Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Analysts: Trump Cuts to EV Tax Credits Could Roil BlueOval City

Uncertainty over President-elect Donald Trump’s plans for federal tax credits and loan programs supporting American electric vehicle manufacturing could stall Tennessee’s fast-growing electric vehicle and clean energy industries, analysts say.

Tennessee has seen an estimated $12.6 billion in investments in new clean energy projects since the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act under President Joe Biden in 2022, according to an October Washington Post analysis of data from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and energy think tank Rhodium Group.

The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) created more than 20 tax incentives for clean energy and manufacturing, marking one of the largest climate investments in American history. No Republican lawmakers voted for the act, but the Post’s analysis found “red” states – including Tennessee – have so far received the lion’s share of investment dollars following its passage.

Low-cost federal loans and tax credits for U.S.-produced batteries and battery components have helped companies stand up more cost-competitive electric vehicle plants in the United States, said Harrison Godfrey, managing director of clean energy industry association Advanced Energy United. The IRA also changed consumer electric vehicle tax credits to incentivize the industry to anchor in the United States; For the credit to apply, vehicles must have batteries made in the U.S. using materials sourced from the U.S. or some allied nations, Godfrey said.

But Trump’s transition team is reportedly planning to scrap the $7,500 tax credit for buyers who purchase new electric vehicles, Reuters reported Friday. And the fate of Biden-era clean energy programs remains unclear.

This is not a red state, blue state economic development story. This is an all of America economic development and manufacturing resurgence story, and Tennessee is a great example of how this resurgence, this growth, is serving ‘red’ America.

– Harrison Godfrey, Advanced Energy United

Energy industry analysts worry such a rollback would stymie the balance of producer and consumer-facing incentives.

“The fundamental thing to understand about that is that the two work in conjunction,” Godfrey said. “It’s not enough just to have one side of that policy … it’s great if we’re standing up factories, but if there’s nobody buying at the end of the assembly line for those components, for that finished vehicle, because we haven’t also helped support that consumption side of the equation … we see great investments that do not actually bear fruit.”

Dozens of bills seeking to rescind parts of the IRA have been considered in the House of Representatives in the last two years, but 18 members of the House Republican Conference wrote in favor of maintaining the IRA’s energy tax credits in an August letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson.

“Prematurely repealing energy tax credits, particularly those which were used to justify investments that already broke ground, would undermine private investments and stop development that is already ongoing,” the letter states. “A full repeal would create a worst-case scenario where we would have spent billions of taxpayer dollars and received next to nothing in return.”

Jack Conness, a policy analyst at energy and climate think tank Energy Innovation, points to the letter as an example of the difference between rhetoric and reality in discussions about repealing parts of the IRA. The reality, he said, is that post-IRA investments have had “significant impact on economic growth and jobs” in red Congressional districts.

“Businesses have been operating under the assumption and making large investments in places like Western Tennessee on the assumption that this policy survives,” Conness said. “So when you want to potentially shake this up, it causes total chaos and havoc on the private business side.”

Electric vehicle and battery industries flock to Tennessee

These policies helped boost projects like Ford’s BlueOval City and the BlueOval SK battery plant in West Tennessee. The companies announced the plant’s development in Haywood County 2021. The U.S. Department of Energy approved a conditional loan of up to $9.2 billion to BlueOval SK under the IRA to build three battery plants in Tennessee and Kentucky last summer.

Godfrey said the future of the Loan Programs Office and its low-cost loan programs for EV and EV component manufacturers is a “big outstanding question.”

What to know: The new Ford BlueOval City plant poised to reshape West Tennessee

“If you deconstruct that, if you shutter the office or if you greatly reduce the size, shift that mission, I think there’s risk there that we don’t see additional projects like this funded in the future,” he said. 

But while some factories have secured their IRA loans, the ink isn’t yet dry on loans like BlueOval SK’s, which is still in the conditional phase.

U.S. Rep. David Kustoff’s West Tennessee district has seen $7.9 billion in investment since the IRA’s passage, according to the Post analysis, followed by U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles’ Middle Tennessee with $2.9 billion.

Both voted against the IRA. Neither could be immediately reached for comment.

Kustoff said in 2022 that the “radical spending bill” would “hurt energy producers” and “certainly worsen inflation,” among other things. Ogles called it a “gross waste of taxpayer dollars.”

Both have said BlueOval City and BlueOval SK will be transformational for the region.

Since 2022, EV component supplier Magna announced it would build the first two supplier facilities in BlueOval City’s Stanton supplier park, and a stamping and assembly facility in Lawrenceburg. NOVONIX Anode Materials announced a new $1 billion battery plant in Chattanooga. Ultium Cells announced a $275 million expansion of its plant in Spring Hill.

According to the Post’s analysis, post-IRA investments have spanned multiple Congressional districts in Tennessee:

Diana Harshbarger (R), District 1: $17 million
Charles Fleischmann (R), District 3: $746 million
Scott DesJarlais (R), District 4: $146 million
Mark Green (R), District 7: $672 million
Steve Cohen (D), District 9: $189 million

“This is not a red state, blue state economic development story,” Godfrey said. “This is an all of America economic development and manufacturing resurgence story, and Tennessee is a great example of how this resurgence, this growth, is serving ‘red’ America.”

Industry Turbulence

The EV industry’s expansion in Tennessee — and the United States — has not been without setbacks.

Ford announced it would push back production of its new, all-electric pickup truck from 2025 to 2027 as part of its response to heightened competition in the EV market and slowing demand. But BlueOval SK is expected to begin producing battery cells in late 2025.

Nissan announced it will cut 9,000 jobs and 20% of its global manufacturing capacity in November after a drop in profit. It’s not clear if the Nissan Smyrna Vehicle Assembly Plant will be impacted.

Production at Ford’s West Tenn. plant delayed to 2027 in attempt to improve profitability

General Motors announced it will lay off 1,000 employees — mostly from its global technical center in Warren, Michigan — on Nov. 15. The company’s largest facility in North America is in Spring Hill. 

Godfrey said all industries see “waxes and wanes” during growth, and the EV industry has been under a microscope in recent years. Progress doesn’t tend to be illustrated quarterly, but over years or decades, he said.

Conness said flirting with the idea of a repeal of IRA programs causes uncertainty to flare.

“The private market wants to know what’s happening on the policy side, and the private market has been pretty outspoken about keeping IRA,” he said.

Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk, who has become a close associate of Trump, has spoken in favor of stripping the tax credit.

Musk wrote, “Take away the subsidies. It will only help Tesla. Also, remove subsidies from all industries!” on his social media site X in July. In a Tesla earnings call that month, he mused that ending the tax credits would be “devastating” for Tesla competitors but “long-term probably actually helps Tesla.” (Tesla has reaped some benefits from federal loan programs, tax credits and carbon credits).

The Alliance for Automotive Innovation —  which represents 42 U.S. automotive companies including GM, Ford, Nissan and Volkswagen — penned a letter to Republican lawmakers in October asserting that the IRA’s EV tax credits are “critical to cementing the U.S. as a global leader in the future of automotive technology and manufacturing.”

“We think about the recent decades where we’ve seen much of the heartland of America, and particularly some of the industrial cities that were really prosperous and vital in the 20th Century collapse on themselves. It’s about the shrinking and departure of these anchor tenants … the major manufacturers there,” Godfrey said. “So the real risk is … if we see a pullback on the industrial policy that is helping support that resurgence, I think we could see a replay of what we’ve seen in a lot of these towns over the past 40-plus years, admittedly for slightly different reasons.”

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com. Follow Tennessee Lookout on Facebook and X.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Futurist: Companies Bet Big on Electric Transportation

Gas stations are as antiquated as CD players. Traffic jams are in the skies. Tourists flock to other planets.

That’s the world people described to Ford Motor Co. for its 10th-annual Looking Further With Ford trends report. But experts say many of these promising innovations will be pushed to avoid a not-so-promising future.

“Imagine a world where demands for food, water, and energy are outpacing supply, fueling widespread scarcity, and suffering across the globe,” reads the Ford report. “That’s the likely scenario as we know it. Experts project the global population will grow to 10 billion by 2050, and climate change has become so severe that the question now is no longer simply how to sustain this planet, but how to exit it.”

Moving people in the U.S. is the country’s largest source (29 percent) of greenhouse gas emissions, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Two Memphis-connected transportation companies, Ford and Southern Airways Express, hope to help flatten this figure, betting on an electric future.

Ford picked West Tennessee last year to build its electric F-series trucks. South Korea-based SK Innovation will build a battery factory for the trucks there, too. When Ford unveiled its electric F-150 Lightning in May, it called it “the truck of the future.” Marketers used legacy language to rev up customers — like “iconic” and “passion” and “exhilaration” — but also added “clean.”

“For both Ford and the American auto industry, F-150 Lightning represents a defining moment as we progress toward a zero-emissions, digitally connected future,” said Bill Ford, Ford’s executive chairman, in May.

Demand for the new, clean truck is evident. The company closed reservations for the Lightning last month, with nearly 200,000 pre-ordered. So, consumers likely won’t find one on a lot for a year or more.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said electric vehicles (EVs) now comprise .7 percent of all of the 1.3 billion light-duty vehicles on the road now. That increases to 31 percent (672 million) of the 2.2 billion cars on the road by 2050. EIA’s projections show a tipping point: Sales of gas-and-diesel-powered cars will peak in 2038.

Southern Airways is also betting on an electric future, in the skies. The commuter airline company began in Olive Branch, Mississippi, in 2013 and has now relocated to Palm Beach, Florida. Last month, it announced a $250-million order of new planes, including 20 seagliders, from the Regional Electric Ground Effect Nautical Transport (REGENT) aerospace company.

The seaglider is an all-electric, zero-emission flying vessel, the company says. It docks in city harbors, where passengers are loaded. It floats on a hull and then a hydrofoil until it reaches open water. Then, it takes flight, cruising at 180 miles per hour, staying within 100 feet of the water’s surface. Stan Little, chairman and CEO of Southern Airways, called the seaglider a “groundbreaking innovation.”

“REGENT’s zero-emission electric vehicle unlocks an incredible amount of operating efficiency for our company while lowering costs, trip times, and our environmental footprint,” Little said.

Southern Airways’ seaglider service will begin in Boston, Nantucket, Palm Beach, and Miami.

Futurist is an occasional series focused on what comes next.

Categories
News Blog News Feature

The Number: Cost of TN Special Session on Ford

Categories
News Blog News Feature

GOP Turns Ford Session Into Covid Battleground

Tennessee Republicans pulled a double switcheroo in Nashville Tuesday, twisting a special session on economic development into a Covid-culture war zone. 

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee called a special session of the Tennessee General Assembly to review an $884 million incentive package to bring a Ford Motor Co. manufacturing facility to the Memphis Regional Megasite in Haywood County. 

House Republicans’ first switcheroo came as they brought a bill during that session against employers from asking employees for proof of a Covid vaccine. Switcheroo number two came during the debate on that bill. After a brief recess, the GOP brought a surprise amendment to the bill to disallow school districts from mandating face masks.     

On the original bill brought to the session, Tennessee businesses can be sued if they fire an employee who refuses to show proof of a Covid-19 vaccine. That is the will of a majority of Tennessee House committee members who voted Tuesday to approve a bill giving employees this right. 

Rep. Jason Zachary (R-Knoxville) introduced the legislation to the committee Tuesday, not the bill’s sponsor, Rep. Rusty Grills (R-Newbern). Zachary warned of President Joseph Biden’s proposal to mandate vaccines for employees for all companies with more than 100 employees. 

Zachary said the president “weaponized the free market against us,” in a star-spangled speech draped in “rights” and “freedoms” and short on references to Covid mortality rates or pediatric case numbers.     

The original bill would have given such employees access to unemployment compensation as well. The bill introduced Tuesday was stripped of this portion and only allowed fired employees the right to sue their companies. However, unemployment insurance was added back to it with an amendment as the bill was debated. 

Though, officials with the Tennessee Department of Labor said employees fired for not getting the Covid vaccine are eligible for unemployment insurance. They’d only not be eligible if getting a Covid shot was part of their original employment agreement. That is, if getting a shot was not in your original contract with your boss, you can still get unemployment in Tennessee.  

Republicans said they didn’t care if the law was duplicative. They stressed the need to “send a message” to employers and others with the legislation. 

As for employees suing their boss, Rep. G.A. Hardaway (D-Memphis) put things plainly, saying, “I thought I was coming up here to split up $1 billion” for Ford. With that, he asked Zachary if he’d talk with Ford about the law as it would open the company up to potential lawsuits if it mandated a vaccine. Zachary said he worked for his constituents in Knox County and “could care less what Ford is OK with” as it pertained to the legislation. 

“I keep hearing Ford, Ford, Ford, and we appreciate them but we’re writing them a check for $884 million,” said Rep. Scott Cepicky (R-Culleoka). “I don’t think if we pass this bill one away or another it will affect them from coming. They’re interested in the money the people of Tennessee is going to give them.”

As for mask mandates in schools, arguments on both sides were nothing new to anyone paying attention to the issue over many months. At the dawn of the 2021 school year, Lee allowed Tennessee parents to opt out of any mask mandate issued by counties, health departments, or school districts. Knox and Shelby counties both overrode the opt-out order in court and mandated students to wear masks in class. 

Rep Gloria Johnson (R-Knoxville) said masks work to keep everyone safe at school. Rep. Dan Howell (R-Cleveland) pointed to the millions of fans attending college football games every Saturday “without a mask and nobody says a word about it.” For some reason, he said, some want masks on children in Tennessee, and “I just don’t get it.”

Debate continued on the legislation after deadline. No final vote had yet been taken on the overall bill.  

So far, the bill does not have a Senate sponsor. 

Categories
News News Blog

Ford’s $5.6B Blue Oval City Touted As “Transformative”

The Memphis Regional Megasite is proposed to become Ford Motor Co.’s high-tech Blue Oval City in an $5.6 billion investment expected to yield about 6,000 jobs. 

Company officials announced late Monday that Ford plans to build its F-Series pickups and advanced batteries at the West Tennessee site in Stanton. Ford said production there will “reimagine how vehicles and batteries are manufactured.”

The Tennessee site is part of an overall plan to manufacture Ford’s zero-emissions vehicles to scale with “the largest, most advanced, most efficient auto production complex in its 118-year history.” This plan also includes the construction of two BlueOvalSK Battery Parks to be built in central Kentucky for the production of batteries to power a new lineup of Food and Lincoln electric vehicles. Ford is also spending $90 million in Texas to train mechanics to work on electric cars. 

The total project is worth an estimated $11.4 billion and is what Ford called “the largest ever U.S. investment in electric vehicles at one time by any automotive manufacturer.” 

“This is our moment — our biggest investment ever — to help build a better future for America,” said Jim Farley, Ford president and CEO. “We are moving now to deliver breakthrough electric vehicles for the many rather than the few. It’s about creating good jobs that support American families, an ultra-efficient, carbon-neutral manufacturing system, and a growing business that delivers value for communities, dealers and shareholders.”

Ford said Blue Oval City will be among the largest auto manufacturing campuses in U.S. history and “will usher in a new era for American manufacturing.”

The 3,600-acre campus — covering nearly six square miles — will encompass vehicle assembly, battery production and a supplier park. The mega campus is designed to add more sustainability solutions, including the potential to use local renewable energy sources such as geothermal, solar, and wind power.

“West Tennessee is primed to deliver the workforce and quality of life needed to create the next great American success story with Ford Motor Company and SK Innovation,” said Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee. “This is a watershed moment for Tennesseans as we lead the future of the automotive industry and advanced manufacturing.”

Here’s what some leaders are saying about the Ford news:

Tennessee Valley Authority CEO Jeff Lyash — “Reliable, low-cost, clean energy attracts world-class companies like Ford to the Tennessee Valley. Bringing jobs and capital investment to this region is what we do at TVA — it’s a fundamental part of our mission — and by helping to bring companies like Ford to this region, we are creating the jobs of the future.”

Tennessee state Sen. Brian Kelsey (R-Germantown) — “This is tremendous news for the Shelby County suburbs, for Memphis, and for all of West Tennessee. It will have a huge economic impact on our region.  

“These are high tech jobs, and the state remains committed to providing the skilled workforce necessary to draw new industries to locate here. Many of us in the legislature have worked for many years to promote the Memphis Megasite, and I’m thrilled to see Gov. Lee bring this dream to reality.”

Tennessee state Sen. Raumesh Akbari (D-Memphis) —  “West Tennesseans will build the next generation of electric vehicles in America. That’s an amazing reality today. It’s actually difficult to overstate the significance of this announcement and the potential for transformative change that an underserved community will see from this historic investment. 

“As America gears up to own the electric vehicle marketplace, I will stand in full support of a project that puts our families to work producing these vehicles with good wages and benefits.”