowing a section 45X credit for a defective component that does not
meet the definition of an eligible component and is not capable of
being used for its intended purpose without further substantial
modification.
D. Sales of Integrated Components to a Related Person
1. In General
Section 45X(d)(4) provides that for purposes of section 45X, a
person is treated as having sold an eligible component to an unrelated
person if such component is integrated, incorporated, or assembled into
another eligible component that is sold to an unrelated person. See
Part II.E. of this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions for
rules applicable to eligible components that are integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into other eligible components and sold to
an unrelated person.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(e)(1) would have provided that, for purposes
of section 45X and the section 45X regulations (and the regulations in
this chapter under sections 6417 and 6418 related to the section 45X
credit), a taxpayer that produces and sells an eligible component to a
related person who then integrates, incorporates, or assembles the
taxpayer's eligible component into another complete and distinct
eligible component that is subsequently sold to an unrelated person may
claim a section 45X credit in the taxable year of the sale to the
unrelated person.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(e)(2) would have provided examples to
illustrate the treatment of sales of multiple incorporated eligible
components to related and unrelated persons. One commenter questioned
the practical application of the requirements in proposed Sec. 1.45X-
2(e)(2)(i) (Example 1) and expressed concern that although Company X
and Y are related, the proposed rule would require a significant amount
of coordination of information. This coordination would be necessary
for the credit to be claimed in the proper tax year in which the
ultimate product (photovoltaic cells produced by Y using photovoltaic
wafers produced by X and purchased by Y) was sold to Company Z.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(e)(2)(i) (Example 1) illustrates the rule in
section 45X(d)(4) requiring an ultimate actual sale to an unrelated
person of an eligible component. Because section 45X(d)(4) expressly
conditions the deemed sale on an actual subsequent sale to an unrelated
person by the related person, the Treasury Department and the IRS do
not have the authority to change this statutorily imposed conditional
timing requirement despite any practical difficulties taxpayers may
experience in obtaining such information. Taxpayers may, however, make
a Related Person Election as illustrated in the example in Sec. 1.45X-
2(e)(3)(ii) and claim the section 45X credit upon the sale to the
related person. This would obviate the need for such taxpayer to know
when the related person actually makes the subsequent sale to an
unrelated person. For these reasons, the final regulations adopt
proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(e)(2)(i) (Example 1) without modification.
2. Special Rules Applicable to Related Person Election
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(e)(3) would have provided that if a taxpayer
makes a valid Related Person Election under section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i) and
proposed Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(1), and the taxpayer produces and then sells
an eligible component to a related person, who then integrates,
incorporates, or assembles the taxpayer's eligible component into
another complete and distinct eligible component that is subsequently
sold to an unrelated person, the taxpayer's sale of the eligible
component to the related person is treated (solely for purposes of the
section 45X credit and the section 45X regulations, and the regulations
in this chapter under sections 6417 and 6418 related to the section 45X
credit) as if made to an unrelated person in the taxable year in which
the sale to the related person occurs. One commenter expressed support
for this proposed rule, as it applies thoughtfully to vertically
integrated electric vehicle manufacturers engaging in sales of
[[Page 85809]]
multiple integrated eligible components to related and unrelated
persons (with a Related Person Election). No other comments were
received on this special rule, so it is adopted in these final
regulations without revision.
IV. Eligible Components
A. In General
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(a) would have defined the term ``eligible
component'' as any solar energy component, any wind energy component,
any inverter, any qualifying battery component, and any applicable
critical mineral, as each is respectively defined in the Proposed
Regulations. For solar energy components, wind energy components,
inverters, and qualifying battery components, proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)
through (e) would have provided definitions, rules for determining the
credit amount, and documentation requirements. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(f) would also have provided rules for applying the phase out of the
section 45X credit. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-4 would have provided such
information for applicable critical minerals (other than rules for
applying the phase out, which does not apply to applicable critical
minerals).
Commenters addressed certain aspects of these proposed rules, as
described in this Part IV. of the Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions. These final regulations generally adopt the rules as
proposed in Sec. 1.45X-3, with the modifications described in this
Part IV. of the Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions.
B. Solar Energy Components--in General
Consistent with section 45X(c)(3), proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b) would
have provided that solar energy component means a solar module,
photovoltaic cell, photovoltaic wafer, solar grade polysilicon, torque
tube, structural fastener, or polymeric backsheet. Several commenters
requested that the final regulations add other non-listed solar energy
components (or alternatively, to provide a safe harbor) to allow for
section 45X credit eligibility. Examples of other non-listed solar
energy components commenters raised include the encapsulant used to
protect the photovoltaic cells and hold the entire system together;
charge transport materials used in photovoltaic cells; photovoltaic
wire; solar mirror facets; and solar thermal receivers. A commenter
also suggested adopting a functionally interdependent and integral part
test analogous to section 48 of the Code to include additional solar
energy components.
Section 45X(c)(3) expressly identifies the qualifying solar energy
components that are eligible for the section 45X credit. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the authority to add to the set of
solar energy components that are identified by statute, for example, by
applying a functional interdependence or integral part test. For this
reason, the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt the
commenters' requests in these final regulations.
1. Photovoltaic Cell
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(1)(ii) would have provided that the
credit amount for a photovoltaic cell is equal to the product of 4
cents multiplied by the capacity of such photovoltaic cell. The
proposed rule provided that the capacity of each photovoltaic cell is
expressed on a direct current watt basis and capacity is the nameplate
capacity in direct current watts using Standard Test Conditions (STC),
as defined by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). The
proposed rule further provided that in the case of a tandem technology
produced in serial fashion, such as a monolithic multijunction cell
composed of two or more sub-cells, capacity must be measured at the
point of sale at the end of the single cell production unit; and, in
the case of a four-terminal tandem technology produced by mechanically
stacking two distinct cells or interconnected layers, capacity must be
measured for each cell at each point of sale.
A few commenters expressed concern that the proposed rule treats
two-terminal and four-terminal tandem technologies differently, and
that by labeling a monolithic two-terminal configuration as composed of
sub-cells, the proposed rule would require this technology to be
measured as a single cell rather than two distinct tandem cells. In
contrast, proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(1)(ii) provides that mechanically
stacked four-terminal tandem technology consists of ``two distinct
cells.'' In the commenters' view, the proposed rule would allow four-
terminal cells to be measured before they are combined, while two-
terminal cells would be measured after they are combined, resulting in
higher capacity for four-terminal cells and increased credit amounts
for four-terminal cells. A commenter also suggested that proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(b)(1)(ii) is currently problematic for future tandem technology
cell production and, perhaps unintentionally, directs the development
of certain tandem technologies.
The Treasury Department and the IRS agree with the commenters'
concerns regarding disparate treatment between four-terminal and two-
terminal cells and capacity and credit amounts. Accordingly, these
final regulations revise proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(1)(ii) to add
additional text at the end as follows: ``Where that cell is sold to a
customer who will use it as the bottom cell in a tandem module, its
capacity should be measured with the customer's intended top cell
placed between the bottom cell and the one-sun light source.''
2. Photovoltaic Wafer
Consistent with section 45X(c)(3)(B)(ii), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(b)(2)(i) would have defined a photovoltaic wafer to mean a thin
slice, sheet, or layer of semiconductor material of at least 240 square
centimeters that comprises the substrate or absorber layer of one or
more photovoltaic cells. A photovoltaic wafer must be produced by a
single manufacturer by forming an ingot from molten polysilicon (for
example, Czochralski method) and then subsequently slicing it into
wafers, forming molten or evaporated polysilicon into a sheet or layer,
or depositing a thin-film semiconductor photon absorber into a sheet or
layer (that is, thin-film deposition).
Some commenters suggested revisions to the definition of a
photovoltaic wafer to include non-traditional methods of producing
wafers. For example, a commenter requested expanding the definition to
include wafers produced by any of the emerging `kerfless' or `direct'
wafer technologies, as well as the polysilicon used by these
technologies. The Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that
direct wafer technologies fall within the statutory definition of
photovoltaic wafers, if they are produced directly from evaporated
solar grade polysilicon but disagree that any further clarification is
needed in these final regulations.
A commenter requested that the final regulations clarify that
ingots must be produced within the United States for solar wafers to be
eligible for the section 45X credit. As required by section
45X(c)(3)(B)(ii)(I)(bb), to qualify for a section 45X credit, a
photovoltaic wafer must be produced by a single manufacturer either by
forming an ingot and then subsequently slicing it into wafers, or by
forming molten or evaporated solar grade polysilicon or deposition into
a sheet or layer. Thus,
[[Page 85810]]
to qualify for a section 45X credit, both the ingot and the wafer must
be produced domestically in accordance with section 45X(d)(2). Proposed
Sec. 1.45X-1(d)(2) would have clarified that constituent elements,
materials, and subcomponents used in the production of eligible
components are not subject to the domestic production requirement
provided in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(d)(1). Because the ingot production
is part of the wafer production, ingots are not constituent elements,
materials, or subcomponents. The Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined it is unnecessary to specify that the ingot must be
domestically produced as section 45X and proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(b)(2)(i) require the wafer to be domestically produced, which
includes production of the ingot. See also Part II.F.2. of this Summary
of Comments and Explanation of Revisions for a discussion of proposed
Sec. 1.45X-1(g)(4)(ii) (Example 2) concerning the production of ingots
and wafers.
3. Polymeric Backsheet
Consistent with section 45X(c)(3)(B)(iii), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(b)(3) would have defined polymeric backsheet to mean a sheet on the
back of a solar module that acts as an electric insulator and protects
the inner components of such module from the surrounding environment.
Certain commenters recommended that the term be considered to
include a product that qualifies solely based on the property's
functionality and not the property's composition, in order for
backsheets made of glass to be eligible components. One commenter
stated that its product is used in solar panels and therefore its
request is consistent with Congressional intent of expediting the
transition to clean energy, the underlying intent of section 45X to
create parity among technologies, and incentivizing the creation of a
U.S.-based supply chain for current and future solar technologies. The
commenter thought that other energy components were defined based on
their function, not their ``composition'' (for example, inverter,
photovoltaic cell, and solar module) and believes that glass performs
the same function as a backsheet made of plastic. The commenter
suggested that clarity on whether a backsheet made of glass is part of
the definition of ``polymeric backsheet'' is important because it will
help with decisions on pursuing a section 48C credit and for avoiding
penalties under section 6694 of the Code (preparer penalty) or section
6662 of the Code (substantial understatement). Another commenter
recommended adding back glass as a solar energy component because it is
better for the environment in that a domestic facility that uses
recycled glass from retired solar modules is ``cleaner'' than an
overseas facility.
In considering these comments, the Treasury Department and the IRS
determined that the best reading of the statute is that the term
``polymeric backsheet'' is limited to backsheets made of polymeric
materials that also meet the functional definition provided in section
45X(c)(3)(B)(iii). This excludes most glass backsheets because they are
typically not composed of a polymer, but of soda-lime glass. The final
regulations add the word ``polymeric'' into the definition as a
clarification. In reaching this determination, the Treasury Department
and the IRS considered that when drafting the statute, Congress
affirmatively included ``polymeric'' in the term and this inclusion
should be given effect. Thus, the final regulations clarify that the
definition is limited to a sheet on the back of solar modules composed,
at least in part, of a polymer, that acts as an electric insulator and
protects the inner components of such module from the surrounding
environment.
4. Solar Grade Polysilicon
Consistent with section 45X(c)(3)(B)(iv), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(b)(4) would have defined solar grade polysilicon to mean silicon that
is suitable for use in photovoltaic manufacturing and purified to a
minimum purity of 99.999999 percent silicon by mass. A commenter
requested that the final rules state that the production of the silicon
gas that is used for direct wafer production may receive the section
45X credit for polysilicon for the mass of silicon in the gas. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have determined, in close consultation
with the Department of Energy, that gas used for direct wafer
production includes molecules of silicon contained within another
substance. Accordingly, such gas is not a complete and distinct
eligible component within the meaning of proposed Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(1)(i). For this reason, the Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this request in these final regulations.
A few commenters requested guidance on how the purity level for
solar grade polysilicon should be determined. One commenter requested
that the final rules clarify that only impurities that are ``material
to the industry'' should be counted in determining whether the minimum
purity level is met. Because these final regulations add the purity
standard in SEMI Specification PV17-1012 Category 1 to proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(b)(4), which distinguishes between material and immaterial
impurities, the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt the
commenter's suggestion of clarifying that the statutory purity level
refers only to impurity levels that are ``material to the industry.''
A commenter recommended adopting the standards for polysilicon
feedstock in SEMI Specification PV17-1012. The Treasury Department and
the IRS, in close consultation with the Department of Energy, have
determined that SEMI Specification PV17-1012 Category 1 meets the
purity standard of 99.999999 percent, while Categories 2 through 5 do
not. The Treasury Department and the IRS thus agree with this request
but only for Category 1, and these final regulations accordingly revise
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(4) to add the purity standard in SEMI
Specification PV17-1012 Category 1.
5. Solar Module
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(5)(ii) would have stated that the credit
amount for a solar module is equal to the product of 7 cents multiplied
by the capacity of such module. The proposed rule also provided that
the capacity of each solar module is expressed on a direct current watt
basis, and that capacity is the nameplate capacity in direct current
watts using STC, as defined by the IEC. A commenter requested producers
be required to use ``flash'' values to determine the value of the tax
credit for modules. The preamble to the Proposed Regulations explained
that nameplate capacity is an appropriate, accurate, and consistent
standard for the measurement of solar module capacity that can be used
to measure the capacity of other eligible components. Using an industry
standard such as nameplate capacity that is widely applicable to
various eligible components provides greater taxpayer certainty,
reduces taxpayer compliance burdens, and aids IRS administration. For
these reasons, the Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that
the best application of the statute is to require the use of nameplate
capacity to measure the capacity of a solar module. The Treasury
Department and the IRS therefore decline to adopt this suggestion to
permit the use of ``flash'' value capacity measurements in these final
regulations.
6. Solar Tracker
Consistent with section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vi), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(b)(6) would have provided that a solar
[[Page 85811]]
tracker means a mechanical system that moves solar modules according to
the position of the sun and to increase energy output. Section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vii) provides that torque tubes (as defined in proposed
Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(7)) or structural fasteners (as defined in proposed
Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(8)) are solar tracker components that are eligible
components for purposes of the section 45X credit.
Commenters requested that the definition of a solar tracker (not an
eligible component) in section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vi) be modified to allow
solar thermal collectors, heliostats, and fixed tilt systems
(additional items) to be solar tracker components as defined in section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vii). A solar tracker is defined in 45X(c)(3)(B)(vi) as a
``mechanical system that moves solar modules according to the position
of the sun to increase energy output.'' To be a solar tracker, a device
must be a mechanical system that moves a solar module. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have authority to expand the definition
of solar tracker to include additional items such as the ones suggested
that increase energy output without moving solar modules. Moreover,
modification of the definition of a solar tracker in the manner the
commenter requested would not result in such additional items
qualifying as eligible components because a solar tracker is not a
solar energy component that is an eligible component under section
45X(c)(1)(A)(i). Section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vii) provides that torque tubes
and structural fasteners are the only two solar tracker components that
may qualify as eligible components. The Treasury Department and the IRS
do not have authority to expand the categories of eligible solar
tracker components. For these reasons, the Treasury Department and the
IRS decline to adopt this request in the final regulations.
7. Torque Tube
Consistent with section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(I), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(b)(7)(i) would have provided that torque tube means a structural
steel support element (including longitudinal purlins) that: (i) is
part of a solar tracker; (ii) is of any cross-sectional shape; (iii)
may be assembled from individually manufactured segments; (iv) spans
longitudinally between foundation posts; (v) supports solar panels and
is connected to a mounting attachment for solar panels (with or without
separate module interface rails); and (vi) is rotated by means of a
drive system.
Commenters suggested various statutory revisions to the definition
of torque tube in section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(I). A commenter recommended
replacing the definition with a more generalized term such as ``Tracker
Structural Frame'' to allow for other common solar collector
morphologies. Another commenter requested removing or revising section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(I)(dd) to include single foundation mounted
structures or ground-mounted carousel structures. One commenter
proposed clarifying that aluminum bearings, steel damper arms, steel
saddle brackets, and steel bottom brackets are included in the
definition of torque tubes or structural fasteners. Alternatively, the
commenter suggested providing either: (i) a non-exclusive list of items
that are included in the definition of torque tube or structural
fasteners, or (ii) a test similar to the functionally interdependent or
integral part tests under proposed Sec. 1.48-9(f)(2)(ii) and (f)(3) to
determine when a component is included in the definition of a torque
tube or structural fastener.
Because section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(I) specifically defines torque
tube for purposes of section 45X, the Treasury Department and the IRS
do not have the authority to expand the definition of torque tubes and
solar tracker components in the final regulations to include additional
solar energy components. As previously discussed, the Treasury
Department and the IRS also lack authority to incorporate a functional
interdependence or integral part tests that would allow other
components not specified in the statute to qualify for the section 45X
credit. For these reasons, the Treasury Department and the IRS decline
to adopt these comments in the final regulations.
8. Structural Fastener
Consistent with section 45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(II), proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(b)(8)(i) would have defined a structural fastener to mean a
component that is used: (i) to connect the mechanical and drive system
components of a solar tracker to the foundation of such solar tracker;
(ii) to connect torque tubes to drive assemblies; or (iii) to connect
segments of torque tubes to one another.
Several commenters requested revisions to the definition of
structural fastener in proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(8)(i). For example,
commenters requested that the definition of structural fastener be
extended ``beyond steel and iron torque tubes to specifically allow for
innovations made from other materials,'' such as durable plastic; that
solar frames made from greenhouse gas reducing steel and roll-form
fabricated frames (as opposed to the current industry standard,
imported extruded aluminum frames) qualify as structural fasteners,
solar modules, or torque tubes; and that the definition of structural
fasteners be expanded to include those that secure the photovoltaic
module to the torque tube or module interface rails. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the authority to expand the
definition of structural fasteners and solar tracker components in the
final regulations to include additional solar energy components.
However, the Treasury Department and the IRS note that a component that
is used for any of the functions described in section
45X(c)(3)(B)(vii)(II) would be considered a structural fastener for
purposes of section 45X. The Treasury Department and the IRS think that
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(8)(i) and the statutory definition of a
structural fastener is sufficiently clear to address the requested
clarifications. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(8)(i) is therefore adopted in
these final regulations without revision.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(8)(iii) would have required that, for
substantiation purposes, a taxpayer must document that a structural
fastener is used in a manner described in proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(b)(8)(i)(A), (B), or (C), with a bill of sale or other similar
documentation that explicitly describes such use. One commenter
specifically supported the substantiation requirement for structural
fasteners in proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(8)(iii). Another commenter
requested the final rules require taxpayers to substantiate that the
structural fasteners for which they are claiming the section 45X credit
include only the manufactured component (bolt or rivet) itself. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have determined there is no need for
further clarification of the substantiation requirement for structural
fasteners in addition to the specific requirements relating to use in
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)(8)(iii) and the general substantiation
requirements in section 6001 of the Code. For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to adopt this comment in the final
regulations.
C. Wind Energy Components
1. In General
Consistent with section 45X(c)(4), proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c) would
have provided that a wind energy component means a blade, nacelle,
tower, offshore wind foundation, or related offshore wind vessel.
Commenters generally requested expanding proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c) to
include other non-listed wind energy components such as structural
fasteners. Section 45X(c)(4) specifically provides a list of qualifying
wind energy
[[Page 85812]]
eligible components. The Treasury Department and the IRS do not have
the authority to expand the statutorily enumerated list of wind energy
components eligible for a section 45X credit. For this reason, the
Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt the commenters request
in these final regulations.
2. Nacelle
Consistent with section 45X(c)(4)(B)(iii), proposed Sec. 1.45-
3(c)(3)(i) would have defined a nacelle to mean the assembly of the
drivetrain and other tower-top components of a wind turbine (with the
exception of the blades and the hub) within their cover housing.
A commenter stated that guidance should distinguish between
manufacturing of eligible wind energy components (for example, in a
manufacturing facility) from the installation of wind energy components
at the relevant project site, as the latter does not constitute
manufacturing or production of eligible components. The Treasury
Department and the IRS have determined that the definition of
``produced by the taxpayer'' provided in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1)
is sufficient to clarify that production of an eligible component
requires substantially transforming constituent elements, materials, or
subcomponents into a complete and distinct eligible component that is
functionally different from that which would result from disqualifying
minor assembly or superficial modification of the elements, materials
or subcomponents.
Another commenter requested that the final regulations recognize
that, where a new drivetrain and associated equipment (the pitch
bearing, pitch system, main shaft, main bearing, gearbox, flex
coupling, and slip ring) are produced for use in repowering of existing
wind turbines and installed into an existing nacelle cover housing with
certain other used equipment (including yaw bearing and baseplate), the
nacelle is eligible for the section 45X credit. Under this commenter's
approach, the drivetrain of the nacelle must be new to be eligible for
the section 45X credit. Another commenter also suggests inclusion of a
``reasonable computation'' of the section 45X credit for repowered
eligible components.
The Treasury Department and the IRS note that repowering is a form
of onsite re-manufacturing that is typically accomplished through a
hybrid of primary and secondary production that utilizes a mix of
existing and new components. To produce a nacelle within the definition
of proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(3)(i), the taxpayer would need to meet the
requirements of the definition of ``produced by the taxpayer'' provided
in proposed Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(1), including by substantially
transforming the combination of existing and new subcomponents into a
new nacelle that is distinct from the original nacelle. In some
circumstances, nacelle repowering may constitute production of an
eligible component. For example, a taxpayer that manufactures and
installs a new drivetrain and associated subcomponents within housing
atop a wind tower will be considered to have substantially transformed
the combination of new and existing subcomponents, so that taxpayer
will have produced an eligible nacelle. In contrast, a taxpayer that
merely replaces the controller in a nacelle with a new one will not
have substantially transformed the combination of new and existing
subcomponents, so that taxpayer will not have produced an eligible
nacelle. Routine maintenance or part replacement would fall under the
definition of disqualifying minor assembly or ``superficial
modification.''
3. Related Offshore Wind Vessel
Consistent with section 45X(c)(4)(B)(iv), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(c)(4)(i) would have defined related offshore wind vessel to mean any
vessel that is purpose-built or retrofitted for purposes of the
development, transport, installation, operation, or maintenance of
offshore wind energy components. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(4)(i) would
have clarified that a vessel is purpose-built for development,
transport, installation, operation, or maintenance of offshore wind
energy components if it is built to be capable of performing such
functions and it is of a type that is commonly used in the offshore
wind industry. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(4)(i) would have further
clarified that a vessel is retrofitted for development, transport,
installation, operation, or maintenance of offshore wind energy
components if such vessel was incapable of performing such functions
prior to being retrofitted, the retrofit causes the vessel to be
capable of performing such functions, and the retrofitted vessel is of
a type that is commonly used in the offshore wind industry.
Under proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(4)(ii), consistent with section
45X(b)(1)(F)(i), the credit amount for a related offshore wind vessel
would have been equal to 10 percent of the sales price of the vessel.
Under the Proposed Regulations the sales price of the vessel does not
include the price of maintenance, services, or other similar items that
may be sold with the vessel. For a related offshore wind vessel with
respect to which a Related Person Election under section
45X(a)(3)(B)(i) has been made, the election would not cause the sale
price of such vessel to be treated as having been determined with
respect to a transaction between uncontrolled taxpayers for purposes of
section 482 of the Code and the regulations thereunder.
One commenter requested clarification on the valuation of
retrofitted offshore wind vessels and requested guidance on whether the
section 45X credit applies to the cost of the retrofit itself, the
value-add of the retrofit, the cost of the final sale of a retrofitted
vessel, or some other amount. The Treasury Department and the IRS
confirm that the credit amount specified in section 45X(b)(1)(F)(i)--
ten percent of the sales price of such vessel--specifically applies to
any related offshore wind vessel which is purpose-built or retrofitted
as provided in section 45X(c)(4)(B)(iv).
A commenter stated that the definition of an offshore wind vessel
is too narrow and that more standard vessel types (for example,
tugboats and barges) that are capable of doing offshore wind work
should also be eligible for the section 45X credit if they are being
constructed or retrofitted for the purpose of offshore wind work. The
Treasury Department and the IRS note that section 45X(c)(4)(B)(iv) and
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(4)(i) would have defined a related offshore
wind vessel to mean ``any vessel'' that is purpose-built or retrofitted
for purposes of the development, transport, installation, operation, or
maintenance of offshore wind energy components. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(c)(4)(i) would have clarified that a vessel is purpose-built for
development, transport, installation, operation, or maintenance of
offshore wind energy components if it is built to be capable of
performing such functions and it is of a type that is commonly used in
the offshore wind industry. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(4)(i) would have
further clarified that a vessel is retrofitted for development,
transport, installation, operation, or maintenance of offshore wind
energy components if such vessel was incapable of performing such
functions prior to being retrofitted, the retrofit causes the vessel to
be capable of performing such functions, and the retrofitted vessel is
of a type that is commonly used in the offshore wind industry. Thus, if
a vessel meets the definition of a related offshore wind vessel in
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(4)(i), there are no limitations as to the
type of
[[Page 85813]]
vessel that may be an eligible component.
The commenter's requested clarification would require an
application of the standard in proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(4)(i) to
specific cases for which a categorical determination of eligibility for
additional vessel types would not be appropriate in these final
regulations because such a determination would depend on the specific
facts of each case.
Although no comments were received on proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(c)(4)(i), the Treasury Department and the IRS revise proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(c)(4)(i) in these final regulations to clarify that Federal
income tax principles apply in determining the accuracy of the sales
price used to calculate the section 45X credit. This revision provides
greater certainty as to what principles apply for purposes of the
section 45X credit and is in addition to the specific exclusions from a
vessel's sales price in proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(4)(i), which included
maintenance, services, or other similar items that may be sold with the
vessel.
4. Total Rated Capacity of the Completed Wind Turbine
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(6) would have provided that, for purposes
of proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c), the total rated capacity of the completed
wind turbine means, for the completed wind turbine for which a blade,
nacelle, offshore wind foundation, or tower was manufactured and sold,
the nameplate capacity at the time of sale as certified to the relevant
national or international standards, such as IEC 61400, or American
National Standards Institute (ANSI)/American Clean Power Association
(ACP) 101-1-2021, the Small Wind Turbine Standard (Standard). Under
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(6), certification of the turbine to such
Standards must be documented by a certificate issued by an accredited
certification body and the total rated capacity of a wind turbine must
be expressed in watts.
One commenter expressed support for the proposal requiring that
qualifying wind turbine components must be made and sold for use on
certified wind turbines. Another commenter recommended including both
American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) 9.1-2009 and ANSI/ACP 101-1-
2021 as acceptable wind turbine certification standards. The commenter
explained that ANSI/ACP 101-1-2021 is a revision of the AWEA standard
(the original small wind certification standard, and all currently
certified small wind systems are certified to this standard) that
streamlines the certification process, but there is no requirement that
turbines with the original certification must recertify to the new
ANSI/ACP standard. Thus, the commenter states that including both
standards in the final rules will allow currently certified turbines
made in the United States to earn section 45X credits as well as new
turbines currently in the certification process following the newer
standard. The Treasury Department and the IRS agree with this request
and these final regulations revise proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(6) to add
both AWEA 9.1-2009 and ANSI/ACP 101-1-2021 as acceptable wind turbine
certification standards.
A commenter sought clarification as to whether a wind tower
producer may rely on a certification of the total rated capacity of the
turbine obtained from the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) that
produces the completed wind turbine in which the wind tower is
incorporated, provided the certificate was issued by an accredited
certification body. The commenter noted that requiring wind tower
producers to independently verify the capacity of the completed turbine
would cause ``undue expense and delay.'' To provide assurance to the
commenter, a wind tower producer may rely on an OEM's certification of
the total rated capacity of the completed wind turbine in which the
tower was incorporated, but the Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined that the rules as set out by proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(6)
and (7) do not require further clarification on this point.
D. Inverters
1. In General
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2), proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d) would
define an inverter as an end product that is suitable to convert direct
current (DC) electricity from one or more solar modules or certified
distributed wind energy systems into alternating current (AC)
electricity. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d) would have further provided that
an end product is suitable to convert DC electricity from one or more
solar modules or certified distributed wind energy systems into AC
electricity if, in the form sold by the manufacturer, it is able to
connect with such modules or systems and convert DC electricity to AC
electricity from such connected source. For purposes of section 45X,
the term inverter includes a central inverter, commercial inverter,
distributed wind inverter, microinverter, or residential inverter.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d) would have clarified the definition of each
of these types of inverters, including the required rated outputs.
The preamble to the Proposed Regulations stated that section
45X(c)(2) requires certain types of inverters be ``suitable to'' or
``suitable for'' a statutorily required use or application to be
considered an eligible component. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d) would also
have provided the calculation of the credit amount for each type of
inverter. In general, the credit amount for each type of inverter would
be equal to the product of the inverter's total rated capacity and the
amount prescribed in section 45X(b)(2)(B) for such inverter.
One commenter requested the final rules provide a credit for
utility-scale power converters and that a ``utility-scale power
converter'' be defined in a manner consistent with section 2.1.9 of
Underwriters Laboratories Standard 1741 (2002). Specifically, the
commenter requested modifying the final rules to provide a credit for
products that only convert direct current to direct current or
alternating current to direct current. Because section 45X(c)(2)(A)
specifically defines the term inverter to mean ``an end product which
is suitable to convert direct current electricity . . . into
alternating current electricity,'' the Treasury Department and the IRS
do not have the authority to expand the definition of inverter in the
final regulations to include these additional products. For this
reason, the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt this
comment in the final regulations.
Another commenter requested that, for each type of inverter
provided for under section 45X(c)(2), the rated output of alternating
current power be defined as ``the maximum continuous grid-tied power
rating the inverter is capable of handling.'' The commenter asserts
that the suggested change will ``ensure consistent interpretation
across technologies despite consumer-driven decisions impacting
output.'' Section 45X(c)(2) uses the term ``rated output'' to define,
in part, a commercial inverter, distributed wind inverter,
microinverter, residential inverter, or utility inverter. The Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to adopt this comment in the final
regulations because the term rated output is in the statutory
definition for these inverters.
Several commenters requested that the final rules provide a section
45X credit for inverters that convert direct current from sources other
than solar modules or certified distributed wind energy systems as long
as these inverters meet the technical requirements of an inverter
defined under section 45X(c)(2). Section 45X(c)(2)(A)
[[Page 85814]]
specifically defines the term inverter to mean ``an end product which
is suitable to convert direct current electricity from one or more
solar modules or certified distributed wind energy systems into
alternating current electricity.'' Other types of inverters such as
bidirectional electric vehicle inverters or utility and commercial
inverters that are in practice used with battery modules can meet the
existing suitability standard within the definition without additional
clarification required. For this reason, the Treasury Department and
the IRS decline to adopt this comment in the final regulations.
2. Central Inverter
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2)(B), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(d)(2)(i) would have defined a central inverter as an inverter that is
suitable for large utility-scale systems and has a capacity that is
greater than 1,000 kilowatts, expressed on an alternating current watt
basis. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(2)(i) would have further clarified
that an inverter is suitable for large utility-scale systems if, in the
form sold by the manufacturer, it is capable of serving as a component
in a large utility-scale system and meets the core engineering
specifications for such application. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(2)(ii)
would have provided a credit equal to the product of 0.25 cents
multiplied by the total rated capacity of the central inverter where
the total rated capacity is expressed on an alternating current watt
basis.
One commenter requested the credit amount available for a central
inverter be changed to match the credit available for utility inverters
because utility inverters are eligible for a credit that is six times
higher than central inverters. Because section 45X(b)(2)(B) provides
the credit amounts available for central inverters and utility
inverters, the Treasury Department and the IRS do not have the
authority to make the requested change. For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to adopt this comment in the final
regulations.
3. Commercial Inverter
a. Definition
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2)(C), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(d)(3)(i) would have provided that a commercial inverter means an
inverter that is suitable for commercial or utility-scale applications,
has a rated output of 208, 480, 600 or 800 volt three-phase power, and
has a capacity expressed on an alternating current watt basis that is
not less than 20 kilowatts and not greater than 125 kilowatts.
One commenter requested the definition of a commercial inverter be
changed to provide a credit for inverters with a rated output greater
than 800 volt three-phase power. Section 45X(c)(2)(C)(ii) defines a
commercial inverter, in part, as having ``a rated output of 208, 480,
600, or 800 volt three-phase power.'' The Treasury Department and the
IRS do not have the authority to expand the definition of a commercial
inverter in the final regulations to those with a rated output greater
than 800 volt three-phase power. For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to adopt this comment in the final
regulations.
A few commenters requested that the final rules modify the
definition of a commercial inverter to include a DC optimized
commercial inverter system, and that, when DC optimizers are paired
with a commercial inverter, the credit amount available for commercial
inverters should be determined in a manner similar to the credit
computation for direct current optimized inverter systems (DC optimized
inverter systems, as the term would have been defined in Proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(d)(5)(iii)(B) and discussed in Part IV.D.3.a. of this Summary
of Comments and Explanation of Revisions). Generally, these commenters
requested that, with the modified definition of commercial inverter,
the available credit be computed as a product of $0.02 multiplied by
the lesser of the sum of the alternating current capacity of each DC
optimizer when paired with the inverter in the DC optimized inverter
system or the alternating current capacity of the inverter in the DC
optimized inverter system. No language in the statutory text or
proposed rules prohibits the use of direct current optimizers with
commercial inverters. Thus, it is unnecessary to modify the final rules
to state that DC optimizers may be used with a commercial inverter.
Section 45X(b)(1)(I) provides that the amount of the section 45X
credit for an inverter is equal to the applicable amount with respect
to each type of inverter multiplied by the capacity of such inverter
(expressed on a per alternating current watt basis). The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have the authority to change the method
for computing the credit for commercial inverters. In contrast,
language that appears only in the definition of ``microinverter'' in
section 45X(c)(2)(E) (`suitable to connect to one solar module') does
require clarification about how to apply the definition to DC optimized
systems and multi-module microinverters. Because this language does not
appear in the definition of ``commercial inverter'' in section
45X(c)(2)(C), there is no analogous need to clarify the application of
the definition or credit calculation. For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to adopt these requests pertaining to
commercial inverters in the final regulations.
b. Credit Amount
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(3)(iii) would have provided a credit
equal to the product of 2 cents multiplied by the total rated capacity
of the commercial inverter where the total rated capacity is expressed
on an alternating current watt basis.
Commenters requested that DC optimizers be allowed to be paired
with commercial or utility scale system configurations, like
microinverters. This comment is not adopted for the reasons provided in
Part IV.D.3.a. of this Summary of Comments and Explanation of
Revisions.
4. Microinverters
a. Definition
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2)(E), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(d)(5)(i) would have defined a microinverter as an inverter that is
suitable to connect with one solar module; has a rated output of 120 or
240 volt single-phase power, or 208 or 480 volt three-phase power; and
has a capacity, expressed on an AC watt basis, that is not greater than
650 watts. One commenter requested the final rules change the maximum
capacity limit for the microinverter from 650 watts to 700 watts to
accommodate future technological advancements. Because section
45X(c)(2)(E)(iii) provides the maximum capacity of a microinverter, the
Treasury Department and the IRS do not have the authority to make the
requested change. For this reason, the Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this comment in the final regulations.
b. Suitable To Connect to One Solar Module--in General
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5)(iii)(A) would have clarified that an
inverter is suitable to connect to one solar module if, in the form
sold by the manufacturer, it is capable of connecting to one or more
solar modules and regulating the DC electricity from each module
independently before that electricity is converted into alternating
current electricity.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5)(iii)(B) would have clarified that a DC
optimized inverter system may qualify as a microinverter. Proposed
Sec. 1.45X-
[[Page 85815]]
3(d)(5)(iii)(B) would have defined a DC optimized inverter system to
mean an inverter that is comprised of an inverter connected to multiple
DC optimizers that are each designed to connect to one solar module.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5)(iii)(B) would have provided that a DC
optimized inverter system is suitable to connect with one solar module
if, in the form sold by the manufacturer, it is capable of connecting
to one or more solar modules and regulating the DC electricity from
each module independently before that electricity is converted into
alternating current electricity. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5)(iv)(B)
would have provided that a DC optimized inverter system qualifies as a
microinverter if each DC optimizer paired with the inverter in a DC
optimized inverter system meets the requirements of section
45X(c)(2)(E) and a taxpayer must produce and sell the inverter and the
DC optimizers in the DC optimized inverter system together as a
combined end product.
Several commenters agreed with the proposed rule permitting DC
optimizers paired with an inverter to qualify as microinverters and
receive the corresponding credit amount. One commenter suggested
revising the definition of a DC optimized inverter systems to more
clearly define the qualifying system components of a DC optimized
inverter system. This commenter proposed that qualifying system
components include items that control the DC output of one or more
solar modules and are integral to the function of the inverter and
modules. The Treasury Department and the IRS, in consultation with the
Department of Energy, conclude that the additional confirmation the
commenter is requesting is not necessary as it would not provide
additional clarity. For this reason, the Treasury Department and the
IRS decline to adopt this suggestion in the final regulations.
Several commenters requested that the final rules remove the
requirement that a taxpayer produce and sell both the inverter and the
DC optimizers in the DC optimized inverter system as a combined end
product. One commenter expressed the view that the requirement distorts
the market, provides an unfair advantage to companies that already
manufacture both items, and requires companies to seek out partnerships
solely for the purpose of obtaining the section 45X credit. Other
commenters that manufacture both products state that the proposed
requirement is inconsistent with standard industry practices where a
manufacturer sells the items separately. In contrast, one commenter
supported the ``combined end product'' requirement and suggested it
also be applied to multi-module inverters to prevent multiple entities
from claiming section 45X credits for the same system. Section
45X(c)(2)(A) defines an inverter as an end product that is suitable to
convert DC electricity from one or more solar modules or certified
distributed wind energy systems into AC electricity. For each type of
inverter listed under section 45X(c)(2), section 45X(b)(1)(I) provides
the applicable credit is determined as an amount equal to the product
of each inverter's applicable amount multiplied by the capacity of such
inverter. The section 45X credit is separately computed for each
inverter. The Treasury Department and the IRS do not have the authority
to allow a credit solely for a DC optimizer, because it does not
convert DC electricity into AC electricity as the definition of
inverter in section 45X(c)(2) requires. The Treasury Department and the
IRS also do not have the authority to change the number of inverter
units used to compute the available credit amount. For these reasons,
the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt these comments in
these final regulations. However, while proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(d)(5)(iv)(B) requires that the inverter and DC optimizer in the DC
optimized inverter system must be produced and sold as a combined end
product, the Treasury Department and the IRS clarify that the inverter
and the DC optimizer do not need to be physically packaged together at
sale, and the inverter and DC optimizer do not need to be fully
interconnected and assembled at the time of sale.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5) would have clarified that a multi-
module inverter may also qualify as a microinverter. Proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(d)(5)(iii)(C) would have defined a multi-module inverter to
mean an inverter that is comprised of an inverter with independent
connections and DC optimizing components for two or more modules.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5)(iii)(C) would have further provided that a
multi-module microinverter is suitable to connect with one solar module
if it is capable of connecting to one or more solar modules and
regulating the DC electricity from each module independently before
that electricity is converted into alternating current electricity.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5)(iv)(C) would have provided that
multimodule inverter qualifies as a microinverter if it meets the
requirements of section 45X(c)(2)(E).
One commenter suggested revising the definition of a multi-module
inverter to more clearly define the qualifying system components of a
multi-module inverter. The commenter suggested that qualifying system
components should be those items that control the DC output of one or
more solar modules and are integral to the function of the inverter and
modules. The same commenter also suggested revising the definition of a
multi-module inverter to clarify that for a multi-module inverter to
qualify as a microinverter, a taxpayer must produce and sell the
inverter and the DC optimizers together as a combined end product. A
different commenter agreed with this suggestion.
A few commenters suggested revising the definition of a multi-
module inverter to provide that a multi-module inverter includes a DC
optimized inverter system such that each DC optimizer may connect with
more than one solar module and the credit amount in such a system is
computed similarly to a DC optimized inverter system, except that the
DC optimizers are not required to be sold with the inverter as a
``combined end product.'' Other commenters disagreed with this
suggestion and support the proposed rule that would not have allowed
solar modules to share a connection to a multi-module inverter.
The reasons provided for retaining the rule for DC optimized
inverter systems also apply to adopting the requirement for multi-
module inverters. The Treasury Department and the IRS think that
requiring taxpayers to produce and sell the inverter and the DC
optimizers together as a combined end product will create parity with
DC optimized inverter systems and avoid potential abuse. For these
reasons, the Treasury Department and the IRS adopt these comments in
the final regulations.
c. Credit Amount
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5)(iv)(A) would have provided that
generally, the credit amount for a microinverter is equal to the
product of 11 cents multiplied by the total rated capacity of the
microinverter where the total rated capacity is expressed on an
alternating current watt basis.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5)(iv)(B) would have clarified how to
determine the credit amount for a DC optimized inverter system that
qualifies as a microinverter. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(d)(5)(iv)(B) would
have provided that the credit amount for a DC optimized inverter system
that qualifies as a microinverter is equal to the product of 11 cents
multiplied by the lesser of the sum of the alternating current capacity
of each DC optimizer when paired with
[[Page 85816]]
the inverter in the DC optimized inverter system or the alternating
current capacity of the inverter in the DC optimized inverter system
where capacity is measured in watts of alternating current converted
from DC electricity by the inverter in a DC optimized inverter system.
One commenter requested that the alternating current capacity of
each DC optimizer when paired with the inverter in the DC optimized
inverter system be calculated as the product of the optimizer's rated
input power capacity, the optimizer's DC-to-DC conversion efficiency
percentage, and the inverter's DC-to-AC conversion efficiency
percentage. Section 45X(b)(1)(I) provides the applicable credit is
determined as an amount equal to the product of each inverter's
applicable amount multiplied by the capacity of such inverter
(expressed on a per alternating current watt basis). The requirement
that capacity is ``expressed on an alternating current watt basis''
already factors in any DC-to-DC conversion efficiency upstream of the
DC-to-AC conversion, and the inverter's DC-to-AC conversion efficiency
percentage is accounted for by the use of ``capacity of such inverter''
(expressed on a per alternating current watt basis). Therefore, these
requirements are duplicative of rules contained in the statutory text.
For this reason, the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt
this suggestion in the final regulations.
5. Utility Inverter
Consistent with section 45X(c)(2)(G), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(d)(7)(i) would have defined a utility inverter as an inverter that is
suitable for commercial or utility-scale systems, has a rated output of
not less than 600 volt three-phase power, and has a capacity expressed
on an alternating current watt basis that is greater than 125 kilowatts
and not greater than 1000 kilowatts.
One commenter requested reducing the required rated output from
``not less than 600 volt three-phase power'' to ``not less than 480
volt three-phase power.'' Section 45X(c)(2)(G)(ii) defines a utility
inverter, in part, as having ``a rated output of not less than 600 volt
three-phase power.'' The Treasury Department and the IRS decline to
adopt the commenter's request because defining a utility inverter to
include those with a rated output of not less than 480 volt three-phase
power would be inconsistent with the statute.
E. Qualifying Battery Components
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(1) would define a qualifying battery
component as electrode active materials, battery cells, or battery
modules.
1. Electrode Active Materials
a. In General
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(i)(A) would have defined electrode
active materials to include cathode electrode materials, anode
electrode materials, and electrochemically active materials that
contribute to the electrochemical processes necessary for energy
storage. In general, electrode active materials are materials that are
capable of being used within a battery for energy storage. Proposed
Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(i)(A) would also have provided that the following
materials in a battery or vehicle would not qualify for the section 45X
credit as an electrode active material: battery management systems,
terminal assemblies, cell containments, gas release valves, module
containments, module connectors, compression plates, straps, pack
terminals, bus bars, thermal management systems, and pack jackets.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(v) would have clarified that a taxpayer
may claim only one section 45X credit with respect to a material that
qualifies as both an electrode active material and an applicable
critical mineral.
Some commenters recommended altering the definition of electrode
active materials as defined in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(i) and in proposed
Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(i)(A). The Treasury Department and the IRS do not
have the authority to alter the definition of electrode active
materials as provided by the statute. For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to adopt these recommendations in the
final regulations.
One commenter raised a concern that certain definitions in the
Proposed Regulations applicable to electrode active materials would
inadvertently exclude separators from being treated as an eligible
component because those definitions do not include language specific to
the separator production process. As proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(i)(D)
specifically included separators in the definition of electrochemically
active materials, such changes to definitions are unnecessary, and the
Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt the commenter's
recommendation.
b. Cathode Electrode Materials and Anode Electrode Materials
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(i)(B) would have defined ``cathode
electrode materials'' to mean the materials that comprise the cathode
of a commercial battery technology, such as binders, and current
collectors (that is, cathode foils). Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(i)(C)
would have defined ``anode electrode materials'' to mean the materials
that comprise the anode of a commercial battery technology, including
anode foils.
A commenter recommended that the definition of cathode electrode
materials in proposed Sec. 1.45-3(e)(2)(i)(B) and of anode electrode
materials in proposed Sec. 1.45-3(e)(2)(i)(C) be clarified to specify
that the materials be ``battery-grade'' so the precursor materials are
eligible for the section 45X credit. Because these proposed definitions
would require that the materials comprise the cathode or anode of a
commercial battery technology, the Treasury Department and the IRS
conclude that specifying that such materials be ``battery-grade'' would
be redundant. For this reason, the Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt these recommendations in the final regulations.
Another commenter recommended that the definition of cathode
electrode materials be clarified to address its concern that the
qualifier ``commercial battery technology'' excludes hydrogen fuel
cells contrary to the definition of the term in the statute, which
contains no such qualifier. The Treasury Department and the IRS do not
have the authority to alter the definition of electrode active
materials as battery components as provided by the statute. For this
reason, the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt this
recommendation in the final regulations. The Treasury Department and
the IRS note, however, that although electrode active materials in
general must be capable of being used within a battery for energy
storage, such materials would still be eligible for the section 45X
credit if they are also capable of being used in other applications,
such as hydrogen fuel cells.
c. Electrochemically Active Materials
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(i)(D) would define ``electrochemically
active materials that contribute to the electrochemical processes
necessary for energy storage'' to mean the battery-grade materials that
enable the electrochemical storage within a commercial battery
technology. In addition to the list of electrochemically active
materials provided in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(i) (that is, solvents,
additives, and electrolytic salts), these may include electrolytes,
catholytes, anolytes, separators, and metal salts and oxides.
One commenter requested the definition of electrochemically active
[[Page 85817]]
materials explicitly include solid-state electrolytes. Solid-state
electrolytes are included in the definition of electrochemically active
materials because Proposed Sec. 1.45X 3(e)(2)(i)(D) includes
``electrolytes,'' with no particular form required. The Treasury
Department and the IRS conclude that specifying that such materials are
included in this definition would be redundant. For this reason, the
Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt these recommendations
in the final regulations.
d. Battery Grade Materials
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(i)(F) would have defined ``battery-
grade materials'' to mean the processed materials found in a final
battery cell or an analogous unit, or the direct battery-grade
precursors to those processed materials. A few commenters requested the
final rules clarify the meaning of direct battery-grade precursors.
Commenters also requested the final rules provide that silane gas,
ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene, and needle coke meet the
definition of electrochemically active materials as direct battery-
grade precursors. While the Treasury Department and the IRS understand
the desire for assurance, listing specific precursors that qualify as
electrochemically active materials would not be possible or advisable
because it could imply that unlisted materials do not qualify as
electrochemically active materials, particularly as battery
technologies may evolve over time. For this reason, the Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to adopt these recommendations in these
final regulations.
e. Production Costs Incurred
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(iv) would have provided that costs
incurred for purposes of determining the credit amount includes costs
as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e) that are paid or incurred within the
meaning of section 461 of the Code by the taxpayer for the production
of an electrode active material only. Thus, under the Proposed
Regulations, production costs with respect to an electrode active
material would not include any costs incurred after the production of
the electrode active material.
The Proposed Regulations would not have allowed direct material
costs as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(2)(i)(A), indirect material costs
as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(3)(ii)(E), or any costs related to the
extraction or acquisition of raw materials to be taken into account as
production costs. This limitation disallowed, for purposes of
calculating the credit: the inclusion of the cost of acquiring the raw
material used to produce the electrode active materials; the cost of
materials used for conversion, purification, or recycling of the raw
material; and other material costs related to the production of
electrode active materials. The Proposed Regulations applied section
263A and the regulations under section 263A (section 263A regulations)
solely to identify the types of costs that are includible in production
costs incurred for the purpose of computing the amount of the section
45X credit. The Proposed Regulations did not apply section 263A or the
section 263A regulations for any other purposes, such as to determine
whether a taxpayer is engaged in production activities.
The preamble to the Proposed Regulations explained that the
rationale for the proposed rule was that the credit for the production
of electrode active materials provides incentives for taxpayers to
conduct activities that add value to the production of electrode active
materials. Merely purchasing raw materials may enable a taxpayer to
produce an electrode active material but it is not by itself an
activity that adds value. In addition, excluding the costs of acquiring
electrode active materials mitigates the risk of crediting the
production costs for the same underlying material more than once as
that material is used in various stages of the production process. For
these reasons, material costs were not creditable costs under the
Proposed Regulations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS requested comments on the
proposed rule for determining the costs incurred with respect to the
production of electrode active materials. Specifically, comments were
sought as to whether and how extraction and other similar value-added
activities in the production of raw materials used in electrode active
materials should be taken into account and how extraction should be
defined, including whether the term should be defined consistent with
proposed Sec. 1.30D-3(c)(8). Comments were also requested with respect
to applicable critical minerals, which are summarized in Part V.C. of
this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions. Many of these
comments had similarities, and the reasoning and revisions in these
final regulations are described in this Part IV.E.1.e. of this Summary
of Comments and Explanation of Revisions and are adopted for both
electrode active materials and applicable critical minerals.
Approximately 72 of the comments received addressed the definition
and scope of production costs generally. Many commenters recommended
that, contrary to the Proposed Regulations, all costs with respect to
the production of electrode active materials be included in production
costs for purpose of determining the credit, including direct material
costs as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(2)(i)(A), indirect material costs
as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(3)(ii)(E), and costs related to the
extraction of raw materials.
A significant number of commenters focused their recommendations on
material costs or the costs of extraction, but there was agreement
among many of them that ``costs of production'' should be interpreted
broadly to include all costs. In support of this position, commenters
asserted that section 45X(b)(1)(J) and (M) do not place limits or
otherwise qualify production costs eligible for the credit and that the
regulations should not impose limitations not explicitly present in the
Code itself. Some of these commenters also argued that, because the
costs excluded from production costs in the Proposed Regulations are
often a substantial or predominant portion of the total costs of
producing some electrode active materials, substantial limitations on
the inclusion of these costs would contradict Congress's goal of
incentivizing the production of electrode active materials. Commenters
also disputed that direct and indirect costs are not incurred in value-
adding activities.
Some commenters also disagreed that the potential for over
crediting (that is, crediting the same production costs multiple times)
justifies denying a credit for these costs. A subset of these
commenters disagreed that over crediting was a legitimate concern,
arguing instead that section 45X provides a credit for costs incurred
at different stages of production attributable to the same underlying
material. Others agreed that over crediting might not be permissible
but that the concern was insufficient to deny entirely credits for all
costs that might be impermissibly claimed more than once for the same
underlying material. In the view of these commenters, prohibiting
crediting these same production costs multiple times would be the
proper approach rather than entirely denying all credits for these
costs. Some commenters noted that, in the case of certain specifically
identified electrode active materials, there was no risk of crediting
the same production costs multiple times and thus direct and indirect
costs should be included in the costs of production for these electrode
active materials. A third
[[Page 85818]]
set of commenters argued that credits should be permissible once under
section 45X(b)(1)(M) for applicable critical minerals and again under
section 45X(b)(1)(J) for electrode active materials.
In the case of electrode active materials that are precursors for
the production of other electrode active materials, one commenter
recommended that the cost of the precursor electrode active materials
only be included in the cost of production for which a credit may be
claimed if the precursor electrode active materials are completely
consumed in the production process and are not used for any other
commercial purpose.
A number of commenters proposed solutions to the problem of
potentially crediting the same production costs multiple times. One
solution commenters proposed was to reduce the basis of property for
which a credit has been claimed by an upstream producer. Commenters
also proposed a system under which a taxpayer would only be eligible
for a credit on costs of material for which no other taxpayer had
previously claimed a credit. This arrangement could be administered
through a system of certifications in which taxpayers would be required
to verify that its suppliers had not previously claimed credits for
costs associated with the same materials for which the taxpayer is
claiming credits. A commenter also urged that producers of electrode
active materials be able to claim a credit if they can establish that
the acquired electrode active materials and applicable critical
minerals used in the production of electrode active materials were
acquired from extraction or production outside the United States and
thus were previously ineligible for a section 45X credit.
In addition to general comments regarding the inclusion of direct,
indirect, and extraction costs, commenters recommended clarification
about more specific costs, including costs associated with
transportation. Another commenter requested the final rules be modified
to include costs of the production of anodes used in the aluminum
production to convert alumina into aluminum. Other commenters asserted
that the costs of processing and purification of materials in the
production of electrode active materials add value and should, on that
basis, be included in the scope of the credit.
Several commenters recommended that the direct and indirect costs
of the production of electrode active materials from recycled feedstock
should be classified as production costs for purposes of the credit.
According to one commenter, recycling processes begin with waste
products at what is essentially a new supply chain.
A commenter supported the Proposed Regulations' exclusion of direct
material, indirect material, and extraction costs from production costs
eligible for the credit. This commenter was concerned that a contrary
rule would invite fraud, waste, and abuse and that, in the case of
extraction costs, would be difficult to administer without the creation
of a tracing system.
With respect to costs related to extraction, the Proposed
Regulations would have excluded extraction costs because extraction
could be far removed, particularly in the case of electrode active
materials, in the supply chain from the ultimate production of the
eligible component. However, commenters highlighted the critical
importance of extraction to the production of both applicable critical
minerals and electrode active materials as well as the close connection
these costs often have to the final production of these materials.
The Treasury Department and the IRS have reconsidered the treatment
of extraction costs in these final regulations for taxpayers that
extract raw materials domestically and for taxpayers that acquire
either domestically or foreign-sourced extracted raw materials. For
both electrode active materials and applicable critical minerals, the
final regulations in Sec. Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(iv) and 1.45X-4(c)(3),
respectively, allow taxpayers to include extraction costs related to
the extraction of raw materials in the United States or a United States
territory, but only if those costs are paid or incurred by the taxpayer
that claims the section 45X credit with respect to the relevant
electrode active material or applicable critical mineral. The Treasury
Department and the IRS note that the section 45X credit is available
only to taxpayers that produce and sell an eligible component. Thus,
the final regulations provide that extraction costs may be included in
production costs consistent with the rules provided under section 263A
only if such costs are incurred by the taxpayer that claims the section
45X credit with respect to the relevant applicable critical mineral or
electrode active material. The Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined that this inclusion of extraction costs incurred by the
taxpayer most accurately captures the meaning ``the costs incurred by
the taxpayer with respect to the production of'' applicable critical
minerals and electrode active materials under section 45X(b)(1)(J) and
(M). If, however, a taxpayer acquires extracted raw material as a
direct (or indirect) material cost, the material costs may be included
as production costs consistent with the rules provided under section
263A regardless of whether the extracted material is domestically- or
foreign-sourced.
With respect to direct and indirect material costs, the Proposed
Regulations would have excluded direct and indirect material costs from
production costs for both applicable critical minerals and electrode
active materials. The Proposed Regulations excluded material costs from
production costs based on an interpretation of the term ``costs
incurred by the taxpayer with respect to production'' in section
45X(b)(1)(J) and (M) as being limited to value-added activities in the
production process. Electrode active materials and applicable critical
minerals differ from all other eligible components described in section
45X because their credit amounts are calculated as a percentage of
production costs rather than specifying a fixed dollar amount or rate.
The preamble to the Proposed Regulations stated that the mere purchase
of materials does not itself add value in a production process despite
being a necessary part of such process. Furthermore, it is unlikely
that Congress intended to allow production costs associated with
applicable critical minerals or electrode active materials to be
credited multiple times, due to the high risk of fraud, waste, and
abuse; the administrative burden of preventing these outcomes; and the
limited effectiveness in supporting domestic production of new eligible
components. The exclusion of direct and indirect material costs
addressed these concerns.
Numerous commenters highlighted the importance and appropriateness
of including material costs in production costs. There was, however,
disagreement as to whether and to what extent the costs of non-U.S.
produced constituent elements, materials, and subcomponents used in the
production of electrode active materials should be included in
production costs. Some commenters recommended that the costs of all
materials be included while others urged limitations to only credit
materials produced domestically. One commenter proposed that the final
regulations modify the proposed rule regarding constituent elements,
materials, and subcomponents used in the production of applicable
critical minerals to distinguish between imports of materials otherwise
available from domestic sources and imported
[[Page 85819]]
materials that are not available from domestic sources.
The Treasury Department and the IRS, after consultation with the
Department of Energy, have reconsidered the proposed exclusion of all
material costs based on these comments. The final regulations adopt a
rule allowing taxpayers that produce applicable critical minerals and
electrode active materials as specified in the statute to include
direct and indirect materials costs (as described in the referenced
section 263A regulations) in production costs if certain conditions are
met, but only if those direct or indirect material costs do not relate
to the purchase of materials that are an eligible component at the time
of acquisition (such as an electrode active material or applicable
critical mineral). In addition, two examples illustrating the revised
production costs rule are included in Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(iv)(A)(2).
In finalizing this rule, the Treasury Department and the IRS
considered the provisions of section 45X and determined this final rule
appropriately implements the statute as a whole. Section 45X(a)(1) and
(2) limit the section 45X credit to the sum of the credit amounts
determined under section 45X(b) with respect to each eligible component
that is produced by the taxpayer and, during such taxable year, sold to
an unrelated person in the taxpayer's trade or business. The statute
allows a section 45X credit for the sale of an applicable critical
mineral or electrode active material produced and sold by the taxpayer
in its business. The section 45X credit for an applicable critical
mineral or electrode active material is equal to 10 percent of the
costs incurred by the taxpayer with respect to production, under
section 45X(b)(1)(M) and (J), respectively.
In calculating a taxpayer's costs incurred in the production of
applicable critical minerals and electrode active materials, it is
necessary to consider situations involving the integration of eligible
components (whether directly made by the taxpayer or purchased from
another taxpayer) in the course of producing an applicable critical
mineral or electrode active material. Generally, integrating one
eligible component into another produced eligible component results in
two credits pursuant to section 45X(d)(4) if the taxpayer produced
both, while integrating a purchased eligible component into another
produced eligible component will only result in a credit for the
eligible component produced by the taxpayer. In the case of an
applicable critical mineral or electrode active material, however, the
section 45X credit calculation differs from the other eligible
components. Thus, further examination was needed to determine how a
credit should be calculated in such a case.
The Treasury Department and the IRS considered the treatment of a
vertically integrated taxpayer. For example, assume a taxpayer produced
an applicable critical mineral or electrode active material and
incurred $50X of costs with respect thereto (EC 1) and integrated EC 1
into a separate applicable critical mineral or electrode active
material (EC 2), incurring an additional $100X of costs with respect to
the production of EC 2 (total production costs of $150X), with EC 2
ultimately being sold by the taxpayer to an unrelated person. In
calculating the section 45X credit, pursuant to section 45X(d)(4),
taxpayer is treated as having sold an eligible component to an
unrelated person if such component is integrated, incorporated, or
assembled into another eligible component which is sold to an unrelated
person. It is important to note that section 45X makes no distinction
between integrated eligible components that were purchased or produced
by the taxpayer. As section 45X(d)(4) directs the taxpayer to treat
itself as selling both EC 1 and EC 2 to the unrelated person, it is
necessary to determine a credit for each EC 1 and EC 2 when both were
produced by the taxpayer.
In this example, the $50X of production costs attributable to EC 1
were not incurred with respect to the production of EC 2, since the
production of EC 2--in other words, the substantial transformation of
EC 1 into EC 2--does not include the production of EC 1. Thus, the
taxpayer would be eligible for a total section 45X credit of $15X: $5X
(10% of $50X) for EC 1 and $10X (10% of $100X) for EC 2. If the $50X of
production costs attributable to EC 1 were included for both EC 1 and
EC 2, then the same costs would be double credited. Double crediting
would result in the taxpayer generating a $20X credit from the sale of
EC 1 and EC2, which would provide an increased credit amount as
compared to the credit amount that should result from the $150X of
actual production costs incurred (or, stated differently, a section 45X
credit that was 13.33 percent of the taxpayer's actual $150X of
production costs in the example). The correct result is taxpayer should
be viewed as having incurred $50X of production costs for EC 1 and
$100X of production costs for EC 2, resulting in a $15X credit, which
also matches 10 percent of the taxpayer's actual production costs
($150X) and does not create a double crediting of costs.
Alternatively, consider a taxpayer that, instead of producing EC 1,
purchases EC 1 for $60X. The taxpayer then spends another $100X
producing EC 2, using EC 1. Similar to the vertically integrated
taxpayer, when the taxpayer sells EC 2, pursuant to section 45X(d)(4),
the taxpayer is treated as having sold EC 1 and EC 2 to an unrelated
person. The difference is that in this case the taxpayer did not
produce EC 1, and therefore the taxpayer does not satisfy section
45X(a)(1)(A) for a section 45X credit for the sale of EC 1. If the
taxpayer were permitted to include the costs for EC 1 ($60X) in
calculating the credit for EC 2, then the taxpayer would receive a
larger credit for producing EC 2 than if the taxpayer had produced both
EC 1 and EC 2. Without a clearer indication in the statute that
Congress intended to treat these two fact patterns differently, in a
way that disadvantages vertically integrated production, the statute as
a whole is appropriately implemented when the result is the same credit
amount for EC 2 ($10X in these examples) whether the taxpayer purchases
or produces EC 1.
In comparing the two results of these examples under the final
rule, the vertically integrated taxpayer gets a larger total section
45X credit by directly engaging in more credit generating activities,
while the non-vertically integrated taxpayer receives a section 45X
credit commensurate with its activities of producing EC 2, but no
credit for integrated eligible components that it did not produce.
These results are consistent with the general rule of section 45X(a)(1)
and (2) and avoid allowing taxpayers to use the same cost in multiple
credit calculations.
Section 45X(d)(2) provides that only sales of eligible components
produced within the United States, or a United States territory, are
taken into account for purposes of section 45X and is additional
support for the rule that does not include foreign applicable critical
minerals or electrode active materials in production costs, regardless
of whether purchased or produced by the taxpayer. Allowing a foreign
produced applicable critical mineral or electrode active material to
increase the section 45X credit conflicts with section 45X(d)(2),
particularly when considered with the rule under section 45X(d)(4). The
Treasury Department and the IRS also note that section 45X(d)(2)
confirms that treatment as an ``eligible component'' is not dependent
on where production occurred, and so a foreign applicable critical
mineral or electrode active
[[Page 85820]]
material is an eligible component subject to the rule in section
45X(d)(4).
The final rule is also consistent with the overall purpose of
section 45X and addresses the concerns described in the preamble of the
Proposed Regulations. While the final rule adopts certain commenters'
position that incurring material costs is necessary and may add value
to a production process, the Treasury Department and IRS maintain that
the inclusion of material costs must be balanced against the risk of
multiple crediting of the same costs and the creation of incentives
that are contrary to the purpose of section 45X. The final rule
accomplishes this balance. Further, although applicable critical
minerals and electrode active materials, or any other eligible
component, produced outside the United States do not pose a risk of
multiple crediting, permitting the production costs of a non-U.S.
produced applicable critical mineral or electrode active material to be
included in production costs would provide an incentive for the
purchase of electrode active materials or applicable critical minerals
produced abroad, which is inconsistent with the overall statutory
scheme and purpose of section 45X (that is, to encourage domestic
production of eligible components). Thus, excluding all costs of
acquiring materials that are eligible components (for example, an
applicable critical mineral or electrode active material at the time of
acquisition) as a direct or indirect material cost with respect to the
production of another applicable critical mineral or electrode active
material appropriately implements the statute. It is also appropriate
to have the same rules for applicable critical minerals and electrode
active materials with respect to production costs, as the statutory
language regarding calculation of the credit for applicable critical
minerals and electrode active materials is the same.
These final regulations also include certain substantiation
requirements for a taxpayer that is claiming a section 45X credit with
respect to an applicable critical mineral or electrode active material.
The preamble to the Proposed Regulations supported not including all
direct and indirect material costs by referencing the possibility that
the same production costs may be credited multiple times and the
potential for increased fraud and abuse related to claiming the section
45X credit. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(c)(4) would have required the
taxpayer to document that their product meets the criteria for an
applicable critical mineral as described in section 45X(c)(6) with a
certificate of analysis (COA) provided by the taxpayer to the person to
which the taxpayer sold the applicable critical mineral. The Treasury
Department and the IRS requested comments on this substantiation
requirement, including whether a similar requirement should be applied
to electrode active materials.
Based on a review of the comments, including comments specifically
suggesting certification statements, and the need to balance the
expansion of costs included as production costs with respect to the
Proposed Regulations while mitigating the risk of fraud, waste and
abuse, these final regulations revise the substantiation rules in
proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(c)(4) for applicable critical minerals and added
substantiation rules for electrode active materials in Sec. 1.45X-
3(e)(2)(iv)(C). In order to include direct or indirect materials costs
as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(2)(i)(A) and (e)(3)(ii)(E) as
production costs when calculating a section 45X credit for the
production and sale of an applicable critical mineral or electrode
active material, a taxpayer must include, as at attachment to the
return on which the section 45X credit is claimed, certifications from
any supplier, including the supplier's employer identification number
and that is signed under penalties of perjury, from which the taxpayer
purchased any constituent elements, materials, or subcomponents of the
taxpayer's eligible component, stating that the supplier is not
claiming the section 45X credit with respect to any of the material
acquired by the taxpayer, nor is the supplier aware that any prior
supplier in the chain of production of that material claimed a section
45X credit for the material. A taxpayer must also prepare the following
information, and maintain that information in the taxpayer's books and
records: (1) a document that provides an analysis of any constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents that concludes the material did
not meet the definition of an eligible component (for example, did not
meet the definition of applicable critical mineral or electrode active
material) at the time of acquisition by the taxpayer (the document may
be prepared by the taxpayer or ideally by an independent third-party);
(2) a list of all direct and indirect material costs and the amount of
such costs that were included within the taxpayer's total production
cost for each electrode active material or applicable critical mineral,
as applicable; and (3) a document related to the taxpayer's production
activities with respect to the direct and indirect material costs that
establishes the materials were used in the production of the electrode
active material or applicable critical mineral, as applicable (the
document may be prepared by the taxpayer or ideally by an independent
third-party). Finally, the taxpayer must provide any other information
related to the direct or indirect materials specified in guidance and
comply with the directions for providing such information as specified
in guidance. Failure to provide this documentation with the return
filing, or providing a ``available upon request'' statement, will
constitute a failure to substantiate the claim. The Treasury Department
and the IRS have determined, in consultation with the Department of
Energy, that these revisions to the Proposed Regulations are necessary
in order to properly substantiate credit amounts claimed under section
45X for applicable critical minerals and electrode active materials.
2. Battery Cells--Definition
a. In General
Consistent with section 45X(c)(5)(B)(ii), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(e)(3)(i) would have defined the term battery cell as an
electrochemical cell comprised of one or more positive electrodes and
one or more negative electrodes, with an energy density of not less
than 100 watt-hours per liter, and capable of storing at least 12 watt-
hours of energy.
Commenters asked for additional guidance clarifying the volumetric
energy density calculation methodology given the variety of battery
shapes, sizes, and construction methodologies that exist in the market.
The Treasury Department and the IRS understand these comments to be
made with respect to calculating energy density under proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(e)(3)(i)(B) and agree that clarification would be helpful.
Energy density can refer to volumetric energy density but is commonly
used to refer to gravimetric (mass-based) energy density. These final
regulations clarify that energy density is referring to volumetric
energy density in Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(3)(i)(B).
One commenter asked that the final rules provide that hydrogen fuel
cells be included under the definition of battery cells by amending the
definition of a battery cell to waive the requirement that a battery
cell be capable of storing at least 12 watt-hours of energy and
permitting this requirement to be met by ``a large hydrogen storage
tank.'' The Treasury Department and the IRS do not have the authority
to amend the definition of a battery cell in the final regulations or
to waive the requirement that it be capable of storing at least 12
[[Page 85821]]
watt-hours of energy. For this reason, the Treasury Department and the
IRS decline to adopt this comment in the final regulations.
At least one commenter raised a matter involving a vertically
integrated manufacturer of electric vehicles that, together with a
related person, operates a battery cell production facility. According
to the commenter, the commenter purchases battery cells from this
production facility and assembles, integrates, and incorporates them
into battery modules at battery assembly facilities located in other
States. Modules produced at these assembly facilities are then shipped
to various electric vehicle production facilities. As described by the
commenter, the process of taking completed battery cells and
integrating, incorporating, and assembling them into completed battery
packs happens across several different facilities, all of which are
operated by the commenter and its affiliates that are separate legal
entities. Each facility is neither solely a battery module facility nor
solely a battery pack facility. The commenter requested that the final
regulations allow a vertically integrated manufacturer and related
parties to elect which facility will receive the credit in situations
where the manufacturer and related parties complete all stages of the
production process and can substantiate that the corresponding credit
will not be duplicated. The Treasury Department and the IRS appreciate
the complex operations that may be inherent in battery production.
However, the statute requires a determination of the taxpayer that
produces an eligible component and does not authorize the relief
requested by the commenter.
b. Capacity Measurement
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(3)(ii) would have provided that taxpayers
must measure the capacity of a battery cell in accordance with a
national or international standard, such as IEC 60086-1 (Primary
Batteries), or an equivalent standard. Taxpayers can reference the
United States Advanced Battery Consortium (USABC) Battery Test Manual
for additional guidance.
Several commenters agreed with the proposed definition because it
provided taxpayers the ability and needed flexibility to determine the
appropriate standard, but others recommended additional guidance or
information be included in these final regulations. A commenter
requested that the final regulations ``retain the criteria that the
standard used by the taxpayer must be one issued by a recognized
standards setting body.'' While not specifically using that language,
these final regulations do maintain that concept by continuing to
require measurement in accordance with a national or international
standard.
Another commenter requested that the final regulations eliminate
the reference to ``an equivalent standard'' to IEC 60068-1 because
``IEC 60086-1 is not applicable to rechargeable battery chemistries,
and it is unknown therefore what an equivalent standard would be.'' The
Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that this clarification
is unnecessary because the reference to IEC 60068-1 or ``an equivalent
standard'' merely provides a non-exclusive example of an acceptable
national or international standard for capacity measurement. These
final regulations therefore do not adopt the commenter's suggestion.
Other commenters suggested the addition of various specific
national or international standards to the language provided in
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(3)(ii) regarding the standards to be used for
battery cell capacity measurement. The Treasury Department and the IRS
understand the desire for assurance but have determined that these
proposed additions, if included as examples, will not add further
clarity to the final regulations. The Treasury Department and the IRS
further do not think that there is a basis to include any of these
proposed additions as the exclusive standard or standards for capacity
measurement. The final regulations therefore do not adopt these
commenters' suggestions regarding particular national or international
standards to be used for capacity measurement in Sec. 1.45X-
3(e)(3)(ii).
Another commenter recommended that the final regulations require
that battery cell ``capacity'' must be mathematically normalized to a
100-hour discharge time, regardless of the time otherwise dictated by
the appropriate national or international standard. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not think there is a basis to adopt this
requirement, as this would displace other national or international
standards with a new requirement that is not in the statute. Therefore,
the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt additional
specific standards in these final regulations beyond those provided in
the Proposed Regulations.
Some commenters noted that the USABC Battery Test Manual, which
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(3)(ii) states may be used for additional
guidance regarding measurement of the capacity of a battery cell, is
not applicable to all battery cell applications and technologies that
may be eligible for the section 45X credit. One commenter suggested
removing the reference to the USABC Battery Test Manual for this
reason. Because the inclusion of this reference is intended to inform
taxpayers of a resource that may be helpful in some cases, even if it
may not be applicable in all cases, the Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to adopt this suggestion.
Another commenter suggested an additional requirement to conduct a
performance test in a certified laboratory once every three years to
verify the capacity of the battery cell. It was unclear from the
comment when this performance testing would be required. Section 45X
requires the production and sale of eligible components. Because an
eligible component must meet the requirements under section 45X at the
time of sale, it would be inappropriate to verify capacity once every
three years. Thus, the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt
this additional capacity measurement requirement in the final
regulations.
3. Battery Modules--Definition
Under section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii), the term battery module, in the
case of a module using battery cells, is a module with two or more
battery cells which are configured electrically, in series or parallel,
to create voltage or current, as appropriate, to a specified end use,
with an aggregate capacity of not less than 7 kilowatt-hours (or, in
the case of a module for a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, not less than 1
kilowatt-hour). Similarly, under section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii), a battery
module with no cells means a module with an aggregate capacity of not
less than 7 kilowatt-hours (or, in the case of a module for a hydrogen
fuel cell vehicle, not less than 1 kilowatt-hour). Consistent with
section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii), proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i) would have
defined battery module to mean a module described in proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(A) (with cells) or (B) (without cells) with an
aggregate capacity of not less than 7 kilowatt-hours (or, in the case
of a module for a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, not less than 1 kilowatt-
hour).
Some commenters suggested lowering the aggregate capacity
limitation to incentivize domestic production of all battery types used
in various industrial applications. One commenter recommended
eliminating the capacity thresholds entirely for battery modules when
used in medical or military applications. While the Treasury Department
and the IRS appreciate commenters' desire to incentivize domestic
battery manufacturing, section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(II) provides the
[[Page 85822]]
aggregate capacity thresholds that battery modules must meet in order
to be eligible components. The Treasury Department and the IRS decline
to adopt the commenters' request to alter or eliminate the aggregate
capacity requirements for battery modules as such revisions would be
inconsistent with the statute. Thus, these final regulations adopt
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i) without change.
a. Modules Using Battery Cells
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(A) would have defined a module
using battery cells as a module with two or more battery cells that are
configured electrically, in series or parallel, to create voltage or
current (as appropriate), to a specified end use, meaning an end-use
configuration of battery technologies. Under the proposed rule, an end-
use configuration is the product that ultimately serves a specified end
use. It is the collection of interconnected cells, configured to that
specific end-use and interconnected with the necessary hardware and
software required to deliver the required energy and power (voltage and
current) for that use. The preamble to the Proposed Regulations
explained that, as applied to batteries commonly used in electric
vehicles, proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(A) would have permitted a
credit for the production and sale of the battery pack in an electric
vehicle, but it would not have permitted a credit for the production of
a module that is not the end-use configuration. The Treasury Department
and the IRS requested comments on this proposed interpretation of the
phrase ``to a specified end use'' in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa).
Many commenters raised concerns with the interpretation of the
phrase ``to a specified end use'' in proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(e)(4)(i)(A). Some commenters asserted that requiring that modules be
in an end-use configuration would be overly restrictive for certain
product categories. For example, certain types of modules may be
transported to the end-use site only partially assembled due to safety
considerations, with final assembly performed by the battery
manufacturer, the customer, or a third-party contractor.
Similarly, a few commenters expressed concern that no taxpayer may
be eligible for the battery module credit in certain cases. One
commenter suggested that this result might occur if module
manufacturers do not manufacture a pack in its end-use configuration.
Further, those who purchase such items and convert them to their end-
use configuration may struggle to demonstrate their activities amount
to substantial transformation. One commenter suggested changing
proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(A) to provide that ``an end-use
configuration is the product that ultimately serves a specified end
use--whether delivered pre-assembled or assembled on-site.'' Further,
the commenter recommended an additional sentence at the end of proposed
Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(A) to identify the section 45X claimant in cases
where assembly occurs by someone other than the taxpayer.
Several commenters stated that proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(A)
created confusion because the definition of battery module could, in
some circumstances, include the items that are referred to in industry
as ``battery packs.'' One commenter noted that while battery cells and
modules predominantly originate from battery manufacturers, battery
packs are assembled by electric vehicle manufacturers before being
installed in electric vehicles.
Some commenters requested that, if the definition of battery
modules includes battery packs in the case of electric vehicle battery
modules, the process to transform what is colloquially referred to in
industry as a battery module into what is known as a ``battery pack''
be clarified in the final regulations to constitute disqualifying minor
assembly or ``partial transformation.'' Another commenter requested
that the final regulations state that the rules are agnostic as to the
form or manner in which a battery module with cells is incorporated
into the electric vehicle.
Other commenters supported the proposed definition of battery
module with cells, stating that this definition appropriately captures
the intention of the section 45X credit. One commenter asserted that
the battery pack production covered by the proposed definition is a
more valuable activity than the production of a single battery module
and is the activity closer to the downstream consumer.
The Treasury Department and the IRS appreciate the comments
received regarding battery modules and have determined, in close
consultation with the Department of Energy, that additional
clarification is needed. Section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa) defines
battery module using battery cells as ``a module using battery cells,
with two or more battery cells which are configured electrically, in
series or parallel, to create voltage or current, as appropriate, to a
specified end use[. . .].'' Section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(II) provides a
capacity threshold limitation of ``[an] aggregate capacity of not less
than 7 kilowatt-hours (or, in the case of a module for a hydrogen fuel
cell vehicle, not less than 1 kilowatt-hour)'' that such battery module
using battery cells (as defined in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa))
must meet.
In reviewing comments, the Treasury Department and the IRS
understand that the explanation in the preamble of the Proposed
Regulations regarding application to electric vehicles may not have
aligned with industry understanding and the statutory text. Upon review
of the comments received, the Treasury Department and the IRS wish to
restate that the requirement found in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa),
that battery modules using battery cells that contain battery cells
configured to a specified end use, applies regardless whether the items
are typically called ``battery modules'' or ``battery packs'' in
industry practice. These final regulations are therefore clarified to
provide that a battery module using battery cells becomes an eligible
component upon first meeting the requirements of section
45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(I)(aa) and (c)(5)(B)(iii)(II), notwithstanding when
this transformation may occur in a manufacturing production chain.
At least one commenter requested a rule allowing the entity that
assembles the pack to assign tax credits to the joint venture that
manufactured the module. Alternatively, if the definition of specified
end use is not adopted with respect to joint ventures, the regulations
should instead allow for joint venture partners to assign battery-
related section 45X credits to the joint venture as the parties see
fit, or in cases where the parties do not choose to assign the credits
to one of the parents, the joint venture itself. This comment is not
adopted as issues specific to joint ventures are outside the scope of
these final regulations. For discussion of ``produced by the taxpayer''
and the associated rules for who may claim the section 45X credit, see
Part II.B. of this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions.
b. Modules With No Battery Cells
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(B) would have defined the term
``module with no battery cells'' as a product with a standardized
manufacturing process and form that is capable of storing and
dispatching useful energy; that contains an energy storage medium that
remains in the module (for example, it is not consumed through
combustion); and that is not a custom-built electricity generation or
storage facility. This proposed definition would allow battery
[[Page 85823]]
technologies, such as flow batteries and thermal batteries, to be
eligible for the section 45X credit, but would not permit technologies
that do not meet this definition, such as standalone fuel storage tanks
or fuel tanks connected to engines or generation systems, to qualify as
a module with no battery cells.
Several commenters supported the proposed definition of a battery
module, and specifically the inclusion of thermal batteries. Commenters
also asked for clarification regarding a technology-neutral application
of the proposed definition of a battery module. Other commenters
suggested specific clarifications to the final regulations regarding
certain types of thermal battery systems, such as thermal ice storage
or thermal bricks. Some commenters requested that the final regulations
incorporate similar language used in the section 48 proposed
regulations to facilitate this technology-neutral treatment. For
example, these commenters suggested that the final regulations should
adopt the language in proposed Sec. 1.48-9(e)(10)(ii) by specifically
stating that ``batteries of all types (such as lithium ion, vanadium
flow, sodium sulfur, and lead-acid)'' are eligible components.
Commenters asserted that there is symmetry between the investment tax
credits for energy storage property and advanced manufacturing credits
for energy storage products. Additionally, commenters raised that
technology-neutral treatment aligns with Congressional intent to
establish eligibility criteria based on performance thresholds, not
technology.
The Treasury Department and the IRS, in close consultation with the
Department of Energy, agree with commenters that a battery module with
no battery cells does not require a specific storage medium nor are
there chemistry-based requirements for qualifying battery modules.
However, the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to include
specific language as a non-exhaustive list of possible storage mediums.
Including a non-exhaustive list of current storage mediums on an
industry-by-industry basis is not practical and may inadvertently
create confusion for other emerging technologies on whether those
mediums would qualify for the section 45X credit.
Some commenters disagreed with the requirement in proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(B) that the storage medium remain in the module,
asserting that the requirement ``may inadvertently exclude
technologies'' such as compressed air ``that can deliver on the intent
of the regulations.'' The Treasury Department and the IRS decline to
amend proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(B) in response to this comment.
The Treasury Department and the IRS, in consultation with the
Department of Energy, have determined that the proposed rule
appropriately implements the statute. The requirement that the storage
medium remain in the module gives meaning to both ``battery'' and to
``module.'' For batteries, this requirement describes a feature common
to electrochemical and more nascent types of batteries and
distinguishes batteries from technologies that rely on fuel. For
modules, this requirement helps segregate qualifying technologies from
those that are self-contained and not merely one component of a larger
system.
Manufacturing the constituent components of battery modules without
manufacturing the entire energy storage system does not result in the
production of a module with no battery cells under the final
regulations. For example, in thermal energy storage applications, the
taxpayer must produce and sell the entire system and not just the
storage medium. A manufacturer that only produces a thermal storage
medium (for example, molten salt) in a thermal energy storage system
would not be eligible for the credit. Requiring the production of the
entire energy storage system from ``energy in'' through ``energy out''
provides similar treatment for purposes of the section 45X credit to
the production of a battery module using battery cells.
Numerous comments requested additional clarification of ``custom-
built electricity . . . storage facility.'' Commenters noted that the
definition in proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(B) creates ambiguity as
to which modifications made in order to meet site or use specifications
would trigger the ``custom-built'' disqualifier. Several commenters
asserted that the Proposed Regulations create additional limitations on
battery modules without cells that do not apply to the other eligible
components. Commenters contended that the terms in the Proposed
Regulations, such as ``manufacturing,'' ``standardized,'' and ``not
custom-built,'' do not appear in the statutory text and diverge from
the general approach taken by the Proposed Regulations with respect to
other eligible components. Some commenters asserted that nearly all
thermal battery implementations are associated with custom-built
generation and storage facilities.
These commenters requested that the final regulations clarify that
the eligible components may be assembled with other property to
comprise a functioning energy generation or storage facility.
Commenters also suggested additional clarity regarding the physical
boundaries of a battery module and thought that using the proposed
definition of ``produced by the taxpayer'' would allow for an eligible
component to be assembled on-site, such as battery modules with no
battery cells that are too heavy and large to transport fully
assembled. Commenters asserted that most or all batteries will require
some amount of on-site installation. Commenters generally requested
that the final regulations provide a clear and principled definition of
``custom-built'' that continues to support a technology-neutral and
inclusive implementation of section 45X.
Commenters provided various alternatives to further clarify the
definition of ``custom-built'' in the Proposed Regulations. One
commenter recommended clarifying the definition of ``a custom-built
electricity storage facility'' as ``a facility (1) that contains an
energy storage medium and (2) of which all, or substantially all, of
the integral components are designed specifically for the facility and
are not interchangeable with components of other facilities that
utilize the same or similar electricity storage technology.'' Another
commenter asked that the final regulations clarify that a module with
no battery cells is not treated as custom-built if modules are produced
by the taxpayer using the same or similar components or property
generally used by the taxpayer to produce such modules but in different
configurations or amounts to accommodate the storage needs or the site
layout applicable to the storage asset. A commenter recommended
clarifying the definition that a module with modular components
manufactured offsite may undergo final assembly at its installation
site without being considered a custom-built facility and include an
example regarding final assembly on site. Another suggestion included
clarifying that modules with no cells are items of property that must
be combined with other tangible personal property to store energy.
Separately, a commenter noted that for contract manufacturing
arrangements, ``a routine order for off-the-shelf-property'' is not
eligible for the section 45X credit. The commenter suggested the final
regulations provide that an agreement will be treated as a routine
purchase order for off-the-shelf property if the contractor is required
to make no more than de minimis modifications to the property to tailor
it to the customer's specific needs. However, if the manufacturer does
make more than de minimis modifications,
[[Page 85824]]
the module may be custom-built. The commenter asserted that the
proposed rule sets up a complicated dichotomy under which manufacturers
of modules with no battery cells who enter into contract manufacturing
arrangements will have to establish an undefined standard that are
neither off the shelf nor custom-built.
Commenters also provided specific examples regarding whether
certain technologies or configurations would be considered custom-
built. For example, physical site conditions at a customer's site may
require that the same components used for one pumped heat energy
storage (PHES) are differently arranged for another PHES. The use of
the PHES by a customer may require modified storage durations (for
example, 20 hours versus 10 hours), which would require additional
storage media and vessels. The commenter asserted that this should not
be considered custom-built. Commenters also noted that, for closed-loop
pumped storage hydropower systems, pipes and other related components
are otherwise produced in a standardized process, and neither resemble
nor are functionally equivalent to standalone fuel storage tanks or
fuel tanks connected to engines or generation systems custom-built
electricity generation or storage facility. Commenters also raised that
these differences are based on the topography of the site where the
system is located and not on the intended function of these components
or the system as a whole.
One commenter requested that the Treasury Department and the IRS
include hydrogen fuel cell systems under the definition of a battery
module using battery cells. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(B) would
define the term ``module with no battery cells'' as a product with a
standardized manufacturing process and form that is capable of storing
and dispatching useful energy, that contains an energy storage medium
that remains in the module (for example, it is not consumed through
combustion), and that is not a custom-built electricity generation or
storage facility.
In general, the Treasury Department and the IRS appreciate the
complexity of the issues raised by commenters. Given the myriad of
technologies, industry-specific applications, and customary business
practices, the final regulations provide additional clarifications. The
Treasury Department and the IRS understand the need for clear,
administrable rules for both taxpayers and the IRS. The comments also
illustrate the impracticality of providing rules to specifically
address all situations. The Treasury Department and the IRS, in close
consultation with the Department of Energy, have determined that the
definition provided in proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(B) strikes the
appropriate balance between bright-line rules and the necessary
flexibility for evolving industries. The Treasury Department and the
IRS therefore decline to adopt suggested revisions to the definition of
``module with no battery cells'' in the final regulations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS, in close consultation with the
Department of Energy, also have determined that requiring battery
modules be modular in the sense that they are both self-contained and
not highly customized appropriately implements the statutory definition
provided in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(iii). Because of this, the preamble to
the Proposed Regulations further clarified that this proposed
definition would allow battery technologies such as flow batteries and
thermal batteries to be eligible for the section 45X credit, but it
would not permit technologies that do not meet this definition such as
standalone fuel storage tanks or fuel tanks connected to engines or
generation systems to qualify as a module with no battery cells. For
these reasons, the Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt
this comment in the final regulations.
One commenter recommended adopting the definition of modules using
battery cells for the definition of modules with no battery cells, with
the addition that the module should receive, store, and deliver energy
for conversion to electricity. However, adopting the commenter's
recommended definition would not be appropriate for modules with no
battery cells because the definition of modules using battery cells
requires the inclusion of battery cells in the module. Accordingly, The
Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt the commenter's
recommendation.
The Treasury Department and the IRS agree with commenters who
suggest that the examples illustrating the contrast between
``substantial transformation'' and disqualifying minor assembly,
explained in Part II.B. of this Summary of Comments and Explanation of
Revisions provide useful guidelines for taxpayers and the IRS in
determining what is a standardized manufacturing process and not a
custom-built electricity generation or storage facility. Thus,
incidental onsite assembly of prefabricated modular components for
final assembly that are generally produced in the ordinary course of a
taxpayer's trade or business would constitute a standardized
manufacturing process for purposes of Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(B).
Battery modules with no battery cells that undergo a substantial
transformation onsite or are specially manufactured for a single
customer would constitute a custom-built electricity generation or
storage facility. The Treasury Department and the IRS decline to
provide a de minimis threshold which would exclude certain
manufacturing or configurations that would otherwise qualify for the
section 45X credit using the principles described in Part II.B. of this
Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions.
c. Capacity Measurement
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(ii)(A) would have provided that, for
modules using battery cells, taxpayers must measure the capacity of a
module with a testing procedure that complies with a national or
international standard published by a recognized standard setting
organization. The capacity of a battery module using battery cells may
not exceed the total capacity of the battery cells in the module.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(ii)(B) would have provided that, for
modules with no battery cells, taxpayers must measure the capacity
using a testing procedure that complies with a national or
international standard published by a recognized standard setting
organization. If no such standard applies to a type of module with no
battery cells, taxpayers must measure the capacity of such module as
the Secretary may prescribe in regulations or other guidance. The
Treasury Department and the IRS requested comments on what recognized
national or international standards are currently available for
measuring capacity of modules with no battery cells and whether further
guidance may be required.
One commenter suggested that the aggregate capacity measurement
outlined in section 45X and the Proposed Regulations for battery
modules is challenging to apply in the context of thermal battery
modules with no cells. Another commenter explained that battery
capacity measurements are subject to variations contingent upon
environmental conditions during measurement and that capacity
assessment for both battery cells and battery modules must occur within
a standard testing environment. Some commenters agreed with the
approach in the Proposed Regulations of allowing taxpayers to determine
the appropriate national or international standards because taxpayers
are in a better position to determine the appropriate
[[Page 85825]]
standard. Moreover, this approach provides the flexibility necessary
for emerging technologies to qualify for the credit. Such commenters
requested that the final regulations retain the criteria that the
taxpayer must use a testing procedure issued by a recognized standards
setting body.
Other commenters explained that the Treasury Department and the IRS
should prescribe a flexible approach to capacity measurement for
battery modules with no battery cells such that different technologies
are appropriately measured and provide alternative testing procedures
that complies with a national or international standard published by a
recognized standard setting organization that is relevant and
applicable for the varying technologies. One commenter asserted that,
in their view, such standards may include American Society of
Mechanical Engineers (ASME) or International Standards Organization
(ISO), but specifically recommended that capacity should be measured
based on nameplate capacity as provided in 40 CFR 96.202 in the absence
of a bright-line standard. Another commenter supported this approach
because of alleged difficulties in determining the minimum capacity of
battery modules with no cells before they are placed in service. Other
commenters suggested various standards, including ASME PTC 53; ANSI/
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning
Engineers (ASHRAE) Standard 94.2-2010; and ASHRAE 94 testing methods
(specifically, 94.1,94.2, and 94.3). Another commenter recommended that
the final regulations require use of a conversion factor of 1.16RT/kW =
14/12 and recommended that the regulations provide a capacity measure
if there is no national or international standard for a given
technology.
A different commenter raised concerns regarding capacity
measurement for battery modules with no battery cells and suggested
adding to proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(iii)(B), ``. . . The capacity of
each battery module is expressed on a kilowatt-hour basis in the actual
useful energy unit that is specific to the battery module without
cells. For example, both thermal and thermochemical battery modules
have their capacity expressed on a kilowatt-hour-thermal basis.''
The Treasury Department and the IRS, after consultation with the
Department of Energy, have determined that taxpayers producing thermal
and thermochemical battery modules with no battery cells must convert
the energy storage to a kilowatt-hour basis and provide both
methodology and testing regarding this conversion. Taxpayers must
maintain this testing and methodology as part of books and records
under section 6001. However, the kilowatt-hour conversion cannot exceed
the direct conversion of the total nameplate capacity of the thermal
battery module to kilowatt-hours (the capacity that is sold to the
consumer). The taxpayer claiming the section 45X credit must use the
same methodology consistently, subject to any updated standard of the
same methodology and testing, for battery modules (with or without
cells) sold in the taxpayer's trade or business. The final regulations
incorporate these clarifications in Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(ii) regarding
testing and methodology with respect to battery modules.
One commenter requested the final rules remove the requirement that
the capacity of a battery module not exceed the total capacity of the
battery cells in the module because the different structures of each
eligible component may affect the capacity measurement of the module.
The Treasury Department and the IRS, in consultation with the
Department of Energy, have determined that this rule serves an
important function in reducing the potential to manipulate testing
conditions in the measurement of capacity and in encouraging the
application of reliable measurement standards for battery cells. The
Treasury Department and the IRS therefore decline to remove the
requirement that the capacity of a battery module not exceed the total
capacity of the battery cells in the module.
Another commenter requested that the final regulations provide that
the entity that manufactures a battery module that exceeds the
statutory 7 kilowatt-hours threshold limitation in section
45X(c)(5)(B)(iii)(II) receives the $10/kWh module credit. As discussed
in Part IV.E.3.a. of this Summary of Comments and Explanation of
Revisions, the taxpayer that produces and sells the eligible component
(when a battery module first becomes the eligible component) may claim
the section 45X credit. Whether an eligible component is produced by
the taxpayer is generally discussed in Part II.B. of this Summary of
Comments and Explanation of Revisions.
A commenter noted that proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i), which
provides the definition for battery modules ``with an aggregate
capacity of not less than 7 kilowatt-hours,'' aligns with section 30D.
The language in section 30D is based on the capacity of the complete
battery installed on the vehicle. The commenter asserted that the
parallel language describing the capacity threshold in section 45X and
in section 30D indicates that the eligible component for the section
45X credit for battery modules are the items commonly referred to in
industry as ``battery packs.'' This comment is not adopted. As
explained in Part IV.E.3.a. of this Summary of Comments and Explanation
of Revisions, a battery module (within the meaning of section 45X) is
an eligible component, regardless of whether industry nomenclature
would describe that module as a ``battery pack.''
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(5)(i) would have provided a special rule
where the capacity determined with respect to a battery cell or battery
module must not exceed a capacity-to-power ratio of 100:1. At least one
commenter requested clarification on the definition of ``capacity to
power ratio.'' The commenter noted that term could mean either the
maximum energy that the battery cell and module can hold or the maximum
output that the battery cell and module can release instantaneously.
The final regulations retain the proposed rule defining ``capacity to
power ratio'' in Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(5). The Treasury Department and the
IRS confirm that the rule, with respect to a battery cell or battery
module, the capacity-to-power ratio refers to both the power and the
capacity as a cap on the section 45X credit amount, rather than an
eligibility criterion. Power is the battery cell's maximum rate of
discharge; capacity is the maximum amount of energy the component can
store.
F. Phase-Out Rule
Consistent with section 45X(b)(3), proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(f)(1)
would have provided that, in the case of any eligible component sold
after December 31, 2029, the amount of the section 45X credit
determined with respect to such eligible component is equal to the
product of the amount determined under proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(b)
through (e) with respect to such eligible component, multiplied by the
phase out percentage under proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(f)(2). Consistent
with section 45X(b)(3)(C), proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(f)(3) would have
provided that the phase out rules described in proposed Sec. 1.45X-
3(f)(1) and (2) apply to all eligible components except applicable
critical minerals. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-3(f)(2) would have provided the
phase out percentage is equal to 75 percent for eligible components
sold during calendar year 2030; 50 percent for eligible components sold
during calendar year 2031; 25 percent for eligible
[[Page 85826]]
components sold during calendar year 2032, and zero percent for
eligible components sold after calendar year 2032.
A commenter expressed concern that the phase out rules create
disparate treatment of an applicable critical mineral produced by a
taxpayer that with further value-added processing would result in the
production of an electrode active material and provided the example of
the production of natural graphite active anode materials. The
commenter stated that if the production of the applicable critical
mineral and production of the electrode active material occurs in a
vertically integrated company, the taxpayer may only claim a section
45X credit for one component. Thus, the commenter requests the phase
out rule be modified to not apply to electrode active materials.
The Treasury Department and the IRS decline to adopt the
commenter's request. The Treasury Department and the IRS do not have
the authority to allow a section 45X credit for the production of an
electrode active material in amounts in excess of what is permitted
under section 45X(b)(3).
For these reasons, these final regulations adopt proposed Sec.
1.45X-3(f) without modification.
V. Applicable Critical Minerals
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-4 would have provided definitions for the
listed applicable critical minerals (generally in accordance with
section 45X(c)(6)), the credit amounts, and rules regarding production
costs for purposes of determining credit amounts. Commenters addressed
certain aspects of these proposed rules, as described in this Part V.
of the Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions. These final
regulations generally adopt the rules as proposed in Sec. 1.45X-4,
with the modifications described in this Part V. of the Summary of
Comments and Explanation of Revisions.
A. In General
Section 45X(c)(6) defines applicable critical minerals that are
eligible components for purposes of the section 45X credit. Consistent
with section 45X(c)(6), proposed Sec. 1.45X-4 provides that an
applicable critical mineral means any of the minerals that are listed
in section 45X(c)(6) and defined in proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b).
Several commenters requested that the final rules generally clarify
and expand the eligibility of metals and metal alloys (including alloys
made from primary and secondary metal production) under the purity
requirements. Section 45X generally provides specific minimum purity
requirements or forms for applicable critical minerals. Metals or metal
alloys under the specified purity requirements that do not meet
specified forms do not qualify for the section 45X credit. Thus, the
Treasury Department and the IRS do not have the statutory authority to
add additional metals and alloys to the list of applicable critical
minerals in these final regulations.
B. Definitions
1. Aluminum
Section 45X(c)(6)(A) provides that aluminum that is converted from
bauxite to a minimum purity of 99 percent alumina by mass or purified
to a minimum purity of 99.9 percent aluminum by mass qualifies as an
applicable critical mineral. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(1) would have
defined aluminum to mean aluminum that is converted from bauxite to a
minimum purity of 99 percent alumina by mass or purified to a minimum
purity of 99.9 percent aluminum by mass. The preamble to the Proposed
Regulations stated that section 45X(c)(6)(A) should be interpreted in
light of the dynamics of the aluminum industry and the role that
critical materials like aluminum play in the renewable energy and
energy storage industry. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(1) would have
interpreted section 45X(c)(6)(A) to mean aluminum, including commodity-
grade aluminum, described in section 45X(c)(6)(A)(i) and (ii). Proposed
Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(1) would have defined ``commodity-grade aluminum'' as
aluminum that has been produced directly from aluminum that is
described in proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(1)(i) or (ii), is limited to
primary production of unwrought forms, and is in a form that is sold on
international commodity exchanges, which would include commercial grade
aluminum that is 99.7 percent aluminum by mass.
A commenter expressed support for the definition of aluminum in the
proposed rule, and stated that the statutory definition could be read
to apply only to the refining of alumina and, as a result, not benefit
domestic primary aluminum producers, nor achieve the spirit of the
legislation to increase domestic manufacturing. The commenter noted
confusion with the statutory definition, which stated in part, that
aluminum ``which is converted from bauxite to a minimum purity of 99
percent alumina by mass'' meets the definition of aluminum--however,
alumina is converted from bauxite, not aluminum. Thus, the commenter
noted that the proposed rule correctly states the primary aluminum
production process and will help United States primary aluminum
producers bolster domestic operations and strengthen global
competitiveness.
A commenter requested that the final regulations provide that
aluminum oxide (alumina) is a form of aluminum for the purposes of
section 45X(c)(6)(A)(i). The Treasury Department and the IRS note that
section 45X(c)(6)(A)(i) provides eligibility for the credit for
aluminum that is converted from bauxite to a minimum purity of 99
percent alumina by mass. One commenter requested that the definition of
primary aluminum include molten metal. The Treasury Department and the
IRS note that section 45X(c)(6)(A)(ii) does not restrict the form of
aluminum purified to a minimum purity of 99.9 percent aluminum by mass.
One commenter proposed lowering the eligible purity for aluminum to 96
percent. The Treasury Department and the IRS view this request as
inconsistent with the statute.
A few commenters requested the definition of primary aluminum
include all unwrought primary aluminum smelted from aluminum oxide
(that is, alumina). One commenter requested that the final rules
clarify that aluminum produced through secondary production is eligible
for the section 45X credit. The preamble to the Proposed Regulations
stated that proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(1) clarifies that the term
``commodity-grade aluminum'' is limited to primary production of
unwrought forms by specifying that commodity-grade aluminum must be
``produced directly'' from certain forms of aluminum. The Treasury
Department and the IRS understand that the ability to ascertain and
substantiate the process or processes used at an earlier point in the
lifecycle of feedstock aluminum for secondary production is limited.
The Treasury Department and the IRS are concerned that such limitations
would pose significant substantiation and administrability issues if
secondary production were permitted for commodity-grade aluminum under
proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(1).
A few commenters requested that the final rules replace the
requirement that commodity-grade aluminum be ``in a form sold on
international commodity exchanges'' with the requirement that such
aluminum ``has the ability to meet the chemical specifications of
aluminum sold on international commodity exchanges,'' because not all
aluminum sold to third-party customers is traded through the London
Metal Exchange, which imposes the shape requirements. The commenters
state
[[Page 85827]]
that commercial grade aluminum is made into products that are alloyed
to different specifications and shapes that are not traded through
commodity markets, and the final rules should not distinguish among the
end markets. Although the Treasury Department and the IRS view the
requirement that commodity-grade aluminum be ``in a form sold on
international commodity exchanges'' as providing important clarity and
certainty for taxpayers and the IRS, as well as an objective and
observable standard to determine eligibility, the Treasury Department
and the IRS will continue to consider these comments as they work to
finalize proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(1).
One commenter requested the final regulations clarify ``aluminum
that is converted from alumina with a minimum purity of 99 percent on a
fired basis should qualify as an applicable critical mineral.'' The
Treasury Department and the IRS think that the additional language
specifying whether the purity is measured on a fired basis or dried
basis is not necessary due to the specific purity standards already
listed in section 45X and the proposed rules. In addition, although
these terms are often included on a Certificate of Analysis (COA), the
Treasury Department and IRS anticipate that using these terms may cause
confusion in circumstances in which these terms are not included on a
COA.
With respect to all of the comments related to the definition of
aluminum, the Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that
additional consideration is necessary prior to finalizing proposed
Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(1), which the Treasury Department and the IRS intend
to do at a later date. For that reason, Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(1) is reserved
in these final regulations.
2. Neodymium
Consistent with section 45X(c)(6)(R), proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(18)
would have provided that the term neodymium means neodymium that is
converted to neodymium-praseodymium oxide that is purified to a minimum
purity of 99 percent neodymium-praseodymium oxide by mass; converted to
neodymium oxide that is purified to a minimum purity of 99.5 percent
neodymium oxide by mass; or purified to a minimum purity of 99.9
percent neodymium by mass.
One commenter requested that the final rules provide that the
following are eligible for the section 45X credit: (1) neodymium if
purified to the industry standard minimum purity of 99.0 percent
neodymium by mass; (2) neodymium converted to neodymium-praseodymium
and purified to a minimum purity of 99.0 percent neodymium-praseodymium
by mass; (3) neodymium-praseodymium that is purified to a minimum
purity of 99.0 percent neodymium-praseodymium by mass; and (4)
neodymium-iron-boron alloy or neodymium-praseodymium-iron-boron alloy
purified to 99.0 percent by mass. The Treasury Department and the IRS
do not have the statutory authority to modify the definition of
neodymium or to modify purity percentages in proposed Sec. 1.45X-
4(b)(18) and these final regulations adopt this proposed rule without
change.
3. Vanadium
Consistent with section 45X(c)(6)(X), proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(24)
would have provided that the term vanadium means vanadium that is
converted to ferrovanadium or vanadium pentoxide. One commenter
requested that the definition of vanadium includes vanadium when it is
purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent vanadium by mass. The
Treasury Department and the IRS do not have the statutory authority to
modify the definition of vanadium to include purity percentages, and
these final regulations adopt this proposed rule without change.
4. Magnesium
Consistent with section 45X(c)(6)(Z)(x), proposed Sec. 1.45X-
4(b)(26)(x) would have provided that the term magnesium means magnesium
purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent by mass. One commenter
requested that the definition of magnesium be expanded to include
magnesium oxide and magnesium hydroxide at purity levels that range
from 90-98 percent. The Treasury Department and the IRS do not have the
statutory authority to modify the definition of magnesium or to modify
purity percentages in proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(26)(x), and these final
regulations adopt this proposed rule without change.
C. Credit Amount--in General
Section 45X(b)(1) generally provides the credit amount determined
with respect to any eligible component, including any eligible
component it incorporates, subject to the credit phase out provided at
section 45X(b)(3). Section 45X(b)(3)(C) provides that the credit phase
out does not apply with respect to any applicable critical mineral.
Section 45X(b)(1)(M) provides that, in the case of any applicable
critical mineral, the credit amount is an amount equal to 10 percent of
the costs incurred by the taxpayer with respect to production of such
mineral. Proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(c)(3) would have provided that the
costs incurred for purposes of determining the credit amount includes
costs as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e) that are paid or incurred within
the meaning of section 461 of the Code by the taxpayer for the
production of an applicable critical mineral only. As explained in the
preamble to the Proposed Regulations, this rule has the effect of
excluding any costs incurred after the production of the applicable
critical mineral. The Proposed Regulations applied section 263A and the
section 263A regulations solely to identify the types of costs that are
includible in production costs incurred for purposes of computing the
credit amount. The Proposed Regulations did not apply section 263A or
the section 263A regulations for any other purposes, such as to
determine whether a taxpayer is engaged in production activities.
Under the Proposed Regulations, direct or indirect materials costs,
as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(2)(i)(A) and (e)(3)(ii)(E),
respectively, and any costs related to the extraction or acquisition of
raw materials would not be taken into account as production costs. The
Proposed Regulations would have attributed a wide range of costs to the
production of an applicable critical mineral as costs incurred in
producing the applicable critical mineral, including, but not limited
to, labor, electricity used in the production of the applicable
critical mineral, storage costs, depreciation or amortization,
recycling, and overhead. However, the cost of acquiring the raw
material used to produce the applicable critical mineral; the cost of
materials used for conversion, purification, or recycling of the raw
material; and other material costs related to the production of the
applicable critical mineral were not taken into account.
The Proposed Regulations provided a credit for the costs associated
with production activities that add value to the applicable critical
mineral and are conducted by the taxpayer that produces the applicable
critical mineral. Because purchasing raw materials may enable a
taxpayer to produce an applicable critical mineral but it is not by
itself an activity that adds value, the Proposed Regulations excluded
material costs from creditable costs. This exclusion of material costs
mitigates the risk of crediting the same costs multiple times.
[[Page 85828]]
Many commenters made similar arguments with respect applicable
critical minerals and the inclusion of direct material costs as defined
in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(2)(i)(A), indirect material costs as defined in
Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(3)(ii)(E), and costs related to the extraction of raw
materials in their production costs for purposes of determining the
credit. Commenters argued that there was insufficient textual support
for a limitation, and any such limitation would work against the
purposes of the credit. As with electrode active materials, commenters
asserted that direct costs were often a substantial or predominant cost
of producing applicable critical minerals. Denying credits for these
costs would, in the opinion of commenters, be contrary to the goal of
incentivizing extraction and production of applicable critical
minerals. Commenters also disputed that direct and indirect costs are
not incurred in value-adding activities.
A number of commenters also disputed that a credit should only be
available once for the same material. Several commenters argued that
the statutory language and structure did, at a minimum, give taxpayers
credits for production of applicable critical minerals and, when those
applicable critical minerals were used to produce electrode active
materials, additional credits for the production of the electrode
active materials. According to these commenters, the dual credits
reflect the fact that these are separate productive activities for
which section 45X provides separate credits. A commenter also urged
that producers of applicable critical minerals be able to claim a
credit if they can establish that the applicable critical minerals used
in the production were acquired from production or extraction outside
the United States and thus were previously ineligible for a section 45X
credit. For applicable critical minerals that are produced using other
precursor applicable critical minerals, a commenter recommended that
the cost of the precursor applicable critical minerals be excluded from
the cost of producing the applicable critical minerals.
A number of commenters proposed solutions to the problem of
crediting the same production costs multiple times. One solution
commenters proposed was to reduce the basis of property for which a
credit has been claimed by an upstream producer. Commenters also
proposed a system under which a taxpayer would only be eligible for a
credit on costs of material for which no other taxpayer had previously
claimed a credit. This arrangement could be administered through a
system of certification or tracing in which taxpayers would be required
to verify that its suppliers had not claimed previously claimed credits
for costs associated with the same materials for which the taxpayer is
claiming credits. Commenters generally agreed that producers should not
need to be vertically integrated to claim credits. Instead, these
commenters argued that each producer in the supply chain should be
eligible to claim credits for, at a minimum, their addition to the
value of the applicable critical minerals produced.
Some commenters addressed the requirement in section 45X(d)(2) that
extraction or production of applicable critical minerals occur within
the United States or a possession of the United States. A commenter
urged that only the cost of extraction of applicable critical minerals
occurring in the geology of the United States or its possessions should
qualify for the section 45X credit in calculating the cost of
production of such mineral. Other commenters urged that credits be
permitted to taxpayers that process applicable critical minerals
extracted outside the United States provided that the processing occurs
within the United States or its possessions. One commenter proposed
that the final regulations modify the proposed rule regarding
constituent elements, materials, and subcomponents used in the
production of applicable critical minerals to distinguish between
imports of materials otherwise available from domestic sources and
imported materials that are not available from domestic sources.
Although this suggested proposal deviates from the Proposed
Regulations, it would still allow for credits associated with costs of
foreign-sourced constituent elements, materials, and subcomponents but
only where domestic alternatives are not available.
Three commenters supported the Proposed Regulations' exclusion of
direct, indirect, and extraction costs from production costs eligible
for the credit. One commenter was concerned that a contrary rule would
invite fraud, waste, and abuse and that, in the case of extraction
costs, would be difficult to administer without the creation of a
tracing system. Two commenters specifically identified extraction costs
as something that should be excluded from the costs of production for
the credit. One recommended more explicit clarification that the cost
of the extraction of raw materials is excluded from creditable
production costs.
With respect to these comments, refer to Part IV.E.1.e. of this
Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions, which describes the
revisions to the proposed rules for production costs of both electrode
active materials and applicable critical minerals that are in these
final regulations.
Proposed Sec. 1.45X-4(c)(4) would have required the taxpayer to
document that their product meets the criteria for an applicable
critical mineral as described in section 45X(c)(6) with a certificate
of analysis provided by the taxpayer to the person to which the
taxpayer sold the applicable critical mineral. The Treasury Department
and the IRS requested comments on this substantiation requirement,
including whether a similar requirement should be applied to electrode
active materials. With respect to this proposed rule, refer to Part
IV.E.1.e. of this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions,
which describes the revisions to the proposed rules for substantiation
of both electrode active materials and applicable critical minerals
that are in these final regulations.
VI. Other Comments Received Regarding Ancillary Issues
In response to the Proposed Regulations, certain commenters
responded concerning the application of sections 6417 and 6418. A
commenter noted that the Proposed Regulations do not explain the
process for making a section 6417 elective pay election for a section
45X credit and recommends the final regulations provide more details
and guidance on the payment amount and potential considerations.
Another commenter requested additional clarification on application
procedures, methods, reporting items, refund/transfer periods, and
other supplementary procedures relevant to the provisions of section
6417. Similar comments were received with respect to the
transferability provisions of section 6418 that may apply to the
section 45X credit. A separate commenter requested clarification
regarding a transfer of tax credits from vessel manufacturer (shipyard)
to vessel owner, and the possible effects of different ownership
arrangements of related offshore wind vessels.
The comments related to sections 6417 and 6418 are outside the
scope of these final regulations under section 45X, as the comments
relate to rules under sections 6417 and 6418. Final regulations under
sections 6417, 89 FR 17546 (March 11, 2024), corrected in 89 FR 26786
(April 16, 2024), and corrected in 89 FR 66562 (August 16, 2024) and
6418, 89 FR 34770 (April 30,
[[Page 85829]]
2024), corrected in 89 FR 67859 (August 22, 2024), are available and
provide relevant information on the elective payment election under
section 6417, making a transfer election under section 6418, and the
impacts of various ownership structures on the ability and requirements
when making an election under either section 6417 or section 6418.
A commenter suggested that the Proposed Regulations should have
addressed whether the section 45X credit can be carried back to offset
prior year tax liabilities or whether it can be transferred to other
taxpayers. The commenter suggested that the final regulations allow the
credit to be carried back for a reasonable period of time or to be
transferred to other eligible taxpayers under certain conditions and
limitations. This request is outside the scope of these final
regulations, but as a clarification, section 39 of the Code describes
rules related to the carryback and carryforward of unused credits,
including section 39(a)(4) which provides a 3-year carryback period for
any applicable credit (as defined in section 6417(b)). Section 1.6418-
5(h) also provides a rule clarifying that a transferee of a specified
credit portion under section 6418 can apply section 39(a)(4) to the
extent the specified credit portion is described in section 6417(b)
(list of applicable credits, taking into account any placed in service
requirements in section 6417(b)(2), (3), and (5)).
A commenter requested that the final regulations define what
constitutes a disposition or a cessation of eligibility for the purpose
of recapturing the credit within five years of being placed in service.
According to the commenter, the final rules should define the terms
``disposition'' and ``cessation of eligibility'' and provide examples
and exceptions. As a clarification, the section 45X credit is not
subject to the recapture provisions of section 50 of the Code because
it is not an investment credit under section 46 of the Code. Further,
there is no statutory authority under the provisions of section 45X to
require recapture of the credit. Thus, these final regulations do not
include any rules related to recapture.
A commenter noted that the Proposed Regulations do not address
whether the section 45X credit can be specially allocated to certain
partners or whether the credit can be modified by a partnership
agreement for partnerships that produce and sell eligible components,
possibly ``creating inconsistencies or unfairness for some partners who
may have different interests or expectations.'' The commenter requested
that the final regulations include a rule allowing the section 45X
credit to be specially allocated or modified by a partnership
agreement. Because the commenter's request is addressed under section
704 and Sec. 1.704-1(b)(4)(ii) and does not relate to credit
eligibility under section 45X, the Treasury Department and IRS decline
to adopt a rule addressing partnership allocations in these final
regulations.
VII. Severability
If any provision in this 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.
Applicability Dates
These regulations apply to eligible components for which production
is completed and sales occur after December 31, 2022, and during
taxable years ending on or after October 28, 2024. Taxpayers may choose
to apply these regulations to eligible components for which production
is completed and sales occur after December 31, 2022, and during
taxable years ending before October 28, 2024, provided that taxpayers
follow these regulations in their entirety and in a consistent manner.
Effect on Other Documents
Section 5.05(2) of Notice 2023-18 and section 3 of Notice 2023-44,
which relate to the interaction between sections 45X and 48C, are
superseded for eligible components for which production is completed
and sales occur after October 28, 2024.
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review
Pursuant to the Memorandum of Agreement, Review of Treasury
Regulations under Executive Order 12866 (June 9, 2023), tax regulatory
actions issued by the IRS are not subject to the requirements of
section 6(b) of Executive Order 12866, as amended. Therefore, a
regulatory impact assessment is not required.
II. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520) (PRA)
generally requires that a Federal agency obtain the approval of the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) before collecting information
from the public, whether such collection of information is mandatory,
voluntary, or required to obtain or retain a benefit.
The collections of information in these final regulations contain
reporting and recordkeeping requirements that are required to validate
eligibility to claim a section 45X credit. These collections of
information would generally be used by the IRS for tax compliance
purposes and by taxpayers to facilitate proper reporting and
compliance. The general recordkeeping requirements mentioned within
these final regulations are considered general tax records under Sec.
1.6001-1(e). Specific certification statements under Sec. 1.45X-
1(c)(3) and statements required in Sec. Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(iv)(C) and
1.45X-4(c)(4) are considered general tax records and are required for
the IRS to validate the taxpayer that may claim a section 45X credit.
For PRA purposes, general tax records are already approved by OMB under
1545-0074 for individuals, 1545-0123 for business entities, and under
1545-0092 for trust and estate filers.
These final regulations also provide reporting requirements related
to making the Related Person Election as described in Sec. 1.45X-2(d)
and calculating the section 45X credit amount as described in Sec.
1.45X-1. The Related Person Election will be made by taxpayers with
Forms 1040, 1041, 1120-S, 1065, and 1120, on Form 7207, Advanced
Manufacturing Production Credit (or any successor forms); and credit
calculations will be made on Form 3800 and supporting forms including
Form 7207 (and any successor forms). These forms are approved under
1545-0074 for individuals, 1545-0123 for business entities, 1545-2306
for trust and estate filers of Form 7207, and 1545-0895 for trust and
estate filers of Form 3800. These final regulations are not changing or
creating new collection requirements not already approved by OMB or
will be approved under 5 CFR 1320.10 by OMB.
No public comments were received by the IRS directed specifically
at the PRA or on the collection requirements, but commenters generally
articulated the burdens associated with the documentation requirements
contained in the Proposed Regulations. As described in the relevant
portions of this preamble, the Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined that the documentation requirements are necessary to
administer the provisions of section 45X.
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes
certain requirements with respect to Federal rules that are subject to
the
[[Page 85830]]
notice and comment requirements of section 553(b) of the Administrative
Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) and that are likely to have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Unless an agency determines that a proposal is not likely to have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities,
section 603 of the RFA requires the agency to present a final
regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) of the final regulations. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have not determined whether the final
regulations will likely have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. This determination requires
further study. Because there is a possibility of significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities, a FRFA is provided in
these final regulations.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, the Proposed Regulations
were submitted to the Chief Counsel of the Office of Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration for comment on its impact on small
business, and no comments were received.
A. Need for and Objectives of the Rule
The final regulations provide greater clarity to taxpayers that
intend to claim a section 45X credit. The final regulations provide
necessary definitions, the time and manner to make the Related Person
Election and rules regarding the determination of credit amounts. The
Treasury Department and the IRS intend and expect that giving taxpayers
guidance that allows them to claim the section 45X credit will
beneficially impact various industries. In particular, the section 45X
credit encourages the domestic production of eligible components and
incentivizes taxpayers to invest in clean energy projects that generate
eligible credits.
B. Affected Small Entities
The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and if
feasible, an estimate of, the number of small entities that may be
affected by the proposed rules, if adopted. The Small Business
Administration Office of Advocacy (SBA) estimates in its 2023
Frequently Asked Questions that 99.9 percent of American businesses
meet its definition of a small business. The applicability of these
final regulations does not depend on the size of the business, as
defined by the SBA.
As described more fully in the preamble to this final regulation
and in this initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA), section 45X
and these final regulations may affect a variety of different entities
across several different clean energy industries as multiple types of
eligible components are provided for under the statute and
manufacturers may produce more than one type. Although there is
uncertainty as to the exact number of small businesses within this
group, the current estimated number of respondents to these final rules
is 13,450 taxpayers. The estimated total annual reporting burden and
estimated average annual burden per respondent will be computed when
Form 7207 and the instructions to Form 7207 are updated to reflect
these final regulations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS utilize tax data as the basis
for its RFA analysis. Tax entities supply information on tax forms,
which information is processed and recorded by the IRS. This data is
then available to the IRS office of Research, Applied Analytics and
Statistics and to the Treasury Department's Office of Tax Policy for
use in estimating the impact of tax regulation on businesses. Tax data
is the more appropriate data as it provides nearly universal coverage
of the entities that are affected by these tax regulations. All
taxpayers and many potential taxpayers are represented in the universe
of tax data. Second, the tax data more accurately reflect the level of
organization to which tax regulations are applicable because tax data
is collected on the entity rather than the enterprise level.
Overwhelmingly, business tax regulations apply to the entity level
making tax data a natural fit for the analysis of regulatory impact.
Further, with limited exceptions, tax regulations apply to all entities
organized in a particular manner regardless of industry or size.
Finally, analysis of the implications of tax regulations for the
purposes of the PRA and any Special Analyses, including the Regulatory
Impact Analysis, are carried out using tax data. Generally, restricting
analysis for the RFA to tax data prevents difficulties in reconciling
the different analyses within a given regulation.
Reliance on tax data has some drawbacks. In general, tax forms do
not collect information unless it is directly relevant to the
calculation of tax liability. The Northern American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) codes referenced by the Office of
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration are included on tax forms
for informational purposes and may not be reliable. For example, past
the first two-digits of the NAICS code, economic sector level, entries
may be left blank in the raw data. In addition, for a tax entity that
is comprised of multiple different enterprises that each operate in a
different industry, the NAICS code reported on a tax form may not
reflect the appropriate industry for the regulation under analysis.
Furthermore, most tax returns have no independent verification of the
accuracy of NAICS codes. Notwithstanding this concern, tax data remains
the most appropriate data for analysis of the implications of tax
regulations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS have considered other data
alternatives including Census data sources, such as the Statistics of
U.S. Businesses (SUSB) suggested by SBA's Office of Advocacy. The 2020
SUSB includes only six million firms and eight million establishments
while the proposed tax data includes approximately 18 million business
entities. Unlike the SUSB data, the tax data includes more small
businesses, not only ones with at least one employee. Tax data provides
a more inclusive estimate of businesses affected by tax regulations. In
conclusion, while tax data is an appropriate resource for evaluating
the impact of tax regulations, this data does not permit some of the
usual analysis presented to the SBA. Furthermore, since the NAICS codes
reported on the tax return may not accurately reflect the industry of
the entity, applying separate standards by industry is inadvisable.
Thus, the Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that
reliance on NAICS codes would not accurately reflect the entities
affected by these regulations. Further, the Treasury Department and the
IRS currently do not have useable tax data that reflects the entities
that will be affected by these regulations. While there is uncertainty
as to the exact number of small businesses within this group, the
Treasury Department and the IRS continue to estimate that approximately
13,450 taxpayers will be impacted.
The Treasury Department and the IRS expect to receive more
information on the impact on small businesses after taxpayers start to
claim the section 45X credit using the guidance and procedures provided
in these final regulations.
C. Impact of the Rules
The final regulations provide rules for how taxpayers can claim the
section 45X credit. Taxpayers that claim the section 45X credit will
have administrative costs related to reading and understanding the
rules as well as recordkeeping and reporting requirements because of
the Related Person Election, computation of the section 45X credit and
tax return
[[Page 85831]]
requirements. The costs will vary across different-sized entities and
across the type of production activities in which such entities are
engaged.
The Related Person Election allows a taxpayer to make an
irrevocable election annually with their Federal income tax return by
providing the information required on Form 7207 (or any successor
form), including, for example, the name, EIN of the taxpayer; a
description of the taxpayer's trade or business; the name, address and
EINs of all related persons; a list of the eligible components that are
sold, and the intended purpose of the eligible components sold by the
related person. To make the Related Person Election and claim the
section 45X credit, the taxpayer must file an annual Federal income tax
return. The reporting and recordkeeping requirements for that Federal
income tax return would be required for any taxpayer that is claiming a
general business credit, regardless of whether the taxpayer was making
a Related Person Election under section 45X.
D. Alternatives Considered
The Treasury Department and the IRS considered alternatives to
these final regulations. For example, the Treasury Department and the
IRS considered whether to impose certain pre-return filing requirements
as a condition of making the Related Person Election as authorized in
section 45X(a)(3)(B)(ii) to prevent duplication, fraud, or improper or
excessive credits. These final regulations were designed to minimize
burdens for taxpayers while ensuring that the IRS has sufficient
information to determine eligibility for the section 45X credit. The
Treasury Department and the IRS determined that requiring registration
before a taxpayer makes the Related Person Election is unnecessary at
this time. These final regulations would allow taxpayers to make an
irrevocable Related Person Election annually with their Federal income
tax return by providing the information required on Form 7207 (or any
successor form), which would provide the IRS with sufficient
information to assist in preventing duplication, fraud, or the claiming
of improper or excessive credits if eligible components are produced
and then sold to related persons.
E. Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal Rules
The final rule would not duplicate, overlap, or conflict with any
relevant Federal rules. As discussed previously, the final rule would
merely provide procedures and definitions to allow taxpayers to claim
the section 45X credit. The Treasury Department and the IRS invite
input from interested members of the public about identifying and
avoiding overlapping, duplicative, or conflicting requirements.
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 (updated annually for inflation). These final
regulations do 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 from
publishing any rule that has federalism implications if the rule either
imposes substantial, direct compliance costs on State and local
governments, and is not required by statute, or preempts State law,
unless the agency meets the consultation and funding requirements of
section 6 of the Executive order. These final regulations do not have
federalism implications and do not impose substantial direct compliance
costs on State and local governments or preempt State law within the
meaning of the Executive order.
VI. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
Executive Order 13175 (Consultation and Coordination with Indian
Tribal governments) prohibits an agency from publishing any rule that
has Tribal implications if the rule either imposes substantial, direct
compliance costs on Indian Tribal governments, and is not required by
statute, or preempts Tribal law, unless the agency meets the
consultation and funding requirements of section 5 of the Executive
order. This final rule does not have substantial direct effects on one
or more federally recognized Indian tribes and does not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on Indian Tribal governments within
the meaning of the Executive order.
VII. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.),
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs designated this rule
as a major rule as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Statement of Availability of IRS Documents
IRS notices and other guidance cited in this preamble are published
in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (or Cumulative Bulletin) and are
available from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government
Publishing Office, Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting the IRS website
at https://www.irs.gov.
Drafting Information
The principal authors of these final regulations are Mindy Chou,
John Deininger, Derek Gimbel, John Lovelace, and Alexander Scott.
However, other personnel from the Office of Chief Counsel, the Treasury
Department, and the IRS participated in the development of these
regulations.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, the Treasury Department and the IRS amend 26 CFR part
1 as follows:
PART 1--INCOME TAXES
0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 is amended by adding
entries in numerical order for Sec. Sec. 1.45X-1 through 1.45X-4 to
read in part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Section 1.45X-1 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 45X, 6001, 6417(h)
and 6418(h).
Section 1.45X-2 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 45X and 1502.
Section 1.45X-3 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 6001.
Section 1.45X-4 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 6001.
* * * * *
0
Par. 2. Sections 1.45X-0 through 1.45X-4 are added to read as follows:
Sec.
* * * * *
1.45X-0 Table of contents.
1.45X-1 General rules applicable to the advanced manufacturing
production credit.
1.45X-2 Sale to unrelated person.
1.45X-3 Eligible components.
1.45X-4 Applicable critical minerals.
* * * * *
Sec. 1.45X-0 Table of contents.
This section lists the major captions contained in Sec. Sec.
1.45X-1 through 1.45X-4.
Sec. 1.45X-1 General rules applicable to the advanced manufacturing
production credit.
[[Page 85832]]
(a) Overview.
(b) Credit amount.
(c) Definition of produced by the taxpayer.
(d) Produced in the United States.
(e) Production and sale in a trade or business.
(f) Sale of integrated components.
(g) Interaction between sections 45X and 48C.
(h) [Reserved]
(i) Anti-abuse rule.
(j) Applicability date.
Sec. 1.45X-2 Sale to unrelated person.
(a) In general.
(b) Definitions.
(c) Special rule for sale to related person.
(d) Related person election.
(e) Sales of integrated components to related person.
(f) Applicability date.
Sec. 1.45X-3 Eligible components.
(a) In general.
(b) Solar energy components.
(c) Wind energy components.
(d) Inverters.
(e) Qualifying battery component.
(f) Phase out rule.
(g) Applicability date.
Sec. 1.45X-4 Applicable critical minerals.
(a) In general.
(b) Definitions.
(c) Credit amount.
(d) Applicability date.
Sec. 1.45X-1 General rules applicable to the advanced manufacturing
production credit.
(a) Overview--(1) In general. This section provides general rules
regarding the advanced manufacturing production credit determined under
section 45X of the Code (section 45X credit). Paragraph (a)(2) of this
section provides definitions of certain terms that apply for purposes
of section 45X and the section 45X regulations (as defined in paragraph
(a)(2)(xv) of this section). Paragraphs (b) through (j) of this section
provide the basic rules regarding the section 45X credit, including the
definition of the term produced by the taxpayer, and rules to determine
the taxpayer that produces an eligible component and whether such
taxpayer is entitled to claim a section 45X credit in contract
manufacturing arrangements; where the production of eligible components
must occur; the treatment of integrated, incorporated or assembled
eligible components; and the interaction between sections 45X and 48C
of the Code. See Sec. 1.45X-2 for rules regarding sales to unrelated
persons, sales to related persons, and the related person election
(Related Person Election), including rules regarding the time, place,
and manner of making the Related Person Election. See Sec. 1.45X-3 for
the definitions of all eligible components (except applicable critical
minerals) and the credit amounts available for each of these eligible
components, including certain phase-out percentages. See Sec. 1.45X-4
for the definitions of applicable critical minerals and the rules
regarding the determination of the credit amount for applicable
critical minerals.
(2) Generally applicable definitions. This paragraph (a)(2)
provides definitions of terms that apply for purposes of section 45X
and the section 45X regulations.
(i) Applicable critical mineral. The term applicable critical
mineral means any of the minerals that are listed in section 45X(c)(6)
and defined in Sec. 1.45X-4(b).
(ii) Code. The term Code means the Internal Revenue Code.
(iii) Contract manufacturing arrangement. The term contract
manufacturing arrangement is defined in paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(B) of this
section.
(iv) Electrode active materials. The term electrode active
materials is defined in section 45X(c)(5)(B)(i) and described in Sec.
1.45X-3(e)(2).
(v) Eligible component. The term eligible component is defined in
section 45X(c)(1)(A) and described in Sec. Sec. 1.45X-3 and 1.45X-4.
(vi) Eligible taxpayer. The term eligible taxpayer is defined in
paragraph (c)(3) of this section.
(vii) Extraction. The term extraction is defined in Sec. 1.45X-
3(e)(2)(iv)(B).
(viii) Guidance. The term guidance means guidance published in the
Federal Register or Internal Revenue Bulletin, as well as
administrative guidance such as forms, instructions, publications, or
other guidance on the IRS.gov website. See Sec. Sec. 601.601 and
601.602 of this chapter.
(ix) IRA. The term IRA means Public Law 117-169, commonly known as
the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022.
(x) IRS. The term IRS means the Internal Revenue Service.
(xi) Produced by the taxpayer. The term produced by the taxpayer is
defined in paragraph (c) of this section, and the related terms
production activities and production process have the meaning given
those terms in paragraph (c) of this section.
(xii) Related person. The term related person is defined in Sec.
1.45X-2(b)(2).
(xiii) Related Person Election. The term Related Person Election is
defined in Sec. 1.45X-2(d)(1).
(xiv) Secretary. The term Secretary means the Secretary of the
Treasury or her delegate.
(xv) Section 45X regulations. The term section 45X regulations
means the provisions of this section, Sec. Sec. 1.45X-2 through 1.45X-
4, and the regulations in this chapter under sections 6417 and 6418 of
the Code that relate to the section 45X credit.
(xvi) Unrelated person. The term unrelated person is defined in
section 45X(a)(3) and described in Sec. 1.45X-2(b)(3).
(b) Credit amount. Except as otherwise provided in section
45X(b)(3) and Sec. 1.45X-3(f), for purposes of section 38 of the Code,
the amount of the section 45X credit for any taxable year is equal to
the sum of the credit amounts provided under section 45X(b) and
described in Sec. Sec. 1.45X-3 and 1.45X-4 with respect to each
eligible component that is produced by the taxpayer and, within the
taxable year, sold by the taxpayer to an unrelated person. See Sec.
1.45X-2 for rules regarding sales of eligible components to related
persons that may be treated as if sold to unrelated persons for
purposes of section 45X(a).
(c) Definition of produced by the taxpayer--(1) In general. The
term produced by the taxpayer means a process conducted by the taxpayer
that substantially transforms constituent elements, materials, or
subcomponents into a complete and distinct eligible component that is
functionally different from that which would result from minor assembly
or superficial modification of the elements, materials, or
subcomponents, and includes both primary and secondary production.
Primary production involves producing an eligible component using non-
recycled materials while secondary production involves producing an
eligible component using recycled materials.
(i) Partial transformation. The term produced by the taxpayer does
not include partial transformation that does not result in substantial
transformation of constituent elements, materials, or subcomponents
into a complete and distinct eligible component as described in this
paragraph (c)(1).
(ii) Minor assembly or superficial modification. The term produced
by the taxpayer does not include minor assembly of two or more
constituent elements, materials, or subcomponents, or superficial
modification of the final eligible component, if the taxpayer does not
also engage in the process resulting in a substantial transformation
described in paragraph (c)(1) or (2) of this section.
(iii) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application
of this paragraph (c)(1).
(A) Example 1. Taxpayers X, Y, and Z each produce one of three
sections of a wind tower that together make up the wind tower. No
taxpayer has produced an eligible component within the meaning of
section 45X(a)(1)(A) because
[[Page 85833]]
no taxpayer has produced all sections of the wind tower.
(B) Example 2. Same facts as paragraph (c)(1)(iii)(A) of this
section (Example 1), but taxpayers X, Y, and Z instead form Partnership
XYZ. Partnership XYZ produces all three sections of the wind tower.
Partnership XYZ has produced an eligible component within the meaning
of section 45X(a)(1)(A).
(C) Example 3. Taxpayer V puts the external casing on a battery
module (within the meaning of Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(A)) that already
had cells, battery management systems, and other components integrated
into it. Taxpayer V has engaged in minor assembly and has not produced
an eligible component within the meaning of section 45X(a)(1)(A).
(D) Example 4. Taxpayer U purchases two finished halves of a wind
turbine nacelle and combines them into a single nacelle. Taxpayer U has
engaged in minor assembly and has not produced an eligible component
within the meaning of section 45X(a)(1)(A).
(E) Example 5. Taxpayer T purchases a dry cell battery and fills
the electrolyte of the battery. Taxpayer T has engaged in minor
assembly and has not produced an eligible component within the meaning
of section 45X(a)(1)(A).
(F) Example 6. Taxpayer W purchases a prefabricated wind turbine
blade and applies paint and finishes. Taxpayer W has engaged in
superficial modification of the blade and has not produced an eligible
component within the meaning of section 45X(a)(1)(A).
(2) Special rule for certain eligible components--(i) In general.
For solar grade polysilicon, electrode active materials, and applicable
critical minerals, the term produced by the taxpayer means processing,
converting, refining, or purifying source materials, such as brines,
ores, or waste streams, to substantially transform the source materials
to derive a distinct eligible component, and includes both primary and
secondary production. For the production process for electrode active
materials and applicable critical minerals, the term conversion is
defined in Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(2)(ii)(A) or Sec. 1.45X-4(c)(2)(i),
respectively, and the term purification is defined in Sec. 1.45X-
3(e)(2)(ii)(B) or Sec. 1.45X-4(c)(2)(ii), respectively.
(ii) Example. Taxpayers X, Y and Z are unrelated C corporations
that have calendar year taxable years. In 2024, X extracts raw lithium
from natural mineral deposits and purifies the extracted material to
90% lithium by mass. X subsequently hires Y to further purify the
lithium material furnished by X to a purity of no less than 99.9%
lithium by mass as required by section 45X(c)(6)(P) and Sec. 1.45X-
4(b)(16)(ii). In 2025, Y purifies the material to 99.9% lithium by mass
(qualifying lithium). X subsequently sells the qualifying lithium to Z
in 2026. X may not claim a section 45X credit for the qualifying
lithium sold to Z because the qualifying lithium was not produced by X
within the meaning of this paragraph (c)(2) of this section, given that
X did not transform the lithium material to derive a distinct eligible
component (i.e., lithium which satisfies the minimum purity of 99.9%
lithium by mass prescribed by section 45X(c)(6)(P)).
(3) Eligible taxpayer--(i) In general. Except as otherwise provided
in paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section, a taxpayer claiming a section
45X credit with respect to an eligible component must be the taxpayer
that directly performs the production activities that bring about a
substantial transformation resulting in the eligible component and must
sell such eligible component to an unrelated person.
(ii) Contract manufacturing arrangement--(A) In general. If the
production of an eligible component is performed in whole or in part
pursuant to a contract that is a contract manufacturing arrangement,
then, provided the other requirements of section 45X are met, the party
to such contract that may claim the section 45X credit with respect to
such eligible component is the party that performs the actual
production activities that bring about a substantial transformation
resulting in the eligible component.
(B) Contract manufacturing arrangement defined. The term contract
manufacturing arrangement means any agreement (or agreements) providing
for the production of an eligible component if the agreement is entered
into before the production of the eligible component to be delivered
under the contract is completed. A routine purchase order for off-the-
shelf property is not treated as a contract manufacturing arrangement
for purposes of this paragraph (c)(3). An agreement will be treated as
a routine purchase order for off-the-shelf property if the contractor
is required to make no more than de minimis modifications to the
property to tailor it to the customer's specific needs, or if at the
time the agreement is entered into, the contractor knows or has reason
to know that the contractor can satisfy the agreement out of existing
stocks or normal production of finished goods.
(iii) Special rule for contract manufacturing arrangements. If an
eligible component is produced by a taxpayer pursuant to a contract
manufacturing arrangement, the parties to such agreement may determine
by agreement the party that may claim the section 45X credit. If a
taxpayer enters into contract manufacturing arrangements with multiple
fabricators to produce an eligible component, the parties to such
agreements may determine by agreement the party that may claim the
section 45X credit. The IRS will not challenge the agreement of the
parties provided all the parties submit signed certification statements
in the manner required in Form 7207, Advanced Manufacturing Production
Credit, or its instructions (as described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of
this section) indicating that all parties agree as to the party that
may claim the section 45X credit.
(iv) Certification statement requirements. A certification
statement indicating that all parties to a contract manufacturing
arrangement agree as to the party that will claim the section 45X
credit must include--
(A) All required information set forth in guidance; and
(B) A properly signed penalty of perjury statement that includes
the following: under penalties of perjury, I declare that I have
examined this statement, including accompanying documents, and to the
best of my knowledge and belief, the facts presented in support of this
statement are true, correct, and complete.
(v) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of
this paragraph (c)(3).
(A) Example 1: Contract manufacturing with sale. Taxpayers X, Y and
Z are unrelated C corporations that have calendar year taxable years.
In 2024, pursuant to a contract manufacturing arrangement as described
in paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(B) of this section, X hires Y to produce a
solar module. The contract is a tolling arrangement and provides that Y
will produce the solar module according to X's designs and
specifications and using the materials and subcomponents that X
provides. X and Y enter an agreement providing that X is the sole party
that may claim a section 45X credit for the production and sale of the
solar module, and X and Y each sign a certification statement as
described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section reflecting this
agreement. In 2025, Y produces and delivers the solar module to X, and
in 2026, X sells the solar module to Z. X may claim a section 45X
credit in taxable year 2026 for the solar module it sold to Z provided
all other requirements of section 45X are met and the certification
statements signed by X
[[Page 85834]]
and Y meet the requirements described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this
section and are properly submitted by X. Y could claim a section 45X
credit if the agreement between X and Y had designated Y as the sole
party that could claim a section 45X credit for the production and sale
of the solar module provided all other requirements of section 45X are
met and the certification statements signed by X and Y meet the
requirements described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section and are
properly submitted by Y.
(B) Example 2: Contract manufacturing with no sale. Assume the
facts are the same as in paragraph (c)(3)(v)(A) of this section
(Example 1), except that X does not sell the solar module and instead X
uses it to generate electricity for use in X's trade or business.
Because there has been no sale, neither X nor Y may claim a section 45X
credit for the solar module regardless of whether X and Y submit signed
certification statements described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this
section.
(C) Example 3: Multiple contract manufacturing arrangements.
Taxpayers V, W, X, Y, and Z are unrelated C corporations that have
calendar year taxable years. In 2024, pursuant to three separate
contract manufacturing arrangements as described in paragraph
(c)(3)(ii)(B) of this section, V hires W, X, and Y to produce the
bottom, middle and top segments, respectively, of a single wind tower
that V designed. W, X, Y, and V enter into an agreement providing that
V is the sole party that may claim a section 45X credit for the
production and sale of the wind tower, and W, X, Y, and V each sign a
certification statement as described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this
section reflecting this agreement. In 2024, W and X both produce and
deliver their respective wind tower segments to the installation site,
and in 2025, Y produces and delivers its wind tower segment to the
installation site. In 2026, V sells the completed wind tower to Z. V
may claim a section 45X credit in taxable year 2026 for the wind tower
it sold to Z provided all other requirements of section 45X are met and
the certification statements signed by V, W, X, and Y meet the
requirements described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section and are
properly submitted by V. W or X or Y could be the party that could
claim a section 45X credit if the agreement between V, W, X and Y had
designated W or X or Y as the sole party that could claim a section 45X
credit for the production and sale of the wind tower provided all other
requirements of section 45X are met and the certification statements
signed by V, W, X, and Y meet the requirements described in paragraph
(c)(3)(iv) of this section and are properly submitted by the party
designated as the sole party that could claim a section 45X credit.
(D) Example 4: Applicable Critical Mineral Processing with
Certification. Taxpayers X, Y, and Z are unrelated C corporations that
have calendar year taxable years. In 2024, X extracts raw lithium from
natural mineral deposits and purifies the extracted material to 90%
lithium by mass. X subsequently hires Y to further process the lithium
material pursuant to a contract manufacturing arrangement as described
in paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(B) of this section. Specifically, the contract
is a tolling arrangement and provides that X remains the owner for
Federal income tax purposes throughout the purification process and
that Y will further purify the lithium material furnished by X to a
purity of no less than 99.9% lithium by mass as required by section
45X(c)(6)(P) and Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(16)(ii). X and Y enter an agreement
providing that X is the sole party that may claim a section 45X credit
for the production and sale of the applicable critical mineral, and X
and Y each sign a certification statement as described in paragraph
(c)(3)(iv) of this section reflecting this agreement. In 2025, Y
purifies the material to 99.9% lithium by mass (qualifying lithium) and
delivers it to X. X subsequently sells the qualifying lithium to Z in
2026. X may claim a section 45X credit in taxable year 2026 for the
qualifying lithium sold to Z, provided that all other requirements of
section 45X are met, and the certification statements signed by X and Y
meet the requirements described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section
and are properly submitted by X. Y could claim a section 45X credit if
the agreement between X and Y had designated Y as the sole party that
could claim a section 45X credit for the qualifying lithium, provided
that all other requirements of section 45X are met, and the
certification statements signed by X and Y meet the requirements
described in paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this section and are properly
submitted by Y. Neither X nor Y could claim a section 45X credit in the
absence of a designating agreement and certification statement
(described in paragraphs (c)(3)(iii) and (iv) of this section,
respectively) for the reasons stated in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this
section.
(4) Timing of production and sale--(i) In general. Production of
eligible components for which a taxpayer is claiming a section 45X
credit may begin before December 31, 2022. Production of eligible
components must be completed, and sales of eligible components must
occur, after December 31, 2022.
(ii) Example. Taxpayer X has a calendar year taxable year. Taxpayer
X begins production of a related offshore wind vessel (as defined in
section 45X(4)(B)(iv) and described in Sec. 1.45X-3(c)(4)) in January
2022. Production is completed in December 2024 and the sale to an
unrelated person occurs in 2025. Taxpayer X is eligible to claim the
section 45X credit in 2025, assuming that all other requirements of
section 45X are met.
(d) Produced in the United States--(1) In general. Sales are taken
into account for purposes of the section 45X credit only for eligible
components that are produced within the United States, as defined in
section 638(1) of the Code, or a United States territory, which for
purposes of section 45X and the section 45X regulations has the meaning
of the term possession provided in section 638(2).
(2) Subcomponents. Constituent elements, materials, and
subcomponents used in the production of eligible components are not
subject to the domestic production requirement provided in paragraph
(d)(1) of this section.
(e) Production and sale in a trade or business. An eligible
component produced and sold by the taxpayer is taken into account for
purposes of the section 45X credit only if the production and sale are
in a trade or business (within the meaning of section 162 of the Code)
of the taxpayer.
(f) Sale of integrated components--(1) In general. For purposes of
the section 45X credit, section 45X(d)(4) provides that a taxpayer that
produces an eligible component is treated as having sold such eligible
component to an unrelated person if such component is integrated,
incorporated, or assembled into another eligible component that is then
sold to an unrelated person.
(i) Integrated, incorporated, or assembled. The term integrated,
incorporated, or assembled means the production activities by which an
eligible component that is a constituent element, material, or
subcomponent is substantially transformed into another complete and
distinct eligible component that is not solar grade polysilicon, an
electrode active material, or an applicable critical mineral. The term
integrated, incorporated, or assembled does not mean the minor assembly
or superficial modification of an eligible component used as an
element, material, or subcomponent and other elements, materials, or
[[Page 85835]]
subcomponents that results in a distinct product.
(ii) Special rule for eligible components resulting in solar grade
polysilicon, electrode active materials, or applicable critical
minerals. For solar grade polysilicon, electrode active materials, and
applicable critical minerals, the term integrated, incorporated, or
assembled means the production activities in which an eligible
component is processed, converted, refined, or purified to derive a
distinct eligible component that is solar grade polysilicon, an
electrode active material, or an applicable critical mineral. The term
integrated, incorporated, or assembled does not mean minor assembly or
superficial modification of an eligible component used as an element,
material, or subcomponent and other elements, materials, or
subcomponents that results in a distinct product.
(2) Application--(i) In general. A taxpayer may claim a section 45X
credit for each eligible component the taxpayer produces and sells to
an unrelated person, including any eligible component the taxpayer
produces that was used as a constituent element, material, or
subcomponent and integrated, incorporated, or assembled into another
complete and distinct eligible component or another complete and
distinct product (that is not itself an eligible component) that the
taxpayer also produces and sells to an unrelated person.
(ii) Example: Sale of product with incorporated eligible components
to unrelated person. In 2022, X, a domestic corporation that has a
calendar year taxable year, begins production of electrode active
materials (EAMs) that are completed in 2023 and incorporated into
battery cells that X also produces. In 2024, X incorporates those
battery cells into battery modules (within the meaning of Sec. 1.45X-
3(e)(4)(i)(A)) and integrates the battery modules into electric
vehicles. X sells the electric vehicles to Z, an unrelated person, in
2024. X may claim a section 45X credit for the EAMs, the battery cells,
and the battery modules in 2024.
(g) Interaction between sections 45X and 48C--(1) In general. For
purposes of the section 45X credit, consistent with section
45X(c)(1)(B), property that would otherwise qualify as an eligible
component (otherwise qualified property) is only an eligible component
if the property is produced at a section 45X facility (as defined in
paragraph (g)(2) of this section) and no part of that section 45X
facility is also a section 48C facility (as defined in paragraph (g)(3)
of this section).
(2) Section 45X facility--(i) In general. A section 45X facility
comprises the independently functioning tangible property used by the
taxpayer that is necessary to be considered the producer of the
otherwise qualified property within the meaning of paragraph (c)(1) or
(2) of this section, as applicable. The tangible property that
comprises a section 45X facility may be in more than one location.
(ii) Special rule for contract manufacturing arrangement. In the
case of a contract manufacturing arrangement where the parties have
agreed to who can claim a section 45X credit under paragraph
(c)(3)(iii) of this section, the section 45X facility under paragraph
(g)(2)(i) of this section is determined by taking into account the
tangible property used to produce the otherwise qualified property,
regardless of which party to the arrangement claims the credit.
(3) Section 48C facility--(i) In general. A section 48C facility
includes all eligible property included in a qualifying advanced energy
project for which a taxpayer receives an allocation of section 48C
credits under the allocation program established under section 48C(e)
and claims such credits after August 16, 2022.
(ii) Eligible property. Eligible property is property that--
(A) Is necessary for the production or recycling of property
described in section 48C(c)(1)(A)(i), re-equipping an industrial or
manufacturing facility described in section 48C(c)(1)(A)(ii), or re-
equipping, expanding, or establishing an industrial facility described
in section 48C(c)(1)(A)(iii);
(B) Is tangible personal property, or other tangible property (not
including a building or its structural components), but only if such
property is used as an integral part of the qualified investment credit
facility; and
(C) With respect to which depreciation (or amortization in lieu of
depreciation) is allowable.
(4) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of
this paragraph (g), and assume any other requirements of section 45X
that are not described have been met:
(i) Example 1: Two independent section 45X facilities--(A) Facts.
Taxpayer owns and operates a manufacturing site that contains tangible
property made up of Equipment A and Equipment B, each set of which
functions independently and which is arranged in serial fashion.
Equipment A is used by the taxpayer to produce otherwise qualified
property 1. Equipment B is used to produce otherwise qualified property
2, a different type of product than otherwise qualified property 1.
Taxpayer was allocated a section 48C credit under the section 48C(e)
program for a section 48C facility that includes Equipment A and
subsequently placed the section 48C facility and Equipment A in service
in taxable year 2026. Taxpayer claimed a section 48C credit related to
Equipment A for taxable year 2026.
(B) Analysis. The section 45X facility with respect to otherwise
qualified property 1 is the tangible property made up of Equipment A,
which is the independently functioning tangible property used by the
taxpayer that is necessary to be considered the producer of the
otherwise qualified property within the meaning of paragraph (c)(1) or
(2) of this section. However, Equipment A is also eligible property
that is considered part of a section 48C facility as defined in
paragraph (g)(3) of this section. Therefore, otherwise qualified
property 1 is not an eligible component under paragraph (g)(1) of this
section because part (all in this case) of the section 45X facility
where otherwise qualified property 1 was produced is also considered a
section 48C facility. There is a separate section 45X facility with
respect to otherwise qualified property 2. That section 45X facility is
the tangible property made up of Equipment B. Equipment A is not
included in the section 45X facility as it is not used to produce
otherwise qualified property 2. None of the tangible property
comprising the section 45X facility with respect to otherwise qualified
property 2 is considered part of a section 48C facility. Thus,
otherwise qualified property 2 is an eligible component under paragraph
(g)(1) of this section.
(ii) Example 2: Single section 45X facility at different
locations--(A) Facts. Taxpayer owns and operates two manufacturing
sites at different locations. The tangible property at manufacturing
site 1 is Equipment A, which is used to continue and finish the first
part of the production process for otherwise qualified property. The
tangible property at manufacturing site 2 is Equipment B, which is used
to complete the production process of the same otherwise qualified
property. Taxpayer was allocated a section 48C credit under the section
48C(e) program for Equipment A.
(B) Analysis. Equipment A and B comprise a single section 45X
facility regardless of location under paragraph (g)(2)(i) of this
section because both Equipment A and B were used to produce the
otherwise qualified property and the use of Equipment A and B are
necessary to consider the
[[Page 85836]]
taxpayer the producer, consistent with the meaning of produced by the
taxpayer in paragraph (c)(1) or (2) of this section. However, part of
the property comprising the section 45X facility is also a section 48C
facility under paragraph (g)(3) of this section because Equipment A is
eligible property that is part of a section 48C facility. As a result,
the otherwise qualified property is not considered an eligible
component, and the sale of the otherwise qualified property will not
generate a section 45X credit.
(iii) Example 3: Independent tangible property and production of
component--(A) Facts. Taxpayer owns and operates two manufacturing
sites. Manufacturing Site 1 contains tangible property that is
Equipment A, which is used to produce photovoltaic cells. Manufacturing
Site 2 contains tangible property that is Equipment B and tangible
property that is Equipment C, which are arranged in serial fashion.
Equipment B is used to produce photovoltaic cells. Equipment C is used
to produce solar modules, in part, by combining the photovoltaic cells
produced by Equipment A and Equipment B. Taxpayer was allocated a
section 48C credit under the section 48C(e) program for a section 48C
facility that includes Equipment B. Subsequently, Taxpayer places the
section 48C facility and Equipment B in service in taxable year 2026.
Taxpayer claimed a section 48C credit for Equipment B in taxable year
2026.
(B) Analysis. Equipment A and Equipment B each comprise a section
45X facility since each independently functions to produce otherwise
qualified property, photovoltaic cells. No part of the section 45X
facility comprised of Equipment A is eligible property that is included
in a section 48C facility. Thus, the photovoltaic cells produced in the
section 45X facility comprised of Equipment A are eligible components.
The photovoltaic cells that are produced in the section 45X facility
comprised of Equipment B are otherwise qualified property that cannot
qualify as eligible components because part (all in this case) of the
section 45X facility comprised of Equipment B where the photovoltaic
cells are produced is also considered a section 48C facility. Solar
modules, a different otherwise qualified property, are produced in
using Equipment C, which is itself a separate section 45X facility.
Equipment C does not have to include any of the tangible property
included in Production Unit A or B under paragraph (g)(2)(i) of this
section because it is not necessary for the Taxpayer to use that
equipment to be considered the producer of the solar modules for
purposes of section 45X. As a result, no part of section 45X facility
comprised of Equipment C where the solar modules are produced is
considered a section 48C facility, and the solar modules are considered
an eligible component for purposes of section 45X.
(iv) Example 4: Manufacturing under a contract manufacturing
arrangement--(A) Facts. X is hired by Y to manufacture photovoltaic
cells, but X and Y agree under paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section
that Y will be the party to claim any section 45X credit resulting from
the sale of the photovoltaic cells. X owns and operates a manufacturing
site that contains equipment that is tangible property used to produce
the photovoltaic cells. X was allocated a section 48C credit under the
section 48C(e) program for a section 48C facility that includes the
equipment used to produce the photovoltaic cells. The equipment is
eligible property that is part of the section 48C facility that was
placed in service in taxable year 2026. X claimed a section 48C credit
for the equipment in taxable year 2026.
(B) Analysis. Under paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of this section, in
determining the section 45X facility related to the photovoltaic cells
(the otherwise qualified property), Y must consider the equipment that
X used in producing the photovoltaic cells. In this case, that means
that part of the section 45X facility is also considered a section 48C
facility, as the equipment used to produce the photovoltaic cells is
also eligible property that is part of a section 48C facility.
Therefore, the photovoltaic cells are not eligible components for
purposes of section 45X to X or Y, and there is no section 45X credit
generated if the photovoltaic cells are sold.
(v) Example 5: Two independent production units manufacturing under
a contract manufacturing arrangement--(A) Facts. Assume the facts are
the same as in paragraph (g)(4)(iv) of this section (Example 4), except
that Y and X also agreed for X to produce photovoltaic wafers using
other equipment that is tangible property that is different than the
equipment X uses to produce the photovoltaic cells.
(B) Analysis. While Y must consider the equipment that X uses to
produce the photovoltaic wafers (the otherwise qualified property)
under paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of this section to determine the section 45X
facility associated with the photovoltaic wafer production, Y is not
required to include any of the equipment used by X to produce the
photovoltaic cells because it was not necessary to use that equipment
to be considered the producer of the photovoltaic wafers. As a result,
no part of the section 45X facility related to photovoltaic wafers is
part of a section 48C facility. Therefore, the photovoltaic wafers are
eligible components for purposes of section 45X and Y will be entitled
to claim a section 45X credit upon the sale.
(h) [Reserved]
(i) Anti-abuse rule--(1) In general. The rules of section 45X and
the section 45X regulations must be applied in a manner consistent with
the purposes of section 45X and the section 45X regulations (and the
regulations in this chapter under sections 6417 and 6418 related to the
section 45X credit). A purpose of section 45X and the section 45X
regulations (and the regulations in this chapter under sections 6417
and 6418 related to the section 45X credit) is to provide taxpayers an
incentive to produce eligible components in a manner that contributes
to the development of secure and resilient supply chains. Accordingly,
the section 45X credit is not allowable if the primary purpose of the
production and sale of an eligible component is to obtain the benefit
of the section 45X credit in a manner that is wasteful, such as
discarding, disposing of, or destroying the eligible component without
putting it to a productive use. A determination of whether the
production and sale of an eligible component is inconsistent with the
purposes of section 45X and the section 45X regulations (and the
regulations in this chapter under sections 6417 and 6418 related to the
section 45X credit) is based on all facts and circumstances.
(2) Example--(i) Facts. Taxpayer is engaged in the activity of
producing and selling multiple units of Eligible Component 1 (EC1).
Taxpayer engages in no other activities. The cost of producing each
unit of EC1 is less than the amount of the section 45X credit that
would be available if each EC1 qualified for the section 45X credit.
Taxpayer sells some of its units of EC1 to related persons and makes a
Related Person Election pursuant to section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i). Taxpayer
also sells some of its units of EC1 to unrelated persons. Taxpayer
sells all units of EC1 at an amount equal to cost plus a markup to
reflect an anticipated accommodation fee and establishes corresponding
accounts receivable at the time of the respective sales. In addition,
Taxpayer knows or reasonably expects that after acquiring the units of
EC1, the related and unrelated transferees will not resell the units of
EC1 or use them in their trades or businesses. Taxpayer intends to
obtain the benefit from the section 45X credit by claiming such credits
[[Page 85837]]
itself or monetizing such credits through an election under section
6417 or section 6418. Taxpayer eliminates the aforementioned accounts
receivable at the time it claims the section 45X credit or receives
related payments attributable to the section 45X credit, and further
makes payments to the related and unrelated transferees as
accommodation fees computed as a percentage of such benefits.
(ii) Analysis. Based on all of the facts and circumstances in
paragraph (i)(2)(i) of this section, the primary purpose of Taxpayer's
production and sale of EC1 is to obtain the benefit of the section 45X
credit in a manner that is wasteful and will not be treated as the
production and sale of eligible components in a trade or business of
Taxpayer for purposes of section 45X(a)(1) and (2). Taxpayer is not
eligible for the section 45X credit with respect to units of EC1 that
it produced and sold. See sections 6417(d)(6) (excessive payments) and
6418(g)(2) (excessive credit transfer).
(j) Applicability date. This section applies to eligible components
for which production is completed and sales occur after December 31,
2022, and during a taxable year ending on or after October 28, 2024.
Sec. 1.45X-2 Sale to unrelated person.
(a) In general. The amount of the section 45X credit for any
taxable year is equal to the sum of the credit amounts determined under
section 45X(b) (and described in Sec. Sec. 1.45X-3 and 1.45X-4) with
respect to each eligible component that is produced by the taxpayer
and, during the taxable year, sold by the taxpayer to an unrelated
person. Applicable Federal income tax principles apply to determine
whether a transaction is in substance a sale (or the provision of a
service, or some other disposition). See Sec. 1.45X-1(d) and (e) for
additional requirements relating to sales.
(b) Definitions. This paragraph (b) provides definitions of terms
that apply for purposes of this section.
(1) Person. The term person means an individual, a trust, estate,
partnership, association, company, or corporation, as provided in
section 7701(a)(1) of the Code. For purposes of this section, an entity
disregarded as separate from a person (for example, under Sec.
301.7701-3 of this chapter) is not a person.
(2) Related person. The term related person means a person who is
related to another person if such persons would be treated as a single
employer under the regulations in this chapter under section 52(b) of
the Code.
(3) Unrelated person. The term unrelated person means a person who
is not a related person as defined in paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(c) Special rule for sale to related person--(1) In general. For
purposes of section 45X(a), a taxpayer is treated as selling an
eligible component to an unrelated person if such component is sold to
such person by a person who is a related person with respect to the
taxpayer.
(2) Example. X and Y are members of a group of trades or businesses
under common control under section 52(b), and thus are related persons
under section 45X(d)(1). Each of X and Y has a calendar year taxable
year. Z is an unrelated person. X is in the trade or business of
producing and selling solar modules. X produces and sells solar modules
to Y in 2023. Y sells the solar modules to Z in 2024. X may claim a
section 45X credit for the sale of the solar modules in 2024, the
taxable year of X in which Y sells the solar modules to Z.
(d) Related person election--(1) Availability of election--(i) In
general. In such form and manner as the Secretary may prescribe, a
taxpayer may make an election under section 45X(a)(3)(B) (Related
Person Election), to treat a sale of eligible components by such
taxpayer to a related person as if made to an unrelated person. As a
condition of, and prior to, a taxpayer making a Related Person Election
(as described in paragraph (d)(2) of this section), the Secretary may
require such information or registration as the Secretary deems
necessary for purposes of preventing duplication, fraud, or any
improper or excessive credit amount determined under section 45X(a)(1).
(ii) Members of a consolidated group. A Related Person Election is
made by a member of a consolidated group (as defined in Sec. 1.1502-
1(h)) in the manner described in paragraph (d)(3)(ii) of this section.
A member of a consolidated group that sells eligible components in an
intercompany transaction (as defined in Sec. 1.1502-13(b)(1)) may make
the Related Person Election to claim the section 45X credit in the year
of the intercompany sale. For the treatment of the selling member's
gain or loss from that sale, see Sec. 1.1502-13.
(2) Time and manner of making election--(i) In general. A taxpayer
must make an affirmative Related Person Election annually on the
taxpayer's timely filed original Federal income tax return, including
extensions in such form and in such manner as may be prescribed in
guidance. The Related Person Election will be applicable to all sales
of eligible components to related persons by the taxpayer for each
trade or business that the taxpayer engages in during the taxable year
that resulted in a credit claim and for which the taxpayer has made the
Related Person Election.
(ii) Required information. For all sales of eligible components to
related persons, the taxpayer must provide all required information set
forth in guidance. Such information may include, for example, the
taxpayer's name, employer identification number (EIN), a description of
the taxpayer's trade or business (including principal business activity
code); the name(s) and EINs of all related persons; a listing of the
eligible components that are sold; and the intended purpose of any
sales of eligible components to or from related persons.
(3) Scope and effect of election--(i) In general. A separate
Related Person Election must be made with respect to related person
sales made by a taxpayer for each eligible trade or business of the
taxpayer. The election applies only to such trade or business for which
the Related Person Election is made. An election under this section
applies to all sales to related persons (including between members of
the same consolidated group) of eligible components produced by the
taxpayer during the taxable year with respect to each trade or business
for which the Related Person Election is made and is irrevocable for
the taxable year for which the election is made. An election under
paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section applies solely for purposes of the
section 45X credit and the section 45X regulations (and the regulations
in this chapter under sections 6417 and 6418 related to the section 45X
credit).
(ii) Application to consolidated groups. For a trade or business of
a consolidated group, a Related Person Election must be made by the
agent for the group on behalf of the members claiming the section 45X
credit and filed with the group's timely filed original Federal income
tax return, including extensions, with respect to each trade or
business that the consolidated group conducts. See Sec. 1.1502-77
(providing rules regarding the status of the common parent as agent for
its members). A separate election must be filed on behalf of each
member claiming the section 45X credit, and each election must include
the name and EIN of the agent for the group and the member on whose
behalf the election is being made.
(iii) Application to partnerships. The Related Person Election for
a partnership must be made on the partnership's timely filed original
[[Page 85838]]
Federal income tax return, including extensions, with respect to each
trade or business that the partnership conducts. The election applies
only to such trade or business for which the Related Person Election is
made. An election by a partnership does not apply to any trade or
business conducted by a partner outside the partnership.
(4) Anti-abuse rule--(i) In general. A Related Person Election may
not be made if, with respect to the eligible components relevant to
such election, the taxpayer fails to provide the information described
in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, provides information described in
paragraph (d)(2) of this section that shows that such components are
described in paragraph (d)(4)(ii) or (iii) of this section, or such
components are described in paragraph (d)(4)(ii) or (iii) of this
section.
(ii) Improper use. For purposes of this paragraph (d)(4) the term
improper use means a use that is wasteful, such as discarding,
disposing of, or destroying the eligible component without putting it
to a productive use by the related person to which the eligible
component is sold.
(iii) Defective components. The term defective component means a
component that does not meet the requirements of section 45X and the
section 45X regulations.
(e) Sales of integrated components to related person--(1) In
general. For purposes of section 45X and the section 45X regulations
(and the regulations in this chapter under sections 6417 and 6418
related to the section 45X credit), a taxpayer that produces and then
sells an eligible component to a related person, who then integrates,
incorporates, or assembles the taxpayer's eligible component into
another complete and distinct eligible component that is subsequently
sold to an unrelated person, may claim a section 45X credit (or make an
election under section 6417 or section 6418) with respect to the
taxable year in which the related person's sale to the unrelated person
occurs.
(2) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules provided
in paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(i) Example 1: Sales of multiple incorporated eligible components
to related persons. X and Y are C corporations that are members of a
group of trades or businesses under common control under section 52(b),
and thus are related persons under section 45X(d)(1) and paragraph
(b)(2) of this section. Each of X and Y has a calendar year taxable
year. Z is an unrelated person. X and Y are in the trade or business of
producing and selling photovoltaic wafers and cells. X produces and
sells photovoltaic wafers to Y in 2023. Y incorporates the photovoltaic
wafers into photovoltaic cells and sells the photovoltaic cells to Z in
2024. X may claim a section 45X credit for the sale of the photovoltaic
wafers in 2024, the taxable year of X in which Y sells the photovoltaic
cells to Z.
(ii) Example 2: Sales of multiple incorporated eligible components
to related and unrelated persons. W, X, and Y are domestic C
corporations that are members of a group of trades or businesses under
common control under section 52(b), and thus are related persons under
section 45X(d)(1) and paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Each of W, X,
and Y has a calendar year taxable year. W produces electrode active
materials (EAMs) and sells the EAMs to X in 2023. In 2024, X
incorporates the EAMs into battery cells that it produces and sells the
battery cells to Y. In 2025, Y incorporates the battery cells into
battery modules (within the meaning of Sec. 1.45X-3(e)(4)(i)(A)) that
it produces and sells the battery modules to Z, an unrelated person. W
may claim a section 45X credit for EAMs sold to X, X may claim a
section 45X credit for the battery cells sold to Y, and Y may claim a
section 45X credit for the battery modules sold to Z in 2025, the
taxable year of each of W, X, and Y in which the battery modules are
sold to Z.
(3) Special rules applicable to related person election--(i) In
general. If a taxpayer makes a valid Related Person Election under
section 45X(a)(3)(B)(i) and paragraph (d)(1) of this section, and the
taxpayer produces and then sells an eligible component to a related
person, who then integrates, incorporates, or assembles the taxpayer's
eligible component into another complete and distinct eligible
component that is subsequently sold to an unrelated person, the
taxpayer's sale of the eligible component to the related person is
treated (solely for purposes of the section 45X credit and the section
45X regulations, and the regulations in this chapter under sections
6417 and 6418 related to the section 45X credit) as if made to an
unrelated person in the taxable year in which the sale to the related
person occurs.
(ii) Example: Sales of multiple integrated eligible components to
related and unrelated persons with a related person election. W, X, and
Y are domestic C corporations that are members of a group of trades or
businesses under common control and thus are related persons under
section 45X(d)(1) and paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Each of W, X,
and Y has a calendar year taxable year. W produces electrode active
materials (EAMs) and sells the EAMs to X in 2023. W makes a valid
Related Person Election under paragraph (d)(1) of this section in 2023
with regard to the sale. In 2024, X incorporates the EAMs into battery
cells that it produces and sells the battery cells to Y. X makes a
valid Related Person Election under paragraph (d)(1) of this section in
2024 with regard to the sale. In 2025, Y incorporates the battery cells
into battery modules that it produces and sells the battery modules to
Z, an unrelated person. W may claim a section 45X credit for the sale
of the EAMs in 2023 because the sale to X is treated as if made to an
unrelated person solely for purposes of section 45X(a). X may claim a
section 45X credit for the sale of the battery cells in 2024 because
the sale to Y is treated as if made to an unrelated person solely for
purposes of section 45X(a). Y may claim a section 45X credit for the
sale of battery modules in 2025 because Z is an unrelated person.
(f) Applicability date. This section applies to eligible components
for which production is completed and sales occur after December 31,
2022, and during a taxable year ending on or after October 28, 2024.
Sec. 1.45X-3 Eligible components.
(a) In general. For purposes of the section 45X credit, eligible
component means any solar energy component (as defined in paragraph (b)
of this section), any wind energy component (as defined in paragraph
(c) of this section), any inverter (as defined in paragraph (d) of this
section), any qualifying battery component (as defined in paragraph (e)
of this section), and any applicable critical mineral (as defined in
Sec. 1.45X-4(b)). See paragraph (f) of this section for certain phase-
out rules applicable to eligible components other than applicable
critical minerals.
(b) Solar energy components. Solar energy component means a solar
module, photovoltaic cell, photovoltaic wafer, solar grade polysilicon,
torque tube, structural fastener, or polymeric backsheet, each as
defined in this paragraph (b).
(1) Photovoltaic cell--(i) Definition. Photovoltaic cell means the
smallest semiconductor element of a solar module that performs the
immediate conversion of light into electricity that is either a thin
film photovoltaic cell or a crystalline photovoltaic cell.
(ii) Credit amount. For a photovoltaic cell, the credit amount is
equal to the product of 4 cents multiplied by the capacity of such
photovoltaic cell. The
[[Page 85839]]
capacity of each photovoltaic cell is expressed on a direct current
watt basis. Capacity is the nameplate capacity in direct current watts
using Standard Test Conditions (STC), as defined by the International
Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). In the case of a tandem technology
produced in serial fashion, such as a monolithic multijunction cell
composed of two or more sub-cells, capacity must be measured at the
point of sale at the end of the single cell production unit. In the
case of a four-terminal tandem technology produced by mechanically
stacking two distinct cells or interconnected layers, capacity must be
measured for each cell at each point of sale. If a cell is sold to a
customer who will use it as the bottom cell in a tandem module, its
capacity should be measured with the customer's intended top cell
placed between the bottom cell and the one-sun light source.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document the capacity of a
photovoltaic cell in a bill of sale or design documentation, such as an
IEC certification (for example, IEC 61215 or IEC 60904).
(2) Photovoltaic wafer--(i) Definition. Photovoltaic wafer means a
thin slice, sheet, or layer of semiconductor material of at least 240
square centimeters that comprises the substrate or absorber layer of
one or more photovoltaic cells. A photovoltaic wafer must be produced
by a single manufacturer by forming an ingot from molten polysilicon
(for example, Czochralski method) and then subsequently slicing it into
wafers, forming molten or evaporated polysilicon into a sheet or layer,
or depositing a thin-film semiconductor photon absorber into a sheet or
layer (that is, thin-film deposition).
(ii) Credit amount. For a photovoltaic wafer, the credit amount is
$12 per square meter.
(3) Polymeric backsheet--(i) Definition. Polymeric backsheet means
a sheet on the back of a solar module, composed, at least in part, of a
polymer, that acts as an electric insulator and protects the inner
components of such module from the surrounding environment.
(ii) Credit amount. For a polymeric backsheet, the credit amount is
40 cents per square meter.
(4) Solar grade polysilicon--(i) Definition. Solar grade
polysilicon means silicon that is suitable for use in photovoltaic
manufacturing and purified to a minimum purity of 99.999999 percent
silicon by mass. Satisfaction of the minimum purity requirement will be
determined in accordance with the standards provided in SEMI
Specification PV17-1012, Category 1.
(ii) Credit amount. For solar grade polysilicon, the credit amount
is $3 per kilogram.
(5) Solar module--(i) Definition. Solar module means the connection
and lamination of photovoltaic cells into an environmentally protected
final assembly that is--
(A) Suitable to generate electricity when exposed to sunlight; and
(B) Ready for installation without an additional manufacturing
process.
(ii) Credit amount. For a solar module, the credit amount is equal
to the product of 7 cents multiplied by the capacity of such module.
The capacity of each solar module is expressed on a direct current watt
basis. Capacity is the nameplate capacity in direct current watts using
STC, as defined by the IEC.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document the capacity of a
solar module in a bill of sale or design documentation, such as an IEC
certification (for example, IEC 61215 or IEC 61646).
(6) Solar tracker. Solar tracker means a mechanical system that
moves solar modules according to the position of the sun and to
increase energy output. A torque tube (as defined in paragraph (b)(7)
of this section) or structural fastener (as defined in paragraph (b)(8)
of this section) are solar tracker components that are eligible
components for purposes of the section 45X credit.
(7) Torque tube--(i) Definition. Torque tube means a structural
steel support element (including longitudinal purlins) that--
(A) Is part of a solar tracker;
(B) Is of any cross-sectional shape;
(C) May be assembled from individually manufactured segments;
(D) Spans longitudinally between foundation posts;
(E) Supports solar panels and is connected to a mounting attachment
for solar panels (with or without separate module interface rails); and
(F) Is rotated by means of a drive system.
(ii) Credit amount. For a torque tube, the credit amount is 87
cents per kilogram.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document that a torque tube
is part of a solar tracker with a specification sheet, bill of sale, or
other similar documentation that explicitly describes its application
as part of a solar tracker.
(8) Structural fastener--(i) Definition. Structural fastener means
a component that is used--
(A) To connect the mechanical and drive system components of a
solar tracker to the foundation of such solar tracker;
(B) To connect torque tubes to drive assemblies; or
(C) To connect segments of torque tubes to one another.
(ii) Credit amount. For a structural fastener, the credit amount is
$2.28 per kilogram.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document that a structural
fastener is used in a manner described in paragraph (b)(8)(i)(A), (B),
or (C) of this section with a bill of sale or other similar
documentation that explicitly describes such use.
(c) Wind energy components. Wind energy component means a blade,
nacelle, tower, offshore wind foundation, or related offshore wind
vessel, each as defined in this paragraph (c).
(1) Blade--(i) Definition. Blade means an airfoil-shaped blade that
is responsible for converting wind energy to low-speed rotational
energy.
(ii) Credit amount. For a blade, the credit amount is equal to the
product of 2 cents multiplied by the total rated capacity of the
completed wind turbine for which the blade is designed.
(2) Offshore wind foundation--(i) Definition. Offshore wind
foundation means the component (including transition piece) that
secures an offshore wind tower and any above-water turbine components
to the seafloor using--
(A) Fixed platforms, such as offshore wind monopiles, jackets, or
gravity-based foundations; or
(B) Floating platforms and associated mooring systems.
(ii) Credit amount. For a fixed offshore wind foundation platform,
the credit amount is equal to the product of 2 cents multiplied by the
total rated capacity of the completed wind turbine for which the fixed
offshore wind foundation platform is designed. For a floating offshore
wind foundation platform, the credit amount is equal to the product of
4 cents multiplied by the total rated capacity of the completed wind
turbine for which the floating offshore wind foundation platform is
designed.
(3) Nacelle--(i) Definition. Nacelle means the assembly of the
drivetrain and other tower-top components of a wind turbine (with the
exception of the blades and the hub) within their cover housing.
(ii) Credit amount. For a nacelle, the credit amount is equal to
the product of 5 cents multiplied by the total rated capacity of the
completed wind turbine for which the nacelle is designed.
(4) Related offshore wind vessel--(i) Definition. Related offshore
wind vessel
[[Page 85840]]
means any vessel that is purpose-built or retrofitted for purposes of
the development, transport, installation, operation, or maintenance of
offshore wind energy components. A vessel is purpose-built for
development, transport, installation, operation, or maintenance of
offshore wind energy components if it is built to be capable of
performing such functions and it is of a type that is commonly used in
the offshore wind industry. A vessel is retrofitted for development,
transport, installation, operation, or maintenance of offshore wind
energy components if such vessel was incapable of performing such
functions prior to being retrofitted, the retrofit causes the vessel to
be capable of performing such functions, and the retrofitted vessel is
of a type that is commonly used in the offshore wind industry.
(ii) Credit amount. For a related offshore wind vessel, the credit
amount is equal to 10 percent of the sales price of the vessel. The
sales price of the vessel, determined under Federal income tax
principles, does not include the price of maintenance, services, or
other similar items that may be sold with the vessel. For a related
offshore wind vessel with respect to which an election under section
45X(a)(3)(B)(i) has been made, such election will not cause the sale
price of such vessel to be treated as having been determined with
respect to a transaction between uncontrolled taxpayers for purposes of
section 482 of the Code and the regulations in this chapter.
(5) Tower--(i) Definition. Tower means a tubular or lattice
structure that supports the nacelle and rotor of a wind turbine.
(ii) Credit amount. For a tower, the credit amount is equal to the
product of 3 cents multiplied by the total rated capacity of the
completed wind turbine for which the tower is designed.
(6) Total rated capacity of the completed wind turbine. For
purposes of this section, total rated capacity of the completed wind
turbine means, for the completed wind turbine for which a blade,
nacelle, offshore wind foundation, or tower was manufactured and sold,
the nameplate capacity at the time of sale as certified to the relevant
national or international standards, such as IEC 61400, or ANSI/ACP
101-1-2021, the Small Wind Turbine Standard (Standard). Certification
of the turbine to such Standards must be documented by a certificate
issued by an accredited certification body. The total rated capacity of
a wind turbine must be expressed in watts.
(7) Substantiation. Taxpayers must maintain specific documentation
regarding wind energy components for which a section 45X credit is
claimed. For blades, nacelles, offshore wind foundations, or towers, a
taxpayer must document the turbine model for which such component is
designed and the total rated capacity of the completed wind turbine in
technical documentation associated with the sale of such component. For
related offshore wind vessel, such documentation could include the
contract to construct or retrofit (along with retrofit plans), sales
contract, U.S. Coast Guard bill of sale, U.S. Coast Guard Certificate
of Documentation (COD), and U.S. Coast Guard Certificate of Inspection
(COI).
(d) Inverters--(1) In general. Inverter means an end product that
is suitable to convert direct current (DC) electricity from one or more
solar modules or certified distributed wind energy systems into
alternating current electricity. An end product is suitable to convert
DC electricity from one or more solar modules or certified distributed
wind energy systems into alternating current electricity if, in the
form sold by the manufacturer, it is able to connect with such modules
or systems and convert DC electricity to alternating current
electricity from such connected source. The term inverter includes a
central inverter, commercial inverter, distributed wind inverter,
microinverter, or residential inverter. Only an inverter that meets at
least one of the requirements in paragraphs (d)(2) through (7) of this
section is an eligible component for purposes of the section 45X
credit.
(2) Central inverter--(i) Definition. Central inverter means an
inverter that is suitable for large utility-scale systems and has a
capacity that is greater than 1,000 kilowatts. The capacity of a
central inverter is expressed on an alternating current watt basis. An
inverter is suitable for large utility-scale systems if, in the form
sold by the manufacturer, it is capable of serving as a component in a
large utility-scale system and meets the core engineering
specifications for such application.
(ii) Credit amount. For a central inverter the total rated capacity
of which is expressed on an alternating current watt basis, the credit
amount is equal to the product of 0.25 cents multiplied by the total
rated capacity of the central inverter.
(iii) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document that a central
inverter meets the core engineering specifications for use in a large
utility-scale system and has a capacity that is greater than 1,000
kilowatts with a specification sheet, bill of sale, or other similar
documentation that explicitly describes such specifications and
capacity.
(3) Commercial inverter--(i) Definition. Commercial inverter means
an inverter that--
(A) Is suitable for commercial or utility-scale applications;
(B) Has a rated output of 208, 480, 600, or 800 volt three-phase
power; and
(C) Has a capacity expressed on an alternating current watt basis
that is not less than 20 kilowatts and not greater than 125 kilowatts.
(ii) Suitable for commercial or utility-scale applications. An
inverter is suitable for commercial or utility-scale applications if,
in the form sold by the manufacturer, it is capable of serving as a
component in commercial or utility-scale systems and meets the core
engineering specifications for such application.
(iii) Credit amount. For a commercial inverter the total rated
capacity of which is expressed on an alternating current watt basis,
the credit amount is equal to the product of 2 cents multiplied by the
total rated capacity of the commercial inverter.
(iv) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document that a commercial
inverter meets the core engineering specifications for use in
commercial or utility-scale applications, the inverter's rated output,
and the inverter's capacity in a specification sheet, bill of sale, or
other similar documentation.
(4) Distributed wind inverter--(i) In general. Distributed wind
inverter means an inverter that is used in a residential or non-
residential system that utilizes one or more certified distributed wind
energy systems and has a total rated output, expressed on an
alternating current watt basis, of not greater than 150 kilowatts.
(ii) Certified distributed wind energy system. Certified
distributed wind energy system means a wind energy system that is
certified by an accredited certification agency to meet Standard 9.1-
2009 of the American Wind Energy Association; IEC 61400-1, 61400-2,
61400-11, 61400-12; or ANSI/ACP 101-1-2021, the Standard, including any
subsequent revisions to or modifications of such Standard that have
been approved by ANSI.
(iii) Credit amount. For a distributed wind inverter the total
rated capacity of which is expressed on an alternating current watt
basis, the credit amount is equal to the product of 11 cents multiplied
by the total rated capacity of the distributed wind inverter.
(iv) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document that a distributed
wind inverter is used in a residential or non-residential system that
utilizes one or
[[Page 85841]]
more certified distributed wind energy systems with a specification
sheet, bill of sale, or other similar documentation that explicitly
describes such use and the total rated output of the inverter on an
alternating current watt basis.
(5) Microinverter--(i) Definition. Microinverter means an inverter
that--
(A) Is suitable to connect with one solar module;
(B) Has a rated output described in paragraph (d)(5)(ii) of this
section; and
(C) Has a capacity, expressed on an alternating current watt basis,
that is not greater than 650 watts.
(ii) Rated output. For purposes of paragraph (d)(5)(i)(B) of this
section, for an inverter to be a microinverter, the inverter must have
a rated output of--
(A) 120 or 240 volt single-phase power; or
(B) 208 or 480 volt three-phase power.
(iii) Suitable to connect to one solar module--(A) In general. An
inverter is suitable to connect to one solar module if, in the form
sold by the manufacturer, it is capable of connecting to one or more
solar modules and regulating the DC electricity from each module
independently before that electricity is converted into alternating
current electricity.
(B) Application to direct current (DC) optimized inverter systems.
A DC optimized inverter system means an inverter that is comprised of
an inverter connected to multiple DC optimizers that are each designed
to connect to one solar module. A DC optimized inverter system is
suitable to connect with one solar module if, in the form sold by the
manufacturer, it is capable of connecting to one or more solar modules
and regulating the DC electricity from each module independently before
that electricity is converted into alternating current electricity.
(C) Application to multi-module inverters. A multi-module inverter
means an inverter that is comprised of an inverter with independent
connections and DC optimizing components for two or more modules. A
multi-module microinverter is suitable to connect with one solar module
if it is capable of connecting to one or more solar modules and
regulating the DC electricity from each module independently before
that electricity is converted into alternating current electricity.
(iv) Credit amount--(A) In general. For a microinverter the total
rated capacity of which is expressed on an alternating current watt
basis, the credit amount is equal to the product of 11 cents multiplied
by the total rated capacity of the microinverter.
(B) DC optimized inverter systems. A DC optimized inverter system
qualifies as a microinverter if it meets the requirements of paragraph
(d)(5)(i) of this section. For purposes of paragraph (d)(5)(i)(C) of
this section, a DC optimized inverter system's capacity is determined
separately for each DC optimizer paired with the inverter in a DC
optimized inverter system. If each DC optimizer paired with the
inverter in a DC optimized inverter system meets the requirements of
paragraph (d)(5)(i) of this section, then the DC optimized inverter
system qualifies as a microinverter. The credit amount for a DC
optimized inverter system that qualifies as a microinverter is equal to
the product of 11 cents multiplied by the lesser of the sum of the
alternating current capacity of each DC optimizer when paired with the
inverter in the DC optimized inverter system or the alternating current
capacity of the inverter in the DC optimized inverter system. For
purposes of this paragraph (d)(5)(iv)(B), capacity must be measured in
watts of alternating current converted from DC electricity by the
inverter in a DC optimized inverter system. For a DC optimized inverter
system to qualify as a microinverter, a taxpayer must produce and sell
the inverter and the DC optimizers in the DC optimized inverter system
together as a combined end product.
(C) Multi-module inverters. A multi-module inverter qualifies as a
microinverter if it meets the requirements of paragraph (d)(5)(i) of
this section. For purposes of paragraph (d)(5)(i)(C) of this section, a
multi-module inverter's capacity is determined separately for each
internal DC optimizer paired with the inverter. The credit amount for a
multi-module inverter is equal to the product of 11 cents multiplied by
the total alternating current capacity of the DC optimizers in the
multi-module inverter when paired with the inverter in the system. For
purposes of this paragraph (d)(5)(iv)(C), capacity must be measured in
watts of alternating current converted from DC electricity by the
inverter in a multi-module microinverter.
(v) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document that a microinverter
meets the core engineering specifications to be suitable to connect
with one solar module, the inverter's rated output, and the inverter's
capacity in a specification sheet, bill of sale, or other similar
documentation. In the case of a DC optimized inverter system, the
taxpayer must also document that the DC optimizers and the inverter in
such system were sold as a combined end product.
(6) Residential inverter--(i) Definition. Residential inverter
means an inverter that--
(A) Is suitable for a residence;
(B) Has a rated output of 120 or 240 volt single-phase power; and
(C) Has a capacity expressed on an alternating current watt basis
that is not greater than 20 kilowatts.
(ii) Suitable for a residence. An inverter is suitable for a
residence if, in the form sold by the manufacturer, it is capable of
serving as a component in a residential system and meets the core
engineering specifications for such application.
(iii) Credit amount. For a residential inverter the total rated
capacity of which is expressed on an alternating current watt basis,
the credit amount is equal to the product of 6.5 cents multiplied by
the total rated capacity of the residential inverter.
(iv) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document that a residential
inverter meets the core engineering specifications for use in a
residence, the inverter's rated output, and the inverter's capacity in
a specification sheet, bill of sale, or other similar documentation.
(7) Utility inverter--(i) Definition. Utility inverter means an
inverter that--
(A) Is suitable for commercial or utility-scale systems;
(B) Has a rated output of not less than 600 volt three-phase power;
and
(C) Has a capacity expressed on an alternating current watt basis
that is greater than 125 kilowatts and not greater than 1000 kilowatts.
(ii) Suitable for commercial or utility-scale systems. An inverter
is suitable for commercial or utility-scale systems if, in the form
sold by the manufacturer, it is capable of serving as a component in
such systems and meets the core engineering specifications for such
application.
(iii) Credit amount. For a utility inverter the total rated
capacity of which is expressed on an alternating current watt basis,
the credit amount is equal to the product of 1.5 cents multiplied by
the total rated capacity of the utility inverter.
(iv) Substantiation. The taxpayer must document that a utility
inverter meets the core engineering specifications for use in
commercial or utility-scale systems, the inverter's rated output, and
the inverter's capacity in a specification sheet, bill of sale, or
other similar documentation.
(e) Qualifying battery component--(1) In general. Qualifying
battery component means electrode active materials, battery cells, or
battery
[[Page 85842]]
modules, each as defined in this paragraph (e).
(2) Electrode active materials--(i) Definitions--(A) Electrode
active materials. Electrode active materials means cathode electrode
materials, anode electrode materials, and electrochemically active
materials that contribute to the electrochemical processes necessary
for energy storage. Electrode active materials do not include battery
management systems, terminal assemblies, cell containments, gas release
valves, module containments, module connectors, compression plates,
straps, pack terminals, bus bars, thermal management systems, and pack
jackets.
(B) Cathode electrode materials. Cathode electrode materials means
the materials that comprise the cathode of a commercial battery
technology, such as binders, and current collectors (for example,
cathode foils).
(C) Anode electrode materials. Anode electrode materials means the
materials that comprise the anode of a commercial battery technology,
including anode foils.
(D) Electrochemically active materials. Electrochemically active
materials that contribute to the electrochemical processes necessary
for energy storage means battery-grade materials that enable the
electrochemical storage within a commercial battery technology. In
addition to solvents, additives, and electrolyte salts,
electrochemically active materials that contribute to the
electrochemical processes necessary for energy storage may include
electrolytes, catholytes, anolytes, separators, and metal salts and
oxides.
(E) Example. A commercial battery technology contains Cathode
Active Material (CAM), which is a powder used in the battery that is
made by processing and combining Battery-Grade Materials A and B.
Battery-Grade Material A is a derivative of Material C, which has been
refined to the necessary level to enable electrochemical storage. The
production costs for CAM and its direct inputs (Battery-Grade Material
A and Battery-Grade Material B) are eligible for the section 45X credit
for electrode active materials, but the unrefined Material C is not.
(F) Battery-grade materials. Battery-grade materials means the
processed materials found in a final battery cell or an analogous unit,
or the direct battery-grade precursors to those processed materials.
(ii) Credit amount. For an electrode active material, the credit
amount is equal to 10 percent of the costs incurred by the taxpayer
with respect to production of such materials.
(iii) Production processes for electrode active materials--(A)
Conversion. For purposes of section 45X, the term conversion means a
chemical transformation from one species to another.
(B) Purification. For purposes of section 45X, the term
purification means increasing the mass fraction of a certain element.
(iv) Production costs incurred--(A) In general--(1) Definition of
production costs incurred. Costs incurred by the taxpayer with respect
to production of an electrode active material includes all costs as
defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e) that are paid or incurred within the
meaning of section 461 of the Code by the taxpayer for the production
of such electrode active material including direct materials costs as
defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(2)(i)(A), or indirect materials costs as
defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(3)(ii)(E), but does not include direct or
indirect materials costs that relate to the purchase of materials that
are an eligible component at the time of acquisition (for example, an
electrode active material as defined in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this
section or applicable critical mineral as defined in Sec. 1.45X-4(b)).
This definition of production costs incurred also includes any costs
incurred by the taxpayer related to the extraction, as defined in
paragraph (e)(2)(iv)(B) of this section, of raw materials in the United
States or a United States territory, but only if those costs are paid
or incurred by the taxpayer that claims the section 45X credit with
respect to the relevant electrode active material. Section 263A of the
Code and the regulations in this chapter under section 263A apply
solely to identify the types of costs that are includible in production
costs incurred for purposes of computing the amount of the section 45X
credit, but do not apply for any other purpose, such as to determine
whether a taxpayer is engaged in production activities.
(2) Production costs for production of incorporated eligible
components. The production costs that a taxpayer pays or incurs in the
production of an eligible component (whether produced domestically or
not) that the taxpayer then incorporates into a further distinct
electrode active material within the meaning of Sec. 1.45X-1(f)(1) are
not included in the costs incurred by the taxpayer in producing the
further distinct electrode active material. A taxpayer may not include
the same production costs in the calculation of the credit amount for
more than one eligible component. For example, if the taxpayer pays or
incurs production costs of $50X for eligible component 1 and an
additional $100X of production costs for eligible component 2 that
included integrating eligible component 1 within the meaning of Sec.
1.45X-1(f)(1), then the production costs for eligible component 1 equal
$50X and the production costs for eligible component 2 equal $100X.
(3) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules of this
section:
(i) Example 1. Taxpayers X, Y and Z are unrelated C corporations
that have calendar year taxable years. In 2024, X extracts raw nickel
from natural mineral deposits located in the United States and purifies
the extracted material to 99% nickel by mass (qualifying nickel) as
required by section 45X(c)(6)(S) and Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(19)(ii). Y
subsequently purchases the qualifying nickel and uses the material to
produce battery-grade nickel salts which qualify as electrode active
materials within the meaning of paragraph (e)(2) of this section. Y
sells the battery-grade nickel salts to Z in tax year 2026. Y may claim
a section 45X credit for the battery-grade nickel salts in tax year
2026 because Y produced, within the meaning of Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(2), an
eligible component. In calculating its production costs with respect to
such credit, Y may not include the purchase price it paid to X for the
qualifying nickel because the qualifying nickel met the minimum purity
requirement prescribed by section 45X(c)(6)(S) such that the material
constituted an applicable critical mineral (and, accordingly, an
eligible component) at the time at which Y acquired the qualifying
nickel.
(ii) Example 2. Assume the facts are the same as in paragraph
(e)(2)(iv)(A)(2)(i) of this section (Example 1), except that X purifies
the extracted raw nickel material to a purity of 90% nickel by mass,
rather than 99% nickel by mass as required by section 45X(c)(6)(S) and
Sec. 1.45X-4(b)(19)(ii). Y may claim a section 45X credit for the
battery-grade nickel salts in tax year 2026 because Y produced, within
the meaning of Sec. 1.45X-1(c)(2), an eligible component. In
calculating its production costs with respect to such credit, Y may
include the purchase price of the 90% nickel material among its
production costs, provided that Y satisfies the substantiation
requirements described in paragraph (e)(2)(iv)(C) of this section,
because, at the time at which Y acquired such material, the material
did not meet the minimum purity as required by section 45X(c)(6)(S) to
constitute an applicable critical mineral.
(B) Definition of extraction. The term extraction means the
activities
[[Page 85843]]
performed to harvest minerals or natural resources from the ground or
from a body of water. Extraction includes, but is not limited to,
operating equipment to harvest minerals or natural resources from mines
and wells and the physical processes involved in refining. Extraction
also includes operating equipment to extract minerals or natural
resources from the waste or residue of prior extraction, including
crude oil extraction to the extent that processes applied to that crude
oil yield an applicable critical mineral or an electrode active
material as a byproduct. 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 or electrode active material processing.
Extraction does not include activities that begin with a recyclable
commodity (as such activities are recycling). Extraction does not
include the chemical and thermal processes involved in refining.
(C) Substantiation. In order to include direct or indirect
materials costs as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(2)(i)(A) and
(e)(3)(ii)(E) as production costs when calculating a section 45X credit
for the production and sale of an electrode active material, a
taxpayer, as part of filing an annual tax return (or a return for a
short year within the meaning of section 443 of the Code), must include
the information in paragraph (e)(2)(iv)(C)(1) of this section as an
attachment to that return, prepare the information required in
paragraphs (e)(2)(iv)(C)(2) through (4) of this section and maintain
that information in the taxpayer's books and records under section
6001, and comply with directions for the information required in
paragraph (e)(2)(iv)(C)(5) of this section as specified in guidance:
(1) Certifications from any supplier, including the supplier's
employer identification number and that is signed under penalties of
perjury, from which the taxpayer purchased any constituent elements,
materials, or subcomponents of the taxpayer's electrode active
material, stating that the supplier is not claiming the section 45X
credit with respect to any of the material acquired by the taxpayer,
nor is the supplier aware that any prior supplier in the chain of
production of that material claimed a section 45X credit for the
material.
(2) A document that provides an analysis of any constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents that concludes the material did
not meet the definition of an eligible component (for example, did not
meet the definition of applicable critical mineral or electrode active
material) at the time of acquisition by the taxpayer. The document may
be prepared by the taxpayer or ideally by an independent third-party.
(3) A list of all direct and indirect material costs and the amount
of such costs that were included within the taxpayer's total production
cost for each electrode active material.
(4) A document related to the taxpayer's production activities with
respect to the direct and indirect material costs that establishes the
materials were used in the production of the electrode active material.
The document may be prepared by the taxpayer or ideally by an
independent third-party.
(5) Any other information related to the direct or indirect
materials specified in guidance.
(D) Failure to provide the documentation described in paragraph
(e)(2)(iv)(C) of this section with the return filing, or providing an
available upon request statement, will constitute a failure to
substantiate the claim.
(v) Materials that are both electrode active materials and
applicable critical minerals--(A) In general. A material that qualifies
as an electrode active material and an applicable critical material is
eligible for the section 45X credit. A taxpayer may claim the section
45X credit with respect to such material either as an electrode active
material or an applicable critical material, but not both.
(B) Example. Lithium carbonate is an electrode active material
because it is a direct battery-grade precursor to electrolyte salts,
which are processed materials found in a final battery cell. Lithium
carbonate is also eligible for the 45X critical minerals credit. A
taxpayer who produces and sells lithium carbonate may claim either the
electrode active material credit or the critical mineral credit for its
production and sale of lithium carbonate but may not take both credits.
(3) Battery cells--(i) Definition. Battery cell means an
electrochemical cell--
(A) Comprised of one or more positive electrodes and one or more
negative electrodes;
(B) With a volumetric energy density of not less than 100 watt-
hours per liter; and
(C) Capable of storing at least 12 watt-hours of energy.
(ii) Capacity measurement. Taxpayers must measure the capacity of a
battery cell in accordance with a national or international standard,
such as IEC 60086-1 (Primary Batteries), or an equivalent standard.
Taxpayers can reference the United States Advanced Battery Consortium
(USABC) Battery Test Manual for additional guidance.
(iii) Credit amount. For a battery cell, the credit amount is equal
to the product of $35 multiplied by the capacity of such battery cell,
subject to the limitation provided in paragraph (e)(5) of this section.
The capacity of a battery cell is expressed on a kilowatt-hour basis.
(4) Battery module definitions and applicable rules--(i) Battery
module defined. The term battery module means a module described in
paragraph (e)(4)(i)(A) or (B) of this section with an aggregate
capacity of not less than 7 kilowatt-hours (or, in the case of a module
for a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, not less than 1 kilowatt-hour).
(A) Modules using battery cells. A module using battery cells, is a
module with two or more battery cells that are configured electrically,
in series or parallel, to create voltage or current, as appropriate, to
a specified end use, meaning an end-use configuration of battery
technologies. An end-use configuration is the product that combines
cells into a module such that any subsequent manufacturing is done to
the module rather than to the cells individually. Where multiple points
in a supply chain may be eligible under this section, the first module
produced and sold that meets the requirements of this section and the
kilowatt-hour requirement in paragraph (e)(4)(i) of this section will
be the only module eligible.
(B) Modules with no battery cells. A module with no battery cells
means a product with a standardized manufacturing process and form that
is capable of storing and dispatching useful energy, that contains an
energy storage medium that remains in the module (for example, it is
not consumed through combustion), and that is not a custom-built
electricity generation or storage facility. For example, neither
standalone fuel storage tanks nor fuel tanks connected to engines or
generation systems qualify as modules with no battery cells.
(ii) Capacity measurement--(A) Modules using battery cells.
Taxpayers must measure the capacity of a module using battery cells
with a testing procedure that complies with a national or international
standard published by a recognized standard setting organization. The
capacity of a battery module may not exceed the total nameplate
capacity of the battery cells in the module. Taxpayers must measure the
capacity of a battery cell in accordance with a national or
international standard, such as IEC
[[Page 85844]]
60086-1 (Primary Batteries), or an equivalent standard. Taxpayers can
reference the USABC Battery Test Manual for additional guidance.
(B) Modules with no battery cells. Taxpayers must measure the
capacity of a module with no battery cells with a testing procedure
that complies with a national or international standard published by a
recognized standard setting organization. Taxpayers producing thermal
and thermochemical battery modules described in paragraph (e)(4)(i)(B)
of this section must convert the energy storage to a kilowatt-hour
basis and provide both methodology and testing regarding this
conversion. Such conversion of the kilowatt-hour basis cannot exceed
the total direct conversion of the total nameplate capacity of the
thermal battery module to kilowatt-hours.
(C) Substantiation of capacity measurement. Taxpayers must maintain
the testing standard and methodology with respect to the capacity
measurement described in paragraphs (e)(4)(ii)(A) and (B) of this
section as part of books and records under section 6001 and Sec.
1.6001-1. The testing procedure and methodology must consistently be
used, subject to any updated standard of the same methodology and
testing, for battery modules (with or without cells) sold in the
taxpayer's trade or business.
(iii) Credit amount--(A) Modules using battery cells. For a battery
module with cells, the credit amount is equal to the product of $10
multiplied by the capacity of such battery module, subject to the
limitation provided in paragraph (e)(5) of this section. The capacity
of each battery module is expressed on a kilowatt-hour basis.
(B) Modules with no battery cells. For a battery module without
cells, the credit amount is equal to the product of $45 multiplied by
the capacity of such battery module, subject to the limitation provided
in paragraph (e)(5) of this section. The capacity of each battery
module is expressed on a kilowatt-hour basis.
(5) Limitation on capacity of battery cells and battery modules--
(i) In general. For purposes of paragraphs (e)(3)(iii) and (e)(4)(iii)
of this section, the capacity determined with respect to a battery cell
or battery module must not exceed a capacity-to-power ratio of 100:1.
(ii) Capacity to power ratio. For purposes of paragraph (e)(5)(i)
of this section, capacity-to-power ratio means, with respect to a
battery cell or battery module, the ratio of the capacity of such cell
or module to the maximum discharge amount of such cell or module.
(f) Phase out rule--(1) In general. Except as provided in paragraph
(f)(3) of this section, in the case of any eligible component sold
after December 31, 2029, the amount of the section 45X credit
determined with respect to such eligible component must be equal to the
product of--
(i) The amount determined under this section with respect to such
eligible component, multiplied by
(ii) The phase out percentage under paragraph (f)(2) of this
section.
(2) Phase out percentages. The phase out percentage is equal to--
(i) 75 percent for eligible components sold during calendar year
2030;
(ii) 50 percent for eligible components sold during calendar year
2031;
(iii) 25 percent for eligible components sold during calendar year
2032, and
(iv) Zero percent for eligible components sold after calendar year
2032.
(3) Exception for applicable critical minerals. The phase out rules
described in paragraphs (f)(1) and (2) of this section apply to all
eligible components except applicable critical minerals.
(g) Applicability date. This section applies to eligible components
for which production is completed and sales occur after December 31,
2022, and during a taxable year ending on or after October 28, 2024.
Sec. 1.45X-4 Applicable critical minerals.
(a) In general. The term applicable critical mineral means any of
the minerals that are listed in section 45X(c)(6) and defined in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Definitions. The following definitions apply for the purpose of
this section--
(1) [Reserved]
(2) Antimony. The term antimony means antimony that is--
(i) Converted to antimony trisulfide concentrate with a minimum
purity of 90 percent antimony trisulfide by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99.65 percent antimony by
mass.
(3) Barite. The term barite means barite that is barium sulfate
purified to a minimum purity of 80 percent barite by mass.
(4) Beryllium. The term beryllium means beryllium that is--
(i) Converted to copper-beryllium master alloy; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent beryllium by mass.
(5) Cerium. The term cerium means cerium that is--
(i) Converted to cerium oxide that is purified to a minimum purity
of 99.9 percent cerium oxide by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent cerium by mass.
(6) Cesium. The term cesium means cesium that is--
(i) Converted to cesium formate or cesium carbonate; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent cesium by mass.
(7) Chromium. The term chromium means chromium that is--
(i) Converted to ferrochromium consisting of not less than 60
percent chromium by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent chromium by mass.
(8) Cobalt. The term cobalt means cobalt that is--
(i) Converted to cobalt sulfate; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99.6 percent cobalt by mass.
(9) Dysprosium. The term dysprosium means dysprosium that is--
(i) Converted to not less than 99 percent pure dysprosium iron
alloy by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent dysprosium by mass.
(10) Europium. The term europium means europium that is--
(i) Converted to europium oxide that is purified to a minimum
purity of 99.9 percent europium oxide by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent of europium by
mass.
(11) Fluorspar. The term fluorspar means fluorspar that is--
(i) Converted to fluorspar that is purified to a minimum purity of
97 percent calcium fluoride by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent fluorspar by mass.
(12) Gadolinium. The term gadolinium means gadolinium that is--
(i) Converted to gadolinium oxide that is purified to a minimum
purity of 99.9 percent gadolinium oxide by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent gadolinium by mass.
(13) Germanium. The term germanium means germanium that is--
(i) Converted to germanium tetrachloride; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99.99 percent germanium by
mass.
(14) Graphite. The term graphite means natural or synthetic
graphite that is purified to a minimum purity of 99.9 percent graphitic
carbon by mass. The term 99.9 percent graphitic carbon by mass means
graphite that is 99.9 percent carbon by mass.
(15) Indium. The term indium means indium that is--
(i) Converted to--
(A) Indium tin oxide; or
(B) Indium oxide that is purified to a minimum purity of 99.9
percent indium oxide by mass; or
[[Page 85845]]
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent indium by mass.
(16) Lithium. The term lithium means lithium that is--
(i) Converted to lithium carbonate or lithium hydroxide; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99.9 percent lithium by mass.
(17) Manganese. The term manganese means manganese that is--
(i) Converted to manganese sulphate; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99.7 percent manganese by
mass.
(18) Neodymium. The term neodymium means neodymium that is--
(i) Converted to neodymium-praseodymium oxide that is purified to a
minimum purity of 99 percent neodymium-praseodymium oxide by mass;
(ii) Converted to neodymium oxide that is purified to a minimum
purity of 99.5 percent neodymium oxide by mass; or
(iii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99.9 percent neodymium by
mass.
(19) Nickel. The term nickel means nickel that is--
(i) Converted to nickel sulphate; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent nickel by mass.
(20) Niobium. The term niobium means niobium that is--
(i) Converted to ferronibium; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent niobium by mass.
(21) Tellurium. The term tellurium means tellurium that is--
(i) Converted to cadmium telluride; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99 percent tellurium by mass.
(22) Tin. The term tin means tin that purified to low alpha
emitting tin that--
(i) Has a purity of greater than 99.99 percent by mass; and
(ii) Possesses an alpha emission rate of not greater than 0.01
counts per hour per centimeter square.
(23) Tungsten. The term tungsten means tungsten that is converted
to ammonium paratungstate or ferrotungsten.
(24) Vanadium. The term vanadium means vanadium that is converted
to ferrovanadium or vanadium pentoxide.
(25) Yttrium. The term yttrium means yttrium that is--
(i) Converted to yttrium oxide that is purified to a minimum purity
of 99.999 percent yttrium oxide by mass; or
(ii) Purified to a minimum purity of 99.9 percent yttrium by mass.
(26) Other minerals. The following minerals are also applicable
critical minerals provided that such mineral is purified to a minimum
purity of 99 percent by mass:
(i) Arsenic.
(ii) Bismuth.
(iii) Erbium.
(iv) Gallium.
(v) Hafnium.
(vi) Holmium.
(vii) Iridium.
(viii) Lanthanum.
(ix) Lutetium.
(x) Magnesium.
(xi) Palladium.
(xii) Platinum.
(xiii) Praseodymium.
(xiv) Rhodium.
(xv) Rubidium.
(xvi) Ruthemium.
(xvii) Samarium.
(xviii) Scandium.
(xix) Tantalum.
(xx) Terbium.
(xxi) Thulium.
(xxii) Titanium.
(xxiii) Ytterbium.
(xxiv) Zinc.
(xxv) Zirconium.
(c) Credit amount--(1) In general. For any applicable critical
mineral, the credit amount is equal to 10 percent of the costs incurred
by the taxpayer with respect to production of such mineral.
(2) Production processes for applicable critical minerals--(i)
Conversion. For purposes of section 45X, the term conversion means a
chemical transformation from one species to another.
(ii) Purification. For purposes of section 45X, the term
purification means increasing the mass fraction of a certain element.
(3) Production costs incurred--(i) In general. Costs incurred by
the taxpayer with respect to the production of applicable critical
minerals includes all costs as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e) that are
paid or incurred within the meaning of section 461 of the Code by the
taxpayer for the production of an applicable critical mineral,
including direct or indirect materials costs as defined in Sec.
1.263A-1(e)(2)(i)(A) and (e)(3)(ii)(E), respectively, but only if those
direct or indirect material costs do not relate to the purchase of
materials that are an eligible component at the time of acquisition
(for example, an electrode active material as defined in Sec. 1.45X-
3(e)(2)(i) or applicable critical mineral as defined in paragraph (b)
of this section). This definition of production costs incurred would
include any costs incurred by the taxpayer related to the extraction of
raw materials in the United States or a United States territory, but
only if those costs are paid or incurred by the taxpayer that claims
the section 45X credit with respect to the relevant applicable critical
mineral. Section 263A of the Code and the regulations in this chapter
under section 263A apply solely to identify the types of costs that are
includible in production costs incurred for purposes of computing the
amount of the section 45X credit, but do not apply for any other
purpose, such as to determine whether a taxpayer is engaged in
production activities.
(ii) Production costs for production of incorporated eligible
components. The production costs that a taxpayer pays or incurs in the
production of an eligible component (whether produced domestically or
not) that the taxpayer then incorporates into a further distinct
applicable critical mineral within the meaning of Sec. 1.45X-1(f)(1)
are not included in the costs incurred by the taxpayer in producing the
further distinct applicable critical mineral. A taxpayer may not
include the same production costs in the calculation of the credit
amount for more than one eligible component. For example, if the
taxpayer pays or incurs production costs of $50X for eligible component
1 and an additional $100X of production costs for eligible component 2
that included integrating eligible component 1 within the meaning of
Sec. 1.45X-1(f)(1), then the production costs for eligible component 1
equal $50X and the production costs for eligible component 2 equal
$100X.
(4) Substantiation. In order to include direct or indirect
materials costs as defined in Sec. 1.263A-1(e)(2)(i)(A) and
(e)(3)(ii)(E) as production costs when calculating a section 45X credit
for the production and sale of an applicable critical mineral, a
taxpayer, as part of filing an annual tax return (or a return for a
short year within the meaning of section 443 of the Code), must include
the information in paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section as an attachment
to that return, prepare the information required in paragraph
(c)(4)(ii) through (iv) of this section and maintain that information
in the taxpayer's books and records under section 6001, and comply with
directions for the information required in paragraph (c)(4)(v) of this
section as specified in guidance:
(i) Certification from any supplier, including the supplier's
employer identification number and that is signed under penalties of
perjury, from which the taxpayer purchased any constituent elements,
materials, or subcomponents of the taxpayer's applicable critical
mineral, stating that the supplier is not claiming the section 45X
credit with respect to any of the material acquired by the taxpayer,
nor is the supplier aware that any prior supplier in the chain of
production of that material claimed a section 45X credit for the
material.
[[Page 85846]]
(ii) A document that provides an analysis of any constituent
elements, materials, or subcomponents that concludes the material did
not meet the definition of an eligible component (for example, an
applicable critical mineral or electrode active material) at the time
of acquisition by the taxpayer. The document may be prepared by the
taxpayer or ideally by an independent third-party.
(iii) A list of all direct and indirect material costs and the
amount of such costs that were included within the taxpayer's total
production cost for each applicable critical mineral.
(iv) A document related to the taxpayer's production activities
with respect to the direct and indirect material costs that establishes
the materials were used in the production of the applicable critical
mineral. The document may be prepared by the taxpayer or ideally by an
independent third-party.
(v) Any other information related to the direct or indirect
materials specified in guidance.
(5) Failure to provide the documentation described in paragraph
(c)(4) of this section with the return filing, or providing an
available upon request statement, will constitute a failure to
substantiate the claim.
(d) Applicability date. This section applies to eligible components
for which production is completed and sales occur after December 31,
2022, and during a taxable year ending on or after October 28, 2024.
Douglas W. O'Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner.
Approved: October 17, 2024.
Aviva R. Aron-Dine,
Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2024-24840 Filed 10-24-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P