shutterbug
Well-known member
And Georgia senators are fully on board with this already. Frankly there is only one senator who matters in this.Sorry, you are correct.. I meant Georgia. Both are Democrat.
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And Georgia senators are fully on board with this already. Frankly there is only one senator who matters in this.Sorry, you are correct.. I meant Georgia. Both are Democrat.
For about two seconds. Next year will change everything...Sorry, you are correct.. I meant Georgia. Both are Democrat.
Looks like the increased tax credit might have a better shot in the upcoming budget reconciliation bill with democrat only support. Manchin might still try to tank it, wouldnāt be a surprise now that we found out just how deep heās in fossil fuel ās pocket.Both Democrat and both highly supportive of unions.
The guy that took millions from Exxon?And Georgia senators are fully on board with this already. Frankly there is only one senator who matters in this.
One incentive is that EVs are just plain better than gas vehicles in a lot of ways and price parity is close, in many cases, too.Also...if you think Americans are going to "do the right thing" without incentive, I got beach front property in Nebraska to sell you.
Completely correct. People forget that we are running massive deficits, mortgaging our children's and grandchildren's future. The debt we are accumulating now has serious maro ramifications. EVs now stand on their own. I don't think the initial incentives were necessary - I certainly would have purchased my first three Teslas (and the two Priuses) without receiving the tax credits that we got. Same for our solar panels and geothermal systems. However, the credits may have impacted the calculus for some buyers. Those days are over, so what we now have is folks with their hands out - essentially middle class-to-wealthy folks who WANT a credit for something they'd buy anyway. And asking the Federal government to take on more debt to help them buy a new car. Nope.One incentive is that EVs are just plain better than gas vehicles in a lot of ways and price parity is close, in many cases, too.
I'm not saying necessarily that the tax credit is bad... but I think it might be overkill. For instance, I don't think it would take $12,500 to get people to buy all the EVs manufacturers can build over the next couple years, at least the good ones. I bet Ford could sell all ~80k Lightnings that they are estimated to build with very little incentive, for instance. Tesla has been selling all the EVs they can build without the federal incentive for years. Ford can't build the Mach E fast enough at $7,500 credit.
I stand to benefit from the credit and have already benefitted to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars, but I think we'd be better off with more, smaller credits, personally. I think 2.5 million $5,000 credits would give better ROI than 1 million $12,500 credits, for instance.
Short version: I don't think people need $12,500 of incentive to sell EVs, anymore. Even at $0-$7500, right now, the GOOD EVs are selling out because they're simply better than their gas competition. I think we can spend our tax dollars more efficiently than a huge $12,500 credit.
Are we really bringing politics and ideology back into this thread?So what? What is your point? Let the poor ride the bus. No one is born poor. I'm over this socialist thinking. I work my butt off to have nice things.
Oh great..this BS again. Let's end corporate welfare and oil subsidies and then we can talk.So what? What is your point? Let the poor ride the bus. No one is born poor. I'm over this socialist thinking. I work my butt off to have nice things.
I notice no one gives a shit about spending when we give massive tax breaks to the richest 1%, corporate welfare and endless war in the Middle East. Somehow when we need to actually give the middle class something, everyone wants to talk about how we can't afford it...Completely correct. People forget that we are running massive deficits, mortgaging our children's and grandchildren's future. The debt we are accumulating now has serious maro ramifications. EVs now stand on their own. I don't think the initial incentives were necessary - I certainly would have purchased my first three Teslas (and the two Priuses) without receiving the tax credits that we got. Same for our solar panels and geothermal systems. However, the credits may have impacted the calculus for some buyers. Those days are over, so what we now have is folks with their hands out - essentially middle class-to-wealthy folks who WANT a credit for something they'd buy anyway. And asking the Federal government to take on more debt to help them buy a new car. Nope.
To be clear in prefacing this comment, I'm not promoting oil subsidies or war simply by questioning the size of the EV credit. It's not inherently one or the other thing. Like my previous comment, I'm only asking about the size of the EV credit itself and if it's the right size, or if we should make it smaller and spend the rest of what we would have spent on, say, EV charging infrastructure.Unlike those item mentioned above....promoting green cars will get some payback in the form of less fossil fueled vehicles, cleaner air, less pollution and thus less health costs and environmental cleanup costs
Complete crap. Those are not subsidies. They are deductions for actual expenses. Duh. The left calls anything that is deducted as a business expenses a subsidy. Look, when I pay an employee to do a job, it is a cost of business. When Exxon explores a new oil field, the money they spend is actual cash. The "subsidy" you reference is simply the methodology by which they are allowed to recover (deduct) their actual costs. This is CASH they have spent. Not ONE DOLLAR of tax credit exists for fossil fuel - the term "Credits" in the left column is an out-and-out lie. The descriptions in the bar chart even define it as such - deductions are NOT credits. All four of those items are deductions for actual cash expenses, real outlays that the companies incur. There are NO actual subsidies for fossil fuels. None, except in the distorted nomenclature and fantasies of the green left. Spoken as a major contributor to environment causes and as an EV driver and owner of significant renewable energy production.The idea that the EV tax credit "mortgages our children's future"* is laughable when fossil fuel industry subsidies remain many times more costly and benefit only the wealthy at the cost of us all. The attached graph isn't even comprehensive on the fossil fuel side. In realty that bar is even bigger. Numbers are from the US Treasury.
If we eliminated the wasteful, inequitable fossil fuel subsidies, we could more than double the EV programs (and make them more equitable in the process) and yet still save money.
*An intentionally misleading, emotionally wrought statement that means nothing, as there will always be future costs for present investments. The trick is deciding which ones are worth the cost and will have lasting benefits for all.
But those aren't the options. At least not unless the proposed legislation - which currently includes both the $12,500 tax credits and big money for charging infrastructure - is changed.Put another way, if these are our options:
1. Sell 1,000,000 EVs (can't make any more anyway) with $5,000,000,000 in tax credits and $7,500,000,000 in charging infrastructure
2. Sell 1,000,000 EVs (can't make any more anyway) with $12,500,000,000 in tax credits and $0 in charging infrastructure.
Option 1 seems clearly better, IMO, and I think we can max out Tesla/Ford/VW EV production for the next couple years with a much smaller than $12,500 credit.