https://www.greencarreports.com/news/1124804_ev-tax-credit-will-drop-again-for-chevrolet-bolt-ev-october-1
EV tax credit will drop again for Chevrolet Bolt EV October 1
August 29, 2019  Bengt Halvorson 

[image  
https://images.hgmsites.net/hug/2019-chevrolet-bolt_100672365_h.jpg
 Bolt EV
]

In a little more than a month, General Motors will face a slightly stronger
headwind in its ability to sell electric vehicles—and, perhaps, make money
from them. EVs and plug-in hybrids from the automaker that are delivered
starting October 1 will only be eligible for a $1,875 credit amount, versus
the $3,750 they’ve been eligible for since April 1 of this year. 

GM confirmed that it delivered 200,000 eligible vehicles last fall, which
triggered a reduction of its credit amount one full quarter later. The
reduction happens in two six-month periods during which those purchasing
eligible vehicles are able to claim 50 percent and then 25 percent of the
full $7,500.

The base 2019 Chevrolet Bolt LT starts at $37,495 including the $875
destination fee. So not counting other state, local, or automaker incentives
that might apply, the Bolt EV could effectively cost $33,745 for those who
take delivery prior to October 1, or $35,620 from then through next March. 

The credit, with its staggered phase-out for each individual automaker, is
overseen by the IRS. It was originally passed as part of the Energy
Improvement and Extension Act of 2008, during the George W. Bush
administration.

Opposition to the EV tax credit has mostly come in the form of propaganda
and push-polls from the oil and gas industry, and while the Trump
administration earlier this year threatened to cut the credit entirely, it
became clear that the credit—and even expanding it—had bipartisan support
and went well beyond electric vehicle fans and environmental groups. 

GM isn’t the first one to see the credit phased out for its customers. Tesla
reached that ceiling the quarter before GM, so the credit on its models
ratcheted down to $1,875 on July 1. Beginning January 1, 2020, the credit
will go away completely for the electric vehicle maker. 

While the GM phase-out applies to all U.S. brands of GM—including Chevy,
Buick, and Cadillac—other automakers have perhaps been more shrewd with
their top-level decisions and how they’ll affect regulatory rules and such
credits. Earlier this week Volvo’s Polestar electric performance brand was
issued its own World Manufacturing Identifier—a strategy that will allow
both Volvo and Polestar to get separate 200,000-vehicle ceilings.
[© greencarreports.com]


+
https://www.topspeed.com/lifestyle/news/hyundai-wants-an-electric-scooter-in-every-new-car-it-sells-ar186394.html
Hyundai Wants An Electric Scooter In Every New Car It
Sells
August 29, 2019  So does Audi, by the way, for its eletric range  
Long story short, Hyundai is launching a new electric scooter that might end
up in every new car the Koreans sell, as the company wants to look at  ways
to improve last mile mobility, a logistical living hell that’s forced
carmakers like Ford to develop its own delivery robot ...
https://pictures.topspeed.com/IMG/crop/201908/hyundai-foldable-sco-2-2_1600x0w.jpg




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