Rep. Greg Vitali (D-Delaware) called the agreement, which was quietly negotiated for some time, a “backroom deal.”
Patrick McDonnell – formerly Wolf’s secretary of the Department of Environmental Protection who now leads the statewide lobbying group PennFuture – said the legislation is “slapdash industrial policy at its worst that will perpetuate Pennsylvania’s addiction to fossil fuels.”
Overall, the bill creates $1.97 billion in tax credits. It earmarks $50 million a year for hydrogen production subsidies. Hydrogen’s main byproduct is water, and if it’s produced with renewable energy – called “green” hydrogen – it produces no carbon emissions. Another method, called “blue” hydrogen, still produces some emissions.
State leaders say they want those firms to help build a regional hydrogen hub. The Biden administration is putting $7 billion toward the creation of such hubs across the country.
Mark Szybist, senior attorney for the Climate and Clean Energy Program at Natural Resources Defense Council, called the bill “deeply flawed.”
The tax credits, he said, “provide massive financial support to petrochemical manufacturing and shale gas extraction unconditioned on either pollution limits or protections for communities where supported facilities will be located.”
The proposal creates $15 million annually in tax credits over eight years for companies in milk processing industry, and $20 million annually over five years for semiconductor and biomedical research companies, if they use natural gas and create new facilities and jobs.