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SPONSOR: |
Cisneros |
DATE TYPED: |
|
HB |
|
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Expand Renewable Energy Tax Credit |
SB |
813/aHTRC |
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Neel |
|||||
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
|
($75.0) |
Recurring |
General
Fund |
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Relates to:
HB 146a Expand Renewable Energy Tax Credit
LFC files
US Energy Information Administration (EIA)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
Public Regulatory Commission (PRC)
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department
(EMNRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of HTRC Amendment
The House Taxation
and Revenue Committee amendment:
·
Strikes language on page 4 of the bill
that would have made the current and proposed credits transferable to third
parties.
·
Strikes changes on page 5 that provided
conformity with the credit transfer mechanism.
·
On page 2 of the bill, in the definition
of a “qualified energy generator” the amendment would reduce the minimum size
requirement from 20 megawatts to 10 megawatts.
Synopsis
of Original Bill
Senate Bill 813 changes the Renewable Energy
Production Credit adopted last year (Laws 2002, Chapter 59). The credit is equal to $0.01 per
kilowatt-hour for the first 400 thousand megawatt hours of power supplied per
taxpayer per year. The credit may be
taken against the taxpayer’s corporate income tax liability. Proposed changes include:
Taxpayers are eligible
for the tax credit for ten consecutive years, beginning when the qualified
energy generator begins producing electricity.
A qualified energy generator must operate a facility with at least 20
megawatts generating capacity in
SB 813 allows for the
tax credit to be sold, exchanged or transferred for a period of up to five
years.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD
notes the near-term impact of the proposal is limited by the small number and
capacity of eligible facilities in the state.
At present there are only a small number of eligible facilities under
development. However, the Public
Regulation Commission (“PRC”) has recently ordered the state’s utilities to
significantly increase the share of renewable energy in their total sources of
supply to
Longer term impacts
are noted by EMNRD in a study on the Potential Economic
Benefits from Commercial Wind Power Facilities in the State of New Mexico conducted
by the BBC Research & Consulting Group which concluded that five
facilities, each with a generating capacity of 40 megawatts, would produce $60
million in statewide sales, $20 million dollars in wages for one year, $2.5
million in on-going sales, 60 on-going jobs statewide, $225,000 in annual royalty
revenues for the state land fund and $400,000 each year to the general fund
from gross receipts and income taxes.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The PRC notes that SB 813 defines a “qualified
energy resource” to include “a fluidized-bed technology”. But this technology is currently also used in
some coal-fired generation units, which are probably not intended to receive a
renewable energy production tax credit.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
According to TRD, the Public Regulatory
Commission (PRC) has regulations requiring energy providers to distribute 2
percent of their total energy supplies through renewable energy sources by
TRD’s analysis notes other state, local and
federal incentives for renewable power generators that include federal
renewable production tax credits, federal renewable energy production incentives,
accelerated depreciation and systems benefits charges that provide financial
support for renewable energy development.
According to EIA, bio mass is organic
material which has stored sunlight in the form of chemical energy. Biomass
fuels include wood, wood waste, straw, manure, sugar cane, and many other
byproducts from a variety of agricultural processes and account for 38 percent
of the renewable energy market; however in 2000 renewable energy accounted for
only 7 percent of the total energy consumed in the
SN/yr/njw