Major automakers Ford and General Motors are at odds over potential restrictions to federal tax credits for newly-produced electric vehicles (EV) that utilize Chinese components, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.
Ford and GM disagree on whether the Biden administration should deem Chinese-made EV batteries as “foreign entities of concern,” barring them from receiving tax credits, hurting Ford, which wishes to use the Chinese products to lower operating costs, while GM believes that the use of the batteries could impose Chinese dominance on the U.S. EV market, according to the WSJ.
The Biden administration is expected to finalize rules for a $7,500 tax credit per EV as a feature of the Inflation Reduction Act, which was signed into law in August 2020 and included $740 billion in new spending with $370 billion dedicated to green energy subsidies and tax credits.
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“It would be absurd to classify Ford or its fully owned subsidiary as a foreign entity, much less one of concern,” Chris Smith, chief government affairs officer at Ford, said, according to the WSJ. “We’re Ford, and we’re all-in on America.”
Ford, barring a restrictive rule by the Biden administration, plans to license the more advanced Chinese battery technology, which would enable the company to manufacture cheaper iron-based batteries, according to the WSJ. GM does not have plans to use the cheaper Chinese battery technology and would be disadvantaged by its use by other EV manufacturers due to higher costs.
Ford announced that it would be pausing the construction of a new EV battery plant that it was building in Marshall, Michigan, on Monday, saying that the company will resume work on the project once Ford is confident in its ability to operate the plant competitively.
In the news: Ford Pauses Construction Of Key EV Battery Plant In Michigan
The two automakers are both the target of a partial strike from the United Auto Workers that was announced on Sept. 14 and was expanded on Friday, striking at a total of 41 plants across three companies, including another automaker, Stellantis. As a part of its demands, the union is seeking assurance that the quality of jobs will be preserved as automakers expand their EV operations, shifting focus away from their traditional operations.
Ford and GM did not immediately respond to a request to comment from the Daily Caller News Foundation.
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