Qualifying Advanced Energy Project Credit (48C) Program

48C Updates

Round 2 Tax Credit Allocations Announced 

The Department of Treasury, Internal Revenue Service and DOE have announced $6 billion in tax credits to build clean energy supply chains, drive investments, and lower costs in energy communities.

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Overview

The Qualifying Advanced Energy Project Credit (48C) was established by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and renewed and expanded under the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA).  The 48C credit is a tax credit for investments in advanced energy projects, as defined in 26 USC § 48C(c)(1).  The IRA provided $10 billion in funding for the expanded 48C(e) Qualifying Advanced Energy Project Credit Allocation Program (48C(e) program). To receive the full value of a 48C credit, projects must meet prevailing wage and registered apprenticeship standards.  

The Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service, in partnership with DOE, conducted two rounds of tax credit allocations for projects that expand clean energy manufacturing and recycling and critical materials refining, processing and recycling, and for projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions at industrial facilities.  DOE’s Office of Manufacturing & Energy Supply Chains (MESC) manages the 48C(e) program on behalf of IRS and Treasury. 

On March 29, 2024, the IRS allocated approximately $4 billion of 48C credits for over 100 projects across 35 states, with approximately $1.5 billion allocated to projects in designated energy communities.

On January 10, 2025, the IRS allocated approximately $6 billion of the 48C credits for over 140 projects in approximately 30 states, with approximately $2.5 billion allocated to projects in designated energy communities.  

Below is additional information about the eligible projects under the 48C(e) program: 

  • Clean Energy Manufacturing and Recycling Projects: A qualifying advanced energy project in this category involves re-equipping, expanding, or establishing an industrial or manufacturing facility. The facility must manufacture or recycle one or more of the specified advanced energy properties outlined in the Round 2 guidance. Production of energy-intensive materials that have a substantially lower carbon intensity when compared to an appropriate industry-specific benchmark are now eligible under this category. Please review the guidance for an updated list of program priorities.
  • Industrial Decarbonization Projects (formerly named Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Projects): An advanced energy project qualifies under this category if it involves retrofitting an industrial or manufacturing facility, particularly in energy-intensive sectors such as cement, iron and steel, aluminum, and chemicals. The retrofit must include the installation of equipment specifically designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 20 percent.
  • Critical Materials Projects: A qualifying advanced energy project in this category re-equips, expands, or establishes an industrial facility for the processing, refining, or recycling of critical materials (as defined in § 7002(a) of the Energy Act of 2020 (30 U.S.C. § 1606(a)). 

Concept papers and applications will be evaluated across multiple criteria and policy factors, including (1) commercial viability; (2) greenhouse gas emissions impacts; (3) strengthening U.S. supply chains and domestic manufacturing for a net-zero economy; and (4) workforce and community engagement. 

Approximately $2.5 billion of this second allocation round will be set aside for projects in designated 48C(e) energy communities, which includes communities with closed coal mines or coal plants (see Appendix C of IRS Notice 2024-36 for the list of designated census tracts).  The program will provide an investment tax credit of up to 30% of qualified investments for certified projects that meet prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements.

48C Energy Communities 

Section 48C(e) Energy Communities Census Tracts are census tracts in which (1) no pre-IRA 48C projects were located and (2) a coal mine has closed after December 31, 1999 or a coal-fired electric generating unit has been retired after December 31, 2009 or which is directly adjoining to any of these census tracts.

Timing

  • Round 2 allocations announced - January 10, 2025 (read the release)
  • 48C full application submissions due October 18, 2024, by 11:59 p.m. ET. (read the release)
  • Round 2 Full Applications Informational Webinar - September 16, 2024, 1 p.m. ET | Register to Attend
  • 48C full application period opens - August 29, 2024.  
  • Guidance Released (Press release) – April 29, 2024
  • Informational Webinar – May 16,2024, 12 p.m. ET 
  • DOE 48C Portal opens for Concept Paper Submission – May 22, 2024
  • Submission Deadline for Concept Papers – June 21, 2024, by 5 p.m. ET

48C Portal

The 48C Portal is open for registration for any interested applicants, including small-, medium- and large-sized manufacturers. The 48C portal opened for application submission on August 29, 2024. Applications must be submitted through the 48C portal prior to 11:59 pm on October 18, 2024.

Visit the DOE 48C Portal to register. Registered applicants will be able to create, view, and manage their applications. The updated 48C applicant guide (Revised August 2024) is now available.

 

Informational Webinar

DOE, IRS, and Treasury hosted a virtual informational webinar for applicants on Monday, September 16, 2024, at 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time. This webinar provided eligible applicants information on how to prepare and submit a full application for Round 2 of the Qualifying Advanced Energy Project Credit (48C) program. 

Watch the webinar replay:

Guidance

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) 

Additional Resources

Questions  

Register at and visit the 48C Portal to access the help center on the navigation bar to view additional resources including the Applicant User Guide, and other helpful information. Additional help articles will continue to be added to the Applicant Portal.

Any questions or comments about registration and the concept paper and full application submission process can be submitted to the Department of Energy at [email protected].  Department of energy staff cannot provide tax advice.

Round 1 Tax Credit Allocations Announced

The Department of Treasury and DOE have announced $4 Billion in tax credits to build clean energy supply chains, drive investments, and lower costs in energy communities. 

 

  • Round 1: Overview

    The Qualifying Advanced Energy Project Credit (48C) program was established by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and expanded with a $10 billion investment under the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022. The Advanced Energy Project Credit provides a tax credit for investments in advanced energy projects, as defined in 26 USC § 48C(c)(1). 

    The Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service, in partnership with DOE, have announced up to $4 billion in a first round of tax credits for projects that expand clean energy manufacturing and recycling and critical materials refining, processing and recycling, and for projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions at industrial facilities. 

    Approximately $1.6 billion of this allocation will be set aside for projects in designated energy communities. The program will provide an investment tax credit of up to 30% of qualified investments for certified projects that meet prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements.

     

    Round 1: Guidance + Updates Round 1 Tax Credit Allocations Announced


    The Department of Treasury and DOE have announced $4 Billion in tax credits to build clean energy supply chains, drive investments, and lower costs in energy communities. 

    New Portal Live!
    Effective February 29, 2024, the Qualifying Advanced Energy Tax Credit Portal is migrating from eXCHANGE to a new system, 48C Portal. You’ll sign into the new 48C Portal with ID.me instead of Login.gov. You will still be able to access your application information in eXCHANGE, but all future actions will be performed on the new 48C Portal. Allocation decisions for 2023 applicants will only be accessible through the new 48C Portal. More information on the can be found at go live announcement and the 48C Portal applicant user guide.


    GET HELP: APPLICANT PORTAL  

    From the new 48C Portal, select Help Center on the navigation bar to view additional help resources including FAQs, the Applicant User Guide, and other helpful information. You will be able to access help articles including How to View Your Application Status and Decisions, and How to Withdraw an Application. Additional help articles will continue to be added to the Applicant Portal. Any questions or comments can be submitted to the Department of Energy at [email protected].

     

    Round 1: Guidance

     

    Round 1: Frequently Asked Questions

    Round 1: Resources 
     

    Round 1 Webinars: Informational Webinar

    DOE hosted a webinar on November 28, 2023, at 12pm ET for an informational webinar on the application process. The webinar will cover the 48C(e) application process and provide guidance for developing a strong application. Watch the webinar or view the webinar slides here. 48C Program 

    Overview Webinar Video: https://youtu.be/eZCQ9g6k4OQ. This Office of Manufacturing & Energy Supply Chains (MESC) webinar presents an informational webinar on the Qualifying Advanced Energy Project Credit (§48C) application process and provide guidance for developing a strong application. The webinar was held on November 28, 2023, at 12pm ET.  

    DOE and Treasury previously hosted a virtual informational webinar for potential applicants on June 27, 2023, at 2 p.m. ET. Watch the webinar below, or view the webinar slides here.

     

  • Round 2 Announced

    The Department of Treasury has issued Notice 2024-36, Appendices A & B (A: Eligibility and B: DOE Application Process, and Appendix C (Section 48C(e) Energy Communities Census Tracts) regarding up to $6 billion in tax credit allocations for the second round of allocations for the 48C(e) program, including approximately $2.5 billion for projects located in 48C(e) designated energy communities. Read the release.

    • October 18, 2024 - 48C full application submissions due by 11:59 p.m. EST. (read the release)
    • September 16, 2024 - Round 2 Full Applications Informational Webinar | 1 p.m. ET | Watch the Webinar Replay  
    • August 29, 2024 - 48C full application period opens. 
    • June 21, 2024 - 48C concept paper submissions due by 5 pm EST.
    • May 22, 2024 - DOE 48C Portal opens for concept paper submission at 9 am EST. (read the release)

    Round 2 Application Templates Now Available 

    Templates for Round 2 applications are now available on the 48C Portal. Applicants are encouraged to use the 2024 full application forms templates to submit 48C applications, when the portal opens for submissions. Templates provided include: 

    • Narrative templates: As part of the application submission, applicants are required to submit a narrative that cannot exceed 30 pages and a workforce and community engagement plan that cannot exceed 5 pages. There’s a narrative template for Clean Energy Manufacturing/Critical Materials Projects and a separate template for Industrial Decarbonization Projects. There is also a template for Workforce and Community Engagement Plans. 
    • Data sheets: Applicants are required to submit a 48C Application Data Sheet. There is one data sheet for Clean Energy Manufacturing Projects, one data sheet for Critical Materials Projects, and one data sheet for Industrial Decarbonization projects. Applicants should select the appropriate data sheet based on their project category. 
    • Business Entity Certification: Applicants are required to submit a business entity certification with their application. Applicants may use this template for their business entity certification. 

    The templates can be found in a knowledge article titled, “2024 Full Application Forms Templates” in the 48C Portal.
    Concept paper encourage/discourage notifications to applicants were posted in the 48C portal. The 48C Portal opened for applications on August 29, 2024. An organization that submitted a round 2 concept paper may submit a full application regardless of whether they receive an encourage or discourage notification. 48C applications are due on October 18, 2024, by 11:59 pm EST.

    48C Round 1 Best Practices Document:

    DOE has posted a 48C Round 1 Best Practices document to assist potential applicants with understanding why they may have been denied a credit in Round 1 and with addressing common issues to ensure high quality concept papers and applications that comply with § 48C requirements and applicable guidance, as described in IRS Notice 2024-36. 

    48C Round 1 Virtual Debriefings available - June 17 and 18: 

    Round 1 applicants who received a written debrief letter can request a 15-minute virtual debriefing session - learn more

    Round 2 Announced: 

    The Department of Treasury has issued Notice 2024-36, Appendices A & B (A: Eligibility and B: DOE Application Process, and Appendix C (Section 48C(e) Energy Communities Census Tracts) regarding up to $6 billion in tax credit allocations for the second round of allocations for the 48C(e) program, including approximately $2.5 billion for projects located in 48C(e) designated energy communities.  Read the release.

    • May 22, 2024 - DOE 48C Portal opens for concept paper submission at 9 am EST. (read the release)
    • June 21, 2024 - 48C concept paper submissions due by 5 pm EST.

    48C ROUND 2 Concept Paper Submissions Due June 21, 2024:

    DOE 48C Portal opens for concept paper submission on May 22, 2024. Concept paper submission is the first required step in the application process. A concept paper must be submitted to be eligible to submit the full application. The new concept paper templates (Clean Energy and Critical Materials Manufacturing and Recycling Projects - Updated and Industrial Decarbonization Projects - Updated) and datasheet document are available to preview and start collecting the needed information to submit a concept paper.  Should any discrepancy occur between the document posted here and the documents in the 48C portal, the ones in the portal override. Concept paper submissions are due June 21, 2024 by 5 pm EST.

    The Concept Paper PDF templates were updated as of June 10, 2024 to align with the formatting requirements in Notice 2024-36. No substantive changes were made and applicants who submitted their concept paper prior to June 10, 2024 are NOT expected or required to resubmit with the revised template.

    48C ROUND 2 Concept paper templates:

    Templates available to preview and start collecting the needed information to submit a concept paper.  Applicants must submit a completed PDF template for their relevant project category and a completed datasheet. These templates are provided to facilitate the public's access to these documents. Should any discrepancy occur between the document posted here and the documents in the 48C portal, the ones in the portal override. 

    The Concept Paper PDF templates were updated as of June 10,2024 to align with the formatting requirements in Notice 2024-36. No substantive changes were made and applicants who submitted their concept paper prior to June 10, 2024, are NOT expected or required to resubmit with the revised template.

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    48C Reviewers

    Support 48C as a Reviewer - Now recruiting Round 2 Reviewers! 


    Are you interested in supporting the implementation of this impactful program? The Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains has exciting opportunities to contribute to the § 48C Tax Credit Program Application merit review process.  The § 48C Tax Credit Program aims to play a critical role to create high-quality jobs, reduce industrial emissions, and increase domestic production of critical clean energy products and materials.

    To implement this mission, we need support from a diverse group of people with expertise in commercialization, supply chains, industrial decarbonization, and workforce and community engagement. Because the scope of the § 48C program spans multiple technologies and industries in areas such as clean energy manufacturing, critical minerals and industrial decarbonization, we also need support from experts across different technical areas.

    Are you considering applying to be a DOE reviewer? As a reviewer, you will:

    • Have the opportunity to apply your expertise to inform how DOE supports energy infrastructure and supply chain activities. 
    • Receive a stipend (only applicable to reviewers external to the federal government) 
    • Have clear time commitments and expectations, which are clearly described in the brochure below.

    Interested in being a reviewer, learn more below.

    Round 2: 48C Reviewer Brochure


    How to become a reviewer?

    Those interested in assisting in the merit review process should send an email to [email protected] with sufficient details. Please do not attach your resume.

    Based on the program requirements and specific reviewer needs, 48C program team will get in touch with you on the next steps to complete and on onboarding process.


    Reviewer Types

    There are 3 anticipated groups of reviewers for each application:

    Special Purpose ReviewersSuper ReviewersGeneral Reviewers

    Expected to review the specific content that relates to the specific sub-elements in each merit review criteria and prepare a summary analysis and high-level list of strengths and weaknesses. 

    • It is expected that the effort is approximately 3-5 hours per application.

    Expected to review the application section that focus on their area of expertise (e.g., commercial viability, supply chain, workforce and community engagement) and provide their score for the merit review criterion, as well as providing comment on strengths and weaknesses. 

    They will have access to the analysis prepared by Special Purpose Reviewers and, if needed, suggest additional analysis to help with their review. Each application will be reviewed by four Super Reviewers, one for each merit review criterion. 

    • It is expected that the effort is approximately 6-8 hours per application. 
    • Towards the end of the merit review process, the Super Reviewers are expected to participate in the merit review meeting where the scores and comments for each application are discussed and consolidated. This may take up to 1-2 days, scheduled in advance.

    Expected to review the complete application and provide their scores for all the merit review criteria, in addition to providing comment on strengths and weaknesses. 

    They will have access to the analysis prepared by Special Purpose Reviewers and, if needed, suggest additional analysis to help with their review. 

    • It is expected that the effort is approximately 8-12 hours per application. 
    • Towards the end of the merit review process, the General Reviewers are expected to participate in the merit review meeting where the scores and comments for each application are discussed and consolidated. This may take up to 1-2 days, scheduled in advance.

    Desired qualifications: 

    These reviewers are expected to be in the early stage of their careers in their area of expertise.

    Desired qualifications

    These reviewers are expected to be senior experts/leaders in their area of expertise.

    Desired qualifications: 

    These reviewers are expected to be senior subject matter experts in respective technology areas, with broad understanding of the commercial viability, supply chains, general workforce practices for the specific technology areas. 

    Compensation: 

    Varies based on terms of actual contract with reviewer, but generally $300-$500 per application, plus $500 for administrative activities such as but not limited to:  attending the merit review training, completing vendor paperwork, and/or uploading comments/scores into 48C Portal. 

     

    Compensation: 

    Varies based on terms of actual contract with reviewer, but generally $800-$1,000 per application, plus $500 for administrative activities such as but not limited to: attending the merit review training, completing vendor paperwork, making travel arrangements, and/or uploading comments/scores into 48C Portal. 

    When travel is required, certain pre-approved costs may be paid by the program, within GSA allowable costs, but time spent traveling will not be reimbursed.

    Compensation: 

    Varies based on terms of actual contract with reviewer, but generally $800-$1,200 per application, plus $500 for administrative activities such as but not limited to:  attending the merit review training, completing vendor paperwork, making travel arrangements, and/or uploading comments/scores into 48C Portal. 

    When travel is required, certain pre-approved costs may be paid by the program, within GSA allowable costs, but time spent traveling will not be reimbursed.

     


    Onboarding and Training

    KBC Energy Solutions, LLC, is supporting the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains (MESC) in reviewer onboarding.  Additional details will be provided later.

    All reviewers are required to sign the Nondisclosure Agreement (NDA) and Conflict of Interest and Foreign Government-Sponsored Talent Recruitment Program Involvement forms, in addition to IRS Data Privacy forms.

    All reviewers are required to submit for background checks (fingerprinting, background investigation) before they can be considered for merit review of applications.

    Several training sessions will be provided on:

    • Reviewer Conflict of Interest and Foreign Government-Sponsored Talent Recruitment Program Involvement and Nondisclosure obligations, and Data Privacy requirements.
    • 48C Round 2 guidance, technical content background
    • Merit review process, review guidelines/rubric
    • “Office hours” to answer any questions/concerns before or during the merit review process.