Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle A— Income Taxes › Chapter 1— NORMAL TAXES AND SURTAXES › Subchapter A— Determination of Tax Liability › Part IV— CREDITS AGAINST TAX › Subpart E— Rules for Computing Investment Credit › § 48A
You can get a tax credit for investing in certain advanced coal power projects. The credit equals 20% of the eligible money spent for the first category of projects, 15% for the second category, and 30% for the third category. Eligible investment means the cost of qualifying equipment put into service that you own and can depreciate. The Treasury Secretary must set up a program within 180 days to review and certify projects. Applications are allowed in two 3-year windows set by the Secretary. The Secretary must accept or reject an application within 60 days, an accepted applicant has 2 years to show it meets more rules, and a certified project must be in service within 5 years or the certification expires. All certified credits together cannot exceed $2,550,000,000. Of that total, $800,000,000 is set aside for integrated gasification combined cycle projects, $500,000,000 for other advanced coal projects in the first window, and $1,250,000,000 for projects in the later window. The Secretary will review allocations after 6 years and may reassign unused amounts. A qualifying project must use the approved advanced coal technology for a new plant or a retrofit, use at least 75% coal, and have at least 400 megawatts of nameplate capacity at one site. The owner must show most of the power will be used, control a suitable site, and be located in the United States. Projects applying in the later window must include equipment to separate and store at least 65% of their CO2 emissions (70% for reallocated credits). Short definitions: qualifying project = meets these rules; advanced technology = meets the performance rules below; eligible property = project equipment (for IGCC this includes gasification gear). The law favors equal capacity among bituminous, subbituminous, and lignite projects and gives priority to projects with greenhouse-gas capture, by-product use, research partnerships, and the highest CO2 capture rates. Performance rules for new or converted units include either using IGCC or meeting a design net heat rate of 8,530 Btu/kWh (40% efficiency) and pollution limits of 99% SO2 removal, NOx ≤ 0.07 lbs/MMBtu, PM ≤ 0.015 lbs/MMBtu, and 90% mercury removal. Existing units can qualify if they reach at least 35% efficiency and meet required efficiency gains. The Secretary must publish who gets credits, can adjust awards to move project sites for better CO2 capture or other reasons, and must take back credits if a project fails to meet required CO2 separation and storage. Using these credits does not by itself mean the technology is officially proven under the Clean Air Act.
Full Legal Text
Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 48A
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60