DOE sets deadline for applications for its wind and solar tax credit program

Published on February 14, 2024 by Dave Kovaleski

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The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) will stop accepting new applications on Feb. 29 for the 2023 program year of the Low-Income Communities Bonus Credit program, which provides tax credits in low-income communities for wind and solar facilities.

Until then, applications will continue to be accepted on a rolling basis but only applications submitted in categories with remaining capacity will be considered. Interested parties can go to the DOE’s website for updates on how much capacity remains available by category.

After the 2023 program year applications have been processed, all applications that do not receive an allocation will be withdrawn and those applicants will need to reapply for the 2024 program year.

The program was established through the Inflation Reduction Act, the the largest clean energy and climate investment in history. It provides a 10- or 20-percentage point boost to the Investment Tax Credit for qualified solar or wind facilities in low-income communities. The goals of the program are to increase access to clean energy in low-income communities, encourage new market participants, and benefit individuals and communities that have experienced adverse health or environmental effects or lacked economic opportunities.

The DOE is administering the program in conjunction with the U.S. Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service.

“There has been sky-high demand for this program and these historic opportunities to invest in underserved communities will continue in the next program year,” Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo said.

During the initial 30-day application window, the program received more than 46,000 applications for new energy facilities. The facilities were located in low-income communities to benefit low-income households from across the country, including 48 states and the District of Columbia.

The applications represent more than 8 gigawatts of generation capacity, or the equivalent power used by 800 million LED light bulbs. That is more than four times the total capacity available for the 2023 program, indicating the huge demand for the program.

The 2024 program, opening this spring, will unlock an additional 1.8 gigawatts of capacity to support these investments.