‘Buy America’ EV Charging Waiver Rejected by US Senate Vote

‘Buy America’ EV Charging Waiver Rejected by US Senate Vote

WASHINGTON, Nov 8 (Reuters) ⁤- The U.S. Senate voted 50-48 to overturn President Joe Biden’s decision to waive some ‍”Buy America” requirements for government-funded electric vehicle⁤ charging stations ​but⁣ the White⁤ House said he would veto the measure.The ⁢White House argued ‍the Republican bill⁣ would eliminate entirely the domestic manufacturing requirement for government-funded electric⁢ vehicle (EV) chargers “thereby harming domestic manufacturing and American jobs.”Senate Democrats Sherrod Brown, Joe⁢ Manchin, Jon Tester ⁣and independent Kyrsten Sinema joined Republicans ​in voting⁣ to reject the regulation.The Federal ‌Highway Administration (FHWA) in⁤ February agreed‌ to waive some ⁢requirements until July 2024, saying it would enable “EV ​charger acquisition and installation to immediately proceed.”Congress has set aside $7.5 billion to fund ⁤electric vehicle charging stations. The funding is crucial to the Biden administration’s plans to ramp up electric vehicle sales.The White House ⁤said the bill to rescind the waiver would ‍also overturn ⁤the FHWA decision to ‍extend Buy America rules ⁢to EV⁤ chargers.As a result, the 1983⁤ Reagan administration decision‍ to exempt manufactured products from Buy⁢ America requirements would again⁣ apply, meaning EV ⁢chargers would not be covered by any Buy⁣ America requirements, the White House said.Republican Senator‍ Marco Rubio challenged⁤ the White ‌House argument, arguing the⁣ administration could⁤ separately ⁢rescind the 1983⁣ decision‍ at any time. Rubio said the waiver would allow ⁢government funds to “go‌ into the hands of Chinese companies to ‌build electric vehicle charging ‍stations.”Under the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law,⁤ infrastructure projects‌ like EV ⁤chargers must obtain⁤ at least 55% ​of construction materials, including iron and steel, from domestic sources⁤ and U.S. manufactured.The rules do not start imposing the 55% requirement until July 2024 and EV chargers ‌produced by‌ then ​can receive funding⁣ if installation begins by October 2024.EV chargers require iron⁣ and steel for some of their most crucial parts, including the internal structural ‌frame, heating and cooling fans and​ the power‌ transformer. ⁢Chargers with‍ cabinets ⁣that house the product require even ​more steel, making up to 50% of the total cost ⁢of the chargers ​in some cases.U.S.​ states and‍ companies warned‍ global demand​ for EV chargers is straining the supply chain, making it difficult, if not⁢ impossible, to meet made-in-America standards and expedite construction of new chargers.Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Marguerita Choy and Stephen CoatesOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters​ Trust Principles. Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tab

Link ⁤from www.reuters.com

Exit mobile version