『How the Made in America Tax Credit Actually Works』のカバーアート

How the Made in America Tax Credit Actually Works

How the Made in America Tax Credit Actually Works

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Lucas and Luna tackle the Advanced Manufacturing Production Credit — Section 48C and 45X — which pays companies to produce solar wafers, battery components, and critical minerals in the United States. The Inflation Reduction Act expanded this credit in 2022, and by mid-2026 the Treasury has allocated over $10 billion in tax credits to projects from Michigan to Georgia. The episode zooms in on a single case: Redwood Materials, the battery recycling startup founded by Tesla co-founder JB Straubel. Redwood claimed roughly $1 billion in 45X credits last year alone for producing cathode material in Nevada. But the real question is whether these credits are building a permanent supply chain or just subsidising a temporary boom. Lucas explains how the credit is structured as a per-unit payment per kilowatt-hour of battery capacity or per kilogram of cathode, which means companies get paid more the more they produce. Luna pushes on whether this creates a race to overproduce, pointing to analysts who worry about a 2028 cliff when the credit steps down. The conversation covers the tension between boosting domestic manufacturing and the risk of dependency on federal subsidies, and closes with a look at what happens if a future Congress sunsets the credit early. #AdvancedManufacturingProductionCredit #Section48C #Section45X #RedwoodMaterials #JBStraubel #InflationReductionAct #BatterySupplyChain #SolarManufacturing #CriticalMinerals #DomesticProduction #TaxCredits #CleanEnergy #SupplyChainResilience #Nevada #Michigan #Georgia #FexingoBusiness #Economics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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