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U.S. Department of Energy Announces Seven Hydrogen-Related Projects to Receive More Than $300 Million in 48C Tax Credits

By May 10, 2024 2   min read  (319 words)

May 10, 2024 |

DOE Funding 2 e1715357543286

Hydrogen-related projects among 35 projects across 20 states to receive $1.93 billion in tax credits to accelerate clean energy manufacturing and recycling and reduce greenhouse gas emissions at industrial facilities

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) recently announced details for 35 projects across 20 states that received a total of $1.93 billion in allocations of the Qualifying Advanced Energy Project Credit (48C). This information was voluntarily shared with DOE by the recipients of the tax credits, including the following seven hydrogen-related projects, which span five states and received more than $300 million in credit allocations:

ORGANIZATION CREDIT PROJECT TOPIC LOCATION
Cummins Inc. $10.6M Industrial Decarbonization Fridley, Minnesota
Electric Hydrogen Co. $18.3M Industrial Decarbonization Devens, Massachusetts
John Cockerill Hydrogen North America $34.1M Industrial Decarbonization Baytown, Texas
Nel Hydrogen $41M Industrial Decarbonization Plymouth Township, Michigan
Topsoe SOEC Production US Inc. $136M Industrial Decarbonization Chester, Virginia
Ballard Power Systems $54M Clean Energy and Clean Vehicle Manufacturing Rockwall, Texas
Nuvera Fuel Cells $14.1M Clean Energy and Clean Vehicle Manufacturing Billerica, Massachusetts

The 48C credit is a tax credit funded by the White House’s Investing in America agenda through the Inflation Reduction Act, aimed at accelerating clean energy manufacturing and recycling and reducing greenhouse gas emissions at industrial facilities. It is an investment tax credit, which provides credits for up to 30% of qualified investments, provided they meet prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements. 

See the full list of projects.

The projects receiving this tax credit address critical needs across the clean energy economy, including grid components (e.g., transformers), electric vehicle components and chargers, solar components, clean steel, critical materials processing and recycling, and other clean energy products. Multiple projects are located in traditional energy communities, which include communities with closed coal mines or coal plants—advancing the White House’s commitment to invest in the communities that have kept America’s economy powered for generations.

 

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