Abstract
Progressive movements today call for transformative state-led investment in renewable energy and other climate infrastructures—in the United States, a vision that confronts inherited legacies of austerity. I argue that a significant obstacle is the neoliberal toolkit through which the US federal government subsidizes renewables, an indirect, highly opaque system of tax credits and incentives. For forty years, tax subsidies have ‘paid’ private financial players to invest in renewables, via allowing them to claim legal tax shelters against their other income. In this political economic analysis, I question, first, how US renewable energy acquired this peculiar form of public finance ‘through the tax code’, unique in the global industry. Second, I explore how the model has shaped US renewables financing, development, and ownership. I center two decisive moments: the California ‘wind rush’ in the 1980s, and the ongoing renewables boom of the last fifteen years. This history articulates financial experiments and tax sheltering scandals of the Reagan Administration with exploitation returned today in more organized (and lucrative) form, as ‘tax equity’ finance. Via tax equity, a handful of major US banks dominate financing for renewables and other politically embattled public goods. They exert a troubling ability to extract rents for their capital, gatekeep what projects get built and by whom, and stall US renewables development altogether. Today, the practice is increasingly strained by these and other problems—growing public costs, private capacity ceilings, and amplification of sectoral crises. Under Biden, it faces probable reform, but may need more comprehensive reimagination.
Highlights
The Biden Administration is a potential watershed moment in the US federal government’s response to energy and climate crises
How did US renewable energy acquire this peculiar form of public finance ‘through the tax code’, used nowhere else in the sector? Second, what work has this model done in shaping US renewables financing, development, and ownership, the perverse and extractive outcomes described above? I propose that answering these questions requires a somewhat different history of US renewable energy than featured in existing literature, and a distinct understanding of its neoliberal legacy
Renewable project developers learned important strategies amidst the broader investment wave. They looked to new syndicated partnerships created for tax sheltering as a key strategy to ‘monetize’ federal and state tax credits for renewable energy: a way to bring in third-party investor partners to whom they could effectively ‘sell’ the tax avoidance benefits of projects in return for upfront capital
Summary
The Biden Administration is a potential watershed moment in the US federal government’s response to energy and climate crises. Most renewables development globally still uses project finance structures pioneered in California in the 1980s wind boom, I will argue in part to qualify for the federal tax credits examined here.
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