Summary
Financing Our Energy Future Act
This bill allows a publicly traded partnership to derive income from certain clean energy-related activities and still be treated as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.
As background, a publicly traded partnership is a partnership whose interests are traded on an established securities market (or readily tradable on a secondary market). A publicly traded partnership generally is treated as a corporation for federal income tax purposes unless 90% or more of such partnership’s gross income is qualifying income.
Under current law, qualifying income includes
- interest and dividends;
- real property rents;
- gain from the sale (or disposition) of real property;
- income from certain activities related to minerals and natural resources, source carbon dioxide, and the transportation or storage of certain fuels; and
- gain from the sale (or disposition) of a capital asset or commodities.
Under the bill, the qualifying income is expanded to include income derived from
- electric power (or thermal energy) generated from renewable energy sources (e.g., wind and solar energy), qualified gasification projects, or advanced nuclear facilities;
- accepting or processing open-loop biomass or municipal solid waste (by certain facilities);
- the storage of electric power or thermal energy using certain energy storage technology;
- the generation, storage, or distribution of electric power (or thermal energy) using combined heat and power system property;
- fuels that use certain carbon oxides as primary feedstock;
- certain renewable chemicals;
- transportation or storage of liquefied or compressed hydrogen;
- the conversion of renewable biomass; and
- certain carbon capture and sequestration facilities.
Related bills
Identical legislation
Bill text versions
Legislative Journey
- Introduced
- Committee
- Floor
- Passed Chamber 1
- Passed Chamber 2
- Signed
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
SenateIntroduced in Senate