
Ethanol Tax Incentives

Present law provides for a partial federal excise tax exemption of
51 cents per gallon for of ethanol blended into gasoline. For example,
fuel blended with 10 percent ethanol receives a tax credit of 5.1
cents per gallon. E-85, which is 85 percent ethanol by volume, receives
a 43-cent-per-gallon credit. Petroleum blenders – not corn farmers
– receive this tax credit. The Volumetric Ethanol Excise Tax Credit
(VEETC) legislation passed in 2004 extends the effective date of the tax
credit through 2010.
A recent study by
the U.S. General Accounting Office found that, since 1968, the oil industry
has received approximately $150 billion in tax incentives. By contrast,
the ethanol industry has received $11.2 billion through a partial exemption
of the federal excise tax and $200 million in income tax credits.
According to Citizen
Action, “U.S. taxpayers are providing at least $5 billion a year
in tax breaks in the form of foreign tax credits to provide U.S. multinational
oil companies with an incentive to invest billions of dollars to find
and produce oil overseas so that it can then be exported to the United
States.”
A 1997 editorial in
the New York Times put the real cost of gasoline – including military
expenditures to protect oil interests – at $5 per gallon. Therefore,
on balance, ethanol receives fewer tax incentives than other forms of
energy.
The VEETC provides
other benefits. Because it is assessed on a volume basis, refiners will
no longer be limited to the 5.7/7.7/10-percent blend levels dictated
by the Clean Air Act's oxygen content provisions that may be made obsolete
by RFS legislation anyway. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS), which
was involved in the drafting of this provision, also believes the VEETC
will greatly reduce the opportunity for fraud that existed with the
old excise tax exemption system.
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Last reviewed May 13, 2008 |
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