November 17, 2023

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Analysis reveals Inflation Reduction Act clean energy subsidies at work

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Several clean fuels needed for combating climate change are now on the path to being cost-competitive with their fossil fuel equivalents thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, Princeton researchers have found.

The landmark piece of legislation established an unprecedented set of financial incentives for deploying low greenhouse gas emissions technologies, including ones to promote the production of low-carbon and synthetic liquid fuels.

The Princeton team analyzed the impacts of the landmark legislation on six different hydrogen production pathways and nine different pathways for producing synthetic liquid fuels. The paper, "Impacts of the Inflation Reduction Act on the Economics of Clean Hydrogen and Synthetic Liquid Fuels," was published in Environmental Science & Technology.

They identified the clean fuel pathways that benefited most from Inflation Reduction Act subsidies, those that are likely to remain uncompetitive even with subsidies, and key uncertainties in the implementation of the tax credits that could shape the law's success in promoting clean energy deployment. Their research was first published online Aug. 30 and was highlighted on the cover of the journal's Oct. 17 issue.

"The incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act completely shift the economic favorability of several low-carbon technologies," said first author Fangwei Cheng, associate research scholar at the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment.

"Our goal was to understand which technologies stand to benefit most from the law, and whether the law's incentives are enough to allow cleaner technologies to compete with their fossil fuel-derived equivalents."

Here are key takeaways from the landmark piece of legislation that the researchers uncovered in their analysis:

Hydrogen

Synthetic liquid fuels

Potential regulatory sticking points

"The subsidies should encourage clean energy technology deployments—not generate revenues for developers without attendant environmental gains," said Eric Larson, research leader and senior research engineer at the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment. "It is important to write the rules carefully. They can't be too restrictive, but at the same time, they must be specific enough to ensure they result in meaningful advances in clean energy technology deployments."

More information: Fangwei Cheng et al, Impacts of the Inflation Reduction Act on the Economics of Clean Hydrogen and Synthetic Liquid Fuels, Environmental Science & Technology (2023). DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.3c03063

Journal information: Environmental Science & Technology

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