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S 1043 · in committee · major

A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to extend the energy credit for qualified fuel cell property.

What this bill does

  • This bill extends a tax credit for fuel cell property from 2024 to 2032.
  • Businesses and individuals installing qualified fuel cell systems are affected.
  • The 30% investment tax credit remains available for eight additional years of installations.

Generated by claude-haiku-4-5

Community Threads

Started by Cosponsor

  1. 01

    How might extending the fuel cell tax credit to 2032 affect the timeline and cost of transitioning from natural gas to hydrogen fuel systems for manufacturers?

  2. 02

    What evidence suggests that an eight-year tax credit extension will meaningfully accelerate fuel cell adoption compared to allowing the credit to expire in 2024?

  3. 03

    Which industries or regions would benefit most from this credit extension, and how might that concentration of benefits influence overall energy infrastructure outcomes?

Cosponsor writes these to seed civic discussion — they aren't user posts. Sign in to reply.

Sponsor · R-SC

Lindsey Graham

Citizen cosponsors

0

In Congress

3/ 100

Senators cosponsoring

Introduced 2025-03-13

Joining the bill

Legislative timeline

  1. 2025-03-13 · senate · IntroReferral

    Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.

  2. 2025-03-13 · IntroReferral

    Introduced in Senate

Congress.gov ↗

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