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  • Author:
  • Published: Jun 5th, 2010
  • Category: USA
  • Comments: 5

Obama touts tax credits, ending tax breaks and charging carbon polluters


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The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico should force Congress to provide more tax incentives to spur clean energy development while also cutting back billions in tax breaks for oil companies.

President Barack Obama pushed for accelerating the transition to a clean energy economy by “rolling back billions of dollars in tax breaks to oil companies so we can prioritize investments in clean energy research and development,” during a speech at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh on Wednesday.

He urged Congress to look again at energy legislation that would set up a cap-and-trade system, requiring companies to purchase carbon pollution credits as they gradually change over to cleaner ways of manufacturing.

“The only way the transition to clean energy will succeed is if the private sector is fully invested in this future if capital comes off the sidelines and the ingenuity of our entrepreneurs is unleashed,” he said. “And the only way to do that is by finally putting a price on carbon pollution.”

He acknowledged that it also “means tapping into our natural gas reserves and moving ahead with our plan to expand our nation’s fleet of nuclear power plants.”

Obama had proposed an offshore oil-drilling plan but made clear on Wednesday that oil production can only be pursued if it’s “safe and only if it’s used as a short-term solution while we transition to a clean energy economy.”

He touted tax credits and loan guarantees in the stimulus bill that “will lead to 720,000 clean energy jobs in America by 2012. By 2015, the U.S. will be making 40 percent of the world’s advanced batteries for hybrid cards, up from 2 percent now,” he said.

“We must invest in and embrace the innovation and technology of the future and not the past that applies beyond our energy policy. That’s why we’ve decided to devote more than 3 percent of gross domestic product to research and development to spur the discovery of services and products and businesses that we have yet to imagine.”

In conjunction with that, Obama again proposed making research and experimentation tax credits permanent, which would help businesses afford the high costs of developing new technologies and new products. In 2009, basic research funding received the largest investment in history, he said.

BP has yet to find a way to stop the oil leak more than a mile under the ocean. The Deepwater Horizon rig leased from Transocean by BP exploded and sank on April 20, killing 11 and starting the nation’s worst-ever oil spill.

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  3. View: ABC Touts Tom Friedman to Lobby for Taxes on Oil and Carbon
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5 Responses to “Obama touts tax credits, ending tax breaks and charging carbon polluters”



  1. on Jun 9th, 2010
    @ 5:27 am

    There are two significant issues with the existing R&D Tax Credit regs. First, its a Tier 1 Issue, which means higher chance of audit. Second, the IRS requires contemporaneous documentation to support a claim for Credit. To address these issues, we built Titan Armor



  2. on Oct 2nd, 2010
    @ 6:22 am

    R&D Studies vs R&D Software
    R&D Software can be a helpful tool, but, ultimately, a company still needs to compile a thoroughly-documented study if they are going to be positioned to support R&D credit claims in the event of an audit. The process of identifying qualified R&D activities, of determining applicable percentages of staff time, of determining certain aspects of the required calculations (e.g., related to fixed base pc) cannot be fully automated. For large corporations with significant six figure – seven figure credits, the additional cost of R&D software can be warranted. For small to mid-sized companies, the software, as an additional tool to go along with the R&D study process, generally is not warranted.

    Sincerely,
    Jeffrey Feingold
    Founder and Managing Partner
    Tax Point Advisors – “We don’t just do
    R&D credits … we do them right!”

    CA, FL, MA, NY, OH,TX
    (800) 260-4138
    [email protected]

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