[Federal Register Volume 91, Number 23 (Wednesday, February 4, 2026)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 5160-5207]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2026-02246]



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Vol. 91

Wednesday,

No. 23

February 4, 2026

Part II





Department of the Treasury





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Internal Revenue Service





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26 CFR Parts 1 and 48





Section 45Z Clean Fuel Production Credit; Proposed Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 91 , No. 23 / Wednesday, February 4, 2026 / 
Proposed Rules

[[Page 5160]]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Internal Revenue Service

26 CFR Parts 1 and 48

[REG-121244-23]
RIN 1545-BR30


Section 45Z Clean Fuel Production Credit

AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.

ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking and public hearing.

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SUMMARY: This document contains proposed regulations regarding the 
clean fuel production credit enacted by the Inflation Reduction Act of 
2022 and amended by the One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). These 
proposed regulations would provide rules for determining clean fuel 
production credits, including credit eligibility rules, emissions 
rates, and certification and registration requirements. In addition, 
the proposed regulations would amend three sets of final regulations: 
the elective payment election regulations and the credit transfer 
election regulations, to clarify language relating to ownership of 
clean fuel production facilities, and the Federal excise tax 
registration regulations, to make them clearer and more consistent with 
the clean fuel production credit registration requirements in these 
proposed regulations. The proposed regulations would affect domestic 
producers of clean transportation fuel, taxpayers that may claim a 
credit for a related producer's fuel, and excise tax registrants.

DATES: Written or electronic comments must be received by April 6, 
2026. The public hearing is being held on May 28, 2026, at 10 a.m. 
Eastern Time (ET). Requests to speak and outlines of topics to be 
discussed at the public hearing must be received by April 6, 2026. If 
no outlines are received by April 6, 2026, the public hearing will be 
cancelled. Requests to attend the public hearing must be received by 5 
p.m. ET on May 26, 2026.

ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly encouraged to submit public comments 
electronically via the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and REG-121244-23) by following the 
online instructions for submitting comments. Requests for a public 
hearing must be submitted as prescribed in the ``Comments and Requests 
for a Public Hearing'' section. Once submitted to the Federal 
eRulemaking Portal, comments cannot be edited or withdrawn. The 
Department of the Treasury (Treasury Department) and the IRS will 
publish for public availability any comments submitted to the IRS's 
public docket. Send paper submissions to: CC:PA:01:PR (REG-121244-23), 
Room 5503, Internal Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben Franklin 
Station, Washington, DC 20044. A plain language summary of the proposed 
regulations will be made available at https://www.regulations.gov.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the proposed regulations, 
Jennifer Golden or Danielle Mayfield of the Office of Associate Chief 
Counsel (Energy, Credits, and Excise Tax) at (202) 317-6855 (not a 
toll-free number); concerning submissions of comments or the public 
hearing, Publications and Regulations Section at (202) 317-6901 (not a 
toll-free number) or by email at [email protected] (preferred).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Authority

    This document contains proposed amendments to the Income Tax 
Regulations (26 CFR part 1) regarding sections 45Z, 1361, 4101, 6417, 
and 6418 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) as they relate to the 
clean fuel production credit determined under section 45Z (proposed 
regulations). This document also contains proposed amendments to the 
Manufacturers and Retailers Excise Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 48) 
regarding section 4101 as they relate to excise tax registration. The 
proposed regulations would be issued under the authority granted by 
sections 45Z, 1361(b)(3)(A), 4101(a)(1) and (c), 4222(c), 6001, 
6417(h), 6418(h), and 7805(a) of the Code.
    Section 45Z contains several delegations of authority to the 
Secretary of the Treasury or the Secretary's delegate (Secretary). 
Section 45Z(e) directs the Secretary to issue guidance no later than 
January 1, 2025, regarding implementation of section 45Z, including 
calculation of emissions factors of transportation fuel, the emissions 
rate table described in section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i), and the determination 
of clean fuel production credits under section 45Z. Section 45Z(f)(2) 
further authorizes the Secretary to issue regulations regarding the 
fuel production attributable to the taxpayer in the case of a facility 
with multiple owners, and section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II) authorizes the 
Secretary to issue guidance on certification and other information with 
respect to certain transportation fuels.
    Section 45Z(f)(3) authorizes the Secretary to prescribe additional 
related person rules for other entities similar to the rule described 
for corporations that are members of an affiliated group of 
corporations filing a consolidated return. This includes the authority 
to prescribe rules for related persons with respect to which the 
taxpayer has reason to believe will sell fuel to an unrelated person in 
a manner described in section 45Z(a)(4).
    Section 45Z(d)(5)(C) directs the Secretary to issue regulations or 
other guidance as the Secretary determines necessary to carry out the 
purposes of section 45Z(d)(5)(A)(iv), which excludes from the 
definition of ``transportation fuel'' any fuel produced from a fuel for 
which a credit under section 45Z is allowable.
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) authorizes the Secretary to determine, in 
the case of any transportation fuel that is not a sustainable aviation 
fuel (SAF), whether a model is a successor model to the Greenhouse 
gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation model 
developed by the Argonne National Laboratory (ANL). Additionally, 
section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i) directs the Secretary, subject to section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) through (v), to annually publish a table setting forth 
the emissions rate for similar types and categories of transportation 
fuels based on the amount of lifecycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions 
as described in section 211(o)(1)(H) of the Clean Air Act (CAA) (42 
U.S.C. 7545(o)(1)(H)), as in effect on August 16, 2022 (CAA-2022) for 
such fuels, expressed as kilograms of equivalent carbon dioxide 
(CO2e) per 1,000,000 British thermal units (mmBTU), which a 
taxpayer must use for purposes of section 45Z. The proposed regulations 
cite to the CAA-2022 as enacted by section 1501(a)(2) of the Energy 
Policy Act of 2005, Public Law 109-58, 119 Stat. 594, 1067 (2005), 
amended by section 202(a)(1) of the Energy Independence and Security 
Act of 2007, Public Law 110-140, 121 Stat. 1492, 1521-22 (2007).
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(iv) authorizes the Secretary to determine the 
regulations or methodologies for emissions rate adjustments to exclude 
any emissions attributed to indirect land use change.
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(v)(I) requires the Secretary to provide a 
distinct emissions rate with respect to any transportation fuel derived 
from animal manure. The emissions rate must be based on the specific 
animal manure feedstock, which may include dairy manure, swine manure, 
poultry manure, and any other sources that the Secretary determines to 
be appropriate.

[[Page 5161]]

    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(v)(II) authorizes the Secretary to provide an 
emissions rate less than zero with respect to any transportation fuel 
derived from animal manure.
    Section 1361(b)(3)(A) authorizes the Secretary to prescribe 
regulations providing exceptions to the subparagraph's treatment of a 
qualified subchapter S subsidiary (as defined in section 1361(b)(3)(B)) 
for purposes of the Code.
    Section 4101(a)(1) authorizes the Secretary to prescribe 
regulations related to any registration required under section 4101, 
including the time, form, manner, and terms and conditions of such 
registration.
    Section 4101(c) provides that rules similar to the rules of section 
4222(c) apply to registration under section 4101. Section 4222(c) 
authorizes the Secretary to prescribe regulations related to the 
denial, revocation, or suspension of any registration under section 
4222 if the Secretary determines that a registrant has used such 
registration to avoid the payment of tax or to postpone or interfere 
with the collection of tax, or that such denial, revocation, or 
suspension is needed to protect the revenue.
    Section 6001 authorizes the Secretary to prescribe regulations 
related to recordkeeping, statements, and special returns.
    Section 6417(h) directs the Secretary to issue such regulations or 
other guidance as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of section 
6417.
    Section 6418(h) directs the Secretary to issue such regulations or 
other guidance as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of section 
6418.
    These regulations would also be issued under the express delegation 
of authority under section 7805(a) of the Code, which authorizes the 
Secretary to prescribe all needful rules and regulations for the 
enforcement of the Code, including all rules and regulations as may be 
necessary by reason of any alteration of law in relation to Internal 
Revenue.

Background

I. Overview

    Section 45Z, added to the Code by section 13704 of Public Law 117-
169, 136 Stat. 1818, 1997 (August 16, 2022), commonly known as the 
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), and amended by section 70521 of Public 
Law 119-21, 139 Stat. 72, 276 (July 4, 2025), commonly known as the 
OBBBA, provides an income tax credit (section 45Z credit) for clean 
transportation fuel produced domestically after December 31, 2024, and 
sold by December 31, 2029. See section 13704(c) of the IRA; section 
70521(d) of the OBBBA; section 45Z(g). The section 45Z credit is a 
general business credit under section 38 of the Code.
    The section 45Z credit replaces an assortment of prior fuel 
incentives. Those incentives consisted of income tax credit, excise tax 
credit, and excise tax payment provisions for various biofuels and 
other alternative fuels sold for use as a fuel or used as a fuel, 
including biodiesel, renewable diesel, compressed natural gas, second 
generation biofuel, and SAF. See sections 40(b)(6); 40A(b)(1) and (2); 
40B; 6426(c) through (e) and (k); and 6427(e).
    Section 4101 authorizes the Secretary to require registration with 
respect to the section 4041 and section 4081 fuel excise taxes, and 
requires registration with respect to certain fuel tax credits, 
including the section 45Z credit. Section 4101(a)(1), as amended by 
section 70521(i) of the OBBBA, and section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I) impose a 
registration requirement under section 4101 (section 4101 registration) 
on a taxpayer claiming the section 45Z credit.
    Section 6417, added to the Code by section 13801(a) of the IRA, and 
amended by sections 70512(j)(2) and 70522(c) of the OBBBA, allows an 
applicable entity to elect to treat applicable credits (as defined in 
section 6417(b)), including the section 45Z credit, as a payment 
against the tax imposed by subtitle A of the Code.
    Section 6418, added to the Code by section 13801(b) of the IRA, and 
amended by sections 70512(h), 70513(b)(3)(B)(ii), and 70521(j)(2) of 
the OBBBA, allows an eligible taxpayer to elect to transfer eligible 
credits (as defined in section 6418(f)(1)), including the section 45Z 
credit.
    A taxpayer making a section 6417 or section 6418 election must also 
complete pre-filing registration, as provided in regulations under 
those provisions. This pre-filing registration is distinct from the 
registration required for the section 45Z credit, which is done under 
section 4101.

II. The Section 45Z Credit

A. Credit Eligibility

    Under section 45Z(a)(1)(A), if a taxpayer qualifies for a section 
45Z credit, the taxpayer is eligible to claim a section 45Z credit for 
the taxable year in which the taxpayer sells a transportation fuel. To 
qualify for a section 45Z credit, a taxpayer must: (i) produce a 
transportation fuel that meets the requirements for suitability, 
emissions rate, coprocessing, and prevention of double crediting; (ii) 
produce the fuel at a qualified facility in the United States, 
including in any U.S. territories; (iii) be registered as a producer of 
clean fuel under section 4101 at the time of production; and (iv) sell 
the fuel to an unrelated person in a qualified sale during the taxable 
year. See section 45Z(a)(1) and (4), (d)(4), (d)(5)(A), and (f)(1). 
Transportation fuel produced after December 31, 2025, must be 
exclusively derived from a feedstock that was produced or grown in the 
United States, Mexico, or Canada. See section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(iii); 
section 70521(a)(2) of the OBBBA.
    A taxpayer also cannot be: (i) a specified foreign entity, for 
taxable years beginning after July 4, 2025; or (ii) a foreign-
influenced entity (other than a foreign-influenced entity described in 
section 7701(a)(51)(D)(i)(II) of the Code), for taxable years beginning 
after July 4, 2027. See sections 45Z(f)(8) and 7701(a)(51).
    Section 45Z(d)(4) defines ``qualified facility'' as a facility used 
for the production of transportation fuels. However, the term 
``qualified facility'' excludes any facility for which one of the 
following credits is allowed under section 38 for the taxable year: (i) 
the credit for production of clean hydrogen under section 45V of the 
Code (section 45V credit); (ii) the credit determined under section 46 
of the Code to the extent that such credit is attributable to the 
energy credit determined under section 48 of the Code with respect to 
any specified clean hydrogen production facility for which an election 
is made under section 48(a)(15) (section 48(a)(15) election); and (iii) 
the credit for carbon oxide sequestration under section 45Q of the Code 
(section 45Q credit). Because these credits cannot be stacked with the 
section 45Z credit, this preamble refers to the section 45V credit, the 
section 48(a)(15) election, and the section 45Q credit collectively as 
the ``anti-stacking credits'' and individually as an ``anti-stacking 
credit.''
    Section 45Z(d)(5)(A) defines ``transportation fuel'' as a fuel that 
meets four requirements. First, the fuel must be suitable for use as a 
fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft. Second, the fuel must have a 
lifecycle GHG emissions rate (emissions rate) of not greater than 50 
kilograms (kg) of CO2e per mmBTU. Section 45Z(d)(1) defines 
``mmBTU'' to mean 1,000,000 British thermal units; section 45Z(d)(2) 
defines ``CO2e'' to mean, with respect to any GHG, the 
equivalent carbon dioxide (as determined based on relative global 
warming potential). Third, the fuel must

[[Page 5162]]

not be derived from coprocessing an applicable material (or materials 
derived from an applicable material) with a feedstock that is not 
biomass. Section 45Z(d)(5)(B)(i) defines ``applicable material'' to 
mean monoglycerides, diglycerides, and triglycerides; free fatty acids; 
and fatty acid esters. Section 45Z(d)(5)(B)(ii) defines ``biomass'' to 
have the same meaning as in section 45K(c)(3) of the Code, which 
provides that biomass means any organic material other than oil and 
natural gas (or any product thereof), and coal (including lignite) or 
any product thereof. Fourth, the fuel must not be produced from a fuel 
for which a section 45Z credit is allowable.
    In the case of a taxpayer producing a transportation fuel that is 
SAF, section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II) requires the taxpayer to provide 
certification from an unrelated person.\1\ For this purpose, section 
45Z(a)(3) defines ``sustainable aviation fuel,'' which these proposed 
regulations refer to as a ``SAF transportation fuel,'' to mean the non-
kerosene portion of liquid fuel that is a transportation fuel, is sold 
for use in an aircraft, is not derived from palm fatty acid distillates 
or petroleum, and meets the requirements of either: (i) ASTM 
International Standard D7566 or (ii) the Fischer Tropsch (FT) 
provisions of ASTM International Standard D1655, Annex A1.
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    \1\ Both the preamble to the proposed regulations and the 
proposed regulations use the term ``unrelated person'' when 
describing the certification required by section 
45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II). Section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II) refers to an 
``unrelated party,'' which is synonymous with an unrelated person as 
used in section 45Z(a)(4) and (f)(3).
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    Section 45Z(a)(4) requires a taxpayer to sell transportation fuel 
to an unrelated person: (i) for use by such person in the production of 
a fuel mixture; (ii) for use by such person in a trade or business; or 
(iii) who sells such fuel at retail to another person and places such 
fuel in the fuel tank of such other person. Section 45Z(f)(3) provides 
that persons are treated as related to each other if they would be 
treated as a single employer under the regulations prescribed under 
section 52(b) of the Code.\2\ Section 45Z(f)(3) further provides that 
if a corporation is a member of an affiliated group of corporations 
filing a consolidated return, such corporation is treated as selling 
fuel to an unrelated person if another member of the group sells the 
fuel to an unrelated person. Section 45Z(f)(3) also authorizes the 
Secretary to prescribe similar sale attribution rules for other related 
entities, including rules for related persons with respect to which the 
taxpayer has reason to believe will sell fuel to an unrelated person in 
a manner described in section 45Z(a)(4).
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    \2\ In determining eligibility for the section 45Z credit, a 
taxpayer must apply the controlled group rules under section 52 
consistent with the statutory purpose of section 45Z.
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    Section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II) requires a taxpayer producing a SAF 
transportation fuel to provide certification (in such form and manner 
as the Secretary prescribes) from an unrelated person demonstrating 
compliance with: (i) any general requirements, supply chain 
traceability requirements, and information transmission requirements 
established under the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for 
International Aviation (CORSIA); or (ii) for any methodology similar to 
CORSIA that satisfies the criteria under section 211(o)(1)(H) of the 
CAA-2022, requirements similar to the requirements described for 
CORSIA. A taxpayer producing a SAF transportation fuel must also 
provide such other information as the Secretary may require for 
purposes of carrying out section 45Z.

B. Credit Amount

    Under section 45Z(a)(1), a taxpayer calculates the amount of the 
section 45Z credit by multiplying the applicable amount per gallon or 
gallon equivalent with respect to a transportation fuel produced by the 
taxpayer and sold in a qualified sale by the emissions factor for such 
fuel. Per section 45Z(a)(5), if the credit amount is not a multiple of 
one cent, then it is rounded to the nearest cent. A taxpayer's total 
section 45Z credit for a taxable year is the sum of the section 45Z 
credit for each transportation fuel sold during the taxable year.
1. Applicable Amount
    For fuel produced after December 31, 2025, the applicable amount 
for any transportation fuel is either $0.20 or $1.00. See section 
45Z(a)(2); section 70521(g)(2) of the OBBBA.
    For fuel produced on or before December 31, 2025, the applicable 
amount varies depending on whether the transportation fuel is a SAF 
transportation fuel or is not a SAF transportation fuel (non-SAF 
transportation fuel) and is higher for SAF transportation fuel than for 
non-SAF transportation fuel. For non-SAF transportation fuel, the 
applicable amount is either $0.20 or $1.00. Section 45Z(a)(2). For SAF 
transportation fuel, the applicable amount is either $0.35 or $1.75. 
Section 45Z(a)(3) (repealed for fuel produced after December 31, 2025, 
by section 70521(g)(2) of the OBBBA).
    The increased applicable amount is available if the taxpayer 
produces the transportation fuel at a qualified facility that satisfies 
the prevailing wage and apprenticeship (PWA) requirements.
    Section 45Z(c)(1) provides that for calendar years beginning after 
2024, the applicable amount must be adjusted by multiplying such amount 
by the inflation adjustment factor for the calendar year in which the 
sale of the transportation fuel occurs. Section 45Z(c)(2) provides that 
the inflation adjustment factor for the section 45Z credit is the 
inflation adjustment factor determined and published by the Secretary 
pursuant to section 45Y(c), determined by substituting ``calendar year 
2022'' for ``calendar year 1992'' in section 45Y(c)(3). The inflation 
adjustment factor for purposes of section 45Z means, with respect to a 
calendar year, a fraction the numerator of which is the gross domestic 
product (GDP) implicit price deflator for the preceding calendar year 
and the denominator of which is the GDP implicit price deflator for the 
calendar year 2022. In this context, the term ``GDP implicit price 
deflator'' means the most recent revision of the implicit price 
deflator for the GDP as computed and published by the Department of 
Commerce before March 15 of the calendar year.
    If any inflation-adjusted applicable amount is not a multiple of 
one cent, it must be rounded to the nearest multiple of one cent. 
Section 45Z(c)(1).
    Section 45Z(f)(6)(A) provides that rules similar to the prevailing 
wage requirements of section 45(b)(7) apply. Section 45Z(f)(6)(B) 
provides a special rule for qualified facilities placed in service 
before January 1, 2025, under which such a facility need only satisfy 
prevailing wage requirements for any alteration or repair in taxable 
years beginning after December 31, 2024. Section 45Z(f)(7) provides 
that rules similar to the apprenticeship requirements of section 
45(b)(8) apply. Section 1.45Z-3 provides additional rules on the PWA 
requirements under section 45Z.
2. Emissions Factor and Emissions Rate
    Under section 45Z(b)(1)(A), a transportation fuel's emissions 
factor measures the reduction in a fuel's emissions rate, expressed as 
kg of CO2e per mmBTU, relative to the statutory baseline 
emissions rate of 50 kg of CO2e per mmBTU, expressed as a 
fraction of the statutory baseline. Expressed mathematically, the 
emissions factor calculation is as follows:

(50 kg CO2e per mmBTU-emissions rate) / 50 kg 
CO2e per mmBTU


[[Page 5163]]


    Under section 45Z(b)(2), any emissions factor determined under 
section 45Z(b)(1)(A) that is not a multiple of 0.1 must be rounded to 
the nearest multiple of 0.1.
    A taxpayer determines a fuel's emissions rate by either using the 
annual emissions rate table published by the Secretary or obtaining a 
provisional emissions rate (PER) determination from the Secretary. See 
section 45Z(b)(1)(B) and (D). The emissions rate may not be less than 
zero for any transportation fuel produced after December 31, 2025, 
except for fuel derived from animal manure. See section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(v) 
and (b)(1)(E); section 70521(b) and (c)(1) of the OBBBA.
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i) directs the Secretary, subject to section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) through (v), to annually publish a table setting forth 
the emissions rates for similar types and categories of transportation 
fuels based on the amount of lifecycle GHG emissions as described in 
section 211(o)(1)(H) of the CAA-2022 for such fuels, expressed as kg of 
CO2e per mmBTU. Section 211(o)(1)(H) of the CAA-2022 defines 
lifecycle GHG emissions as ``the aggregate quantity of greenhouse gas 
emissions (including direct emissions and significant indirect 
emissions such as significant emissions from land use changes), as 
determined by the Administrator [of the Environmental Protection Agency 
(EPA)], related to the full fuel lifecycle, including all stages of 
fuel and feedstock production and distribution, from feedstock 
generation or extraction through the distribution and delivery and use 
of the finished fuel to the ultimate consumer, where the mass values 
for all greenhouse gases are adjusted to account for their relative 
global warming potential.'' See also 42 U.S.C. 7602(a). Section 
45Z(d)(3) provides that ``greenhouse gas'' has the same meaning as 
under section 211(o)(1)(G) of the CAA-2022.
    Section 45Z divides transportation fuel into two categories for 
purposes of emissions rates: non-SAF transportation fuel and SAF 
transportation fuel. Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) and (iii) provides the 
methods for determining emissions rates in each case.
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) provides that for non-SAF transportation 
fuel, the lifecycle GHG emissions of such fuel must be based on the 
most recent determinations under the Greenhouse gases, Regulated 
Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation model developed by the ANL, 
or a successor model as determined by the Secretary.
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(iii) provides that for SAF transportation 
fuel, the lifecycle GHG emissions of such fuel is determined in 
accordance with: (i) the most recent CORSIA methodologies that have 
been adopted by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) 
with the agreement of the United States; or (ii) any methodology 
similar to the most recent CORSIA methodologies that satisfies the 
criteria under section 211(o)(1)(H) of the CAA-2022.
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(iv) provides that for transportation fuel 
produced after December 31, 2025, notwithstanding section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(i) through (iii), the emissions rate must be adjusted to 
exclude any emissions attributed to indirect land use change. See 
section 70521(c) of the OBBBA.
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(v) provides that for any transportation fuel 
derived from animal manure and produced after December 31, 2025, a 
distinct emissions rate must be provided with respect to such fuel 
based on the specific animal manure feedstock. Such an emissions rate 
may be less than zero. See section 70521(c) of the OBBBA.
    In the case of any transportation fuel for which an emissions rate 
has not been established in the annual emissions rate table under 
section 45Z(b)(1)(B), a taxpayer producing such fuel may file a 
petition with the Secretary for determination of the PER with respect 
to such fuel. See section 45Z(b)(1)(D).

C. Other Rules

    Section 45Z(f)(2) provides that, if a facility has more than one 
owner, production from the facility will be allocated among the owners 
in proportion to their respective ownership interests in the gross 
sales from such facility, except to the extent provided in regulations 
prescribed by the Secretary.
    Section 45Z(f)(4) provides that under regulations prescribed by the 
Secretary, rules similar to the rules of section 52(d) will apply to a 
pass-thru in the case of estates and trusts.
    Section 45Z(f)(5) provides that rules similar to the rules of 
section 45Y(g)(6) will apply for the allocation of the credit to 
patrons of an agricultural cooperative.

III. Section 4101 Registration

    Section 4101 of the Code generally provides rules for taxpayer 
registration. Section 4101(a)(1) provides a specific delegation of 
authority to the Secretary to prescribe the form and manner of 
registration by requiring every person required to register under 
section 4101 to register with the Secretary at such time, in such form 
and manner, and subject to such terms and conditions, as the Secretary 
may by regulations prescribe. Section 4101(a)(1) further provides that 
a section 4101 registration may be used only in accordance with 
regulations prescribed under section 4101. Section 4101(a)(5) requires 
reregistration under regulations prescribed by the Secretary in the 
event of certain changes in ownership.

A. Section 45Z Registration Requirement

    Section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I) provides that no section 45Z credit 
shall be determined unless the taxpayer is registered as a producer of 
clean fuel under section 4101 at the time of production. Section 
4101(a)(1) requires registration by ``every person producing a fuel 
eligible for the clean fuel production credit (pursuant to section 
45Z),'' effective for transportation fuel produced after December 31, 
2024.\3\
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    \3\ See section 13704(b)(5) of the IRA, as amended by section 
70521(i) of the OBBBA.
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B. Denial, Revocation, or Suspension of Registration

    Under section 4101(c), rules similar to the rules of section 
4222(c) apply for purposes of denial, revocation, or suspension of 
registration under section 4101. Section 4222 generally requires 
registration for certain tax-free sales under section 4221. Section 
4222(c) provides that under regulations prescribed by the Secretary, 
the registration of any person under section 4222 may be denied, 
revoked, or suspended if the Secretary determines: (i) that such person 
has used such registration to avoid the payment of any tax imposed by 
chapter 32 of the Code (chapter 32), or to postpone or in any manner to 
interfere with the collection of any such tax, or (ii) that such 
denial, revocation, or suspension is necessary to protect the revenue. 
The flush language of section 4222(c) provides that denial, revocation, 
or suspension under section 4222(c) is in addition to any penalty 
provided by law for any act or failure to act.
    Section 48.4222(a)-1 provides rules for registration, including 
application instructions. Section 48.4222(c)-1 provides rules for 
revocation or suspension of registration and authorizes the IRS in 
certain circumstances to revoke or temporarily suspend, upon written 
notice, the registration of any person under section 4222.

IV. Section 6417

    Section 6417 permits an applicable entity to elect to treat an 
applicable credit determined with respect to the

[[Page 5164]]

applicable entity for the taxable year as a payment against Federal 
income taxes imposed by subtitle A of the Code equal to the amount of 
the credit. Section 6417(b)(9) provides that the 45Z credit is an 
applicable credit.

V. Section 6418

    Section 6418 permits an eligible taxpayer to elect to transfer all 
or a portion of an eligible credit determined with respect to such 
taxpayer for any taxable year to an unrelated taxpayer. Section 
6418(f)(1)(A)(viii) provides that the section 45Z credit is an eligible 
credit.

VI. Prior Guidance and Publications

A. Notice 2022-58 (Request for Feedback)

    Notice 2022-58, 2022-47 I.R.B. 483 (released November 3, 2022), 
requested stakeholder feedback on questions arising under section 45Z 
that should be addressed in guidance.

B. Treasury Decision 9988 (Elective Payment Election Regulations)

    The Treasury Department and the IRS published Treasury Decision 
9988 in the Federal Register (89 FR 17546, March 11, 2024), which 
finalized regulations concerning the election to treat applicable 
credits as a payment of Federal income tax under section 6417 (Elective 
Payment Election Regulations). The Elective Payment Election 
Regulations contain rules on section 6417 that apply with respect to an 
applicable credit, including the section 45Z credit. Section 1.6417-
2(c)(4) requires an applicable entity or electing taxpayer to own the 
underlying eligible credit property except in the case of the advanced 
manufacturing production credit under section 45X.

C. Treasury Decision 9993 (Credit Transfer Election Regulations)

    The Treasury Department and the IRS published Treasury Decision 
9993 in the Federal Register (89 FR 34770, April 30, 2024), which 
finalized regulations concerning the transfer election with respect to 
eligible credits under section 6418 (Credit Transfer Election 
Regulations). The Credit Transfer Election Regulations contain rules on 
section 6418 that apply with respect to an eligible credit, including 
the section 45Z credit. Section 1.6418-2(d)(1) requires an eligible 
taxpayer to own the underlying eligible credit property except in the 
case of the advanced manufacturing production credit under section 45X.

D. Notice 2024-49 (Registration Requirement)

    Notice 2024-49, 2024-26 I.R.B. 1781 (released May 31, 2024), 
provides guidance on the section 45Z registration requirements, 
including the time, form, and manner of registration. Section 3 of 
Notice 2024-49 also provides general definitions, initial definitions 
of SAF and non-SAF transportation fuels, and an initial, non-exclusive 
list of primary feedstocks, to help taxpayers applying for registration 
identify fuels and primary feedstocks that may qualify for the section 
45Z credit. Notice 2025-10, 2025-6 I.R.B. 682 (released January 10, 
2025), discussed later in this Background section, modifies and 
supersedes these definitions, and replaces them with the definitions in 
the Appendix to Notice 2025-10.

E. Treasury Decision 9998 (PWA Regulations)

    The Treasury Department and the IRS published Treasury Decision 
9998 in the Federal Register (89 FR 53184, June 25, 2024), which 
finalized regulations concerning the PWA requirements under several 
sections of the Code (PWA Regulations), including section 45Z. Section 
1.45Z-3 provides rules on the application of the PWA requirements to 
section 45Z. The preamble to the PWA Regulations contains a detailed 
discussion of the PWA requirements, including applicability dates and 
transition rules with respect to the section 45Z credit. These proposed 
regulations only address Sec.  1.45Z-3 for context and to the extent 
necessary to clarify the rules herein. The PWA Regulations are 
otherwise outside the scope of this rulemaking.

F. Fact Sheet FAQs

    A section 45Z Fact Sheet, FS-2024-25 (released July 10, 2024), 
provides answers to certain frequently asked questions (FAQs) on the 
section 45Z registration requirements. This Fact Sheet is available at 
https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/frequently-asked-questions-about-applying-for-registration-for-the-clean-fuel-production-credit-under-ss-45z.

G. Notice 2025-10 (Notice of Intent To Propose Rules)

    Notice 2025-10 announced that the Treasury Department and the IRS 
intended to propose regulations (forthcoming proposed regulations) 
addressing the section 45Z credit. In addition to providing background 
on the section 45Z credit, Notice 2025-10 explains the intended rules 
to be included in forthcoming proposed regulations and requests public 
feedback on the draft regulatory text in the Appendix to the notice. 
These proposed regulations are the forthcoming proposed regulations 
announced in Notice 2025-10.

H. Notice 2025-11 (Emissions Rate Guidance)

    Notice 2025-11, 2025-6 I.R.B. 704 (released January 10, 2025), 
provides guidance regarding methodologies for determining emissions 
rates under section 45Z and provides the initial emissions rate table 
required by section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i). Notice 2025-11 also requests 
feedback related to emissions rates for the section 45Z credit.
    The public feedback received in response to Notice 2025-10, Notice 
2025-11, and Notice 2022-58 was carefully considered in the development 
of these proposed regulations.

I. Notice 2025-37 (2025 Inflation Adjustment Factor)

    Notice 2025-37, 2025-30 I.R.B. 198 (July 21, 2025), provides the 
calendar year 2025 inflation adjustment factor and applicable amounts 
for the section 45Z credit.

Explanation of Provisions

I. Overview

A. Section 45Z Regulations

    These proposed regulations include six sections relating to section 
45Z, proposed Sec. Sec.  1.45Z-1, 1.45Z-2, 1.45Z-4 through 1.45Z-6, and 
1.4101-1. These sections, together with existing Sec.  1.45Z-3, 
comprise the ``section 45Z regulations'' referenced in this Explanation 
of Provisions. The section 45Z regulations would set forth provisions 
to determine the eligibility for, and the amount of, the section 45Z 
credit for the production of clean transportation fuel. These proposed 
regulations would also provide rules for registration and for filing 
claims for the section 45Z credit.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1 would provide the definitions of terms 
generally applicable for purposes of the section 45Z regulations. 
Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2 would provide general rules applicable to 
section 45Z, such as rules for determining the amount and timing of the 
credit, including rules for the emissions factor and emissions rate for 
transportation fuel and the PER process. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4 would 
provide special rules applicable to section 45Z, including required 
registration, anti-stacking, anti-abuse, production attribution, 
facility ownership, foreign feedstock and prohibited foreign entity 
restrictions, and recordkeeping and

[[Page 5165]]

substantiation rules. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5 would provide the 
procedures for certification of emissions rates for SAF transportation 
fuel. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6 would provide procedures for claiming a 
section 45Z credit. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1 would provide rules for 
registration under section 4101.

B. Amendments to Existing Sections 6417, 6418, and 4101 Regulations

    The proposed regulations would amend Sec. Sec.  1.6417-2(c), 
1.6418-2(d), and 48.4101-1. The proposed amendments to Sec. Sec.  
1.6417-2(c)(4) and 1.6418-2(d)(1) would clarify that sections 45Z and 
45(d)(3)(C) do not require a taxpayer to own the underlying eligible 
credit property. Proposed Sec.  48.4101-1(a)(7) would provide that a 
letter of registration is not a determination of tax treatment under 
the Code or a determination letter. Proposed Sec.  48.4101-1(a)(8) 
would provide rules for reregistration in the event of a change of 
ownership or a change of employer identification number (EIN).

II. Definitions

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1 would provide definitions that apply for 
purposes of section 45Z and the proposed regulations. In addition, 
proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1 would clarify key statutory terms as discussed 
in Parts II.A. through II.M. of this Explanation of Provisions. The 
definitions would also adopt the statutory language for the terms 
``applicable amount'' (section 45Z(a)), ``applicable material'' 
(section 45Z(d)(5)(B)(i)), ``biomass'' (section 45Z(d)(5)(B)(ii) 
(citing section 45K(c)(3))), ``CO2e'' (section 45Z(d)(2)), 
``emissions factor'' (section 45Z(b)(1)(A)), ``greenhouse gas (GHG)'' 
(section 45Z(d)(3)), ``lifecycle GHG emissions'' (section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(i)), and ``mmBTU'' (section 45Z(d)(1)), and identify 
abbreviations used in the proposed regulations, such as ``ASTM,'' 
``Code,'' U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), EPA, ``Secretary,'' IRS, 
``section 45Z credit,'' and ``section 45Z regulations.'' Further, the 
definitions would specify the relevant CORSIA methodologies, define an 
emissions rate in accordance with section 45Z(b)(1), and define terms 
associated with the PER process (see Part III.F.2. of this Explanation 
of Provisions).

A. 45ZCF-GREET Model

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(1) would define ``45ZCF-GREET model'' as 
the model by that name developed by the ANL and published by the DOE 
for use in determining the amount of lifecycle GHG emissions for 
purposes of section 45Z. The 45ZCF-GREET model is a user interface 
designed to accept input related to a transportation fuel production 
facility, execute calculations in the background, and display the full 
lifecycle (in other words, well-to-wheel) carbon intensity of produced 
transportation fuel, measured in kg of CO2e per mmBTU.\4\ 
The 45ZCF-GREET model is currently available at https://www.energy.gov/eere/greet. All publicly available versions of the 45ZCF-GREET model, 
the accompanying user manual, additional information including FAQs, 
and any log of changes to the model are available at https://www.energy.gov/eere/greet. Part III.E.3. of this Explanation of 
Provisions discusses the use of the 45ZCF-GREET model for purposes of 
section 45Z(b)(1)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ As used in the preamble to these proposed regulations, the 
term ``well-to-wheel'' includes well-to-wake with respect to 
aviation fuel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Claim

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(7) would define ``claim'' to mean a 
completed Form 7218, Clean Fuel Production Credit, including all 
required information and documentation that a taxpayer files with its 
Federal income tax return or Federal information return for the taxable 
year for which the section 45Z credit is determined. A ``claim'' would 
include the making of an election under section 6417 or section 6418. 
The proposed regulation would also define ``Form 7218'' to mean Form 
7218 and any successor form(s). These defined terms, coupled with the 
claim filing procedures in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6, would explain how a 
taxpayer may claim a section 45Z credit.

C. Fuel

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(19) would define ``fuel'' as any liquid 
or gaseous substance that can be consumed to supply heat or power. 
Therefore, for purposes of section 45Z, the term ``fuel'' would not 
include electricity. For an additional explanation, see Part II.I.2. of 
this Explanation of Provisions.

D. Gallon Equivalent

    Section 45Z(a)(1)(A) bases the section 45Z credit on a gallon (or 
gallon equivalent) of transportation fuel without defining the terms or 
providing a baseline for non-liquid fuels. The proposed regulations 
would use a gallon measurement for liquid fuels and a gallon equivalent 
for non-liquid fuels. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(20)(i) would define 
``gallon equivalent'' for purposes of section 45Z(a)(1)(A) to mean, 
with respect to any non-liquid fuel, the amount of such fuel that has 
the energy equivalent of a gallon of gasoline, which refers to the 
amount of such fuel that has a Btu content of 116,090 (lower heating 
value). The proposed regulations would use gasoline as the most 
appropriate baseline fuel for determining gallon equivalency because 
gasoline is the most common transportation fuel in the United States, 
and section 45Z is designed to incentivize domestic production of 
transportation fuels that may serve as alternatives to existing fossil 
fuels. The use of a gasoline gallon equivalent is also consistent with 
the gasoline gallon equivalent requirement in section 6426(d)(3), which 
provided an excise tax credit for many of the same types of fuel that 
are eligible for the section 45Z credit. Using the gasoline gallon 
equivalent standard in section 6426(d)(3) in the section 45Z context is 
further supported by the fact that section 45Z replaced section 
6426(d). Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(20)(ii) would provide that a fuel is 
considered non-liquid if it is in a gaseous state at ambient pressure 
and temperature of 1 atmosphere and 60 degrees Fahrenheit, 
respectively.
    To facilitate implementation of a gallon equivalent standard for 
non-liquid fuels, it is necessary to specify whether the standard is 
based on a lower heating value or a higher heating value of the 
baseline fuel, as the two types of heating values have different energy 
contents. The proposed regulations would use a lower heating value, 
rather than a higher heating value, because it is a better 
representation of the useful energy provided by a transportation fuel. 
Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(20)(iii) would explain that the gallon 
equivalent for a non-liquid fuel is calculated by dividing the lower 
heating value of that fuel (measured in Btu) by the lower heating value 
of a gallon of gasoline (116,090 Btu), rounded to 5 decimal places. 
Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(20)(iv) and (v) would provide the lower 
heating values of some non-liquid fuels and an example of the 
calculation of a gallon equivalent, respectively.

E. Producer and Taxpayer Treated as a Producer

1. In General
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(26)(i) would generally define the term 
``producer'' for purposes of section 45Z as the person that engages in 
the production of a transportation fuel. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-
1(b)(26)(iii) would provide examples illustrating the application of 
the definition. Section 45Z requires the taxpayer to be registered as a 
producer of clean fuel but does not specify who

[[Page 5166]]

the producer is if the production process involves multiple persons and 
multiple steps. The proposed regulations would clarify this point.
2. Producer of Alternative Natural Gas
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(26)(ii) would provide that the 
``producer'' of alternative natural gas, including renewable natural 
gas (RNG), for purposes of section 45Z is the person that processes the 
untreated sources of alternative natural gas (processor) to remove 
water, carbon dioxide, and other impurities such that it is 
interchangeable with fossil natural gas. This definition would be 
consistent with the purpose of section 45Z because the processor is the 
most active participant in the production process, and section 45Z 
incentivizes production. The definition of ``producer'' would therefore 
exclude any person that removes conventional or alternative natural gas 
(CANG) from a pipeline, compresses it further after removal, and then 
sells such further-compressed CANG (compressor). Compression of CANG 
that is already interchangeable with fossil natural gas also would not 
meet the proposed definition of ``production'' (see Part II.F. of this 
Explanation of Provisions).
    Several stakeholders have raised questions about who should be 
considered the producer of RNG for purposes of section 45Z. The 
Treasury Department and the IRS understand that the processor and the 
compressor are typically different persons, and that the processor 
typically performs most of the active production and owns (or uses) a 
facility, as that term is defined in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(18). The 
Treasury Department and the IRS further understand that the compressor 
typically performs the final compression step before a fuel is used in 
a vehicle and typically owns (or uses) only compression equipment 
rather than a facility. As a result, the compressor is not engaging in 
production of a transportation fuel under section 45Z(a)(1) and the 
production standard in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(27), and would be 
unable to meet the requirement that transportation fuel be produced at 
a qualified facility as provided in section 45Z(d)(4) and proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(28).

F. Production

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(27)(i) would define ``production'' 
(except for purposes of section 45Z(a)(4)(A)) as all steps and 
processes used to make a transportation fuel. Production would begin 
with the processing of primary feedstock(s) and end with a 
transportation fuel ready to be sold in a qualified sale. Production 
would not include instances in which a person uses a primary feedstock 
to produce a fuel that meets the same ASTM standard as the primary 
feedstock. The definition of ``production'' would also incorporate the 
rules in section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(ii) and (f)(1)(B) requiring production to 
occur in the United States.
    The definition of ``production'' would further clarify that minimal 
processing would not qualify as production for purposes of the section 
45Z credit. Minimal processing would generally include creating a fuel 
mixture or otherwise engaging in activities that do not result in a 
chemical transformation. However, with respect to CANG, production 
would include processing untreated sources of alternative natural gas 
to remove water, carbon dioxide, and other impurities such that it is 
interchangeable with fossil natural gas. Production of CANG would not 
include compressing CANG that is already interchangeable with fossil 
natural gas to a higher pressure.
    Under the proposed regulations, the blending of a transportation 
fuel into another fuel to create a fuel mixture, regardless of whether 
the fuel mixture itself satisfies the requirements of section 
45Z(d)(5)(A), would not constitute production of a transportation fuel 
because the blending process would constitute minimal processing. For 
example, the blending of ethanol and gasoline would not constitute 
production of a transportation fuel.
    Further, importing fuel that is largely finished fuel and undergoes 
only minimal processing in the United States would not constitute 
production. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(27)(ii) would provide examples of 
minimal processing, including instances in which the same person 
engages in production and subsequent blending.
    In enacting section 45Z, Congress replaced fuel credits and 
payments that specifically incentivize blending (including the credits 
under sections 40B and 6426(k), and the payment under section 6427(e)) 
with the section 45Z production credit. Congress's shift from blending 
incentives to a production incentive demonstrates that Congress no 
longer intended to incentivize blending. Therefore, equating production 
with blending would be contrary to Congress's purpose in enacting 
section 45Z.

G. Qualified Facility

1. Facility
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(18) would define a ``facility,'' as used 
in section 45Z(d)(4) and the proposed regulations, to mean a single 
production line that produces a transportation fuel and would include 
all components that function interdependently to produce a 
transportation fuel. The definition of ``facility'' would also clarify 
the treatment of indirect, post-production, and multipurpose equipment. 
The definition would, for instance, exclude CANG compression equipment 
from a facility because it is post-production equipment. The definition 
would include examples involving carbon capture equipment and SAF 
transportation fuel.
    The proposed definition of ``facility'' is neutral as to geographic 
proximity of the components of the production line and focuses instead 
on interdependent pieces of equipment used to produce transportation 
fuel. This definition is consistent with how provisions of the Code 
under which similar tax credits are determined define ``facility.'' It 
is also consistent with stakeholders' requests that a facility be 
narrowly defined to minimize overlap with other credits and their 
concerns that physical boundaries may be inadequate. Accordingly, the 
proposed definition considers that a section 45Z facility may be co-
located with another credit-eligible facility, and that some production 
equipment may be located upstream or downstream from, or in a different 
building than, other equipment.
2. Qualified Facility
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(28)(i) would incorporate the definitions 
of ``qualified facility'' in section 45Z(d)(4) and ``facility'' in 
proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(18) and clarify that a ``qualified facility'' 
must satisfy the anti-stacking rules in section 45Z(d)(4)(B) and 
proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(b). Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(28)(ii) would 
define the term ``anti-stacking credit'' to mean any of the three 
credits listed in section 45Z(d)(4)(B).

H. Qualified Sale

    The draft regulatory text in the Appendix to Notice 2025-10 used 
the term ``qualifying sale.'' The proposed regulations would instead 
use the term ``qualified sale.'' Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(29) would 
define a ``qualified sale'' as a sale of a transportation fuel in a 
manner described in section 45Z(a)(4). The definition would also: (i) 
clarify the term ``sold for use in a trade or business'' for purposes 
of section 45Z(a)(4)(B); (ii) incorporate the sale attribution rule in 
section 45Z(f)(3) if fuel is sold by another member of the taxpayer's 
consolidated group (as defined in Sec.  1.1502-1(b) and (h),

[[Page 5167]]

respectively); and (iii) prescribe an additional sale attribution rule, 
as authorized by section 45Z(f)(3), for fuel sold by a related person 
if the taxpayer is not a member of a consolidated group.
    The draft regulatory text in the Appendix to Notice 2025-10 defined 
the term ``sold for use in a trade or business'' to mean sold for use 
as a fuel in a trade or business within the meaning of section 162 of 
the Code. The term did not include a sale for blending or for further 
processing, including use as a primary feedstock to produce another 
fuel. Many stakeholders raised concerns about the interpretation of 
``sold for use in a trade or business.'' They noted that in the fuel 
industry, many producers sell to related or unrelated intermediaries, 
such as wholesalers or dealers, rather than directly to unrelated final 
purchasers. They asserted that the ``use as a fuel'' language could 
prevent all sales for resale, such as those to intermediary dealers or 
wholesalers, from qualifying for the section 45Z credit. These 
stakeholders requested that the ``use as a fuel'' language be removed 
and that the phrase ``use . . . in a trade or business'' be 
incorporated as written in section 45Z(a)(4)(B). Stakeholders also said 
that a ``use as a fuel'' limitation could undercut the language in 
section 45Z(d)(5)(A), which requires only that a transportation fuel be 
``suitable for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft,'' but 
not actually so used.
    The proposed regulations would adopt the stakeholders' suggestion 
to remove the ``use as a fuel'' language from the definition of ``sold 
for use in a trade or business.'' Under the proposed regulations, 
``trade or business'' would have the same meaning as in section 162 of 
the Code. The meaning of ``sold for use'' would be determined under 
these proposed regulations and would apply solely for purposes of 
section 45Z. The proposed regulations would also explicitly clarify 
that the term ``sold for use in a trade or business'' includes the sale 
of fuel to an unrelated person that subsequently resells the fuel in 
its trade or business.
    The proposed regulations retain the draft regulatory text from the 
Appendix to Notice 2025-10 that excludes a sale for blending from the 
definition of ``sold for use in a trade or business.'' A sale for 
blending (if made to an unrelated person) would qualify as a sale for 
use in the production of a fuel mixture under section 45Z(a)(4)(A) and 
proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(29)(i)(A). Therefore, including a sale for 
blending in the ``sold for use in a trade or business'' definition, 
which relates to section 45Z(a)(4)(B), would render a significant part 
of section 45Z(a)(4)(A) superfluous.
    The proposed regulations do not retain the draft regulatory text 
from the Appendix to Notice 2025-10 that defined ``sold for use in a 
trade or business'' to exclude a sale for further processing, including 
use as a primary feedstock to produce another fuel. To prevent double 
crediting, the OBBBA amended section 45Z(d)(5) to exclude from the 
definition of a ``transportation fuel'' any fuel produced from a fuel 
for which a section 45Z credit is allowable. See section 70521(e) of 
the OBBBA. This statutory revision suggests that a sale for use as a 
primary feedstock to produce another fuel may qualify as a sale for use 
in a trade or business under section 45Z(a)(4)(B). The proposed 
regulations would align the definition of ``sold for use in a trade or 
business'' with the statutory language.
    The proposed regulations would further define ``sold for use in a 
trade or business'' to exclude a sale of fuel to a reseller that 
subsequently sells the fuel at retail to another person and places the 
fuel in the tank of such other person. Such a sale (if made to an 
unrelated person) would be a qualified sale under section 45Z(a)(4)(C) 
and proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(29)(i)(C). Therefore, inclusion of such 
sales in the definition of ``sold for use in a trade or business,'' 
which relates to section 45Z(a)(4)(B), would render section 
45Z(a)(4)(C) superfluous.
    As noted earlier, the proposed definition of ``sold for use in a 
trade or business'' gives meaning to section 45Z(a)(4)(A) and (C) and 
is consistent with a plain reading of section 45Z(a)(4)(B). The 
proposed definition is also consistent with the ``suitable for use as a 
fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft'' language in section 
45Z(d)(5)(A).
    The draft regulatory text in the Appendix to Notice 2025-10 
incorporated the sale attribution rule in section 45Z(f)(3) for fuel 
sold by another member of the taxpayer's consolidated group. Many 
stakeholders requested the adoption of a broader ``look-through'' rule 
for sales made through related intermediaries, so that a taxpayer would 
be treated as selling fuel to an unrelated person if a related person 
(for example, a related intermediary dealer or wholesaler) ultimately 
sold the fuel to an unrelated person. The stakeholders pointed to 
similar look-through rules that the Treasury Department and the IRS 
adopted with regard to credits under sections 45 and 45J of the Code in 
Notice 2008-60, 2008-30 I.R.B. 178, and Notice 2023-24, 2023-13 I.R.B. 
571, respectively. The stakeholders expressed that many fuel producers 
are not organized as corporations and cannot utilize the sale 
attribution rule under section 45Z(f)(3).
    After the release of Notice 2025-10, the OBBBA added rulemaking 
authority to section 45Z(f)(3) that allows the Secretary to prescribe 
additional related-person sale attribution rules similar to the 
statutory rule. See section 70521(f) of the OBBBA. Based on this new 
grant of authority, the proposed regulations would adopt the 
stakeholders' suggestion regarding a broader look-through rule for 
sales made through related persons. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(29)(iv) 
would provide that, for purposes of section 45Z, a taxpayer that is not 
a member of a consolidated group is treated as selling fuel to an 
unrelated person if a related person sells the fuel to the unrelated 
person. This rule would apply to all sales made by related persons 
except those specifically addressed in section 45Z(f)(3) and proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(29)(iii).
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(29)(v) would provide examples 
illustrating the definition of ``qualified sale,'' including the ``sold 
for use in a trade or business'' definition as it relates to section 
45Z(a)(4)(B), the sale attribution rule for fuel sold by another member 
of a taxpayer's consolidated group, the sale attribution rule for fuel 
sold by a related person (other than another member of a taxpayer's 
consolidated group), and a sale made by a taxpayer that produces and 
subsequently blends a transportation fuel.

I. Transportation Fuel

1. In General
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(34) would define ``transportation fuel'' 
as provided in section 45Z(d)(5)(A), and would also define associated 
terms. The proposed regulations would define the term ``suitable for 
use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft'' (suitable for use) to 
mean that the fuel has practical and commercial fitness for use as a 
fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft, or may be blended into a fuel 
mixture that has practical and commercial fitness for use as a fuel in 
a highway vehicle or aircraft. The proposed definition of ``suitable 
for use'' is consistent with longstanding excise tax rules under Sec.  
48.4081-1(c)(2) of the Manufacturers and Retailers Excise Tax 
Regulations, with which the fuel industry is familiar.
    The proposed regulations would also clarify that actual use as a 
fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft is not required. For example, 
diesel fuel that has practical and commercial fitness for use as a fuel 
in a highway vehicle or

[[Page 5168]]

aircraft, but is ultimately used as marine fuel, would satisfy the 
``suitable for use'' standard. The proposed regulations would further 
provide that CANG is suitable for use once it is produced so that it is 
interchangeable with fossil natural gas and would require only minimal 
processing (for example, further compression or liquefaction) to meet 
the specifications of ASTM D8080. In addition, the proposed regulations 
would also provide that a fuel that does not require further processing 
and that may be blended with or used as a component of taxable fuel 
(within the meaning of section 4083 of the Code) is suitable for use.
    The proposed regulations would define the term ``produced from a 
fuel for which a section 45Z credit is allowable,'' as used in section 
45Z(d)(5)(A)(iv), to mean that a fuel has a primary feedstock that 
meets the definition of a transportation fuel under section 45Z 
(without regard to section 45Z(d)(5)(A)(iv)). This proposed rule would 
prevent double crediting by ensuring that only the first transportation 
fuel in a production chain qualifies for a section 45Z credit. See 
section 70521(e) of the OBBBA. Thus, if one fuel is used as a primary 
feedstock to produce a second fuel, and the first fuel qualifies as a 
transportation fuel for purposes of section 45Z, the second fuel would 
not qualify for a section 45Z credit. For instance, SAF produced from 
ethanol as a primary feedstock, and hydrogen produced from RNG as a 
primary feedstock, may not qualify as transportation fuel for purposes 
of section 45Z. However, a fuel could still qualify for a section 45Z 
credit if its production process uses a transportation fuel solely as a 
process fuel or other non-primary-feedstock input.
    The proposed regulations would provide examples illustrating the 
definitions of ``suitable for use'' and ``produced from a fuel for 
which a section 45Z credit is allowable.''
2. Electricity
    The proposed regulations would not include electricity in the 
definition of ``transportation fuel,'' for several reasons. Electricity 
production would therefore be ineligible for the section 45Z credit.
    First, at the time section 45Z was enacted, the Code contained an 
assortment of income tax credit, excise tax credit, and excise tax 
payment provisions for various biofuels and other alternative fuels 
sold for use as a fuel or used as a fuel. These included incentives for 
biodiesel, renewable diesel, and several different alternative fuels 
(including compressed natural gas and second generation biofuel). Joint 
Committee on Taxation, General Explanation of Tax Legislation Enacted 
in the 117th Congress, JCS 1-23, at 278 (Dec. 31, 2023). Congress 
designed the section 45Z credit to replace these incentives, which were 
only available for liquid or gaseous fuels. See sections 40(b)(6); 
40A(b)(1) and (2); 40B; 6426(c) through (e) and (k); 6427(e). 
Therefore, for purposes of section 45Z, it would be reasonable to 
understand the term ``fuel'' as referring to a liquid or gaseous 
substance that can be consumed to supply heat or power. As a result, 
the term ``transportation fuel'' under the proposed regulations would 
not include electricity.
    Second, the anti-stacking rules in section 45Z(d)(4)(B) disallow 
receiving both a section 45Z credit and certain other credits with 
respect to the same facility for a taxable year. See proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-1(b)(28)(ii) (definition of anti-stacking credit); Part IV.B. of 
this Explanation of Provisions (discussion of anti-stacking rules).
    The inclusion of the anti-stacking rules indicates that Congress 
understood the potential for activity at a particular facility to 
generate multiple credits for a taxable year and wished to foreclose 
that possibility. However, the section 45Y clean electricity production 
credit is not included in the anti-stacking rules, which indicates that 
the production of electricity is not eligible for the section 45Z 
credit. Thus, Congress's omission of the section 45Y credit from the 
anti-stacking rules suggests that Congress did not understand the term 
``fuel'' to include electricity for purposes of section 45Z. Further, 
Notice 2025-10, which stated that the forthcoming proposed regulations 
intended to exclude electricity as a transportation fuel, was published 
approximately 6 months before the enactment of the OBBBA. Though the 
OBBBA amended certain aspects of section 45Z discussed in Notice 2025-
10, including the definition of ``transportation fuel,'' the OBBBA did 
not amend or clarify the definition of ``transportation fuel'' to 
include electricity.
    Third, the Code already provides a separate credit for clean 
electricity production under section 45Y. When Congress created the 
section 45Z credit, it also created the section 45Y credit. Generally, 
the section 45Y credit is not limited based on how the electricity is 
ultimately used. If the definition of ``transportation fuel'' in 
section 45Z were to include electricity, there would be significant 
overlap between the electricity eligible for a credit under section 45Z 
and the electricity eligible for a credit under section 45Y. Further, a 
reading of section 45Z to include electricity in the definition of 
``transportation fuel'' would not be consistent with Congressional 
intent in separately enacting section 45Y to incentivize clean 
electricity production and section 45Z to incentivize production of 
clean transportation fuel.

J. Non-SAF Transportation Fuel

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(24)(i) would define ``non-SAF 
transportation fuel'' for purposes of section 45Z as any transportation 
fuel that is not a SAF transportation fuel. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-
1(b)(24)(ii) would provide a non-exclusive list of non-SAF fuels that 
may qualify as a transportation fuel, as well as descriptions of such 
fuels. A non-SAF fuel described in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(24)(ii) 
would also need to meet all the other applicable requirements under 
section 45Z to qualify as a transportation fuel. The list of non-SAF 
fuels would generally track those fuels listed in section 3.03 of 
Notice 2024-49. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(24)(ii) would also retain a 
few modifications that Notice 2025-10 made to the definitions in Notice 
2024-49 to address concerns raised by stakeholders. Consistent with 
Notice 2025-10, the proposed regulations would clarify the description 
of low-GHG CANG, including the ASTM D8080 reference, and would list 
ASTM D1152 (neat methanol) as a specification for low-GHG methanol in 
addition to ASTM D5797 (fuel blend methanol).
    The Treasury Department and the IRS are cognizant of existing 
business practices in which producers make fuel that may not meet all 
the proposed ASTM specifications for that particular fuel. Therefore, 
the proposed ASTM specifications would be both non-exhaustive and non-
exclusive with respect to determining whether a fuel is a 
transportation fuel for purposes of section 45Z. Prescribing exclusive 
fuel-by-fuel specifications in these proposed regulations would be 
impractical and may unintentionally restrict future market 
developments. The Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on 
this general approach and whether in some cases additional specificity 
is needed.

K. SAF Transportation Fuel

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(30) would define ``SAF transportation 
fuel'' to mean SAF as defined in section 45Z(a)(3), and would also 
define associated terms. Further, the proposed regulations would 
clarify that a synthetic blending component sold to a

[[Page 5169]]

person that blends the fuel into a fuel mixture described in ASTM D7566 
is ``sold for use in an aircraft'' within the meaning of section 
45Z(a)(3).

L. Types and Categories of Transportation Fuel

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(35) would define the term ``type of 
transportation fuel'' as a particular kind of fuel, and the term 
``category of transportation fuel'' as the unique primary feedstock and 
pathway used to produce a type of transportation fuel. The definitions 
would clarify those terms as used in section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i).

M. Unrelated Person

    Consistent with section 45Z(f)(3), proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(36) 
would define the term ``unrelated person'' as a person not related to 
the taxpayer. The term ``unrelated party'' has the same meaning as 
``unrelated person'' for purposes of the certification required by 
section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II)(aa). The definition would also incorporate 
the related person definition in section 45Z(f)(3).

III. General Rules

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2 would provide general rules regarding the 
section 45Z credit. The proposed regulations would incorporate and 
clarify the rules in section 45Z(a) through (c) regarding the amount of 
the credit, the credit calculation, the timing of the credit, emissions 
factors, and emissions rates (including the emissions rate table and 
the PER process).

A. Amount of Credit

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(a)(1) would incorporate and clarify the 
credit calculation rules in section 45Z(a)(1). Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-
2(a)(2) would provide that the volume of a liquid fuel is measured on 
the basis of gallons adjusted to ambient pressure and temperature of 1 
atmosphere and 60 degrees Fahrenheit. The proposed rule would reference 
proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(20)(ii) and (iii), respectively, for the 
determination of whether a fuel is liquid or non-liquid and the 
calculation of the gallon equivalent of a non-liquid fuel.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(a)(3) would provide rules and examples for 
the calculation of the section 45Z credit. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-
2(a)(3)(i) would implement the rounding rule provided in section 
45Z(a)(5) for credit amounts and would clarify that the rule applies 
only after multiplying the applicable amount, quantity of fuel, and 
emissions factor. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(a)(3)(ii) would require pro 
rata allocation for sales of transportation fuel produced after 
December 31, 2024, and held in common storage with other fuels.
    Prior to the enactment of the OBBBA, the applicable amount meant 
either the base amount provided in section 45Z(a)(2)(A) or the 
alternative amount provided in section 45Z(a)(2)(B), with an increased 
base amount and alternative amount for SAF transportation fuel under 
section 45Z(a)(3)(A). Section 70521(g)(2) of the OBBBA eliminated the 
increased base amount and alternative amount for SAF transportation 
fuel produced after December 31, 2025. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(a)(4) 
would define the term ``applicable amount'' in accordance with section 
45Z(a)(2), as amended by the OBBBA. Under the proposed definition, the 
alternative amount would apply in the case of any transportation fuel 
produced at a qualified facility that satisfies the PWA requirements. 
The base amount would otherwise apply in the case of any transportation 
fuel produced at a qualified facility that does not satisfy the PWA 
requirements.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(a)(4)(iv) would implement the inflation 
adjustment mechanics for the applicable amount provided under section 
45Z(c), including the inflation adjustment factor as provided in 
section 45Z(c)(2). In Notice 2025-37, the Treasury Department and the 
IRS published the section 45Z inflation adjustment factor for calendar 
year 2025. The section 45Z inflation adjustment factor for subsequent 
calendar years will also be published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin.

B. Timing of Credit

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(b)(1) would clarify that a taxpayer is 
eligible to claim the section 45Z credit only for the taxable year in 
which a qualified sale of a transportation fuel occurs, provided the 
taxpayer meets all other requirements to claim the credit. See section 
45Z(a)(1)(A)(ii). Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(b)(2) would incorporate the 
effective date in section 13704(c) of the IRA, which provides that 
section 45Z applies to transportation fuel produced after December 31, 
2024.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(b)(3)(i) would clarify that a transportation 
fuel may be produced in an earlier taxable year than the taxable year 
in which the qualified sale of the fuel occurs, but that a qualified 
sale may not occur before the date the fuel is produced. As a result, 
if a taxpayer sells transportation fuel before production, the 
qualified sale would occur on the date of production. Proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-2(b)(3)(ii) would provide that a qualified sale occurs at the 
time of the taxpayer's sale to the unrelated person, or if a related-
person sale attribution rule applies, at the time of the related 
person's sale to the unrelated person.

C. Emissions Factor

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(c)(1) would incorporate the definition of 
``emissions factor'' provided under section 45Z(b)(1)(A). Proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-2(c)(2) would incorporate the emissions factor rounding 
rule in section 45Z(b)(2) and provide an example.

D. Emissions Rate

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(d)(1) would incorporate the rules for 
determining the emissions rate of a transportation fuel in section 
45Z(b)(1)(B) and (D). To determine an emissions rate for a fuel, a 
taxpayer would either use the applicable emissions rate table published 
by the Secretary or, if the applicable emissions rate table does not 
establish an emissions rate for the taxpayer's fuel, a PER determined 
by the Secretary.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(d)(2) would incorporate section 70521(b) and 
(c)(1) of the OBBBA, which provide that for transportation fuel 
produced after December 31, 2025, the emissions rate cannot be less 
than zero, unless such fuel is derived from animal manure. Section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(v), which was added by section 70521(c)(1) of the OBBBA, 
provides that, notwithstanding that general rule, the Secretary ``may 
provide an emissions rate that is less than zero'' for a transportation 
fuel derived from an animal manure feedstock such as dairy, swine, or 
poultry manure. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(d)(2) would clarify that the 
limitation regarding negative emissions rates also applies to any 
transportation fuel used as a production input. The proposed rule would 
provide examples illustrating the negative-emissions-rate limitation 
and the effect of a negative emissions rate on the emissions factor 
calculation.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(d)(3) would incorporate the rule in section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(iv), which was added by section 70521(c)(1) of the OBBBA, 
that excludes emissions attributed to indirect land use changes for 
transportation fuel produced after December 31, 2025.
    As discussed in Part III.E. and III.F. of this Explanation of 
Provisions, under proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(2), the applicable 
emissions rate table would direct a taxpayer to use the allowed 
methodologies described in section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) and (iii) and set 
out in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(3), and any PER

[[Page 5170]]

would be determined pursuant to section 45Z(b)(1)(D) and the procedures 
in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f).

E. Emissions Rate Table

1. In General
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e) would incorporate the rules in section 
45Z(b)(1)(B) regarding the annual publication of a table of emissions 
rates for similar types and categories of transportation fuels 
(emissions rate table), including the requirement in section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(i) that the emissions rate table be published ``[s]ubject 
to'' the requirements in section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) through (v).
    The Treasury Department and the IRS will annually publish an 
emissions rate table for each calendar year in the Internal Revenue 
Bulletin. The annual emissions rate table for calendar year 2025 was 
published in Notice 2025-11.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(2) would provide rules for identifying 
the applicable emissions rate table that a taxpayer must use in a given 
taxable year. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(2)(i) would clarify that the 
applicable emissions rate table for a taxpayer is the emissions rate 
table that is in effect on the first day of the taxpayer's taxable year 
of production. The proposed rule would also clarify that, for 
production after December 31, 2024, in taxable years beginning before 
January 1, 2025, the applicable emissions rate table is the emissions 
rate table effective for 2025.
    In response to Notice 2025-10, stakeholders requested the ability 
to use an emissions rate table tied to the year construction of a 
facility began, regardless of when the taxpayer actually produces a 
transportation fuel. If a taxpayer begins constructing a facility in 
2025 but such facility does not begin producing fuel until a subsequent 
calendar year, the stakeholders' requested rule would allow the 
taxpayer to use the emissions rate table for 2025 to determine the 
emissions rate of its fuel for all taxable years.
    The proposed regulations would not adopt this suggestion. Section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(i) directs the Secretary to annually publish an emissions 
rate table and requires taxpayers to use such tables. The statute does 
not contemplate taxpayers locking in the use of old tables in later 
years. Additionally, the amount of the section 45Z credit depends in 
part on the emissions rate of the transportation fuel produced in a 
given taxable year. Accordingly, the emissions rate of a fuel is 
properly established using the emissions rate table in effect for the 
taxable year in which such fuel was produced. The beginning of 
construction date for the facility in which the fuel is produced has no 
significance with respect to emissions rates and is unrelated to the 
actual emissions associated with the production of transportation fuel 
after the facility is placed in service.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(2)(ii) would clarify that if a taxpayer 
produces a fuel for which the applicable emissions rate table 
establishes an emissions rate, the taxpayer must use the corresponding 
allowed methodologies, as specified in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(3), as 
provided in such table to determine the emissions rate for all such 
fuel produced during the taxpayer's taxable year.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(2)(iii)(A) would clarify that the 
applicable emissions rate table establishes the emissions rate for a 
fuel if the emissions rate table includes both the type and category of 
that fuel. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(2)(iii)(B) would clarify that if 
an emissions rate table does not initially include a type or category 
of fuel, but an allowed methodology is updated to add such type or 
category of fuel during the calendar year, then that type or category 
of fuel is considered included in such emissions rate table.
    The proposed regulations would generally require a taxpayer to use 
the latest annual emissions rate table (as opposed to prior annual 
tables) and would prevent the use of outdated modeling.
2. Allowed Methodologies
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(3)(i) would provide that a taxpayer 
producing a fuel for which an emissions rate is established by the 
applicable emissions rate table must determine the fuel's emissions 
rate using the allowed methodologies described in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-
2(e)(3)(iv) and (v), as directed by the applicable emissions rate 
table.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(3)(ii) would require a taxpayer to use 
the first version of an allowed methodology that is publicly available 
in the taxable year of production and that includes the type and 
category of the taxpayer's fuel. However, if an updated version of an 
allowed methodology becomes publicly available after the first day of 
the taxable year of production (but still within such taxable year), 
then the taxpayer could choose to treat such updated version as the 
most recent version of such methodology. This choice would give a 
taxpayer the flexibility to choose the version of an allowed 
methodology to use with respect to taxable years for which an updated 
version of a methodology may be published during a taxpayer's taxable 
year of production. This would generally ensure that a taxpayer uses 
the latest modeling and benefits from favorable updates to a 
methodology, but would not penalize a taxpayer if a methodology is 
updated unfavorably during the taxable year.
    The proposed regulations would address the requirement in section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(i) that the emissions rate table be published ``[s]ubject 
to'' the requirements in section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) through (v). Proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(3)(iv) and (v) would identify the allowed 
methodologies for determining emissions rates for purposes of the 
emissions rate table described in section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i). If the 
applicable emissions rate table establishes the emissions rate for a 
non-SAF transportation fuel, a taxpayer producing such fuel would 
determine the fuel's emissions rate using the 45ZCF-GREET model, as 
directed by the applicable emissions rate table. If the applicable 
emissions rate table establishes the emissions rate for a SAF 
transportation fuel, a taxpayer producing such fuel would determine the 
fuel's emissions rate using the most recent version of the CORSIA 
Default Life Cycle Emissions Values for CORSIA Eligible Fuels lifecycle 
approach (CORSIA Default) or the CORSIA Methodology for Calculating 
Actual Life Cycle Emissions Values lifecycle approach (CORSIA Actual), 
with the agreement of the United States, or the 45ZCF-GREET model, as 
directed by the applicable emissions rate table. The proposed 
regulations would also clarify that, for a given type and category of 
SAF transportation fuel, a taxpayer must use the same methodology to 
calculate lifecycle GHG emissions associated with all stages of fuel 
feedstock production and distribution.
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i) requires the emissions rate table to be 
based on the amount of lifecycle GHG emissions (as described in section 
211(o)(1)(H) of the CAA-2022) for such fuels. Section 211(o)(1)(H) of 
the CAA-2022 defines lifecycle GHG emissions as the aggregate emissions 
from all stages of the fuel's production and use, including feedstock 
production and transportation, fuel production and distribution, and 
use of the finished fuel. This type of lifecycle analysis is referred 
to as ``well-to-wheel'' emissions analysis. As a result, for each type 
and category of transportation fuel, the 45ZCF-GREET model also uses 
``well-to-wheel'' emissions to calculate lifecycle GHG emissions for 
all stages of fuel production, as well as emissions resulting from use 
of the fuel in transportation.
    Section 70521(c)(1) of the OBBBA provides that for fuel produced 
after

[[Page 5171]]

December 31, 2025, notwithstanding the CAA reference in section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(i), the emissions rate of a transportation fuel shall 
exclude any emissions attributed to indirect land use change. See 
section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(iv).
3. 45ZCF-GREET Model
a. In General
    Section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) provides that in the case of non-SAF 
transportation fuel, the lifecycle GHG emissions of such fuel must be 
based on the most recent determinations under the Greenhouse gases, 
Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation model developed 
by the ANL, or a successor model (as determined by the Secretary). The 
DOE changed the name of the ``Greenhouse gases, Regulated Emissions, 
and Energy use in Transportation'' model to ``Greenhouse gases, 
Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Technologies'' in 2020 and it is 
now generally referred to as the ``GREET'' model.
    The GREET model refers to a suite of models, the first version of 
which was released in 1995 and is now called the Research & Development 
Greenhouse gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Technologies 
(R&D GREET) model. Since 1995, the DOE maintained the GREET model to 
enable research regarding lifecycle analyses of hundreds of different 
methods of producing, delivering, and using energy. The R&D GREET model 
was not designed to be used for determining emissions rates for tax 
credits, including the section 45Z credit, but the current suite of 
GREET models includes different versions, some of which are designed to 
facilitate particular regulatory regimes.
    As of February 4, 2026 the DOE's GREET website lists the following 
different versions of the GREET model: R&D GREET, 40BSAF-GREET, 45VH2-
GREET, 45ZCF-GREET, CA-GREET4.0, and ICAO-GREET. See https://energy.gov/eere/greet. For purposes of the section 45Z credit, the 
phrase ``most recent determinations under the Greenhouse gases, 
Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation model'' in 
section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) is best understood as referring to the most 
recent determinations under the 45ZCF-GREET model. As discussed in Part 
III.E.3.b. of this Explanation of provisions, the proposed regulations 
would also designate the 45ZCF-GREET as a successor model to the GREET 
model under section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii).
    Some stakeholders have suggested that the R&D GREET model should be 
used for the section 45Z credit. However, the 45ZCF-GREET model is the 
only appropriate GREET model to use for purposes of the section 45Z 
credit because the R&D GREET model is not limited to transportation 
fuels and includes information that is based on preliminary analyses 
(that is, analyses that are not yet complete, have significant 
technical uncertainties, or are still being reviewed by laboratory 
staff, the DOE staff, or independent experts). See generally GREET, 
Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy, DOE, available at 
https://www.energy.gov/eere/greet.
    While the R&D GREET model is a valuable tool for characterizing the 
benefits and impacts of energy technologies in a directional manner and 
testing new and updated data and parameters, it is designed to provide 
flexibility in user-defined parameters and methodological choices for a 
wide variety of research purposes and thus not appropriate for use in 
policy applications without modifications. Because the R&D GREET model 
offers users many choices regarding analysis methodology (for example, 
co-product accounting method and global warming potential values), 
different users can calculate different emissions rates with respect to 
the same fuel. Many of these choices would not be appropriate for the 
specific context of the section 45Z credit given the potentially 
preliminary nature of much of the information represented in R&D GREET 
and given that specific representations of activities, and their 
emissions, are needed in a specific fashion (for example, to comply 
with the requirements of section 45Z). Given the limitations of some of 
the data underlying aspects of the R&D GREET model and the fact that 
the model does not predetermine for the user the methodologies and 
accounting parameters that are appropriate for compliance with the 
requirements of section 45Z, R&D GREET does not provide the analytical 
and methodological specificity necessary to meet the specific 
objectives or statutory requirements of the section 45Z credit.
    ANL developed, and the DOE published, the 45ZCF-GREET model as a 
specific version of the GREET model to determine emissions rates that 
also meets three key parameters: (i) user-friendliness and consistency, 
(ii) technical robustness of the pathways represented, and (iii) 
consistency with the requirements of section 45Z. The 45ZCF-GREET model 
and the 45ZCF-GREET User Manual are available at https://www.energy.gov/eere/greet. The first version of the 45ZCF-GREET model, 
released on January 15, 2025, included the most commonly used types and 
categories of fuel that are anticipated to meet the eligibility 
requirements to claim the section 45Z credit. The 45ZCF-GREET model and 
the 45ZCF-GREET User Manual were updated in May 2025; such updates 
included adding pathways for alternative natural gas from coal mine 
methane capture and ethanol from U.S. corn wet mills. Additional types 
and categories of fuel may be added in future versions of the 45ZCF-
GREET model.
    Implementation of the section 45Z credit requires that data used to 
calculate emissions rates reflect a given taxpayer's specific 
operations and that such data be independently verifiable to the extent 
possible. Use of facility-specific verifiable data ensures that the 
section 45Z credit is available only to those fuels that meet statutory 
requirements. For certain parameters, bespoke inputs are unlikely to be 
easily measured by taxpayers and/or independently verifiable with high 
fidelity, given the current status of verification mechanisms. Thus, 
certain parameters in the 45ZCF-GREET model are fixed assumptions, 
referred to as ``background data,'' that are based on the best 
available data and may not be changed by users. Alternatively, the 
``foreground data'' in the 45ZCF-GREET model are parameters that must 
be input by the user. The 45ZCF-GREET User Manual contains further 
details on background and foreground data.
b. 45ZCF-GREET as a Successor Model
    The Treasury Department and the IRS recognize that the continued 
existence of the R&D GREET model and periodic updates to both the 
45ZCF-GREET model and the R&D GREET model may create uncertainty about 
which GREET model to use. To address any potential uncertainty, the 
proposed regulations would invoke the Secretary's express delegation of 
authority in section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) to require use of the 45ZCF-GREET 
model as a successor model.
    In drafting the proposed regulations, the Treasury Department and 
the IRS considered the statutory definition of the term ``lifecycle 
greenhouse gas emissions'' in section 211(o)(1)(H) of the CAA-2022 and 
the specific objectives of section 45Z. The Treasury Department and the 
IRS also consulted with the DOE. Accordingly, the proposed regulations 
would reflect that the 45ZCF-GREET model is a model specifically 
developed by the ANL as a derivative of and successor to the R&D GREET 
model to meet the requirements and objectives of section 45Z.

[[Page 5172]]

c. Most Recent Determinations Under GREET
    Regardless of any determination by the Secretary of a successor 
model, the phrase ``most recent determinations under the Greenhouse 
gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation model'' in 
section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii) can be understood to refer to determinations 
under the most recent version of the 45ZCF-GREET model.
    As discussed in Part III.E.3.a. of this Explanation of Provisions, 
the 45ZCF-GREET model is tailored to the administration of the section 
45Z credit and includes features that make it easy for taxpayers to 
use. Use of the most recent version of the 45ZCF-GREET model would also 
ensure that the pathways and approaches provided for determining 
``well-to-wheel'' emissions for various fuel production processes are 
of sufficient methodological certainty to be appropriate for 
determining eligibility for a tax credit.
d. SAF Portion of 45ZCF-GREET Model as a Similar Methodology
    The proposed regulations would allow taxpayers to use the 45ZCF-
GREET model to determine emissions rates for SAF transportation fuel 
(SAF portion of 45ZCF-GREET model). The SAF portion of the 45ZCF-GREET 
model is a ``similar methodology'' to CORSIA under section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(iii)(II) because, like the CORSIA fuel lifecycle 
methodologies, it evaluates the full fuel lifecycle, including all 
stages of fuel and feedstock production through to the end use of the 
finished fuel. The DOE worked with the Treasury Department and other 
Federal agencies to develop the 45ZCF-GREET model, including 
specifications for and limitations on background and foreground data, 
to satisfy the statutory requirements of section 45Z. Additionally, in 
the context of whether the R&D GREET model could be used to determine 
lifecycle GHG emissions for purposes of section 40B(e)(2),\5\ the EPA 
identified certain necessary components of a lifecycle GHG analysis 
consistent with section 211(o)(1)(H) of the CAA-2022 that the R&D GREET 
model lacked. The EPA subsequently determined that the new 40BSAF-GREET 
2024 model, created in 2024 for the now-expired SAF credit under 
section 40B, included the previously identified absent categories of 
emissions.\6\ Similarly, the EPA found that the 45ZCF-GREET model 
includes the categories of emissions it previously identified as 
missing from the R&D GREET model, the lack of which made R&D GREET 
insufficient for calculating lifecycle GHG emissions for purposes of 
section 211(o)(1)(H) of the CAA-2022.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ As in section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(iii)(II), section 40B(e)(2) 
requires that a methodology similar to CORSIA must also satisfy the 
criteria under section 211(o)(1)(H) of the CAA-2022. See also Notice 
2024-37, 2024-21 I.R.B. 1191.
    \6\ See Letter from Joseph Goffman, Principal Deputy Assistant 
Administrator for the Office of Air and Radiation, U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, to Lily Batchelder, Assistant 
Secretary for Tax Policy, U.S. Department of Treasury (December 13, 
2023) (EPA December 2023 Letter), available at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/Final-EPA-letter-to-UST-on-SAF-signed.pdf.
    \7\ See Letter from Joseph Goffman, Assistant Administrator for 
the Office of Air and Radiation, U.S. Environmental Protection 
Agency, to Aviva Aron-Dine, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Tax 
Policy, U.S. Department of Treasury (January 8, 2025) (EPA January 
2025 Letter), available at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/January-2025-EPA-letter-to-UST-on-45zcf-GREET-signed.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The 45ZCF-GREET model contains certain necessary components of a 
lifecycle GHG analysis consistent with section 211(o)(1)(H) of the CAA-
2022 as applied for purposes of the section 45Z regulations.\8\ The 
45ZCF-GREET model is consistent with the requirements of section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(iii). Therefore, emissions rates for SAF transportation 
fuels calculated using the 45ZCF-GREET model would also be consistent 
with those requirements as applied for purposes of the section 45Z 
regulations. See section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ The 45ZCF-GREET model includes significant indirect 
emissions from land use, crop production, and livestock. Due to the 
OBBBA, indirect emissions from land use, also known as induced or 
indirect land use change, will be excluded for purposes of 
transportation fuel produced after December 31, 2025. See section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(iv); section 70521(c) of the OBBBA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

e. Other Aspects of 45ZCF-GREET Model
    In the 45ZCF-GREET model, for purposes of accounting for emissions 
associated with hydrogen (as a production input), natural gas 
alternatives (as a production input or as the transportation fuel 
produced), electricity, and carbon capture and sequestration, rules 
similar to the rules under section 45V would apply unless otherwise 
specified by the 45ZCF-GREET model with respect to technical modeling 
issues or other technical differences. The proposed regulations would 
also clarify the similar rule for incrementality with respect to the 
use of energy attribute certificates in the 45ZCF-GREET model. See also 
Sec.  1.45V-4(d).
    In January 2025, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) 
published a beta version of the USDA Feedstock Carbon Intensity 
Calculator (USDA FD-CIC). The beta version of the USDA FD-CIC is 
undergoing testing, peer review, and public comment in preparation for 
the publication of a final version of USDA FD-CIC. Following 
publication of the final version of USDA FD-CIC, the Treasury 
Department and the IRS anticipate that a section 45Z-specific version 
of the Feedstock Carbon Intensity Calculator (FD-CIC) module will be 
included as an input to the DOE's 45ZCF-GREET model (45ZCF FD-CIC) used 
for calculating carbon intensity adjustments under section 45Z for 
feedstocks that are produced using certain agricultural practices. Such 
practices may include no till, reduced till, cover crops, and nutrient 
management. 45ZCF FD-CIC may undergo periodic updates, including 
incorporation of new data and methodologies from other FD-CIC versions 
(for example, USDA FD-CIC, R&D GREET FD-CIC (R&D FD-CIC)), to 
incorporate more recent data or new data sources, types of practices, 
feedstock types, or changes to geographic specificity. The results of 
the 45ZCF FD-CIC are expected to inform the emissions rates calculated 
under the 45ZCF-GREET model. The Treasury Department and the IRS 
anticipate that 45ZCF FD-CIC may be used for fuel produced and sold in 
2025 even though 45ZCF FD-CIC likely will be published in 2026.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS anticipate that adoption of 
45ZCF FD-CIC would entail additional requirements particular to its 
use, such as agricultural practice implementation, recordkeeping, and 
verification, which may include rules similar to those provided in the 
USDA's technical guidelines for crops used as biofuel feedstocks in 7 
CFR 2100, subparts D, E, and F. The Treasury Department and the IRS 
anticipate publishing additional guidance on these requirements in 
coordination with the publication of 45ZCF FD-CIC.

F. Provisional Emissions Rate (PER)

1. In General
    Many stakeholders have expressed the urgent need for guidance to 
clarify the scope and mechanics of the PER process referenced in 
section 45Z(b)(1)(D), which provides that if the emissions rate table 
does not establish an emissions rate for a transportation fuel, a 
taxpayer producing such fuel may file a petition with the Secretary for 
determination of the emissions rate with respect to such fuel, known as 
a ``PER.''
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(1) would establish the procedures a 
taxpayer must follow to request a PER

[[Page 5173]]

determination. The proposed regulations would require a taxpayer to 
submit an emissions value request (EVR) to the DOE and obtain a 
calculated emissions value letter (CEVL) from the DOE, prior to filing 
a PER petition.
2. PER Terminology
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b) would define terms associated with the 
PER procedures set out in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f). Proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-1(b)(12) would define ``eligible fuel,'' for purposes of the PER 
procedures in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f) and the associated definitions 
in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b), as either a type of fuel not included in 
the applicable emissions rate table, or a type of fuel included in the 
applicable emissions rate table but whose category is not included in 
the applicable emissions rate table.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b) would also define terms related to 
requesting an emissions value (EV) from the DOE, which would be a 
prerequisite to filing a PER petition. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(15) 
would define the term ``emissions value'' or ``EV'' as the value 
setting forth the DOE's analytical assessment of the lifecycle GHG 
emissions associated with the fuel for which the EVR was made. Proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(17) would define the term ``EV applicant'' as a 
taxpayer submitting an EVR for an eligible fuel to the DOE. Proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(6) would define the term ``calculated emissions value 
letter'' or ``CEVL'' as the letter setting forth the emissions value 
and DOE control number that the DOE issues to an applicant whose EVR is 
completed.
3. Threshold Requirements
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(2) would provide that the DOE and the 
IRS, respectively, will deny any EVR or PER petition for a type and 
category of fuel included in the applicable emissions rate table. The 
proposed rule would provide that a taxpayer may only request an 
emissions value, and subsequently a PER determination, for an eligible 
fuel. Because the section 45Z credit is computed for a type and 
category of fuel, the proposed rule would also clarify that the DOE and 
the IRS, respectively, will deny any EVR or PER petition based on a 
facility rather than a type or category of fuel.
4. Emissions Value Requests
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(3) would describe the rules for 
requesting an EV from the DOE for an eligible fuel. Proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-2(f)(3)(i) would direct applicants to follow the guidance and 
procedures that the DOE will separately publish for EVRs, including the 
section 45Z EVR process instructions (Instructions). Proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-2(f)(3)(i) would also describe common assumptions for EVRs, 
including the well-to-wheel system boundary and certain accounting 
rules.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(3)(ii) would describe the information 
required by the DOE for an EVR. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(3)(ii)(A) 
would generally require that an EV applicant provide all information 
required by the DOE's Instructions, including sections of a Class 3 
Front-End Engineering and Design (FEED) study (or studies) or other 
indicator of project maturity, as determined by the DOE, and a 
completed Section 45Z EVR Form.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(3)(ii)(B) would provide that for an EVR 
for an eligible fuel that is a category of hydrogen, an EV applicant 
must first submit a section 45V Emissions Value Request Application in 
accordance with the process for a PER determination for the section 45V 
credit, as described in Sec.  1.45V-4(c). The proposed rule would 
provide that the EV applicant must submit the letter obtained under the 
section 45V EVR process from the DOE stating the well-to-gate emissions 
value that the DOE determined with respect to the facility's hydrogen 
production pathway and the control number that the DOE assigned to the 
section 45V EVR Application. Once such applicant completes the section 
45V EVR process and submits its EVR for purposes of section 45Z, the 
DOE may issue a CEVL, which would include an EV that fully accounts for 
the well-to-wheel emissions of such category of hydrogen.
    The proposed rule would also clarify that if the EV applicant 
produces such category of hydrogen at multiple facilities, such 
applicant will need to provide this information for each facility. See 
Part IV.B. of this Explanation of Provisions for a discussion of the 
anti-stacking rules between section 45Z and section 45V.
5. Submitting a PER Petition
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(4) would provide the exclusive procedures 
for requesting a PER determination. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(4)(i) 
would clarify that a taxpayer requests a PER determination by filing a 
PER petition with the Form(s) 7218 included with the taxpayer's timely 
filed (including extensions) Federal income tax return or Federal 
information return for the first taxable year for which the taxpayer 
claims the section 45Z credit for the eligible fuel to which the PER 
petition relates. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(4)(ii) would describe the 
required content of a PER petition, which would consist of the CEVL for 
each eligible fuel for which the section 45Z credit is being claimed 
for a given taxable year.
6. Determination of a PER
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(5)(i) would provide that a properly filed 
PER petition is deemed accepted by the IRS, and that the deemed 
acceptance constitutes the Secretary's determination of the PER. As 
such, proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(f)(5)(ii) would clarify that a taxpayer 
may rely on the EV the DOE provides in a CEVL for purposes of 
calculating and claiming the section 45Z credit, provided that all 
information, representations, or other data the taxpayer provided to 
the DOE in support of the taxpayer's EVR are accurate.

G. Relation Back of Emissions Rates (Including PER)

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(g) would provide that when an emissions rate 
is first determined for a type and category of fuel, whether 
established in an applicable emissions rate table or by a PER 
determination, that emissions rate will relate back to January 1, 2025. 
The proposed rule would ensure that even if a taxpayer cannot determine 
the emissions rate for a type and category of fuel at the time of 
production, either because such type and category of fuel are not 
established in the applicable emissions rate table or because the 
Secretary has not determined a PER, such taxpayer may utilize a later-
determined emissions rate for such fuel as of the date of production.

IV. Special Rules

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4 would provide special rules with respect to 
the determination of a section 45Z credit. Generally, these rules would 
address the: (i) required registration at the time of production; (ii) 
anti-stacking rules; (iii) anti-abuse rules; (iv) attribution of 
production; (v) lack of ownership requirement; (v) foreign feedstocks 
and prohibited foreign entities; and (vi) specific recordkeeping and 
substantiation requirements.

A. Only Registered Production in the United States Taken Into Account

    As provided in section 45Z(f)(1), proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(a) would 
provide that no section 45Z credit is determined with respect to any 
transportation fuel unless the taxpayer is registered as a producer of 
clean fuel (within the meaning of section 4101) at the time of 
production and the fuel is produced in the United States, which 
includes any territory of the United States. Proposed

[[Page 5174]]

Sec.  1.4101-1, which would provide the registration rules under 
section 4101, is further discussed in Part VII. of this Explanation of 
Provisions.

B. Anti-Stacking Rules

    As previously discussed in Part II.G.2. of this Explanation of 
Provisions, section 45Z(d)(4)(B) disallows a section 45Z credit for 
fuel produced at a facility for which an anti-stacking credit (as 
defined in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(28)(ii)) is allowed. Proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-4(b) would provide anti-stacking rules that would govern 
the interaction between different credits if a facility both produces 
transportation fuel under section 45Z and engages in other credit-
eligible activity. The proposed rule also includes examples. To the 
extent permitted by statute, the proposed rule would generally preserve 
taxpayer choice of which credit to claim--a section 45Z credit or an 
anti-stacking credit--for a taxpayer engaging in multiple credit-
eligible activities at the same facility in a taxable year. For 
instance, a taxpayer producing hydrogen that qualifies for both a 
section 45V credit and a section 45Z credit can generally choose which 
credit to claim.
    In addition to general comments on the proposed anti-stacking 
rules, the Treasury Department and the IRS request specific comments 
addressing situations in which a facility either has multiple owners or 
in which a taxpayer does not own the facility, including administrative 
and compliance issues arising under those scenarios.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(b)(2) would provide that the determination 
of whether a facility is a qualified facility is made each taxable 
year. Therefore, under the proposed rule, a facility may be a qualified 
facility in one taxable year but not in another taxable year. 
Additionally, in the case of a taxpayer producing transportation fuel 
at multiple facilities, the taxpayer would separately determine for 
each facility whether the fuel was produced at a qualified facility. 
The proposed rules are consistent with the anti-stacking rules in 
section 45Z(d)(4)(B), which are tied to the taxable year.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(b)(3) would provide examples illustrating 
the application of the anti-stacking rules to section 45Z for each of 
the anti-stacking credits. One example would address situations in 
which the person claiming an anti-stacking credit for a facility has a 
different taxable year than the taxpayer producing transportation fuel 
at that facility. The examples would also clarify that the anti-
stacking rules apply regardless of whether the taxpayer or another 
person claims an anti-stacking credit with respect to a facility.

C. Anti-Abuse Rules

    As indicated in Notice 2025-10, the Treasury Department and the IRS 
are cognizant of potential abuses of the section 45Z credit, including 
situations in which a taxpayer produces and sells transportation fuel 
in a manner that is inconsistent with Congressional intent in enacting 
section 45Z. The Treasury Department and the IRS are also concerned 
about other potential abuse, such as circular production, credit 
churning or wasteful production with no intended use, and abuse of the 
anti-stacking rules.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(c) would provide that the rules of section 
45Z and the section 45Z regulations must be applied in a manner 
consistent with the purposes of section 45Z and the section 45Z 
regulations (and the regulations in under sections 6417 and 6418 
related to the section 45Z credit), including incentivizing the 
domestic production and use of clean transportation fuel and ensuring 
that taxpayers do not circumvent the feedstock origin and anti-stacking 
rules. Therefore, the proposed rule would provide that no section 45Z 
credit is determined if the primary purpose of the production and sale 
of clean transportation fuel is to obtain the benefit of the section 
45Z credit in a manner that is wasteful, such as discarding, disposing 
of, or destroying the transportation fuel without putting it to a 
productive use. The proposed rule would further provide that whether 
the production and sale of transportation fuel is consistent with the 
purposes of section 45Z and the section 45Z regulations (and the 
regulations in this chapter under sections 6417 and 6418 related to the 
section 45Z credit) is based on all facts and circumstances.
    Section 45Z(e) delegates authority to the Secretary to issue 
guidance regarding implementation of section 45Z, including the 
determination of section 45Z credits. Therefore, the proposed 
regulations would provide general anti-abuse rules that are consistent 
with the three prongs of the section 45Z(a)(4) definition of ``sale'' 
(referred to as a ``qualified sale'' in these proposed regulations) 
that focus on post-production uses of transportation fuel.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on the need 
for these or additional section 45Z anti-abuse rules. The Treasury 
Department and the IRS also request comments on the potentially abusive 
scenarios that should be covered by any anti-abuse rules.

D. Production Attributable to the Taxpayer and Section 761(a) Elections

    Consistent with section 45Z(f)(2), proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(d) would 
provide rules for production attributable to the taxpayer. For a 
facility in which more than one person has an ownership interest (and 
the arrangement is not classified as a partnership for Federal tax 
purposes), proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(d)(1) would provide that production 
from the facility is allocated among those persons in proportion to 
their respective ownership interests in the gross sales from the 
facility. The proposed rule would further provide that each owner's 
respective allocable share of the section 45Z credit is based on each 
owner's allocable share of production, determined pursuant to section 
45Z and these proposed regulations. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(d)(2) would 
provide an example of production attributable to the taxpayer. Proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-4(d)(3) would address instances in which a facility is 
owned pursuant to a valid section 761(a) election.

E. Facility Ownership Not Required

    Credit eligibility under section 45Z is tied to production of a 
transportation fuel at a qualified facility and a subsequent qualified 
sale of the fuel. There is no statutory requirement that the producer 
of the transportation fuel own the qualified facility. Proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-4(e) would address situations in which the producer does not own 
the qualified facility at which it produces the transportation fuel, to 
ensure that production is attributed fairly and accurately in those 
situations.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(e)(1) would clarify that a taxpayer is not 
required to own the qualified facility at which it produces 
transportation fuel for a section 45Z credit to be determined with 
respect to such fuel. If a taxpayer produces transportation fuel at a 
qualified facility owned by another person, proposed Sec.  1.45Z-
4(e)(2) would attribute that production to the taxpayer unless 
otherwise specified in the Code or the section 45Z regulations. In the 
case of a production arrangement under which multiple taxpayers produce 
transportation fuel at a facility that is not owned by all the 
taxpayers, production would be allocated among the taxpayers in 
proportion to their respective interests in the gross sales from that 
fuel, as determined under the applicable contract or other legal 
arrangement with respect to the fuel.

[[Page 5175]]

F. Foreign Feedstock and Prohibited Foreign Entity Restrictions

    Consistent with section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(iii), as added by section 
70521(a) of the OBBBA, proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(f)(1) would provide that 
transportation fuel that is produced after December 31, 2025, must be 
exclusively derived from a feedstock that was produced or grown in the 
United States, Mexico, or Canada.
    Consistent with section 45Z(f)(8), as added by section 70521(k) of 
the OBBBA, proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(f)(2) would prohibit the 
determination of a section 45Z credit: (i) for taxable years beginning 
after July 4, 2025, if the taxpayer is a specified foreign entity; and 
(ii) for taxable years beginning after July 4, 2027, if the taxpayer is 
a foreign-influenced entity (other than a foreign-influenced entity 
that made certain payments to a specified foreign entity). See section 
7701(a)(51)(B) and (D) for definitions of the terms specified foreign 
entity and foreign-influenced entity.

G. Specific Recordkeeping and Substantiation Requirements

    In addition to the general recordkeeping requirements under section 
6001 and Sec.  1.6001-1, proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(g) would require a 
taxpayer claiming the section 45Z credit to maintain records sufficient 
to establish the taxpayer's eligibility for the section 45Z credit and 
the amount of the credit claimed. It would also provide two safe 
harbors: (i) for substantiating emissions rates with respect to non-SAF 
transportation fuel; and (ii) for substantiating qualified sales of 
transportation fuel.
    The proposed recordkeeping and substantiation requirements are 
necessary to ensure the accuracy of reported emissions rates and 
because the amount of the section 45Z credit may depend on certain 
operational choices, such as use of certain types of feedstocks or 
fuels, or engaging in certain emissions-reduction practices like carbon 
capture and sequestration (which may vary from year to year).
1. In General
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(g)(1) would provide that at a minimum, 
sufficient records include records: (i) establishing that each fuel 
produced is a transportation fuel; (ii) establishing any relevant 
information relating to the primary feedstock(s) used to produce each 
fuel; (iii) establishing that each fuel meets any additional 
specifications for the type of fuel as described in Sec.  1.45Z-
1(b)(24) or (30); (iv) substantiating how the emissions rate for each 
fuel was determined (including, if applicable, the specific type(s) and 
category(ies) under the applicable emissions rate table); (v) relating 
to any fuel testing obtained by the taxpayer; (vi) establishing that 
each facility used to produce fuel is a qualified facility; (vii) 
establishing the date each facility was placed in service; (viii) 
establishing that each fuel was sold in a qualified sale; and (ix) 
establishing any certification from an unrelated person and 
substantiating the information contained therein. A taxpayer must also 
keep all information, including raw data, used for or related to any 
petition for a PER. If a taxpayer is claiming an increased credit 
amount by satisfying the PWA requirements, the taxpayer must also 
maintain the records described in Sec.  1.45Z-3 (referencing Sec.  
1.45-12).
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(g)(2) would provide a safe harbor for 
substantiating the emissions rate for a non-SAF transportation fuel 
that was determined using the 45ZCF-GREET model. A taxpayer relying on 
this safe harbor would need to obtain certification in substantially 
the same form and manner described in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5 (related 
to certification for a SAF transportation fuel) with respect to that 
non-SAF transportation fuel. The proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5 certification 
requirements are discussed in Part V. of this Explanation of 
Provisions.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(g)(3)(i) would provide a safe harbor for 
substantiating whether the sale of a transportation fuel is a qualified 
sale for purposes of section 45Z. A taxpayer relying on this safe 
harbor would need to obtain from the purchaser a certificate prepared 
by the purchaser under penalty of perjury in substantially the same 
form and manner as that described in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(g)(3)(ii). 
Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(g)(3)(ii) would include a model certificate that 
a taxpayer may use for purposes of meeting this safe harbor. If the 
certificate relates to a single purchase, the taxpayer must obtain the 
certificate from the purchaser prior to or at the time of sale. If the 
certificate relates to purchases made over a period of time, the 
taxpayer must obtain the certificate from the purchaser prior to or at 
the same time as the initial sale to which the certificate relates. The 
safe harbor would require that a taxpayer have no reason to believe 
that any information in the certificate regarding the use of the 
transportation fuel is false. The safe harbor would also require a 
taxpayer to maintain the certificate with respect to the sale of 
transportation fuel in its books and records.
    Additionally, the Treasury Department and the IRS request comments 
on what types of documentation or other substantiation a taxpayer 
should maintain to establish: proper determination of a fuel's 
emissions rate, including the inputs into CORSIA Default, CORSIA 
Actual, or the 45ZCF-GREET model; certification from an unrelated 
person for non-SAF transportation fuel; existing systems, industry 
standards, or customary practices that may be used to substantiate 
emissions rate and inputs into CORSIA Default, CORSIA Actual, or the 
45ZCF-GREET model (or if there are none, how such tracking and 
verification systems should be developed, with potential timelines 
regarding development).
2. Foreign Feedstocks Including Used Cooking Oil
    As explained in Notice 2025-10, the Treasury Department and the IRS 
remain concerned about the ability to reliably distinguish between 
imported used cooking oil (UCO) and palm oil, and the resulting risk of 
crediting ineligible fuels. Furthermore, section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(ii) 
provides that transportation fuel that is produced after December 31, 
2025, must be exclusively derived from a feedstock that was produced or 
grown in the United States, Mexico, or Canada. As previously discussed 
in Part IV.F. of this Explanation of Provisions, proposed Sec.  1.45Z-
4(f)(1) would implement this statutory change.
    Consistent with this approach, pathways that use foreign feedstocks 
(including UCO) for fuel produced after December 31, 2025, will not be 
available in the 45ZCF-GREET model until the Treasury Department and 
the IRS publish further guidance. A feedstock is considered a foreign 
feedstock if it originates from a source (for example, a farm, 
restaurant, or food processor) and/or is purchased from an aggregator 
located outside the United States, Canada, or Mexico.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS are considering appropriate 
substantiation and recordkeeping requirements for feedstocks imported 
from Canada and Mexico (including UCO), and request comments on 
possible approaches with respect to substantiating that any imported 
feedstocks meet the statutory sourcing requirement. The Treasury 
Department and the IRS are also interested in any industry practices to 
track feedstock source(s) that would mitigate potential taxpayer burden 
while being administrable for the IRS. For example, whether using 
specific existing business records, a taxpayer could demonstrate that 
feedstocks exclusively produced in

[[Page 5176]]

Canada or Mexico did not contain other feedstocks or additives that 
originated outside of Canada or Mexico.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS also request comments on 
purchases from aggregators of UCO and approaches to determine the 
underlying source(s) of the UCO that are administrable for taxpayers 
and the IRS. The Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on, 
for instance, whether there are reliable methods that would indicate 
the geographic location where seeds originated or crops were grown as a 
precursor for use as cooking oil, which could be used to determine 
whether the foreign feedstock limitation in section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(iii) 
applies.

V. Procedures for Certification of Lifecycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions 
Rates

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5 would provide rules for certification from 
an unrelated person of emissions rates for SAF transportation fuel 
(certification). The rules would describe the content, form, and manner 
of the required certification under section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II). 
Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(b) through (f) would provide rules relating to 
the content of the certification. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(g) would 
describe the requirements for timely certification. Proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-5(h) would provide a model certification.

A. Requirements for Certifications

1. In General
    In general, proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(b)(1) would provide that for 
each taxable year for which a taxpayer claims a section 45Z credit for 
SAF transportation fuel, the taxpayer must obtain a certification from 
an unrelated person and include such certification with the taxpayer's 
Form 7218, which is filed with the taxpayer's Federal income tax return 
or Federal information return, for each qualified facility at which the 
taxpayer produces SAF transportation fuel.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(b)(2) would provide that the certification 
described in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(b)(1) must be prepared by a 
qualified certifier (as defined in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(b)(3)) and 
signed by the qualified certifier under penalty of perjury. Proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-5(b)(2) would further provide that the certification must 
include information that is in substantially the same form as the model 
certification provided in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(h). Proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-5(b)(2)(i) through (vi) would describe the following information 
that a certification must contain: (i) a statement from the qualified 
certifier regarding the production of SAF transportation fuel 
(production statement); (ii) a statement from the qualified certifier 
regarding conflicts of interest (conflict statement); (iii) information 
regarding the qualified certifier, including documentation of the 
qualified certifier's qualifications (qualified certifier statement); 
(iv) certain general information about the qualified facility at which 
the SAF transportation fuel production undergoing certification 
occurred (qualified facility statement); (v) any documentation 
necessary to substantiate the certification process given the standards 
and best practices prescribed by the qualified certifier's accrediting 
body as they apply to the circumstances of the taxpayer and the 
qualified facility; and (vi) any other information or documentation 
required by applicable IRS tax forms or form instructions.
2. Production Statement
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(c)(1) would provide that the production 
statement must state that the qualified certifier performed a 
certification sufficient for the IRS to determine that any lifecycle 
GHG emissions data inputs and the operation, during the applicable 
taxable year, of the qualified facility that produced the SAF 
transportation fuel for which the section 45Z credit is claimed are 
accurately reflected in: (i) the number of gallons of SAF 
transportation fuel produced by the taxpayer that is entered on the 
Form 7218 with which the certification is included; and (ii) either the 
data the taxpayer input into the allowed methodology under proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(3), or the data the taxpayer submitted in its PER 
petition and that was provided to the DOE in support of the taxpayer's 
request for the emissions value provided in the PER petition.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(c)(2) would provide that, if a taxpayer 
submitted a PER petition, then the production statement must also 
specify the emissions value received from the DOE that was calculated 
using the data provided in support of the taxpayer's emissions value 
request.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(c)(3) would provide that the production 
statement must specify the lifecycle GHG emissions rate and the amount 
of SAF transportation fuel produced by the taxpayer that are entered on 
the Form 7218 with which the certification is included.
3. Conflict Statement
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(d)(1) would provide that the conflict 
statement must state that: (i) the qualified certifier has not received 
a fee based to any extent on the value of any section 45Z credit that 
has been or is expected to be claimed by the taxpayer, and no 
arrangement has been made for such fee to be paid at any time in the 
future; (ii) the qualified certifier has not been a party to any 
transaction involving the sale of SAF transportation fuel the taxpayer 
produced or in which the taxpayer purchased primary feedstocks for the 
production of such SAF transportation fuel; (iii) the qualified 
certifier is unrelated to the taxpayer and is not an employee of the 
taxpayer; and (iv) the qualified certifier is not married to anyone who 
is related to, or an employee of, the taxpayer.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(d)(2) would provide that if the qualified 
certifier is acting in his or her capacity as a partner in a 
partnership, an employee of any person, whether an individual, 
corporation, or partnership, or an independent contractor engaged by a 
person other than the taxpayer, the statements described in proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-5(d)(1) must also be made with respect to the partnership 
or the person that employs or engages the qualified certifier.
4. Qualified Certifier Statement
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(e) would provide that the qualified 
certifier statement must include: (i) the qualified certifier's name, 
address, and certifier identification number; (ii) the qualified 
certifier's qualifications to conduct the certification, including a 
description of the certification the qualified certifier received from 
the accrediting body; (iii) if the qualified certifier is acting in his 
or her capacity as a partner in a partnership, an employee of any 
person, whether an individual, corporation, or partnership, or an 
independent contractor engaged by a person other than the taxpayer, the 
name, address, and certifier identification number of the partnership 
or the person that employs or engages the qualified certifier; (iv) the 
signature of the qualified certifier and the date of signature; and (v) 
a statement that the certification was conducted for Federal tax 
purposes.
5. Information on Taxpayer's Qualified Facility
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(f) would provide that the certification must 
include: (i) the location of the qualified facility; (ii) a description 
of the qualified facility, including its method of producing SAF 
transportation fuel; (iii) the type(s) of primary feedstock(s) used by 
the qualified facility to produce the SAF transportation fuel during 
the taxable

[[Page 5177]]

year of production; (iv) the amount(s) of primary feedstock(s) used by 
the qualified facility to produce the SAF transportation fuel during 
the taxable year of production; (v) the location(s) from which the 
qualified facility sourced the primary feedstock(s) used to produce the 
SAF transportation fuel during the taxable year of production; (vi) a 
list of the metering devices used to record any data used by the 
qualified certifier to support the production statement under proposed 
Sec.  1.45Z-5(c), along with a statement that the qualified certifier 
has reason to believe that the device(s) underwent industry-appropriate 
quality assurance and quality control, and the accuracy and calibration 
of the device has been tested in the year prior to the time of 
observation; and (vii) confirmation that the emissions rate of the SAF 
transportation fuel produced during the taxable year of production is 
accurate to the higher of +/-5% or 2 kilograms of CO2e per 
mmBTU.

B. Qualified Certifier

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(b)(3) would provide rules regarding 
qualified certifiers for the allowed methodologies. A qualified 
certifier would be required to have the relevant active accreditation 
as of the date it provides a certification to a taxpayer.
1. CORSIA Methodologies
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(b)(3)(i) would provide that, for taxpayers 
using CORSIA Default or CORSIA Actual to determine the emissions rate 
for SAF transportation fuel, the term qualified certifier means any 
individual or organization that is unrelated to the taxpayer and is not 
an employee of the taxpayer, and that has an active accreditation from 
International Sustainability and Carbon Certification, Roundtable on 
Sustainable Biomaterials, ClassNK, or other sustainability 
certification scheme approved by ICAO. Such individuals or 
organizations are experienced and familiar with evaluating information 
regarding CORSIA Default and CORSIA Actual.
2. 45ZCF-GREET Model
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(b)(3)(ii) would provide that, for taxpayers 
using the 45ZCF-GREET model to determine the emissions for SAF 
transportation fuel, the term qualified certifier means any individual 
or organization that is unrelated to the taxpayer and is not an 
employee of the taxpayer, and that has an active accreditation from: 
(i) the American National Standards Institute National Accreditation 
Board (ANAB) to conduct validation and verification in accordance with 
the requirements of International Organization for Standardization 
(ISO) 14065; or (ii) as a verifier, lead verifier, or verification body 
under the California Air Resources Board Low Carbon Fuel Standard (CARB 
LCFS) program. Such ANAB and CARB LCFS verifiers are experienced with 
evaluating information similar to the information included in the 
45ZCF-GREET model.

C. Timely Certification Required

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5(g) would provide that a certification that 
includes all required information is valid with respect to a particular 
claim only if it is signed and dated by the qualified certifier no 
later than: (i) the due date, including extensions, of the Federal 
income tax return or Federal information return for the taxable year 
during which the SAF transportation fuel undergoing certification is 
sold in a qualified sale; or (ii) in the case of a section 45Z credit 
first claimed for the taxable year on an amended return or 
administrative adjustment request (AAR), the date on which the amended 
return or AAR is filed.

VI. Procedures for Filing a Claim for the Clean Fuel Production Credit

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6 would describe the time and manner of filing 
a claim for the section 45Z credit and provide special rules for cases 
in which the taxpayer claiming the credit is not the registered 
producer of a transportation fuel. Under the proposed rule, a taxpayer 
claiming a section 45Z credit would either be the person registered as 
a producer of a transportation fuel at the time of production, or a 
person that would be treated as the registrant.

A. Time and Manner of Filing a Claim

    In general, proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6(a) would provide that a taxpayer 
claims the section 45Z credit on a completed Form 7218 included with 
the taxpayer's timely filed (including extensions) Federal income tax 
return or Federal information return for the taxable year for which the 
taxpayer claims the section 45Z credit. Under proposed Sec.  1.45Z-
6(a), a taxpayer would need to complete a separate Form 7218 for each 
qualified facility at which it produces a transportation fuel for which 
it is claiming a credit.

B. Proper Claimant

    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6(b)(1) would provide the general rule that 
only a taxpayer that is registered by the IRS as a producer of 
transportation fuel at the time of production may claim the section 45Z 
credit.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6(b)(2)(i) through (iii) would provide special 
rules for situations in which a person other than a registered producer 
of transportation fuel may claim the section 45Z credit. These special 
rules would generally apply to: (i) a taxpayer that owns an entity that 
is disregarded as an entity separate from its owner, as defined in 
Sec.  301.7701-2(c)(2)(i) (disregarded entity); (ii) an S corporation 
(as defined in section 1361(a)(1)) that owns a qualified subchapter S 
subsidiary (QSub), as defined in section 1361(b)(3)(B); and (iii) an 
agent for a consolidated group, as defined in Sec.  1.1502-77. The 
proposed rules are consistent with the section 45Z Fact Sheet FAQs but 
provide additional specificity and clarity.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6(b)(2)(i) would provide that in the case of a 
disregarded entity that produces transportation fuel and is registered 
as a producer of transportation fuel at the time of production, the 
taxpayer that owns the disregarded entity is treated as the registered 
producer for purposes of claiming the section 45Z credit.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6(b)(2)(ii) would provide that in the case of 
a QSub that produces transportation fuel and is registered as a 
producer of transportation fuel at the time of production, the S 
corporation that owns the QSub is treated as the registered producer 
for purposes of claiming the section 45Z credit.
    Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6(b)(2)(iii) would clarify that if a member of 
a consolidated group is registered as a producer of transportation fuel 
at the time of production, the agent for such consolidated group is 
treated as the registered producer for purposes of claiming the section 
45Z credit.

VII. Section 4101 Registration

A. Section 4101 Registration Generally

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1 would provide rules for section 4101 
registration for purposes of section 45Z, including rules addressing 
disregarded entities, QSubs, and members of a consolidated group, and 
the registration tests for purposes of section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I). The 
proposed rules are modeled after the longstanding registration rules in 
Sec.  48.4101-1 of the Manufacturers and Retailers Excise Tax 
Regulations that apply for purposes of fuel excise taxes and credits. 
This registration requirement is distinct from the required pre-filing 
registration for a taxpayer that intends to make a section 6417 or 
section 6418 election, as provided by the Credit Transfer Election 
Regulations and the Elective Payment Election Regulations.

[[Page 5178]]

    Proposed Sec. Sec.  1.4101-1(a)(4) and 48.4101-1(a)(8) would 
provide rules for reregistration. Proposed Sec. Sec.  1.4101-1(h) and 
48.4101(a)(7) would provide rules regarding the effect of a Letter of 
Registration for purposes of section 45Z and excise tax registrations, 
respectively.
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1 would provide rules regarding the approval, 
denial, revocation, or suspension of registration that are similar to 
the rules of section 4222(c) and Sec.  48.4222(c)-1. Additionally, many 
of the requirements of proposed Sec.  1.4101-1 would be similar or 
identical to the existing provisions of Sec.  48.4101-1 and to proposed 
Sec.  48.4101-1(a)(7) and (8), which would facilitate consistent tax 
administration. The Treasury Department and the IRS are aware that many 
applicants for registration for purposes of the section 45Z credit and 
other income tax credits must also be registered under section 4101 for 
excise tax purposes. As a result, many applicants are already familiar 
with the section 4101 registration process and must maintain other 
section 4101 registrations (in addition to the registration required 
under section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I) and other income tax registrations).

B. Letter of Registration Required

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(a)(2) would provide that a person is 
registered under section 4101 only if the IRS has issued that person a 
Letter of Registration under the appropriate activity letter and the 
registration has not been revoked or suspended. This proposed rule is 
similar to Sec.  48.4101-1(a)(2).

C. Separate Entity Treatment

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(a)(3)(i) would provide that each business 
unit that has, or is required to have, a separate EIN is treated as a 
separate person for purposes of registration. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-
1(a)(3)(ii) would provide that Sec.  301.7701-2(c)(2)(i) (disregarded 
entity treatment for certain wholly owned entities) does not apply for 
purposes of registration under proposed Sec.  1.4101-1. Under the 
proposed rule, a disregarded entity that has, or is required to have, 
an EIN would be treated as a corporation for purposes of registration. 
Therefore, under the proposed rule, if such an entity produces 
transportation fuel, it must be registered as a producer of 
transportation fuel at the time of production for the owner of the 
disregarded entity to be eligible to claim the section 45Z credit for 
such fuel.
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(a)(3)(iii) would provide that a QSub is 
treated as a separate corporation for purposes of registration under 
proposed Sec.  1.4101-1. As a consequence, each QSub that has an EIN 
and that produces transportation fuel must be registered as a producer 
of transportation fuel at the time of production for its S corporation 
owner to be eligible to claim the section 45Z credit for such fuel. For 
consistency and clarity, the proposed regulations would also amend the 
introductory clause of Sec.  1.1361-4(a)(1) (which generally ignores a 
QSub's separate existence for Federal tax purposes) by adding proposed 
Sec.  1.4101-1(a)(3)(iii) to the list of exceptions.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS understand that many facilities 
that produce transportation fuel are owned by a disregarded entity. The 
proposed regulations would provide registration rules that would 
reflect this practice while also satisfying the statutory requirements. 
The proposed rules would be similar to and consistent with: (i) Sec.  
48.4101-1(a)(4), which provides that every business that has, or is 
required to have, a separate EIN is treated as a separate person for 
purposes of excise tax registration under section 4101; (ii) Sec.  
301.7701-2(c)(2)(v)(A)(3), which provides that Sec.  301.7701-
2(c)(2)(i) (concerning certain wholly-owned entities) does not apply 
for purposes of registration under sections 4101, 4222, and 4412; and 
(iii) Sec.  1.1361-4(a)(8)(i)(C), which provides that a QSub is treated 
as a separate corporation for purposes of registration under sections 
4101, 4222, and 4412.
    The separate entity rules would also align with other related tax 
provisions, including sections 45V and 45Q (for which anti-stacking 
provisions apply), and the elective payment and credit transfer 
election provisions of sections 6417 and 6418, which elections are 
generally made on a per-facility basis. Although the proposed rules are 
consistent with the making of a section 6417 or section 6418 election 
on a facility-by-facility basis, it is important to highlight the 
difference between these proposed registration rules and the rules for 
making an election under section 6417 or section 6418.
    With respect to sections 6417 and 6418, if a taxpayer is the sole 
owner (directly or indirectly) of a disregarded entity for Federal 
income tax purposes and the disregarded entity directly holds the 
underlying applicable credit property, then the taxpayer (and not the 
disregarded entity) makes the section 6417 or section 6418 election, 
including completing the required pre-filing registration as part of 
making a section 6417 or section 6418 election. See Sec. Sec.  1.6417-
2(a)(1)(ii), 1.6417-5, 1.6418-2(a)(3)(i), and 1.6418-4. For example, if 
a taxpayer has two qualified facilities for purposes of section 45Z 
that are owned by separate disregarded entities, each disregarded 
entity (and not the taxpayer) must be registered as a producer of 
transportation fuel for purposes of the section 45Z credit. However, 
the taxpayer (and not either disregarded entity) would ultimately make 
any section 6417 or section 6418 election (including completing the 
section 6417 or section 6418 pre-filing registration process) with 
respect to any section 45Z credit determined with respect to each 
qualified facility.
    Additionally, section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I) requires registration 
``under section 4101.'' This language indicates that Congress meant for 
the existing Sec.  48.4101-1 regulations to apply for purposes of the 
section 45Z credit, including the separate entity rules of Sec.  
48.4101-1(a)(4). The special procedures that apply with respect to a 
taxpayer that owns a disregarded entity or a QSub that is registered 
under proposed Sec.  1.4101-1 and claims the section 45Z credit are 
discussed in Part VI.B. of this Explanation of Provisions.

D. Reregistration

    As provided in section 4101(a)(5), proposed Sec. Sec.  1.4101-
1(a)(4)(i) and 48.4101-1(a)(8)(i) would each require a person to 
reregister if after a transaction (or series of related transactions) 
more than 50 percent of ownership interests in, or assets of, such 
person are held by persons other than persons (or persons related 
thereto) who held more than 50 percent of such interests or assets 
before the transaction (or series of related transactions). 
Reregistration would not apply to companies whose stock is regularly 
traded on an established securities market. These proposed requirements 
would be consistent with section 4101(a)(5) and (d).
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  1.4101-1(a)(4)(ii) and 48.4101-1(a)(8)(ii) 
would each require a person to reregister if the person changes its 
EIN.
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(a)(4)(iii) would provide a safe harbor for 
a person that has been registered by the IRS and must reregister due to 
a change in ownership or EIN. A person that is approved for 
reregistration would be eligible to claim a section 45Z credit as of 
the date the IRS received the application for reregistration, even if, 
at the time of such person's fuel production, the IRS had not yet 
approved the reregistration. The Treasury Department and the IRS 
recognize the urgency for a taxpayer to be issued a Letter of 
Registration for purposes of the section 45Z credit because, unlike 
other tax credits requiring section 4101 registration, section 
45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I) requires that a

[[Page 5179]]

taxpayer be registered at the time of production.

E. Definitions

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(b)(1) would define an ``applicant'' as a 
person that has applied for registration under proposed Sec.  1.4101-
1(d). The proposed definition is consistent with the definition of 
``applicant'' in Sec.  48.4101-1(b)(1).
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(b)(2) would define ``Letter of 
Registration'' as a letter issued by the IRS to approve a registration 
required under section 4101. Under the proposed definition, a Letter of 
Registration would include the registrant's registration number and the 
effective date of the registration.
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(b)(3) would define the phrase ``penalized 
for a wrongful act'' as cases in which a person has: (i) been assessed 
any penalty under chapter 68 of the Code (or similar provision of the 
law of any State) for fraudulently failing to file any return or pay 
any tax, and the penalty has not been wholly abated, refunded, or 
credited; (ii) been assessed any penalty under chapter 68 of the Code, 
such penalty has not been wholly abated, refunded, or credited, and the 
IRS determines that the conduct resulting in the penalty is part of a 
consistent pattern of failing to deposit, pay, or pay over a 
substantial amount of tax; (iii) been convicted of a crime under 
chapter 75 of the Code (or similar provision of the law of any State), 
or of conspiracy to commit such a crime, and the conviction has not 
been wholly reversed by a court of competent jurisdiction; (iv) been 
convicted, under the laws of the United States or any State, of a 
felony for which an element of the offense is theft, fraud, or the 
making of false statements, and the conviction has not been wholly 
reversed by a court of competent jurisdiction; (v) been assessed any 
tax under section 4103 of the Code and the tax has not been wholly 
abated, refunded, or credited; or (vi) had its registration under 
section 4101, section 4222, section 4662, or section 4682 of the Code 
revoked. This proposed definition is similar to the definition of the 
phrase ``penalized for a wrongful act'' in Sec.  48.4101-1(b)(4).
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(b)(4) would define a ``related person'' for 
purposes of registration under section 4101 as a person that: (i) 
directly or indirectly exercises control over an activity of the 
applicant; (ii) owns, directly or indirectly, five percent or more of 
the applicant; (iii) is under a duty to assure the payment of a tax for 
which the applicant is responsible; (iv) is a member, with the 
applicant, of a group of organizations (as defined in Sec.  1.52-1(b) 
of this chapter) that would be treated as a group of trades or 
businesses under common control for purposes of Sec.  1.52-1; or (v) 
distributed or transferred assets to the applicant in a transaction in 
which the applicant's basis in the assets is determined by reference to 
the basis of the assets in the hands of the distributor or transferor. 
This proposed definition is consistent with the definition of ``related 
person'' in Sec.  48.4101-1(b)(5).
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(b)(5) would define a ``registrant'' as a 
person who has registered under section 4101 in accordance with 
proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(f)(3) and whose registration has not been 
revoked or suspended. This proposed definition is consistent with the 
definition of ``registrant'' in Sec.  48.4101-1(b)(6).

F. Requirement To Register

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(c)(1) would require every person producing 
a transportation fuel, as defined in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(34), to 
register with the IRS in accordance with proposed Sec.  1.4101-1. The 
proposed rule incorporates the registration requirement described in 
section 4101(a)(1), as amended by section 70521(i) of the OBBBA, and is 
similar to Sec.  48.4101-1(c)(1). The proposed rule is also consistent 
with section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I).
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(c)(2) would articulate the consequences of 
failing to register under section 4101 by citing to penalties under 
sections 6719, 7232, and 7272 of the Code. The proposed rule is similar 
to Sec.  48.4101-1(c)(3), which was published before the enactment of 
section 6719 and cites to penalties under sections 7232 and 7272. 
Section 7232 imposes a criminal penalty for failure to register or 
reregister as required by section 4101 or for a willful false statement 
in an application for registration or reregistration. Sections 6719 and 
7272 impose civil penalties for failure to register or reregister under 
section 4101.

G. Application Instructions

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(d) would require applicants to apply for 
section 4101 registration using Form 637, Application for Registration 
(For Certain Excise Tax Activities), or such other form as the IRS may 
designate, in accordance with the instructions to such form. An 
applicant would be required to apply for registration under activity 
letter CN if seeking registration as a producer of non-SAF 
transportation fuel, and under activity letter CA if seeking 
registration as a producer of SAF transportation fuel, or under such 
other activity letter(s) as the IRS may designate. The proposed rule is 
consistent with Sec. Sec.  48.4101-1(e) and 48.4222(a)-1(b).

H. Registration Tests

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(1) would provide that the IRS will 
register an applicant only if the applicant meets the activity test of 
proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(2), the acceptable risk test of proposed 
Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(3), and the satisfactory tax history test of proposed 
Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(4), which are collectively called the ``registration 
tests.'' The registration tests under proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e) are 
similar to the registration tests under Sec.  48.4101-1(f).
    The proposed registration tests are consistent with sections 
4101(c) and 4222(c), because their purposes are to confirm whether an 
applicant is actually engaging in the activity for which it is 
requesting to be registered, to prevent an applicant from becoming 
registered and being able to claim a tax credit if it is not engaged in 
such an activity, and to ensure that an applicant has satisfied all of 
its tax obligations under the Code, similar to section 4222(c) and 
Sec. Sec.  48.4222(a)-1 and 48.4222(c)-1. These tests are necessary to 
protect the revenue and to prevent applicants from using their 
registration to avoid payment of tax (by erroneously claiming an income 
tax credit).
1. Activity Test
    Under proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(2), an applicant would meet the 
activity test only if the IRS determines that the applicant: (i) is, in 
the course of its trade or business, regularly engaged in the activity 
for which it is requesting registration; or (ii) is likely to be 
(because of such factors as the applicant's business experience, 
financial standing, or trade connections), in the course of its trade 
or business, regularly engaged in the activity for which it is 
requesting registration within 6 months after becoming registered under 
section 4101. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(2) is similar to Sec.  
48.4101-1(f)(2).
    The purpose of the activity test is to prevent applicants that are 
not engaged in the activity required for the section 45Z credit from 
becoming registered under section 4101, which is a prerequisite to 
claiming the section 45Z credit. For example, if an applicant seeking 
registration for purposes of the section 45Z credit represents on its 
application for registration that it is not yet (or likely to be within 
6 months) engaged in the activity of producing a

[[Page 5180]]

transportation fuel, such applicant would not be approved for 
registration because it fails the activity test.
2. Acceptable Risk Test
    Under proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(3)(i), an applicant would meet the 
acceptable risk test only if neither the applicant nor a related person 
(as defined in proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(b)(4)) has been penalized for a 
wrongful act. Additionally, if an applicant or a related person has 
been penalized for a wrongful act, the IRS would be able to determine 
that an applicant meets the acceptable risk test based on consideration 
of the factors enumerated in proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(3)(ii). The 
acceptable risk test under proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(3) is similar to 
the acceptable risk test under Sec.  48.4101-1(f)(3).
    The purpose of the acceptable risk test under proposed Sec.  
1.4101-1(e)(3) is to ensure that the applicant and persons related to 
the applicant have met their obligations to pay taxes and file returns 
under the Code and also have not been convicted of a crime that 
indicates that the applicant would be dishonest in its representations 
to the IRS for purposes of protecting the revenue, similar to section 
4222(c).
3. Satisfactory Tax History Test
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(4)(i) would provide that an applicant 
meets the satisfactory tax history only if the IRS determines that the 
applicant has a satisfactory tax history. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-
1(e)(4)(ii) would provide that an applicant has a satisfactory tax 
history only if the IRS determines that the filing, deposit, and 
payment history for all Federal taxes of the applicant and any related 
person (as defined in proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(b)(4)) supports the 
conclusion that the applicant will comply with its obligations under 
proposed Sec.  1.4101-1. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(4) is similar to 
the adequate security test of Sec.  48.4101-1(f)(4), and the definition 
of ``satisfactory tax history'' in proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(4)(ii) is 
similar to the definition in Sec.  48.4101-1(f)(4)(iii).
    The purpose of the satisfactory tax history test under proposed 
Sec.  1.4101-1(e)(4) is to ensure that the applicant and persons 
related to the applicant have met their obligations to pay taxes and 
file returns under the Code and also have not been convicted of a crime 
that indicates that the applicant would be dishonest in its 
representations to the IRS for purposes of protecting the revenue, 
similar to section 4222(c).

I. Action on Application by the IRS

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(f)(1) would provide that the IRS may 
investigate the accuracy and completeness of any representations made 
by an applicant and request any additional relevant information from 
the applicant. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(f)(2) would provide that if the 
IRS determines that an applicant does not meet all the registration 
tests described in proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e), the IRS will notify the 
applicant, in writing, that its application for registration is denied 
and state the basis for the denial. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(f)(3) would 
provide that if the IRS determines that an applicant meets all the 
registration tests described in proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e), the IRS 
will register the applicant under section 4101 and issue the applicant 
a Letter of Registration that includes the effective date of the 
registration and the appropriate activity letter(s). The proposed rule 
would also provide that a copy of an application for registration (Form 
637) is not a Letter of Registration. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(f) is 
similar to Sec.  48.4101-1(g).

J. Terms and Conditions of Registration

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(g)(1) would require each applicant or 
registrant to: (i) make deposits, file returns, and pay taxes required 
by the Code and the regulations; (ii) keep records sufficient to show 
production of a transportation fuel; and (iii) notify the IRS of any 
change (such as a change in ownership) in the information the 
registrant submitted in connection with its application for 
registration or previously submitted under proposed Sec.  1.4101-
1(g)(1)(iii), within 10 days after the change occurs. Proposed Sec.  
1.4101-1(g)(1) is similar to Sec.  48.4101-1(h)(1).
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(g)(2) would provide that an applicant or 
registrant may not sell, lease, or otherwise allow another person to 
use its registration (except as otherwise provided in proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-6(b)(2)) or make any false statement to the IRS in connection 
with a submission under section 4101. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(g)(2) is 
similar to Sec.  48.4101-1(h)(2).
    Requiring registrants to comply with their tax deposits, payments, 
and filing burdens under the Code protects the revenue, similar to 
section 4222(c) and Sec.  48.4222(c)-1. Requiring registrants to notify 
the IRS of any change in information that the registrant submitted in 
connection with its application ensures the IRS is aware of relevant 
changes and can ensure the registrant continues to be eligible to 
retain its registration.
    For example, if a registrant that produces a transportation fuel 
changes the type of fuel it produces, the registrant should inform the 
IRS of this change so that the IRS can review the fuel being produced 
to ensure that the registrant still meets a condition of registration 
by producing a transportation fuel. Prohibiting a registrant from 
allowing another person to use its registration and make false 
statements to the IRS ensures that the IRS can rely upon the 
information and representations provided by a registrant, and protects 
the revenue by preventing fraud and abuse of section 4101 registration.

K. Effect of Letter of Registration

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(h) and proposed Sec.  48.4101-1(a)(7) would 
provide that a Letter of Registration is not a determination of 
liability for tax, eligibility for a tax credit or deduction, or any 
other tax treatment under the Code. The proposed rules would also 
provide that a Letter of Registration is not a determination letter, as 
defined in Sec.  601.201(a)(3) of this chapter.
    The proposed rules are consistent with section 4101 and the overall 
statutory scheme. Section 4101 addresses only registration and not 
eligibility for underlying tax credits for which registration is 
required. Additionally, for each tax credit that requires registration 
under section 4101, registration is one of multiple requirements for 
credit eligibility. A taxpayer must meet all of the statutory 
requirements for each credit and cannot rely solely on a Letter of 
Registration to prove entitlement to such credit because doing so would 
make the other requirements in the tax credit statutes superfluous. 
See, e.g., sections 40(b)(6)(E), 40A, 40B, 45Z, and 6426(k). 
Additionally, in the case of excise tax credits, courts have held that 
a Letter of Registration indicates only that the registrant is 
registered under section 4101 and is not a determination that the 
registrant is entitled to claim such credit. See Affordable Bio 
Feedstock, Inc. v. United States, 529 F. Supp. 3d 1298, 1304-07 (M.D. 
Fla. 2021), aff'd, 42 F.4th 1288 (11th Cir. 2022).

L. Adverse Actions by the IRS Against a Registrant

    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(i)(1) would provide that the IRS will 
revoke or suspend a registration if the IRS determines at any time that 
the registrant: (i) does not meet one or more of the registration tests 
under proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(e) and has not corrected the deficiency 
within a reasonable period of time after notification by the IRS; (ii)

[[Page 5181]]

has used its registration to evade, or attempt to evade, the payment of 
any tax, or to postpone or in any manner to interfere with the 
collection of any such tax, or to make a fraudulent claim for a credit 
or payment; (iii) has aided or abetted another person in evading, or 
attempting to evade, payment of any tax, or in making a fraudulent 
claim for a credit or payment; or (iv) has sold, leased, or otherwise 
allowed another person to use its registration, except as otherwise 
provided in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6(b)(2).
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(i)(2) would provide that if the IRS 
determines that a registrant has, at any time, failed to comply with 
the terms and conditions of registration under proposed Sec.  1.4101-
1(g), made a false statement to the IRS in connection with its 
application for registration (or reregistration) or for retention of 
registration, or otherwise used its registration in a manner that 
creates a significant risk of nonpayment or late payment of tax, then 
the IRS may revoke or suspend the registrant's registration.
    Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1(i)(3) would provide that if the IRS revokes 
or suspends a registration, the IRS will notify the registrant in 
writing and state the basis for the revocation or suspension and the 
activity letter(s) to which the revocation or suspension relates. The 
effective date of the revocation or suspension may not be earlier than 
the date on which the IRS notifies the registrant.
    These proposed rules, which are similar to the rules of Sec.  
48.4101-1(i), are necessary because they enable the IRS to revoke or 
suspend registrations as needed to prevent registrants that violate the 
rules of section 4101 from using their registration to avoid payment of 
tax (by erroneously claiming an income tax credit).

VIII. Ownership Clarification for Section 6417 Elective Payment 
Election and Section 6418 Credit Transfer Election

    Both sections 6417(a) and 6418(a) require a credit (applicable 
credit or eligible credit) to be determined with respect to the 
taxpayer before an election may be made. The underlying credit 
provisions confirm whether a taxpayer, to determine a credit, must own 
the relevant underlying eligible credit property or only conduct the 
activities giving rise to a credit. Current Sec. Sec.  1.6417-2(c)(4) 
and 1.6418-2(d)(1) provide rules on determining the credit with respect 
to a taxpayer and include that a credit is determined with respect to a 
taxpayer if the taxpayer owns the underlying eligible credit property 
and conducts the activities giving rise to the credit, or in the case 
of section 45X (under which ownership of eligible credit property is 
not required), is considered (under the regulations under section 45X) 
the taxpayer with respect to which the section 45X credit is 
determined.
    The preambles to the Elective Payment Election Regulations and the 
Credit Transfer Election Regulations both explain with respect to 
Sec. Sec.  1.6417-2(c)(4) and 1.6418-2(d)(1), respectively, that the 
only credit for which ownership is not required is the section 45X 
credit. However, a taxpayer also is not required to own the underlying 
eligible credit property to determine the section 45Z credit. Section 
45Z requires only that a taxpayer produce transportation fuel at a 
qualified facility and sell the fuel in a qualified sale, without 
requiring ownership of the qualified facility. See section 45Z(a)(1), 
regarding general credit eligibility, and section 45Z(d)(4), defining 
``qualified facility.''
    The proposed regulations would amend both Sec. Sec.  1.6417-2(c)(4) 
and 1.6418-2(d)(1) to indicate that facility ownership is not required 
for the section 45Z credit. The proposed amendments would only require 
a taxpayer to conduct the activities giving rise to the section 45Z 
credit. It would be consistent with proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4(e)(1), which 
would state that facility ownership is not required for a section 45Z 
credit to be determined. The proposed amendments would also clarify 
that ownership is not required for the section 45(d)(3)(C) credit and 
include clarifying language to acknowledge contract manufacturing 
arrangements for the section 45X credit. In addition, the proposed 
regulations would amend both Sec. Sec.  1.6417-2(f) and 1.6418-2(g) to 
provide different applicability dates for the proposed changes. The 
Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on the ownership 
language with respect to sections 45Z and 45(d)(3)(C), and whether to 
add language on contract manufacturing or toll processing arrangements 
for the section 45Z credit.

IX. Proposed Applicability Dates and Reliance

    Proposed Sec. Sec.  1.45Z-1, 1.45Z-2 (except for paragraph (e)), 
and 1.45Z-4 through 1.45Z-6, would apply to qualified sales occurring 
in taxable years ending on or after the date the final regulations are 
published in the Federal Register. Proposed Sec.  1.45Z-2(e) would 
apply to qualified sales occurring in taxable years ending on or after 
January 10, 2025. Proposed Sec.  1.4101-1 and proposed Sec.  48.4101-
1(a)(7) and (8) would apply to persons producing transportation fuel in 
taxable years ending on or after the date the final regulations are 
published in the Federal Register. Proposed Sec.  1.6417-2(c)(4) and 
(f), proposed Sec.  1.6418-2(d)(1) and (g), and the proposed amendment 
to Sec.  1.1361-4(a)(1) would apply to taxable years ending on or after 
the date the final regulations are published in the Federal Register. 
Taxpayers may rely on these proposed regulations until final 
regulations are published in the Federal Register, provided taxpayers 
follow them in their entirety and in a consistent manner.

Special Analyses

I. Regulatory Planning and Review

    Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess costs 
and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if regulation is 
necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits 
(including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety 
effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive Order 13563 
emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and benefits, of 
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting flexibility.
    These proposed regulations have been designated by the Office of 
Management and Budget's (OMB) Office of Information and Regulatory 
Affairs (OIRA) as subject to review under Executive Order 12866 
pursuant to the Memorandum of Agreement (July 4, 2025) between the 
Treasury Department and OMB regarding review of tax regulations. OIRA 
has determined that this proposed rulemaking is economically 
significant and subject to review under section 3(f) of Executive Order 
12866 and section 1(c) of the Memorandum of Agreement. Accordingly, 
these proposed regulations have been reviewed by OMB.

A. Need for Regulations

    Section 45Z of the Internal Revenue Code provides an income tax 
credit for the production of clean transportation fuel, which is 
divided into two broad categories: sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) and 
non-SAF transportation fuel. The statute directs the Secretary of the 
Treasury or the Secretary's delegate (Secretary) to issue guidance 
regarding implementation of section 45Z, including the calculation of 
emissions rates and the annual publication of an emissions rate table. 
A taxpayer determines a transportation fuel's emissions rate by either 
using the annual emissions rate table or obtaining

[[Page 5182]]

a provisional emissions rate (PER) determination from the Secretary. 
The proposed regulations provide procedures for taxpayers to obtain a 
PER if the emissions rate table does not establish an emissions rate 
for the type and category of transportation fuel produced. The statute 
also authorizes the Secretary to issue guidance on taxpayer 
registration and certification for purposes of the section 45Z credit. 
The proposed regulations also clarify the meaning of several statutory 
terms, such as ``gallon equivalent,'' ``suitable for use,'' and ``sold 
for use in a trade or business.''
    Pursuant to section 6(a)(3)(B) of Executive Order 12866, the 
following qualitative analysis provides further details regarding the 
anticipated impacts of the proposed regulations. The statute, prior 
guidance, and proposed regulations are briefly summarized in Part I.B. 
of this Special Analyses. The economic analysis of these proposed 
regulations is described in Part I.C. of this Special Analyses. 
Specifically, Part I.C.1. explains the baseline used for the economic 
analysis; Part I.C.2. discusses the types of entities affected by the 
proposed regulations; and Part I.C.3. provides the qualitative 
assessment of the potential economic effects, including the benefits 
and costs, of the proposed regulations compared to the baseline.

B. Statute, Prior Guidance, and Proposed Regulations

    Section 45Z provides an income tax credit for clean transportation 
fuel produced domestically after December 31, 2024, and sold by 
December 31, 2029. Originally enacted in 2022 and extended and modified 
by Public Law 119-21, 139 Stat. 72 (July 4, 2025), commonly known as 
the One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), the section 45Z credit 
replaces an assortment of prior fuel incentives. Those incentives 
consisted of income tax credit, excise tax credit, and excise tax 
payment provisions for various biofuels and other alternative fuels 
sold for use as a fuel or used as a fuel, including biodiesel, 
renewable diesel, compressed natural gas, second generation biofuel, 
and SAF. Transportation fuel is divided into two broad categories: SAF 
and non-SAF. Transportation fuel produced after December 31, 2025, must 
be exclusively derived from a feedstock that was produced or grown in 
the United States, Mexico, or Canada.
    Following the statute, a taxpayer calculates the amount of the 
section 45Z credit by multiplying the applicable amount per gallon or 
gallon equivalent with respect to a transportation fuel by the 
emissions factor for that fuel. If a taxpayer produces the 
transportation fuel at a qualified facility that satisfies the 
prevailing wage and apprenticeship (PWA) requirements, the applicable 
amount is increased. A transportation fuel's emissions factor measures 
the reduction in a fuel's emissions rate relative to the statutory 
baseline emission rate, expressed as a fraction of the statutory 
baseline emission rate. The amount of the section 45Z credit is 
generally larger as the emissions rate of the transportation fuel 
approaches zero. Transportation fuel produced after December 31, 2025, 
cannot have an emissions rate of less than zero unless it is derived 
from animal manure.
    The primary method for determining the emissions rate for non-SAF 
is the United States Department of Energy's (DOE) 45ZCF-GREET model. 
Producers of SAF have the option of using the 45ZCF-GREET model, the 
CORSIA Default methodology, or the CORSIA Actual methodology. Taxpayers 
can request a PER determination if the annually published emissions 
rate table does not establish an emissions rate for the type and 
category of transportation fuel produced. In January 2025, the United 
States Department of Agriculture (USDA) published a beta version of 
USDA Feedstock Carbon Intensity Calculator (FD-CIC) for testing, peer 
review, and public comment in preparation of a final version of USDA 
FD-CIC. Following publication of the final version of USDA FD-CIC, the 
Treasury Department anticipates that 45ZCF FD-CIC, a section 45Z-
specific version of the FD-CIC module, will be included as an input to 
the DOE's 45ZCF-GREET model to be used for calculating carbon intensity 
adjustments under section 45Z for feedstocks that are produced using 
certain agricultural practices.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS have issued several notices 
providing initial guidance on the section 45Z credit. Notice 2024-49 
provided guidance on the section 45Z registration requirements, 
including the time, form, and manner of registration. Notice 2025-10 
announced forthcoming proposed regulations addressing the section 45Z 
credit. These proposed regulations are the forthcoming proposed 
regulations announced in Notice 2025-10. Additionally, Notice 2025-11 
provided guidance regarding methodologies for determining emissions 
rates under section 45Z and provided the initial emissions rate table.
    The proposed regulations provide definitions and general rules on 
the section 45Z credit, such as on credit eligibility, credit amount, 
credit timing, and emissions rates. The statute directs taxpayers to 
use a gallon equivalent for non-liquid fuels but does not provide a 
baseline standard. The proposed rules define ``gallon equivalent'' to 
mean, with respect to any non-liquid fuel, the amount of such fuel that 
has the energy equivalent of a gallon of gasoline determined at the 
lower heating value. The higher heating value and lower heating value 
of a fuel refer to the amount of energy released during combustion, but 
they differ in how they account for the water produced. The higher 
heating value assumes that all water produced is condensed back into 
liquid, while the lower heating value assumes it remains as vapor, thus 
excluding the heat of vaporization from the total energy.
    To qualify for the credit, the fuel must be suitable for use as a 
fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft (suitable for use). The proposed 
regulations define suitable for use to mean that the fuel either has 
practical and commercial fitness for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle 
or aircraft or may be blended into a fuel mixture that has practical 
and commercial fitness for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or 
aircraft. The rules clarify that actual use as a fuel in a highway 
vehicle or aircraft is not required.
    In addition to being suitable for use, section 45Z(a)(4) requires a 
taxpayer to sell transportation fuel to an unrelated person: (i) for 
use by such person in the production of a fuel mixture; (ii) for use by 
such person in a trade or business; or (iii) who sells such fuel at 
retail to another person and places such fuel in the fuel tank of such 
other person. The proposed regulations would explicitly clarify that 
the term ``sold for use in a trade or business'' includes fuel sold to 
an unrelated person that subsequently resells the fuel in its trade or 
business.
    The proposed PER process would require a taxpayer to submit an 
emissions value request (EVR) to the DOE to obtain an emissions value, 
which the taxpayer would use to file a petition requesting the 
determination of a PER. The proposed regulations also provide various 
special rules, including with respect to required registration, anti-
stacking, production attribution, facility ownership, foreign feedstock 
limitation, and recordkeeping. Finally, the proposed regulations 
provide procedures for certification of emissions rates for SAF 
transportation fuel, filing procedures for claiming the section 45Z 
credit, and rules for registration.

[[Page 5183]]

C. Economic Analysis

1. Baseline
    The Treasury Department and the IRS have assessed the benefits and 
the costs of these proposed regulations relative to a no-action 
baseline reflecting anticipated Federal-income-tax-related behavior in 
the absence of these regulations.
2. Affected Taxpayers
    These proposed regulations could affect both domestic corporations 
and pass-through entities. The IRS Research, Applied Analytics, and 
Statistics Division estimates that there will be 260 facilities 
registering to produce transportation fuel. The Treasury Department and 
the IRS understand that, for many producers, each facility is owned by 
a disregarded entity. Each disregarded entity and qualified subchapter 
S subsidiary (QSub) that has an EIN and is a producer of transportation 
fuel for purposes of section 45Z would need to register as a producer 
of clean fuel for its owner to be eligible to claim the section 45Z 
credit. Therefore, the number of approved registrants is expected to 
exceed the number of facilities and credit claimants, though there is 
uncertainty in the magnitude.
    The DOE estimated that there would be 200 PER applicants per year 
for section 45Z credits in the June 2024 Supporting Statement for 
Lifecycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions Value Analysis: Clean Fuel 
Production Credit. However, due to more recent analysis utilizing the 
actual number of PER requests for the section 45V credit, the estimate 
has been reduced to 30 PER requests in the first year and declining 
over time as more pathways are added to the 45ZCF-GREET model.
3. Summary of Economic Effects
    The proposed regulations define terms, incorporate and clarify 
rules, and provide certainty for taxpayers intending to claim the 
section 45Z credit. In the absence of regulations on the section 45Z 
credit, taxpayers could take differing positions on eligibility or file 
claims for credits that do not meet the statutory criteria. Clearly 
defined terms, rules, and requirements also provide for more efficient 
tax administration, the preservation of tax revenues, accurate filings, 
and the harmonization of rules across multiple tax credits.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS have not undertaken 
quantitative estimates of the economic effects of these proposed 
regulations. The Treasury Department and the IRS do not have readily 
available data or models to estimate with reasonable precision the 
effect on the timing and scale of investment behavior that could result 
from these proposed regulations. In the absence of such quantitative 
estimates, the Treasury Department and the IRS have undertaken a 
qualitative analysis of the economic effects of specific provisions of 
these proposed regulations relative to a no-action baseline.
    The proposed regulations incorporate and implement the statutory 
requirement to publish an emissions rate table by directing the 
identified allowed methodologies for the established type and 
categories of fuel to the 45ZCF-GREET and CORSIA Default and Actual 
models. The emission rate table thus allows taxpayer flexibility by 
reflecting a given taxpayer's specific operations as inputs to the 
appropriate model. The initial emissions rate table provided in the 
Appendix of IRS Notice 2025-11 includes the fuels listed in the table 
below.
BILLING CODE 4831-GV-P

[[Page 5184]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP04FE26.005

BILLING CODE 4831-GV-C
    The statute directs taxpayers to use a gallon equivalent for non-
liquid fuels but does not provide a baseline standard. These proposed 
regulations define ``gallon equivalent'' to mean, with respect to any 
non-liquid fuel, the amount of such fuel that has the energy equivalent 
of a gallon of gasoline, which

[[Page 5185]]

refers to the amount of such fuel that has a Btu content of 116,090 
(lower heating value). The proposed regulations use gasoline as the 
baseline fuel for testing gallon equivalency because gasoline is the 
most common transportation fuel in the United States, and section 45Z 
is designed to incentivize domestic production of transportation fuels 
that may serve as alternatives to existing fossil fuels. According to 
the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), ``in 2023, petroleum 
products accounted for about 89% of total U.S. transportation sector 
energy use. Biofuels contributed about 6%, most of which was blended 
with petroleum fuels (gasoline, diesel fuel, and jet fuel).'' \9\ The 
chart below using data from EIA's Annual Energy Outlook 2025 shows that 
in 2024, motor gasoline made up almost 59% of the total of petroleum 
and other fuels used in transportation. Additionally, in the interest 
of harmonizing rules, the use of a gasoline gallon equivalency is 
consistent with the gasoline gallon equivalent requirement in section 
6426(d)(3), which applies to many of the same types of fuel as section 
45Z in the context of a credit that section 45Z replaces.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \9\ See https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/use-of-energy/transportation.php.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

BILLING CODE 4831-GV-P
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP04FE26.006

BILLING CODE 4831-GV-C
    Other definitions of gallon equivalency were considered, including 
diesel gallon equivalency and ethanol gallon equivalency. These 
definitions would have the effect of decreasing (diesel) or increasing 
(ethanol) the amount of the calculated section 45Z credit without 
changing the characteristics of the fuels eligible for the credits. For 
example, the diesel gallon equivalent of gasoline is 0.88 gallons, 
therefore using a diesel gallon equivalent would generally reduce any 
available credit by 12 percent for non-liquid fuels. Neither of these 
equivalency definitions would have provided the equivalency of the most 
common transportation fuel currently in use nor provided the same 
consistency with the gasoline gallon equivalent requirement in section 
6426(d)(3).
    Non-liquid fuels comprise a small portion of the transportation 
fuel market. Renewable natural gas (RNG) accounted for approximately 84 
percent of the nearly 64 billion cubic feet of all the natural gas used 
as transportation fuel in the United States.\10\ Natural gas, however, 
accounted for less than 1% of total transportation fuel use.\11\ In 
addition, much of the supply for RNG is due to clean fuel programs such 
as the national Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) so a small change in the 
credit rate for non-liquid fuels resulting from a different choice for 
the gallon equivalent for non-liquid fuels is unlikely to have a 
significant effect on overall transportation fuel supply.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \10\ See New Renewable Fuel Standard volume targets facilitate 
renewable natural gas production--U.S. Energy Information 
Administration (EIA).
    \11\ See Alternative Fuels Data Center: Natural Gas Fuel Basics.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To facilitate implementation of a gallon equivalency standard for 
non-liquid fuels, these proposed regulations must specify whether the 
equivalency is based on a lower heating value or a higher heating value 
of the baseline fuel, as the two types of heating values have different 
energy contents. The proposed regulations use a lower heating value 
rather than a higher heating value because it is a better 
representation of the useful energy provided by transportation fuel. To 
provide clarity and to ensure consistency across section 45Z claims, 
the proposed regulations provide the lower heating values of some 
common non-liquid fuels and an example for determining the number of 
gallon equivalents using the listed values.
    Section 45Z requires a transportation fuel, in part, to be suitable 
for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft but does not define 
the term ``suitable for use.'' The proposed regulations define 
``suitable for use'' to mean: (i) that the fuel has practical and 
commercial fitness for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft, 
or (ii) may be blended into a fuel mixture that has practical and 
commercial fitness for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft. 
The proposed regulations further clarify that actual use as a fuel in a 
highway vehicle or aircraft is not required.
    The definition of ``suitable for use'' in these proposed 
regulations is consistent with a plain reading of the statutory

[[Page 5186]]

language. Other options considered include defining ``suitable for 
use'' to require actual use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft. 
Such an interpretation would reduce the amount of fuel eligible for the 
credit and thus constrain the cost of the section 45Z credit. However, 
such an interpretation would not be consistent with a plain reading of 
the statutory language.
    In addition to the suitable for use requirement, section 45Z(a)(4) 
requires a taxpayer to sell transportation fuel to an unrelated person: 
(i) for use by such person in the production of a fuel mixture; (ii) 
for use by such person in a trade or business; or (iii) who sells such 
fuel at retail to another person and places such fuel in the fuel tank 
of such other person. The proposed regulations explicitly clarify that 
the term ``sold for use in a trade or business'' includes fuel sold to 
an unrelated person that subsequently resells the fuel in its trade or 
business. The proposed definition responds to stakeholder concern that 
more restrictive definitions could prevent all fuel sales for resale, 
such as those to intermediary dealers or wholesalers, from qualifying 
for the section 45Z credit.
    Stakeholders explained that, in the fuel industry, many producers 
sell to related or unrelated intermediaries, such as wholesalers or 
dealers, rather than directly to unrelated final purchasers. This 
common practice allows efficient distribution and the availability of 
biofuels across regions of the United States because resellers have the 
infrastructure, capacity, and expertise to deliver fuel where it is 
needed that producers do not.\12\ The proposed regulatory definition 
promotes flexibility while maintaining adherence to the statutory 
language. The proposed regulatory definition reduces the costs to those 
producers who would need to alter their current distribution practices 
to take advantage of the tax credit and therefore creates an incentive 
for more clean fuel production.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \12\ See https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/gasoline/where-our-gasoline-comes-from.php.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In considering the definition of ``sold for use in a trade or 
business,'' the Treasury Department and the IRS evaluated the potential 
for double crediting. To address that concern, the draft regulatory 
text in the Appendix to Notice 2025-10 defined the term ``sold for use 
in a trade or business'' to mean sold for use as a fuel in a trade or 
business within the meaning of section 162 of the Code. The draft term 
did not include a sale for blending or for further processing, 
including use as a primary feedstock to produce another fuel.
    After the publication of Notice 2025-10, OBBBA amended section 
45Z(d)(5)(A) to exclude from the definition of ``transportation fuel'' 
any fuel produced from a fuel for which a section 45Z credit is 
allowable. This revision indicates that a sale for use as a primary 
feedstock to produce another fuel may qualify as a sale for use in a 
trade or business under section 45Z(a)(4)(B). The OBBBA amendment thus 
eliminated the double-crediting potential of transportation fuel used 
for further processing, including use as a primary feedstock to produce 
another fuel. As a result, the proposed definition of ``sold for use in 
a trade or business'' in these proposed regulations responds to 
stakeholder feedback by removing the phrase ``sold for use as a fuel'' 
from the definition without the risk of double crediting for 
transportation fuels.
    Many stakeholders have expressed the urgent need for guidance to 
clarify the scope and mechanics of the PER process. Proposed Sec.  
1.45Z-2(f) implements the statutory language regarding the PER process 
and provide this urgent guidance to taxpayers. The proposed regulations 
provide clarity to taxpayer requests for a PER determination by 
delineating the proper forms and how to file them, as well as 
describing the content required and explaining the manner and effect of 
a PER determination. In addition, the proposed regulations direct 
applicants to follow the DOE's published instructions as well as 
describe common assumptions and the information required by the DOE for 
an EVR. The proposed regulations also harmonize rules for eligible 
fuels that are a category of hydrogen by outlining the interaction 
between the PER processes for the section 45V credit and the section 
45Z credit.
    The certainty provided by these proposed regulations would foster 
consistent treatment across credit claimants, allow taxpayers producing 
eligible transportation fuel to make informed investment decisions, and 
facilitate commercial market transactions with respect to contracts 
between suppliers and buyers.

II. Paperwork Reduction Act

    The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520) (PRA) 
generally requires that a Federal agency obtain the approval of OMB 
before collecting information from the public, whether such collection 
of information is mandatory, voluntary, or required to obtain or retain 
a benefit. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not 
required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays 
a valid control number assigned by the OMB.
    The collections of information in these proposed regulations 
contain reporting, third-party disclosure, and recordkeeping 
requirements that are necessary to ensure that the taxpayer qualifies 
for the clean fuel production credit. The collections will be used by 
the IRS for tax compliance purposes and by taxpayers to ensure the fuel 
qualifies for the credit.
    The proposed regulations describe reporting and recordkeeping that 
are part of the registration requirements, as detailed in proposed 
Sec.  1.4101-1(a), (d), (f), and (g). These collections are used to 
determine whether an applicant meets the requirements to be registered 
under section 4101, a requirement to qualify for the section 45Z 
credit. The registration requirements, including the Form 637, are 
already approved by the OMB under control number 1545-1835 with the PRA 
procedures under 5 CFR 1320.10. The proposed regulations are not 
creating or changing these already approved collections.
    The collections of information in the proposed regulations describe 
reporting related to claiming the clean fuel production credit, as 
detailed in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-6. The burden for these requirements 
is included with Form 7218 and its instructions. The Form 7218 and its 
instructions are already approved by OMB under the following control 
numbers: 1545-0123 for businesses, 1545-0074 for individuals, 1545-0047 
for non-profit organizations, and 1545-0092 for trusts and estates with 
the PRA procedures under 5 CFR 1320.10. The proposed regulations are 
not creating or changing these already approved collections.
    The collections of information in the proposed regulations would 
include reporting requirements that taxpayers claiming the section 45Z 
credit for SAF transportation fuel provide a certification from an 
unrelated person with their Federal income tax return or information 
return for each taxable year for which they claim the section 45Z 
credit as required by section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II) and as detailed in 
proposed Sec.  1.45Z-5. The proposed regulations would also include a 
third-party reporting and disclosure requirement that such a 
certification be prepared and certified by an unrelated person. The 
certification must contain an attestation regarding the taxpayer's 
production of SAF transportation fuel, conflicts of interest, the 
certifier's qualifications, the taxpayer's facility, and documentation 
necessary to substantiate the certification process. The taxpayer must 
submit the

[[Page 5187]]

certification to the IRS by including it with the Form 7218. The burden 
for these requirements is already included within the Form 7218 and its 
instructions. Form 7218 and its instructions are already approved by 
OMB under the following control numbers: 1545-0123 for businesses, 
1545-0074 for individuals, 1545-0047 for tax-exempt organizations, and 
1545-0092 for trusts and estates. The proposed regulations are not 
creating or changing these already approved collections.
    The proposed regulations reference the DOE's process for an 
emissions value applicant (EV applicant) to request an emissions value 
from the DOE that could then be used to file a petition with the 
Secretary for a PER determination as detailed in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-
2. The petition made to IRS will be performed by including the 
calculated emissions value letter obtained from the DOE with Form 7218. 
The burden for the petition to the IRS is already included within the 
Form 7218 and its instructions. Form 7218 and its instructions are 
already approved by OMB under the following control numbers: 1545-0123 
for businesses, 1545-0074 for individuals, 1545-0047 for tax-exempt 
organizations, and 1545-0092 for trusts and estates. The proposed 
regulations would not create or change these already approved 
collections.
    The proposed regulations would describe the collection of 
information associated with the process for taxpayers to request an EV 
from the DOE and is reflected in the DOE's PRA submission relating to 
such process. These proposed regulations would not create or change any 
of the collection requirements submitted by the DOE to OMB for 
approval. Approval of the DOE's PRA submission is pending OMB approval. 
The proposed regulations would not create or change any of the 
collection requirements being approved by OMB under the DOE OMB Control 
Number 1910-NEW.
    The collections of information in the proposed regulations describe 
third-party disclosure and recordkeeping requirements that provide safe 
harbor methods for the substantiation of emissions rates and qualified 
sales, as detailed in proposed Sec.  1.45Z-4. The certificates 
described in the proposed regulations may be used to establish, in 
part, the taxpayer's eligibility for the section 45Z credit and the 
amount of the credit claimed on the taxpayer's return. The burden 
associated with these information collections will be included within 
the following OMB control numbers: 1545-0123 for businesses, 1545-0074 
for individuals, 1545-0047 for tax-exempt organizations, and 1545-0092 
for trusts and estates with the PRA procedures under 5 CFR 1320.10.
    The collections of information in the proposed regulations include 
recordkeeping requirements related to claiming the section 45Z credit. 
A taxpayer would use these records to establish its eligibility for the 
section 45Z credit and the amount of the credit claimed. The 
recordkeeping requirements would include that taxpayers keep records 
about emissions rates, production, and sale. These recordkeeping 
requirements are considered general tax records under Sec.  1.6001-
1(e). For PRA purposes, general tax records are already approved by OMB 
under the following control numbers: 1545-0123 for businesses, 1545-
0074 for individuals, 1545-0047 for non-profit organizations, and 1545-
0092 for trusts and estates.

III. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes 
certain requirements with respect to Federal rules that are subject to 
the notice and comment requirements of section 553(b) of the 
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) and that are likely 
to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities. Unless an agency determines that a proposal is not likely to 
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities, section 603 of the RFA requires the agency to present an 
initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) of the proposed rule. 
The Treasury Department and the IRS have not determined whether the 
proposed rule, when finalized, will likely have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities. This determination 
requires further study. However, because there is a possibility of 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, 
an IRFA is provided in these proposed regulations. The Treasury 
Department and the IRS invite comments on both the number of entities 
affected and the economic impact on small entities.
    Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, this notice of proposed 
rulemaking has been submitted to the Chief Counsel of the Office of 
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comment on its impact 
on small business.

A. Need for and Objectives of the Rule

    The proposed regulations would provide needed guidance for 
taxpayers on eligibility for the section 45Z credit, the amount and 
timing of the section 45Z credit, the use of the 45ZCF-GREET model and 
CORSIA methodologies to determine the lifecycle GHG emissions rates of 
transportation fuel, procedures for petitioning the Secretary for a PER 
determination, requirements for the certification of emissions rates 
for SAF transportation fuel, filing procedures for claiming a section 
45Z credit, and rules for registration under section 4101 for purposes 
of section 45Z.

B. Affected Small Entities

    The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and if 
feasible, an estimate of, the number of small entities that may be 
affected by the proposed regulations, if adopted. The Small Business 
Administration's Office of Advocacy estimates in its 2023 FAQs that 
99.9 percent of American businesses meet the definition of a small 
business. The applicability of these proposed regulations does not 
depend on the size of the business, as defined by the Small Business 
Administration. As described more fully in the preamble to this 
proposed regulation and in this IRFA, sections 45Z, 4101, 6417, and 
6418, and these proposed regulations may affect a variety of different 
businesses across several different industries. Because the potential 
credit claimants can vary widely and the credit first went into effect 
in 2025, it is difficult to estimate at this time the compliance costs 
and quantifiable burdens of these proposed regulations, if any, on 
small businesses. Although there is uncertainty as to the exact number 
of small businesses within this group, the current estimated number of 
taxpayers subject to these proposed regulations is 260 taxpayers of 
which 35 percent are small.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS expect to receive more 
information on the impact on small businesses through comments on these 
proposed regulations and again after taxpayers start using the guidance 
and procedures provided in these proposed regulations to claim the 
section 45Z credit.

C. Impact of the Rules

    The proposed regulations would provide rules for how taxpayers can 
claim the section 45Z credit. Taxpayers that claim the section 45Z 
credit would have administrative costs related to reading and 
understanding the rules as well as recordkeeping and reporting 
requirements because of the certification and Federal income tax return 
or information return requirements. The costs would vary across 
different-sized entities and across the type(s) of

[[Page 5188]]

project(s) in which such entities are engaged.
    To claim a section 45Z credit, a taxpayer producing a 
transportation fuel must determine the lifecycle GHG emissions rate(s) 
for all transportation fuel sold during a taxable year. In general, a 
taxpayer must use the emissions rate table that is in effect on the 
first day of the taxable year in which the taxpayer produces a section 
45Z clean transportation fuel. If an updated emissions rate table is 
published during a taxpayer's taxable year of production, then a 
taxpayer may choose to use the updated emissions rate table. If the 
transportation fuel, pathway, or primary feedstock used by the taxpayer 
to produce such transportation fuel is not included in the applicable 
emissions rate table, the taxpayer must petition the Secretary for a 
PER. As part of the PER petition process, a taxpayer must apply to the 
DOE for an emissions value that it then uses to submit a PER petition.
    To claim a section 45Z credit for SAF transportation fuel, in 
addition to determining the lifecycle GHG emissions rate of the fuel, a 
taxpayer must submit a certification from a qualified certifier 
attesting to the taxpayer's production of SAF transportation fuel, the 
amount of SAF transportation fuel sold by the taxpayer, certain general 
information about the qualified facility at which the SAF 
transportation fuel being certified was produced, conflicts of 
interest, the certifier's qualifications, and documentation necessary 
to substantiate the certification process. Additionally, a taxpayer 
would need to retain records sufficient to establish compliance with 
these proposed regulations for as long as may be relevant.
    Although the Treasury Department and the IRS do not have sufficient 
data to determine precisely the likely extent of the increased costs of 
compliance, the estimated burden of complying with the recordkeeping 
and reporting requirements are described in Part II. of this Special 
Analyses regarding the PRA.

D. Alternatives Considered

    The Treasury Department and the IRS considered alternatives to 
approaches taken in the proposed regulations. The proposed regulations 
were designed to minimize burdens for taxpayers while ensuring that the 
statutory requirements of section 45Z are met. Many of the compliance 
burdens in the proposed regulations are statutory requirements, but in 
an effort to reduce these burdens the Treasury Department and the IRS 
considered and included safe harbors for substantiation of emissions 
rates and substantiation of qualified sales to allow greater certainty 
for taxpayers. Additionally, in providing rules related to the 
information required to be submitted to claim the section 45Z credit, 
the Treasury Department and the IRS considered whether the production 
and sale of SAF transportation fuel could be certified by an unrelated 
person without requiring the unrelated person to possess certain 
qualifications or conflict of interest characteristics. Such an option 
would, however, increase the opportunity for fraud or excessive 
payments under section 45Z.
    Section 45Z(e) authorizes the IRS to issue guidance regarding 
implementation of the section 45Z credit and the determination of clean 
fuel production credits under section 45Z. As described in the preamble 
to these proposed regulations, these proposed rules carry out that 
Congressional intent, as the certification requirements allow the IRS 
to verify the taxpayer's entitlement to the section 45Z credit.
    Comments are requested on the requirements in the proposed 
regulations, including specifically whether there are less burdensome 
alternatives that do not increase the risk of duplication, fraud, or 
improper payments under section 45Z.

E. Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal Rules

    The proposed regulations would not duplicate, overlap, or conflict 
with any relevant Federal rules. As discussed previously, the proposed 
regulations would merely provide procedures and definitions to allow 
taxpayers to claim the section 45Z credit. The Treasury Department and 
the IRS invite comments on identifying and avoiding overlapping, 
duplicative, or conflicting requirements.

IV. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires 
that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits and take certain 
other actions before issuing a final rule that includes any Federal 
mandate that may result in expenditures in any one year by a State, 
local, or Tribal government, in the aggregate, or by the private 
sector, of $100 million (updated annually for inflation). These 
proposed regulations do not include any Federal mandate that may result 
in expenditures by State, local, or Tribal governments, or by the 
private sector, in excess of that threshold.

V. Executive Order 13132: Federalism

    Executive Order 13132 (Federalism) prohibits an agency from 
publishing any rule that has federalism implications if the rule either 
imposes substantial direct compliance costs on State and local 
governments and is not required by statute, or preempts State law, 
unless the agency meets the consultation and funding requirements of 
section 6 of the Executive order. This proposed rule does not have 
federalism implications and does not impose substantial direct 
compliance costs on State and local governments or preempt State law 
within the meaning of the Executive order.

Comments and Public Hearing

    Before these proposed amendments to the regulations are adopted as 
final regulations, consideration will be given to comments regarding 
the notice of proposed rulemaking that are submitted timely to the IRS 
as prescribed in the preamble under the ADDRESSES section. The Treasury 
Department and the IRS request comments on all aspects of the proposed 
regulations. All comments will be made available at https://www.regulations.gov or upon request. Once submitted to the Federal 
eRulemaking Portal, comments cannot be edited or withdrawn.
    A public hearing with respect to this notice of proposed rulemaking 
has been scheduled for May 28, 2026, beginning at 10 a.m. ET, in the 
Auditorium at the Internal Revenue Building, 1111 Constitution Avenue 
NW, Washington, DC. Due to building security procedures, visitors must 
enter at the Constitution Avenue entrance. In addition, all visitors 
must present photo identification to enter the building. Because of 
access restrictions, visitors will not be admitted beyond the immediate 
entrance area more than 30 minutes before the hearing starts. 
Participants may alternatively attend the public hearing by telephone.
    The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3) apply to the public hearing. 
Persons who wish to present oral comments at the public hearing must 
submit an outline of the topics to be discussed and the time to be 
devoted to each topic by April 6, 2026. A period of 10 minutes will be 
allotted to each person for making comments. An agenda showing the 
scheduling of the speakers will be prepared after the deadline for 
receiving outlines has passed. Copies of the agenda will be available 
free of charge at the public hearing. If no outline of the topics to be 
discussed at the public hearing is received by April 6, 2026, the 
public hearing will be cancelled. If the

[[Page 5189]]

public hearing is cancelled, a notice of cancellation of the public 
hearing will be published in the Federal Register.
    Individuals who want to testify in person at the public hearing 
must send an email to [email protected] to have their name(s) 
added to the building access list. The subject line of the email must 
contain the regulation number REG-121244-23 and the language TESTIFY In 
Person. For example, the subject line may say: Request to TESTIFY In 
Person at Hearing for REG-121244-23.
    Individuals who want to testify by telephone at the public hearing 
must send an email to [email protected] to receive the telephone 
number and access code for the public hearing. The subject line of the 
email must contain the regulation number REG-121244-23 and the language 
TESTIFY Telephonically. For example, the subject line may say: Request 
to TESTIFY Telephonically at Hearing for REG-121244-23.
    Individuals who want to attend the public hearing in person without 
testifying must also send an email to [email protected] to have 
their name(s) added to the building access list. The subject line of 
the email must contain the regulation number REG-121244-23 and the 
language ATTEND In Person. For example, the subject line may say: 
Request to ATTEND Hearing In Person for REG-121244-23. Requests to 
attend the public hearing must be received by 5 p.m. ET on May 26, 
2026.
    Individuals who want to attend the public hearing by telephone 
without testifying must also send an email to [email protected] to 
receive the telephone number and access code for the hearing. The 
subject line of the email must contain the regulation number REG-
121244-23 and the language ATTEND Hearing Telephonically. For example, 
the subject line may say: Request to ATTEND Hearing Telephonically for 
REG-121244-23. Requests to attend the public hearing must be received 
by 5 p.m. ET on May 26, 2026.
    Public hearings will be made accessible to people with 
disabilities. To request special assistance during a public hearing, 
please contact the Publications and Regulations Section of the Office 
of Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and Administration) by sending an 
email to [email protected] (preferred) or by telephone at (202) 
317-6901 (not a toll-free number) by May 22, 2026.

Statement of Availability of IRS Documents

    Guidance cited in this preamble is published in the Internal 
Revenue Bulletin and is available from the Superintendent of Documents, 
U.S. Government Publishing Office, Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting 
the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.

Drafting Information

    The principal authors of these proposed regulations are Jennifer 
Golden, Danielle Mayfield, Andrew Clark, and Alexander Scott of the 
Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Energy, Credits, and Excise Tax). 
However, other personnel from the Treasury Department, the DOE, the 
EPA, the USDA, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and the IRS 
participated in their development.

List of Subjects

26 CFR Part 1

    Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

26 CFR Part 48

    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

Proposed Amendments to the Regulations

    Accordingly, the Treasury Department and the IRS propose to amend 
26 CFR parts 1 and 48 as follows:

PART 1--INCOME TAXES

0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 is amended by adding 
entries for Sec. Sec.  1.45Z-1, 1.45Z-2, 1.45Z-4 through 1.45Z-6, 
1.1361-4, and 1.4101-1 in numerical order to read in part as follows:

    Authority:  26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *

* * * * *
    Section 1.45Z-1 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 45Z(b), (d), (e), 
and (f).
    Section 1.45Z-2 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 45Z(b) and (e).
* * * * *
    Section 1.45Z-4 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 45Z(e) and (f).
    Section 1.45Z-5 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 45Z(e) and (f).
    Section 1.45Z-6 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 45Z(e).
* * * * *
    Section 1.1361-4 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 1361(b)(3)(A).
* * * * *
    Section 1.4101-1 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 45Z(e), 4101(a)(1) 
and (c), and 4222(c).
* * * * *

0
Par. 2. Sections 1.45Z-1 through 1.45Z-2 are added to read as follows:


Sec.  1.45Z-1   Clean fuel production credit; definitions.

    (a) Overview. For purposes of section 38 of the Code, the section 
45Z clean fuel production credit is determined under section 45Z of the 
Code and the section 45Z regulations. This section provides an overview 
and definitions that apply for purposes of section 45Z and the section 
45Z regulations. Section 1.45Z-2 provides general rules for determining 
the amount and timing of the section 45Z credit, including rules on the 
emissions factor and the emissions rate for transportation fuels. 
Section 1.45Z-3 provides rules relating to the increased credit amount 
for satisfying prevailing wage and apprenticeship (PWA) requirements. 
Section 1.45Z-4 provides rules on required registration (under section 
4101 of the Code and Sec.  1.4101-1), anti-stacking, anti-abuse, 
production attribution, facility ownership, foreign feedstock and 
prohibited foreign entity restrictions, and recordkeeping and 
substantiation. Section 1.45Z-5 provides procedures for the 
certification of emissions rates. Section 1.45Z-6 provides procedures 
for filing a claim for the section 45Z credit. Section 1.4101-1 
provides the rules for registration under section 4101.
    (b) Definitions. The definitions in this section apply for purposes 
of section 45Z and the section 45Z regulations.
    (1) 45ZCF-GREET model. The term 45ZCF-GREET model means the model 
by that name developed by the Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) and 
published by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) for use in determining 
the amount of lifecycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions for purposes of 
section 45Z. Additional information about the 45ZCF-GREET model is 
available at https://www.energy.gov/eere/greet.
    (2) Applicable amount. The term applicable amount means the 
applicable amount as described in section 45Z(a) and Sec.  1.45Z-
2(a)(4).
    (3) Applicable material. The term applicable material means, 
pursuant to section 45Z(d)(5)(B)(i)--
    (i) Monoglycerides, diglycerides, and triglycerides;
    (ii) Free fatty acids; and
    (iii) Fatty acid esters.
    (4) ASTM. The term ASTM means the standards published by ASTM 
International, formerly known as the American Society for Testing and 
Materials. Additional information about ASTM International is available 
at https://www.astm.org/.
    (5) Biomass. The term biomass means, pursuant to sections 
45Z(d)(5)(B)(ii) and 45K(c)(3), any organic material other than--

[[Page 5190]]

    (i) Oil and natural gas (or any product thereof); and
    (ii) Coal (including lignite) or any product thereof.
    (6) Calculated emissions value letter (CEVL). The term calculated 
emissions value letter or CEVL means the letter issued by the DOE to an 
emissions value (EV) applicant. A CEVL includes the EV that the DOE 
determined with respect to the fuel that is the subject of the EV 
applicant's emissions value request (EVR) and the control number that 
the DOE assigned to the EV applicant's EVR.
    (7) Claim; Form 7218--(i) Claim. The term claim means a completed 
Form 7218, Clean Fuel Production Credit, including all information and 
documentation that the form instructions and the section 45Z 
regulations require, that a taxpayer files with its Federal income tax 
return or Federal information return for the taxable year for which the 
section 45Z credit is determined. The term includes the making of an 
election under section 6417 or section 6418 and the regulations 
thereunder, as applicable, by an applicable entity or eligible 
taxpayer.
    (ii) Form 7218. The term Form 7218 means Form 7218, Clean Fuel 
Production Credit, and any successor form(s). See Sec.  601.602 of this 
chapter.
    (8) CO2e. The term CO2e means, with respect 
to any GHG, the equivalent carbon dioxide (as determined based on 
relative global warming potential). See section 45Z(d)(2).
    (9) Code. The term Code means the Internal Revenue Code.
    (10) CORSIA methodologies--(i) In general. The term CORSIA 
methodologies means the fuel lifecycle methodologies used under Volume 
IV of Annex 16 to the Chicago Convention, Carbon Offsetting and 
Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA), which has been 
adopted by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) with 
the agreement of the United States. See section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(iii)(I). 
Additional information about CORSIA is available at https://www.icao.int/environmental-protection/CORSIA/Pages/default.aspx as of 
February 4, 2026.
    (ii) CORSIA Default; CORSIA Actual. The term CORSIA Default means 
determinations from fuel pathways approved under the CORSIA Default 
Life Cycle Emissions Values for CORSIA Eligible Fuels lifecycle 
approach (CORSIA Default) with the agreement of the United States. The 
term CORSIA Actual means determinations from fuel pathways approved 
under the CORSIA Methodology for Calculating Actual Life Cycle 
Emissions Values lifecycle approach (CORSIA Actual) with the agreement 
of the United States. Additional information about CORSIA Default and 
CORSIA Actual is available at https://www.icao.int/environmental-protection/CORSIA/Pages/CORSIA-Eligible-Fuels.aspx.
    (iii) Agreement of the United States required. The terms CORSIA 
methodologies, CORSIA Default, and CORSIA Actual do not include any 
portion of or any approach within such methodologies to which the 
United States has not agreed. See section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(iii)(I).
    (11) DOE. The term DOE means the United States Department of 
Energy.
    (12) Eligible fuel--(i) In general. The term eligible fuel, for 
purposes of the provisional emissions rate procedures described in 
section 45Z(b)(1)(D) and Sec.  1.45Z-2(f) and the associated 
definitions in this paragraph (b), means a fuel that, for the taxable 
year during which such fuel is produced, is either--
    (A) A type of fuel not included in the applicable emissions rate 
table (as described in Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(2)); or
    (B) If the type of fuel is included in the applicable emissions 
rate table, such fuel's category is not included in the applicable 
emissions rate table.
    (ii) Other requirements. An eligible fuel must also meet the 
requirements of section 45Z(d)(5)(A)(i), (iii), and (iv).
    (13) Emissions factor. The term emissions factor means the 
emissions factor as described in section 45Z(b)(1)(A) and Sec.  1.45Z-
2(c)(1).
    (14) Emissions rate. The term emissions rate means the emissions 
rate for a transportation fuel as described in section 45Z(b)(1)(B) and 
(D) and Sec.  1.45Z-2(d).
    (15) Emissions value (EV). The term emissions value or EV means the 
value obtained from the DOE setting forth the DOE's analytical 
assessment of the lifecycle GHG emissions associated with the 
production of an eligible fuel using a particular primary feedstock and 
pathway.
    (16) EPA. The term EPA means the United States Environmental 
Protection Agency.
    (17) EV applicant. The term EV applicant means a taxpayer 
submitting a request to the DOE for an emissions value for an eligible 
fuel for purposes of obtaining a provisional emissions rate (PER) 
determination as provided in section 45Z(b)(1)(D) and Sec.  1.45Z-2(f).
    (18) Facility--(i) In general. For purposes of the definition of 
qualified facility in section 45Z(d)(4) and paragraph (b)(28) of this 
section, the term facility means a single production line that produces 
a transportation fuel. For this purpose, a single production line 
includes all components that function interdependently to produce a 
transportation fuel through a process that results in the lifecycle GHG 
emissions rate used to determine the credit. Components function 
interdependently to produce a transportation fuel if the use of each 
component is dependent upon the use of each of the other components to 
produce a transportation fuel. A component that functions 
interdependently with other components to produce a transportation fuel 
need not be located in the same building as, or within a certain 
geographic proximity to, the other components. A facility includes 
carbon capture equipment if such carbon capture equipment contributes 
to the lifecycle GHG emissions rate of the transportation fuel for 
which the credit is determined. A single production line includes all 
steps of the production process from the processing of feedstock 
through to the transportation fuel that the taxpayer sells in a 
qualified sale.
    (ii) Certain indirect production and post-production equipment. The 
term facility does not include--
    (A) Equipment that is used to condition, such as equipment used to 
blend transportation fuel into a fuel mixture, pressurize a fuel for 
use in transportation, or transport a transportation fuel beyond the 
point of production; or
    (B) Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(18)(iii) of this section, 
feedstock-related equipment (including production, purification, 
recovery, transportation, or transmission equipment) or electricity 
production equipment used to power the transportation fuel production 
process, including any carbon capture equipment associated with the 
electricity production process.
    (iii) Multipurpose components. Components that have a purpose in 
addition to the production of a transportation fuel may be part of a 
facility if such components function interdependently with other 
components to produce a transportation fuel.
    (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate the definition of 
the term facility.
    (A) Example 1. Effect of geographic proximity; carbon capture 
equipment. Z produces a transportation fuel at a facility that is 
equipped with carbon capture equipment (as defined in Sec.  1.45Q-
2(c)), as distinguished from the carbon capture equipment described in 
paragraph (b)(18)(ii)(B) of this section. One purpose of the equipment 
is to capture carbon oxides. Without the

[[Page 5191]]

carbon capture equipment, the facility could not produce a fuel that 
has an emissions rate that would qualify for the section 45Z credit. 
Because the carbon capture equipment functions interdependently with 
other components to produce the transportation fuel, the carbon capture 
equipment is part of the facility under paragraph (b)(18)(i) of this 
section. The analysis in this example is the same regardless of the 
geographic distance between the carbon capture equipment and the rest 
of the components comprising the facility.
    (B) Example 2. Single production line with components functioning 
interdependently; sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) transportation fuel. 
X produces SAF transportation fuel that is a synthetic blending 
component that meets the requirements of ASTM D7566, Annex A2. X sells 
the SAF transportation fuel to Y, an unrelated person. Y blends the SAF 
transportation fuel with kerosene to create a fuel mixture that 
qualifies as jet fuel under ASTM D7566. X uses equipment and components 
that function interdependently to produce the SAF transportation fuel 
that is sold to Y. X's equipment and components constitute a facility 
for section 45Z purposes. As described in paragraph (b)(18)(ii)(A) of 
this section, Y's equipment and components used to make a 
transportation fuel mixture are blending equipment and are not a 
facility for section 45Z purposes.
    (19) Fuel. The term fuel means any liquid or gaseous substance that 
can be consumed to supply heat or power. Therefore, for purposes of 
section 45Z, the term fuel does not include electricity.
    (20) Gallon equivalent--(i) In general. For purposes of section 
45Z(a)(1)(A), the term gallon equivalent means, with respect to any 
non-liquid fuel, the amount of such fuel that has the energy equivalent 
of a gallon of gasoline, which refers to the amount of such fuel that 
has a British thermal unit (Btu) content of 116,090 (lower heating 
value).
    (ii) Non-liquid fuel. A fuel is considered non-liquid if it is in a 
gaseous state at ambient pressure and temperature of 1 atmosphere and 
60 degrees Fahrenheit, respectively.
    (iii) Calculation--(A) In general. For any non-liquid fuel, the 
gallon equivalent of such fuel is equal to that fuel's lower heating 
value divided by the lower heating value of a gallon of gasoline. 
Expressed mathematically: Gallon equivalent = lower heating value of 
the fuel (measured in Btu) / lower heating value of a gallon of 
gasoline (116,090 Btu).
    (B) Rounding. The gallon equivalent determined under paragraph 
(b)(20)(iii)(A) of this section must be rounded to 5 decimal places.
    (iv) Certain lower heating values. This paragraph (b)(20)(iv) 
provides the lower heating values of some non-liquid fuels.
    (A) The lower heating value of low-GHG compressed conventional or 
alternative natural gas (CANG) is 20,267 Btu per pound.
    (B) The lower heating value of low-GHG dimethyl ether is 12,417 Btu 
per pound.
    (C) The lower heating value of low-GHG hydrogen is 51,585 Btu per 
pound.
    (D) The lower heating value of low-GHG liquefied CANG is 20,908 Btu 
per pound. For this purpose, low-GHG liquefied CANG is a non-liquid 
fuel at ambient pressure and temperature of 1 atmosphere and 60 degrees 
Fahrenheit.
    (E) The lower heating value of low-GHG liquefied petroleum gas 
(LPG) (other than propane from hydroprocessed esters and fatty acids 
(HEFA)) is 19,873 Btu per pound. For this purpose, low-GHG LPG (other 
than propane from HEFA) is a non-liquid fuel at ambient pressure and 
temperature of 1 atmosphere and 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
    (F) The lower heating value of low-GHG LPG (propane from HEFA) is 
18,568 Btu per pound. For this purpose, low-GHG LPG (propane from HEFA) 
is a non-liquid fuel at ambient pressure and temperature of 1 
atmosphere and 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
    (v) Example. X produced 100,000 pounds of low-GHG compressed CANG. 
To determine the number of gallon equivalents of low-GHG compressed 
CANG that X produced, X must divide the lower heating value of low-GHG 
compressed CANG (20,267 Btu per pound), by the lower heating value of a 
gallon of gasoline (116,090 Btu). Rounded to 5 decimal places, on an 
energy equivalent basis, each pound of low-GHG compressed CANG is equal 
to 0.17458 gallon equivalents (20,267 Btu per lb. / 116,090 Btu). Thus, 
X produced 17,458 gallon equivalents (0.17458 gallon equivalents x 
100,000 lbs.) of low-GHG compressed CANG.
    (21) Greenhouse gas (GHG). The term greenhouse gas, or GHG, has the 
same meaning given that term under section 211(o)(1)(G) of the Clean 
Air Act (CAA) (42 U.S.C. 7545(o)(1)(G)), as in effect on August 16, 
2022. See section 45Z(d)(3).
    (22) Lifecycle GHG emissions. The term lifecycle GHG emissions 
means the lifecycle GHG emissions as described in section 211(o)(1)(H) 
of the CAA (42 U.S.C. 7545(o)(1)(H)), as in effect on August 16, 2022. 
See section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i).
    (23) mmBTU. The term mmBTU means 1,000,000 British thermal units. 
See section 45Z(d)(1).
    (24) Non-SAF transportation fuel--(i) In general. The term non-SAF 
transportation fuel means any transportation fuel that is not a SAF 
transportation fuel.
    (ii) Low-GHG non-SAF fuels. This paragraph (b)(24)(ii) provides a 
non-exclusive list of fuels that are not sustainable aviation fuel 
(non-SAF fuels) that may qualify as a transportation fuel, as well as 
descriptions of such fuels. A listed non-SAF fuel that meets the 
applicable description in this paragraph (b)(24)(ii) must also meet all 
the other applicable requirements under section 45Z and the section 45Z 
regulations to qualify as a transportation fuel.
    (A) Low-GHG biodiesel. The term low-GHG biodiesel means the 
monoalkyl esters of long chain fatty acids that meet the specifications 
of ASTM D6751 and that have an emissions rate that is not greater than 
50 kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (B) Low-GHG butanol. The term low-GHG butanol means any mixture of 
n-butyl, sec-butyl, and iso-butyl alcohols that meets the 
specifications of ASTM D7862 and that has an emissions rate that is not 
greater than 50 kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (C) Low-GHG diesel fuel. The term low-GHG diesel fuel means liquid 
fuel, including renewable diesel, that meets the specifications of ASTM 
D975 and that has an emissions rate that is not greater than 50 
kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (D) Low-GHG dimethyl ether. The term low-GHG dimethyl ether, which 
includes renewable dimethyl ether, means a gaseous fuel that meets the 
specifications of ASTM D7901 and that has an emissions rate that is not 
greater than 50 kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (E) Low-GHG ethanol. The term low-GHG ethanol means ethyl alcohol 
that is a liquid fuel that meets the specifications of ASTM D4806 for 
denatured fuel ethanol or ASTM D8651 for undenatured fuel ethanol for 
blending with gasoline and that has an emissions rate that is not 
greater than 50 kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (F) Low-GHG gasoline. The term low-GHG gasoline, which includes 
renewable gasoline, means liquid fuel that meets the specifications of 
ASTM D4814 and that has an emissions rate that is not greater than 50 
kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (G) Low-GHG hydrogen. The term low-GHG hydrogen means any gaseous 
or liquid fuel that meets the requirements of the Society of Automotive 
Engineers

[[Page 5192]]

(SAE) J2719 standard and that has an emissions rate that is not greater 
than 50 kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU. Information about SAE 
standards is available at https://www.sae.org/standards.
    (H) Low-GHG liquefied petroleum gas (LPG). The term low-GHG LPG, 
which includes low-GHG propane, means liquefied gases that meet the 
specifications of ASTM D1835 and that have an emissions rate that is 
not greater than 50 kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (I) Low-GHG methanol. The term low-GHG methanol means a methyl 
alcohol that is a liquid fuel that meets the specifications of ASTM 
D1152 or ASTM D5797 and that has an emissions rate that is not greater 
than 50 kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (J) Low-GHG conventional or alternative natural gas (CANG). The 
term low-GHG CANG, which includes renewable natural gas (RNG), means a 
pipeline-quality compressed or liquefied gas that is interchangeable 
with fossil natural gas, requires only minimal processing (for example, 
further compression or liquefaction), to meet the specifications of 
ASTM D8080, and that has an emissions rate that is not greater than 50 
kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (25) Prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements (PWA 
requirements). The term prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements 
or PWA requirements means the requirements described in section 
45Z(f)(6) and (7) and Sec.  1.45Z-3.
    (26) Producer--(i) In general. Except as provided in paragraph 
(b)(26)(ii) of this section, the term producer means the person that 
engages in the production of a transportation fuel.
    (ii) Alternative natural gas. With respect to alternative natural 
gas, including RNG, the term producer means the person that processes 
the untreated sources of alternative natural gas to remove water, 
carbon dioxide, and other impurities such that it is interchangeable 
with fossil natural gas.
    (iii) Examples. The following examples illustrate the definition of 
the term producer.
    (A) Example 1. SAF producer. X uses vegetable oil to make 10,000 
gallons of a synthetic blending component via a HEFA production pathway 
described in ASTM D7566, Annex A2, that qualifies as a SAF 
transportation fuel. X sells the synthetic blending component to Y, a 
blender that makes a 20,000-gallon SAF blend, consisting of 50 percent 
synthetic blending component and 50 percent petroleum-based kerosene, 
that meets the requirements of ASTM D7566. X and Y are unrelated. X is 
the producer of the 10,000 gallons of synthetic blending component that 
it sold to Y. Y is not the producer of any of the 20,000 gallons of 
fuel that it blended because blending is not production.
    (B) Example 2. RNG producer. X collects biogas from an anaerobic 
digester and processes it into RNG that qualifies as a transportation 
fuel. X sells 10,000 gallon equivalents of RNG to Y, a RNG wholesaler 
and distributer. X injects the 10,000 gallon equivalents of RNG into a 
pipeline. Y removes 10,000 gallon equivalents of CANG from the 
pipeline, further compresses it, and sells it to a municipality that 
uses it to fuel compressed natural gas buses. X and Y are unrelated. X 
is the producer of the 10,000 gallon equivalents of RNG. Y is not the 
producer because Y merely took a post-production transportation fuel 
and further compressed it.
    (27) Production--(i) In general. The term production (except for 
purposes of section 45Z(a)(4)(A) and paragraph (b)(29)(i)(A) of this 
section) means all steps and processes used to make a transportation 
fuel. Production begins with the processing of primary feedstock(s) and 
ends with a transportation fuel ready to be sold in a qualified sale. 
Production must involve substantial processing by the producer to 
create a transportation fuel. Production does not include instances in 
which a person engages in minimal processing, such as creating a fuel 
mixture or, except as provided for CANG in this paragraph (b)(27)(i), 
otherwise engaging in activities that do not result in a chemical 
transformation. In the case of CANG, production includes the act of 
processing the untreated sources of alternative natural gas to remove 
water, carbon dioxide, and other impurities such that it is 
interchangeable with fossil natural gas. Production of CANG does not 
include compressing CANG that is already interchangeable with fossil 
natural gas to a higher pressure. Production does not include instances 
in which a person uses a primary feedstock to produce a fuel that meets 
the same ASTM standard as the primary feedstock. Production must occur 
in the United States, which includes any territory of the United 
States.
    (ii) Examples. The following examples illustrate the definition of 
the term production.
    (A) Example 1. Minimal processing for stabilizing biodiesel; 
production in the United States. X, a domestic corporation, imports 
fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) from Canada that does not meet the ASTM 
D6751 specifications for biodiesel. After importation into the United 
States, X adds a stabilizing additive so that the FAME meets the 
specifications of ASTM D6751. The resulting fuel is ASTM-compliant 
biodiesel that qualifies as a transportation fuel. X has not produced 
the ASTM-compliant biodiesel, as X merely engaged in minimal processing 
by adding an additive to the imported FAME. Further, X did not produce 
the ASTM-compliant biodiesel in the United States, as X did not engage 
in substantial processing in the United States. Substantial processing, 
and thus production, occurred before X imported the FAME into the 
United States.
    (B) Example 2. Minimal processing for dehydrating hydrous ethanol; 
production in the United States. Y, a domestic corporation, imports 
hydrous ethanol from Mexico into the United States. The hydrous ethanol 
has excessive water content and does not meet the ASTM D4806 
specifications for ethanol. After importation into the United States, Y 
reduces the water content of the hydrous ethanol. The resulting fuel is 
ASTM-compliant anhydrous ethanol that qualifies as a transportation 
fuel. Y has not produced the ASTM-compliant anhydrous ethanol, as Y 
merely engaged in minimal processing by dehydrating the imported 
hydrous ethanol. Further, Y did not produce the ASTM-compliant 
anhydrous ethanol in the United States, as Y did not engage in 
substantial processing in the United States. Substantial processing, 
and thus production, occurred before Y imported the hydrous ethanol 
into the United States.
    (C) Example 3. Minimal processing for blending ethanol and 
gasoline. Z, a domestic corporation, buys ethanol that qualifies as a 
transportation fuel and blends the ethanol with gasoline. Z has not 
produced a transportation fuel, as Z merely engaged in minimal 
processing by blending the ethanol with gasoline to create a fuel 
mixture.
    (D) Example 4. Production and subsequent blending by same person. 
Z, a domestic corporation, produces ethanol that qualifies as a 
transportation fuel and then blends the ethanol with gasoline. Z has 
engaged in production of a transportation fuel with respect to the 
ethanol, notwithstanding Z's subsequent blending of the ethanol with 
gasoline. However, Z's blending, alone, does not constitute production, 
as Z engaged in minimal processing by blending the ethanol with 
gasoline to create a fuel mixture.
    (28) Qualified facility--(i) In general. The term qualified 
facility means a facility (as defined in paragraph (b)(18) of this 
section) used to produce transportation fuel and excludes any

[[Page 5193]]

facility for which an anti-stacking credit is allowed under section 38 
for the taxable year. See section 45Z(d)(4). For more information on 
the application of the anti-stacking rules, see Sec.  1.45Z-4(b).
    (ii) Anti-stacking credit. The term anti-stacking credit means any 
one of the following credits listed in section 45Z(d)(4)(B):
    (A) The credit for production of clean hydrogen under section 45V 
(section 45V credit).
    (B) The credit determined under section 46 to the extent that such 
credit is attributable to the energy credit determined under section 48 
with respect to any specified clean hydrogen production facility for 
which an election is made under section 48(a)(15) (section 48(a)(15) 
election).
    (C) The credit for carbon oxide sequestration under section 45Q 
(section 45Q credit).
    (29) Qualified sale--(i) In general. The term qualified sale means 
a sale of transportation fuel in a manner described in section 
45Z(a)(4). The term refers to a sale of transportation fuel by the 
taxpayer to an unrelated person if--
    (A) The fuel is sold for use in the production of a fuel mixture by 
such person;
    (B) The fuel is sold for use in a trade or business by such person; 
or
    (C) Such person sells such fuel at retail to another person and 
places such fuel in the fuel tank of such other person.
    (ii) Sold for use in a trade or business. The term sold for use in 
a trade or business means sold for use in a trade or business, with 
trade or business having the same meaning as in section 162 of the 
Code. The term sold for use in a trade or business includes fuel sold 
to an unrelated person that subsequently resells the fuel in its trade 
or business. The term does not include a sale for blending or a sale to 
a purchaser that sells the fuel at retail to another person and places 
the fuel in the fuel tank of such other person.
    (iii) Sale by another member of a consolidated group. In the case 
of a corporation that is a member of an affiliated group of 
corporations filing a consolidated return (that is, a member of a 
consolidated group (as defined in Sec.  1.1502-1(b) and (h), 
respectively)), that corporation will be treated as selling fuel to an 
unrelated person if that fuel is sold to the unrelated person by 
another member of that consolidated group. See section 45Z(f)(3).
    (iv) Sale by related person (other than another member of a 
consolidated group). Except in the case of a taxpayer described in 
paragraph (b)(29)(iii) of this section, and in accordance with section 
45Z(f)(3), a taxpayer will be treated as selling fuel to an unrelated 
person if such fuel is sold to the unrelated person by a related person 
(within the meaning of section 45Z(f)(3) and paragraph (b)(36) of this 
section).
    (v) Examples. The following examples illustrate the definition of 
the term qualified sale.
    (A) Example 1. Qualified sale for use in a trade or business; 
ethanol to SAF. X produces ethanol and sells the ethanol to Y, an 
unrelated person. As part of its trade or business, Y uses the ethanol 
to produce a synthetic blending component under ASTM D7566, Annex A5 
(ATJ-SPK). Y then blends the synthetic blending component with 
petroleum-based kerosene to make a sustainable aviation fuel mixture. X 
has made a qualified sale of the ethanol to Y under paragraphs 
(b)(29)(i)(B) and (b)(29)(ii) of this section because X sold the 
ethanol for use in Y's trade or business. See paragraphs (b)(34)(iii) 
and (b)(34)(iv)(B) of this section regarding the application of the 
definition of transportation fuel to Y's synthetic blending component.
    (B) Example 2. Qualified sale for use in a trade or business; RNG. 
X produces RNG that qualifies as a transportation fuel and sells the 
RNG to Y, an unrelated intermediary wholesaler and distributor. X 
injects the RNG into a pipeline for resale and distribution by Y. Y's 
business consists of purchasing RNG from different producers, 
distributing it through a pipeline, and reselling it to customers who 
may be dealers, distributors, retailers, or end users of fuel. Y 
subsequently resells X's RNG as part of Y's business. X has made a 
qualified sale of the RNG to Y under paragraphs (b)(29)(i)(B) and 
(b)(29)(ii) of this section because X sold the RNG for use in Y's trade 
or business.
    (C) Example 3. Qualified sale made through another member of 
consolidated group. X, a fuel producer, and Y, an intermediary dealer, 
are members of an affiliated group of corporations filing a 
consolidated return. X produces transportation fuel and sells the fuel 
to Y. Y resells the fuel to Z, an unrelated person. Z then sells the 
fuel at retail to a customer and places the fuel in the customer's fuel 
tank. X is treated as selling the fuel to Z under paragraph 
(b)(29)(iii) of this section. X has made a qualified sale of the fuel 
to Z under paragraph (b)(29)(i)(C) of this section.
    (D) Example 4. Qualified sale made through related person (other 
than another member of consolidated group). Same facts as in paragraph 
(b)(29)(v)(C) of this section (Example 3), except that X and Y are non-
corporate entities under common control and would be treated as a 
single employer under the regulations prescribed under section 52(b) of 
the Code. X and Y are thus related persons within the meaning of 
section 45Z(f)(3) and paragraph (b)(36) of this section. X is treated 
as selling the fuel to Z under paragraph (b)(29)(iv) of this section. X 
has made a qualified sale of the fuel to Z under paragraph 
(b)(29)(i)(C) of this section.
    (E) Example 5. Qualified sale by taxpayer that produces and 
subsequently blends a fuel. X produces 9,000 gallons of renewable 
diesel that qualifies as a transportation fuel. After production, X 
blends the 9,000 gallons of renewable diesel with 1,000 gallons of 
petroleum-based diesel fuel that does not qualify as a transportation 
fuel. X sells the resulting 10,000-gallon fuel blend to an unrelated 
person for use in that person's trade or business. X has made a 
qualified sale of the 9,000 gallons of renewable diesel, as part of the 
fuel blend, under paragraphs (b)(29)(i)(B) and (b)(29)(ii) of this 
section.
    (30) SAF transportation fuel--(i) In general. The term SAF 
transportation fuel means sustainable aviation fuel as defined in 
section 45Z(a)(3). That term means the non-kerosene portion of any 
liquid fuel that is a transportation fuel, is sold for use in an 
aircraft, and:
    (A) Meets the requirements of--
    (1) ASTM D7566; or
    (2) The Fischer Tropsch (FT) provisions of ASTM D1655, Annex A1; 
and
    (B) Is not derived from palm fatty acid distillates or petroleum.
    (ii) Synthetic blending component. The term synthetic blending 
component means the SAF portion of a fuel mixture described in ASTM 
D7566 that meets the specifications of one of the ASTM D7566 Annexes 
and is not derived from palm fatty acid distillates or petroleum.
    (iii) Sold for use in an aircraft. A synthetic blending component 
sold to a person that blends the fuel into a fuel mixture described in 
ASTM D7566 is sold for use in an aircraft within the meaning of section 
45Z(a)(3) and paragraph (b)(30)(i) of this section.
    (iv) FT hydrocarbons. The term FT hydrocarbons means the FT 
hydrocarbons that are derived from biomass, used to produce jet fuel 
described in section A1.2.2.2 of ASTM D1655, Annex A1, and not derived 
from palm fatty acid distillates or petroleum.
    (v) ASTM D7566 Annexes. The term ASTM D7566 Annexes means any of 
the annexes in ASTM D7566 that provide the specifications for a pathway 
to create a synthetic blending component

[[Page 5194]]

that can be blended with ASTM D1655-compliant kerosene.
    (vi) ASTM D1655, Annex A1. The term ASTM D1655, Annex A1 means the 
FT provisions of ASTM D1655, Annex A1 that are contained in section 
A1.2.2.2, which provides a pathway for coprocessing up to five percent 
of FT hydrocarbons with petroleum to make a liquid fuel that qualifies 
as jet fuel. For purposes of this definition, the term petroleum 
includes any conventionally sourced hydrocarbons permitted under ASTM 
D1655, Annex A1. Liquid fuel produced in accordance with section 
A1.2.2.1 of ASTM D1655, Annex A1 does not qualify for the section 45Z 
credit because section A1.2.2.1 defines a pathway for producing a 
liquid fuel from coprocessing an applicable material (or materials 
derived therefrom) with a non-biomass feedstock. See section 
45Z(d)(5)(A)(iii).
    (31) Secretary; IRS--(i) Secretary. The term Secretary means the 
Secretary of the Treasury or the Secretary's delegate. See section 
7701(a)(11)(B).
    (ii) IRS. The term IRS means the Internal Revenue Service.
    (32) Section 45Z credit. The term section 45Z credit means the 
clean fuel production credit determined under section 45Z of the Code 
and the section 45Z regulations.
    (33) Section 45Z regulations. The term section 45Z regulations 
means the regulations in this section, Sec. Sec.  1.45Z-2 through 
1.45Z-6, and 1.4101-1.
    (34) Transportation fuel--(i) In general. The term transportation 
fuel means, pursuant to section 45Z(d)(5)(A), a fuel that--
    (A) Is suitable for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft;
    (B) Has an emissions rate that is not greater than 50 kilograms of 
CO2e per mmBTU;
    (C) Is not derived from coprocessing an applicable material (or 
materials derived from an applicable material) with a feedstock that is 
not biomass; and
    (D) Is not produced from a fuel for which a section 45Z credit is 
allowable.
    (ii) Suitable for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft 
(suitable for use)--
    (A) In general. A fuel is suitable for use as a fuel in a highway 
vehicle or aircraft (suitable for use) if the fuel has practical and 
commercial fitness for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft, 
or may be blended into a fuel mixture that has practical and commercial 
fitness for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or aircraft. A fuel may 
possess this practical and commercial fitness even though use in a 
highway vehicle or aircraft is not the fuel's predominant use. However, 
a fuel does not possess this practical and commercial fitness solely by 
reason of its possible or rare use as a fuel in a highway vehicle or 
aircraft. A fuel is suitable for use at the point at which no further 
production, refinement, or other step is necessary before the fuel may 
be sold in a qualified sale, except, as specified in paragraph 
(b)(34)(ii)(B) of this section, for CANG. To be considered suitable for 
use, a fuel need not actually be used as a fuel in a highway vehicle or 
aircraft.
    (B) CANG. CANG is suitable for use once it is produced so that it 
is interchangeable with fossil natural gas and would require only 
minimal processing (for example, further compression or liquefaction) 
to meet the specifications of ASTM D8080.
    (C) Fuels not requiring further processing. A fuel that does not 
require further processing and that may be blended with or used as a 
component of taxable fuel (within the meaning of section 4083 of the 
Code) is suitable for use.
    (iii) Produced from a fuel for which a section 45Z credit is 
allowable. A fuel is produced from a fuel for which a section 45Z 
credit is allowable if a primary feedstock of the fuel meets the 
definition of a transportation fuel under paragraph (b)(34)(i) of this 
section, without regard to paragraph (b)(34)(i)(D) of this section.
    (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate the definition of 
the term transportation fuel.
    (A) Example 1. Suitable for use. X produces diesel fuel that has 
practical and commercial fitness for use as a fuel in a highway vehicle 
or aircraft. The diesel fuel meets the description of low-GHG diesel 
fuel in paragraph (b)(24)(ii)(C) of this section, and no further 
production, refinement, or other step is necessary before the fuel may 
be sold in a qualified sale. X sells the diesel fuel to a purchaser 
that uses it as marine diesel fuel. X's diesel fuel satisfies the 
suitable for use standard under paragraph (b)(34)(ii) of this section, 
notwithstanding that the diesel fuel ultimately is not used in a 
highway vehicle or aircraft.
    (B) Example 2. Produced from a fuel for which a section 45Z credit 
is allowable. Y buys ethanol and uses it as a primary feedstock to 
produce a synthetic blending component under ASTM D7566, Annex A5 (ATJ-
SPK). The ethanol meets the definition of a transportation fuel under 
paragraph (b)(34)(i) of this section. Under paragraph (b)(34)(iii) of 
this section, Y has produced the synthetic blending component from a 
fuel for which a section 45Z credit is allowable. Y's synthetic 
blending component is not a transportation fuel for purposes of section 
45Z.
    (35) Types and categories of transportation fuel. As used in 
section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i), the term type of transportation fuel refers to 
a particular kind of transportation fuel. For example, ethanol is one 
type of transportation fuel. As used in section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(i), the 
term category of transportation fuel means the unique primary feedstock 
and pathway (also known as production process) used to produce a type 
of transportation fuel. For example, fermentation of U.S. corn starch 
is one category of ethanol.
    (36) Unrelated person. The term unrelated person means a person not 
related to the taxpayer. The term has the same meaning as the term 
unrelated party for purposes of the certification required by section 
45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II)(aa). Persons are treated as related to each other 
if such persons would be treated as a single employer under the 
regulations prescribed under section 52(b) of the Code. See section 
45Z(f)(3).
    (c) Applicability date. This section applies to qualified sales 
occurring in taxable years ending on or after [date of publication of 
final regulations in the Federal Register].


Sec.  1.45Z-2   General rules.

    (a) Amount of credit--(1) In general. For purposes of section 38, 
the section 45Z credit for any taxable year, with respect to a given 
transportation fuel, is an amount equal to the product of--
    (i) The applicable amount for such fuel;
    (ii) The total gallons or gallon equivalents of such fuel that 
were--
    (A) Produced by the taxpayer at a qualified facility; and
    (B) Sold by the taxpayer in a qualified sale during the taxable 
year; and
    (iii) The emissions factor for such fuel.
    (2) Determination of whether fuel is liquid or non-liquid; 
measurement. Whether a fuel is liquid or non-liquid is determined 
according to Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(20)(ii). The volume of a liquid fuel is 
measured on the basis of gallons adjusted to ambient pressure and 
temperature of 1 atmosphere and 60 degrees Fahrenheit. The gallon 
equivalent of a non-liquid fuel is calculated according to Sec.  1.45Z-
1(b)(20)(iii).
    (3) Calculation rules--(i) Rounding. If the amount of any section 
45Z credit, as calculated under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, is 
not a multiple of one cent, a taxpayer must round such amount to the 
nearest cent. A taxpayer must round up any amount ending in 0.5 cents 
or more

[[Page 5195]]

and round down any amount ending in less than 0.5 cents.
    (ii) Pro rata allocation required for sales of transportation fuel 
in common storage--(A) In general. If a taxpayer sells transportation 
fuel that is held in common storage with other fuels that have 
different emissions rates, the taxpayer is treated as selling a pro 
rata portion of each fuel produced after December 31, 2024, and held in 
such common storage. As described in Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(27), the blending 
of fuels while such fuels are held in common storage does not 
constitute production of a transportation fuel with a distinct 
emissions rate.
    (B) Example. In 2025, X produces 1,000,000 gallons of ethanol at 
three different facilities: 200,000 gallons, or 20%, at Facility 1; 
250,000 gallons, or 25%, at Facility 2; and 550,000 gallons, or 55%, at 
Facility 3. The ethanol produced at Facility 1 has an emissions factor 
of 0.5. The ethanol produced at Facility 2 has an emissions factor of 
0.1. The ethanol produced at Facility 3 is not a transportation fuel 
and no section 45Z credit may be determined with respect to it. X 
places 1,000,000 gallons of ethanol in common storage tanks. In 2025, X 
sells 600,000 gallons of ethanol from the common storage tanks in 
qualified sales. Of the 600,000 gallons sold, 120,000 gallons (20%) are 
allocated to Facility 1, 150,000 gallons (25%) are allocated to 
Facility 2, and 330,000 gallons (55%) are allocated to Facility 3. X 
otherwise satisfies the requirements of the section 45Z credit, and 
Facility 1 and 2 satisfy the prevailing wage and apprenticeship (PWA) 
requirements. Therefore, X's section 45Z credit amount is calculated as 
follows: ($1.06 x 120,000 x 0.5) + ($1.06 x 150,000 x 0.1) = ($127,200 
x 0.5) + ($159,000 x 0.1) = $63,600 + $15,900 = $79,500. The result 
does not change if ethanol produced before January 1, 2025, was also in 
the common storage tanks.
    (4) Applicable amount--(i) In general. The applicable amount is 
either the base amount for transportation fuel produced at a qualified 
facility that does not satisfy the PWA requirements, or the alternative 
amount for transportation fuel produced at a qualified facility that 
satisfies the PWA requirements. The applicable amount is subject to 
inflation adjustment for calendar years beginning after 2024, as 
described in paragraph (a)(4)(iv) of this section.
    (ii) Base amount. The base amount is either--
    (A) For transportation fuel produced on or before December 31, 
2025, 20 cents for transportation fuel which is not sustainable 
aviation fuel (non-SAF transportation fuel) and 35 cents for SAF 
transportation fuel; or
    (B) For transportation fuel produced after December 31, 2025, 20 
cents.
    (iii) Alternative amount. The alternative amount is either--
    (A) For transportation fuel produced on or before December 31, 
2025, $1.00 for non-SAF transportation fuel and $1.75 for SAF 
transportation fuel; or
    (B) For transportation fuel produced after December 31, 2025, 
$1.00.
    (iv) Inflation adjustment--(A) In general. For calendar years 
beginning after 2024, the applicable amount for any transportation fuel 
is adjusted by multiplying such amount by the inflation adjustment 
factor for the calendar year in which the qualified sale of the 
transportation fuel occurs. If any inflation adjusted amount is not a 
multiple of one cent, such amount will be rounded to the nearest 
multiple of one cent. See section 45Z(c)(1). A taxpayer must round up 
any amount ending in 0.5 cents or higher and round down any amount 
ending in less than 0.5 cents.
    (B) Inflation adjustment factor. The term inflation adjustment 
factor means the inflation adjustment factor determined and published 
by the Secretary of the Treasury or the Secretary's delegate 
(Secretary) pursuant to section 45Y(c) of the Code, determined by 
substituting ``calendar year 2022'' for ``calendar year 1992'' in 
section 45Y(c)(3). See section 45Z(c)(2). Accordingly, the inflation 
adjustment factor is, with respect to a calendar year, a fraction whose 
numerator is the gross domestic product (GDP) implicit price deflator 
for the preceding calendar year and whose denominator is the GDP 
implicit price deflator for the calendar year 2022. The term GDP 
implicit price deflator means the most recent revision of the implicit 
price deflator for the GDP as computed and published by the Department 
of Commerce before March 15 of the calendar year. See section 
45Y(c)(3).
    (C) Publication of inflation adjustment factor. The Secretary will 
publish guidance in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (see Sec.  601.601 of 
this chapter) no more frequently than annually that will provide the 
inflation adjustment factor.
    (b) Timing of credit--(1) In general. A taxpayer is eligible to 
claim the section 45Z credit only for the taxable year in which the 
qualified sale of a transportation fuel occurs, provided the taxpayer 
meets all other requirements to claim the credit.
    (2) Credit not allowed for production before January 1, 2025. The 
section 45Z credit is not allowed for transportation fuel produced 
before January 1, 2025.
    (3) Qualified sale timing--(i) Production. Production of a 
transportation fuel may take place in an earlier taxable year than the 
taxable year in which the qualified sale of such fuel occurs. However, 
a qualified sale cannot take place before the date the fuel is 
produced.
    (ii) Sale to unrelated person. A qualified sale occurs at the time 
of the sale to the unrelated person. If a taxpayer is treated as 
selling transportation fuel to an unrelated person under Sec.  1.45Z-
1(b)(29)(iii) or (iv) (involving sales by related persons), the 
qualified sale occurs at the time the related person sells the fuel to 
an unrelated person.
    (iii) Example of qualified sale timing for member of consolidated 
group. X, a fuel producer, and Y, an intermediary dealer, are members 
of an affiliated group of corporations filing a consolidated return. 
The affiliated group, including X and Y, uses the calendar year as its 
taxable year. In 2025, X produces transportation fuel and sells the 
fuel to Y. In 2026, Y resells the fuel to Z, an unrelated person. Z 
then sells the fuel at retail to a customer and places the fuel in the 
customer's fuel tank. For purposes of section 45Z, X is treated as 
selling the fuel to Z under Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(29)(iii) and has made a 
qualified sale. X's qualified sale to Z occurs in 2026 when Y sells the 
fuel to Z. Thus, X may only claim a section 45Z credit for that fuel 
for the 2026 taxable year (assuming all other requirements for the 
section 45Z credit are met).
    (c) Emissions factor--(1) In general. Under section 45Z(b)(1)(A), 
the emissions factor of a transportation fuel is an amount equal to the 
quotient of--
    (i) An amount equal to--
    (A) 50 kilograms (kg) of equivalent carbon dioxide 
(CO2e) per 1,000,000 British thermal units (mmBTU); minus
    (B) The emissions rate for such fuel; divided by--
    (ii) 50 kg of CO2e per mmBTU.
    (2) Rounding--(i) In general. If the emissions factor of a 
transportation fuel is not a multiple of 0.1, a taxpayer must round 
such amount to the nearest multiple of 0.1. A taxpayer must round up if 
the digit in the hundredths place is a 5 or higher, and round down if 
the digit in the hundredths place is less than 5.
    (ii) Example. Y produces a transportation fuel with an emissions 
rate of 21.25 kg of CO2e per mmBTU. The emissions factor of 
Y's fuel is initially calculated as follows: (50-21.25) / 50 = 0.575. 
0.575 is not a multiple of 0.1, so Y must round the

[[Page 5196]]

emissions factor to the nearest multiple of 0.1. Thus, the emissions 
factor of Y's fuel is 0.6. If instead the emissions rate of Y's fuel 
were 23 kg of CO2e per mmBTU, resulting in an initial 
calculation of the emissions factor as 0.54, Y must round the emissions 
factor down to 0.5.
    (d) Emissions rate--(1) In general. The emissions rate for a 
transportation fuel is such fuel's lifecycle greenhouse gas (GHG) 
emissions expressed as kg of CO2e per mmBTU, either as 
established in the applicable emissions rate table published by the 
Secretary (pursuant to section 45Z(b)(1)(B) and paragraph (e) of this 
section), or, in the case of any transportation fuel for which an 
emissions rate has not been established in the applicable emissions 
rate table, a provisional emissions rate (PER) determined by the 
Secretary with respect to such fuel (pursuant to section 45Z(b)(1)(D) 
and paragraph (f) of this section).
    (2) Negative emissions rates--(i) In general. The emissions rate of 
a transportation fuel produced after December 31, 2025, may not be less 
than zero (with a resulting emissions factor greater than one), unless 
such fuel is produced from a primary feedstock that is an animal 
manure. This limitation also applies to any transportation fuel (as 
defined in Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(34)) used as a production input.
    (ii) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules 
regarding negative emissions rates.
    (A) Example 1. Prohibition of negative emissions rate except for 
transportation fuel produced from animal manure. In 2026, X produces 
renewable natural gas (RNG) by anaerobic digestion and biogas upgrading 
of an animal manure, and Y produces RNG by anaerobic digestion and 
biogas upgrading of landfill gas. The emissions rates of X's and Y's 
fuels are both, without further adjustment, -10 kg of CO2e 
per mmBTU. X's fuel is produced from animal manure, so no adjustment of 
the emissions rate is necessary and the emissions factor for X's fuel 
is 1.2. However, because Y's fuel is not produced from animal manure, 
the emissions rate for Y's fuel must be adjusted up to 0, so the 
emissions factor for Y's fuel is 1.0.
    (B) Example 2. Prohibition of negative emissions rate for 
transportation fuel used as production input. In 2026, Z produces 
ethanol by fermentation of U.S. corn starch. As part of the ethanol 
production process, Z buys alternative natural gas and uses it as 
process fuel. The alternative natural gas meets the definition of a 
transportation fuel under Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(34) and has an emissions 
rate of -100 kg of CO2e per mmBTU. However, the alternative 
natural gas is not derived from animal manure and serves only as a 
process fuel, not the primary feedstock (see Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(34)(iii), 
Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(35), and paragraph (e) of this section), for Z's 
ethanol. For purposes of accounting for the alternative natural gas 
when calculating the emissions rate for Z's ethanol, Z must adjust the 
emissions rate of the alternative natural gas up to 0 kg of 
CO2e per mmBTU.
    (3) Indirect land use change excluded. For transportation fuel 
produced after December 31, 2025, the emissions rate of a fuel does not 
include any emissions attributed to indirect land use change. See 
section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(iv).
    (e) Emissions rate table--(1) In general. As required by section 
45Z(b)(1)(B)(i), the Secretary will annually publish a table that 
establishes the emissions rate for similar types and categories of 
transportation fuels (as defined in Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(35)) based on the 
lifecycle GHG emissions for such fuels expressed as kg of 
CO2e per mmBTU (emissions rate table), which a taxpayer must 
use for purposes of the section 45Z credit. The emissions rate table 
for each calendar year will be published in the Internal Revenue 
Bulletin (see Sec.  601.601 of this chapter). A taxpayer must use the 
applicable emissions rate table as specified in paragraph (e)(2) of 
this section.
    (2) Applicable emissions rate table--(i) In general. For taxable 
years beginning after December 31, 2024, the applicable emissions rate 
table for a taxpayer is the emissions rate table that is in effect on 
the first day of the taxpayer's taxable year of production. For 
production after December 31, 2024, in taxable years beginning before 
January 1, 2025, the applicable emissions rate table is the emissions 
rate table effective for 2025.
    (ii) Use of applicable emissions rate table. A taxpayer that 
produces a fuel for which the applicable emissions rate table 
establishes an emissions rate must use the corresponding allowed 
methodologies, as specified in paragraph (e)(3) of this section, 
provided in such table to determine the emissions rate for all such 
fuel produced during the taxpayer's taxable year.
    (iii) Emissions rate established in emissions rate table--(A) In 
general. An emissions rate table establishes the emissions rate for a 
fuel if the emissions rate table includes both the type and category of 
fuel. An emissions rate table does not establish the emissions rate for 
a fuel if such table includes the type but not the category of fuel.
    (B) Effect of additions to methodology. If an emissions rate table 
does not initially include a type or category of fuel but an allowed 
methodology is updated to add such type or category of fuel during the 
calendar year, then that type or category of fuel will be considered 
included in such emissions rate table.
    (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules 
regarding the applicable emissions rate table.
    (A) Example 1. General rule for identifying applicable emissions 
rate table. X, a calendar year taxpayer, is a fuel producer. In 2025, X 
produces biodiesel by transesterification of U.S. soybean oil. The 
emissions rate table for calendar year 2025 includes both biodiesel, 
the type of fuel X produces, and transesterification of U.S. soybean 
oil, the category of biodiesel X produces. Therefore, the emissions 
rate table for calendar year 2025 establishes the emissions rate for 
X's biodiesel and is the applicable emissions rate table for all of X's 
production of such biodiesel in 2025.
    (B) Example 2. Type or category of fuel added to allowed 
methodology. Y, a calendar year taxpayer, is a fuel producer. In 2025, 
Y produces biodiesel by transesterification of Canadian soybean oil. 
The emissions rate table for calendar year 2025 includes the type of 
fuel Y produces, biodiesel. However, the 2025 emissions rate table for 
calendar year 2025 does not include transesterification of Canadian 
soybean oil, the category of biodiesel Y produces. The initial version 
of the 45ZCF-GREET model, an allowed methodology, released January 15, 
2025, also includes the type but not the category of fuel Y produces. 
On June 1, 2025, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) publicly releases 
an updated version of the 45ZCF-GREET model that adds the 
transesterification of Canadian soybean oil for biodiesel. Because the 
update to the 45ZCF-GREET model adds the category of biodiesel Y 
produces during the calendar year, the emissions rate table for 
calendar year 2025 is considered to include the category of fuel Y 
produces. As such, the emissions rate table for calendar year 2025 
establishes the emissions rate for Y's biodiesel and is the applicable 
emissions rate table for all of Y's production of such biodiesel in 
2025.
    (3) Allowed methodologies for emissions rate table--(i) In general. 
A taxpayer producing a fuel for which an emissions rate is established 
by the applicable emissions rate table must determine the fuel's 
emissions rate using the methodologies allowed under paragraphs 
(e)(3)(iv) and (v) of this

[[Page 5197]]

section (allowed methodologies or allowed methodology), as directed by 
the applicable emissions rate table.
    (ii) Use of most recent version of allowed methodology--(A) In 
general. A taxpayer must use the first version of an allowed 
methodology that is publicly available in the taxable year of 
production and that includes the type and category of such fuel (most 
recent version of an allowed methodology). If an allowed methodology is 
updated with respect to an included type or category of fuel and such 
updated methodology becomes publicly available after the first day of 
the taxable year of production but still within such taxable year, then 
the taxpayer may, at its discretion, treat such updated version as the 
most recent version of such methodology.
    (B) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules regarding 
allowed methodologies.
    (1) Example 1. Choice after methodology update. X, a calendar year 
taxpayer, is a fuel producer. In 2025, X produces biodiesel by 
transesterification of U.S. soybean oil. The 2025 emissions rate table 
is the applicable emissions rate table; it identifies the 45ZCF-GREET 
model as the only allowed methodology. The initial version of the 
45ZCF-GREET model, released January 15, 2025, includes the type and 
category of the fuel X produces. On June 1, 2025, the DOE publicly 
releases a version of the 45ZCF-GREET model that updates the 
transesterification pathway. Under paragraph (e)(3)(ii)(A) of this 
section, X may use either the January 15, 2025, or the June 1, 2025, 
version of the 45ZCF-GREET model to calculate the emissions rate for 
all biodiesel produced using such pathway in 2025.
    (2) Example 2. Addition of type or category of fuel to methodology 
without further updates. Y, a calendar year taxpayer, is a fuel 
producer. In 2025, Y produces biodiesel by transesterification of 
Canadian soybean oil. The initial version of the 45ZCF-GREET model, 
released January 15, 2025, includes the type, but not the category, of 
fuel Y produces. On June 1, 2025, the DOE publicly releases an updated 
version of the 45ZCF-GREET model that adds the transesterification of 
Canadian soybean oil for biodiesel. As such, the 2025 emissions rate 
table is considered to include Y's type and category of fuel; it 
identifies the 45ZCF-GREET model as the only allowed methodology. Under 
paragraph (e)(3)(ii)(A) of this section, because the June 1, 2025, 
version of the 45ZCF-GREET model is the first publicly available 
version that includes Y's type and category of fuel, Y must use the 
June 1, 2025, version of the 45ZCF-GREET model to calculate the 
emissions rate for all biodiesel it produced by transesterification of 
Canadian soybean oil in 2025.
    (3) Example 3. Choice of methodology after addition of type or 
category of fuel to methodology. Same facts as in paragraph 
(e)(3)(ii)(B)(2) of this section (Example 2), except that on September 
1, 2025, the DOE publicly releases a version of the 45ZCF-GREET model 
that updates the transesterification of Canadian soybean oil pathway. 
Under paragraph (e)(3)(ii)(A) of this section, Y cannot use the January 
15, 2025, version of the 45ZCF-GREET model, but may use either the June 
1, 2025, or the September 1, 2025, version of the 45ZCF-GREET model to 
calculate the emissions rate for all biodiesel it produced using such 
pathway in 2025.
    (iii) 45ZCF-GREET model as a successor model--(A) In general. For 
purposes of section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(ii), the 45ZCF-GREET model is a 
successor model.
    (B) Certain emissions accounting rules--(1) In general. In the 
45ZCF-GREET model, for purposes of accounting for emissions associated 
with hydrogen (as a production input), natural gas alternatives (as a 
production input or as the transportation fuel produced), electricity, 
and carbon capture and sequestration, rules similar to the rules under 
section 45V of the Code apply, unless otherwise specified by the 45ZCF-
GREET model with respect to technical modeling issues that are 
subsequently identified by the DOE or technical differences arising 
from the application of the section 45V rules to the 45ZCF-GREET model.
    (2) Similar rule for use of energy attribute certificates (EACs); 
incrementality. With respect to the use of an EAC within the 45ZCF-
GREET model, rules similar to Sec.  1.45V-4(d) apply. When applying the 
incrementality rules in Sec.  1.45V-4(d)(3)(i) for purposes of the 
45ZCF-GREET model, a taxpayer's facility is considered placed in 
service in the first taxable year it produces a transportation fuel. 
Thus, the electricity-generating facility that produced the unit of 
electricity to which the EAC relates must have a commercial operations 
date (COD) that is no more than 36 months before the first day of the 
taxable year that the facility for which the EAC is retired first 
produced a transportation fuel, or, if the electricity represented by 
the EAC is produced by an electricity-generating facility that uses 
carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) technology, such technology has 
a placed in service date that is no more than 36 months before the 
first day of the taxable year that the facility for which the EAC is 
retired first produced a transportation fuel.
    (3) Example. Similar incrementality rules applied to existing fuel 
production facility. X owns and operates Facility, which has produced 
ethanol by fermentation of U.S. corn starch since 2002. On January 1, 
2024, X finishes upgrading Facility, so that the ethanol produced at 
Facility has an emissions rate that is less than 50 kg of 
CO2e per mmBTU. For purposes of accounting for emissions 
associated with electricity, X purchases and retires EACs and uses 
those EACs when calculating the emissions rate of its ethanol. Although 
Facility has been operating since 2002, it only began producing a 
transportation fuel on January 1, 2024. For purposes of applying the 
incrementality rules to EACs used within the 45ZCF-GREET model, 
Facility is considered placed in service on January 1, 2024. Thus, an 
electricity generating facility that produced a unit of electricity to 
which the EACs relate must have a COD no earlier than January 1, 2021.
    (iv) Methodology for non-SAF transportation fuel. If the applicable 
emissions rate table establishes the emissions rate for a non-SAF 
transportation fuel, then a taxpayer producing such fuel must determine 
the fuel's emissions rate using the 45ZCF-GREET model, as directed by 
the applicable emissions rate table.
    (v) Methodologies for SAF transportation fuel. If the applicable 
emissions rate table establishes the emissions rate for a SAF 
transportation fuel, then a taxpayer producing such fuel must determine 
the fuel's emissions rate using the most recent version of the Carbon 
Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA) 
Default Life Cycle Emissions Values for CORSIA Eligible Fuels lifecycle 
approach (CORSIA Default) or the CORSIA Methodology for Calculating 
Actual Life Cycle Emissions Values lifecycle approach (CORSIA Actual) 
(as described in Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(10)(ii)), or the 45ZCF-GREET model, 
as directed by the applicable emissions rate table. A taxpayer may 
choose, for each type and category of SAF transportation fuel that it 
produces, which of these methodologies to use. For a given type and 
category of SAF transportation fuel, a taxpayer must use the same 
methodology to calculate lifecycle GHG emissions associated with all 
stages of SAF production, from feedstock production through 
distribution. See Sec.  1.45Z-5, Procedures for certification of 
lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rates, for information on how to 
certify compliance with these

[[Page 5198]]

methodologies. For purposes of section 45Z(b)(1)(B)(iii)(II), the 
45ZCF-GREET model is a similar methodology to CORSIA.
    (vi) Additional instructions on methodologies. A taxpayer must use 
an allowed methodology in accordance with the applicable emissions rate 
table, accurately enter all information requested by such methodology, 
and follow all publicly available instructions for the use of such 
methodology.
    (f) Provisional emissions rate (PER)--(1) In general. If a taxpayer 
produces an eligible fuel, as defined in Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(12), then the 
taxpayer may file a petition with the Secretary for a determination of 
the emissions rate (provisional emissions rate (PER)) for such eligible 
fuel (PER petition). See section 45Z(b)(1)(D). Before filing a PER 
petition, the taxpayer must first submit a request to the DOE for an 
emissions value (EV) for an eligible fuel (emissions value request 
(EVR)). The DOE will consider such taxpayer the emissions value 
applicant (EV applicant). The EV applicant must receive a calculated 
emissions value letter (CEVL) from the DOE for such fuel. Before 
submitting an EVR, an EV applicant must review the applicable emissions 
rate table and the most recent version of the allowed methodologies to 
ensure that the applicable emissions rate table has not already 
established the emissions rate for the EV applicant's type and category 
of fuel. After obtaining a CEVL, the taxpayer may then file a PER 
petition for the eligible fuel that is the subject of the CEVL. The EV 
applicant must submit an EVR to the DOE in accordance with the 
procedures described in paragraph (f)(3) of this section. The taxpayer 
must submit a PER petition in accordance with the procedures described 
in paragraph (f)(4) of this section. The DOE and the IRS, respectively, 
will deny any EVR or PER petition that does not follow the procedures 
in this paragraph (f).
    (2) Threshold requirements. An EV applicant may submit an EVR, and 
subsequently a PER petition, only for an eligible fuel. The DOE and the 
IRS, respectively, will deny any EVR or PER petition for a type and 
category of fuel included in the applicable emissions rate table. 
Additionally, the DOE and the IRS, respectively, will deny any EVR or 
PER petition based on a facility rather than a type or category of 
fuel.
    (3) Procedures for requesting emissions value from DOE--(i) In 
general. The DOE will publish specific guidance and procedures for an 
EV applicant to submit an EVR to the DOE. An EV applicant that submits 
an EVR must follow the procedures specified by the DOE to request and 
obtain such emissions value, including the DOE's Section 45Z EVR 
process instructions (Instructions). The DOE will evaluate an EVR using 
the same well-to-wheel system boundary that the 45ZCF-GREET model 
employs. As used in this paragraph (f)(3), the term well-to-wheel 
includes well-to-wake with respect to aviation fuel. Additionally, the 
DOE will treat background data parameters in the 45ZCF-GREET model 
(fixed data that a 45ZCF-GREET model user cannot change) as background 
data (fixed data that an EV applicant cannot change) in evaluating an 
EVR. For purposes of accounting for emissions associated with hydrogen 
(as a production input), natural gas alternatives (as a production 
input or as the transportation fuel produced), electricity, and carbon 
capture and sequestration, rules similar to the rules under section 45V 
apply, unless otherwise specified by the DOE with respect to subsequent 
technical modeling issues or technical differences arising from the 
application of the section 45V rules to an eligible fuel. The DOE may 
decline to review an EVR that is not responsive, including an EVR that 
is not for an eligible fuel or an EVR that is incomplete. An EV 
applicant seeking a new emissions value for a given type and category 
of fuel after the DOE has completed its analysis may reapply only if 
the EV applicant wishes to resubmit its EVR with new or revised 
technical information or clarifications related to the information 
previously submitted. An EVR is complete once the DOE either issues the 
EV applicant a CEVL or denies the EVR.
    (ii) Required information for an EVR--(A) EVR for an eligible fuel 
that is not a category of hydrogen. An EV applicant submitting an EVR 
for an eligible fuel that is not a category of hydrogen must submit the 
following information to the DOE:
    (1) Specific sections of the Class 3 front-end engineering and 
design (FEED) study (or studies) as defined by the Association for the 
Advancement of Cost Engineering (AACE) International Recommended 
Practice No. 18R-97, or similar indication of project maturity such as 
project specification and cost estimation sufficient to inform a final 
investment decision, as determined by the DOE, that has been completed 
for each qualified facility at which the applicant produces the 
eligible fuel, as described further in the Instructions; and
    (2) A completed Section 45Z EVR Form, as described in the 
Instructions.
    (B) EVR for an eligible fuel that is a category of hydrogen. An EV 
applicant submitting an EVR for an eligible fuel that is a category of 
hydrogen must first submit a section 45V Emissions Value Request 
Application under the process for a provisional emissions rate 
determination for the section 45V credit, as described in Sec.  1.45V-
4(c). An EV applicant submitting an EVR for an eligible fuel that is a 
category of hydrogen must submit to the DOE, in addition to the general 
requirements in paragraph (f)(3)(ii)(A) of this section, the letter 
obtained under the section 45V emissions value request process from the 
DOE stating the well-to-gate emissions value that the DOE determined 
with respect to the facility's hydrogen production pathway and the 
control number that the DOE assigned to the section 45V Emissions Value 
Request Application. If the EV applicant produces that category of 
hydrogen at multiple facilities, such applicant will need to provide 
this information for each facility. Once such an EV applicant goes 
through the section 45V emissions value request process and then 
submits their EVR for purposes of section 45Z, the DOE may issue a CEVL 
that includes an emissions value that fully accounts for the well-to-
wheel emissions of that category of hydrogen.
    (4) Procedures for requesting PER determination--(i) In general. To 
request a PER determination, a taxpayer must file a PER petition with 
the Form(s) 7218 included with the taxpayer's timely filed (including 
extensions) Federal income tax return or Federal information return for 
the first taxable year for which the taxpayer claims the section 45Z 
credit for the eligible fuel to which the PER petition relates.
    (ii) Required information for a PER petition. A PER petition must 
include the CEVL received from the DOE with respect to the eligible 
fuel. If the taxpayer obtained more than one emissions value from the 
DOE, the taxpayer must include the CEVL for each eligible fuel for 
which it is claiming a section 45Z credit for a given taxable year with 
the relevant Form(s) 7218. The CEVL(s) included with the Form(s) 7218 
constitutes the PER petition.
    (5) Determination of a PER--(i) In general. Upon the taxpayer's 
filing of a PER petition pursuant to paragraph (f)(4) of this section, 
the PER petition will be deemed accepted by the IRS. The IRS's deemed 
acceptance of such PER petition is the Secretary's determination of the 
PER.
    (ii) Reliance on emissions value. A taxpayer may rely upon an 
emissions value provided by the DOE in a CEVL for purposes of 
calculating and claiming the section 45Z credit, provided that all

[[Page 5199]]

information, representations, or other data provided to the DOE in 
support of the emissions value request are accurate. If an applicable 
emissions rate table subsequently establishes an emissions rate for a 
fuel subject to a CEVL, a taxpayer must use the applicable emissions 
rate table and may no longer rely on the CEVL for the fuel.
    (6) Not an examination of books and records. The Secretary's PER 
determination is not an examination or inspection of books of account 
for purposes of section 7605(b) of the Code and does not preclude or 
impede the IRS (under section 7605(b) or any administrative provisions 
adopted by the IRS) from later examining a return or inspecting books 
or records with respect to any taxable year for which the section 45Z 
credit is claimed. For example, any information, representations, or 
other data provided to the DOE in an EVR are still subject to 
examination. Further, a PER determination does not signify that the IRS 
has determined that any other requirements of the section 45Z credit 
have been satisfied for any taxable year.
    (g) Emissions rates (including PER) relate back to January 1, 2025. 
The first emissions rate determined for a type and category of fuel, 
whether established in an applicable emissions rate table or through 
the PER process, relates back to January 1, 2025.
    (h) Applicability date. This section applies to qualified sales 
occurring in taxable years ending on or after [date of publication of 
final regulations in the Federal Register], except that paragraph (e) 
of this section applies to qualified sales occurring in taxable years 
ending on or after January 10, 2025.
0
Par. 3. Sections 1.45Z-4 through 1.45Z-6 are added to read as follows:


Sec.  1.45Z-4   Special Rules.

    (a) Registered production in the United States required. No section 
45Z credit is determined with respect to any transportation fuel unless 
the taxpayer is registered, or is treated as being registered, as a 
producer of clean fuel under section 4101 of the Code at the time of 
production and the fuel is produced in the United States, which 
includes any territory of the United States. See Sec.  1.45Z-6(b) for 
special rules regarding registration if the taxpayer is not the 
producer. See Sec.  1.4101-1 for the registration rules that apply for 
purposes of the section 45Z credit.
    (b) Anti-stacking rules--(1) In general. This paragraph (b) 
provides rules for determining whether an anti-stacking credit (as 
defined in Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(28)(ii)) has been allowed for a taxable 
year with respect to a facility. Section 45Z(d)(4)(B).
    (2) Determination of qualified facility--(i) In general. The 
determination of whether a facility is a qualified facility must be 
made separately for each taxable year. Whether a facility is a 
qualified facility for a given taxable year depends on whether the 
facility produced transportation fuel sold during that taxable year and 
whether an anti-stacking credit was allowed for that taxable year with 
respect to the facility. A facility may be a qualified facility in one 
taxable year but not in another taxable year. If a taxpayer produces 
transportation fuel at multiple facilities, the determination of 
whether the fuel was produced at a qualified facility is made 
separately for each facility.
    (ii) Section 48(a)(15) election. A section 48(a)(15) election is 
irrevocable, and if made, will permanently disqualify a facility from 
being a qualified facility for purposes of section 45Z for the taxable 
year of the election and all subsequent taxable years.
    (iii) Carbon capture equipment at a facility. In the case of any 
transportation fuel produced at a facility that includes carbon capture 
equipment for which the section 45Q credit is allowed for the taxable 
year, that facility is not a qualified facility, and no section 45Z 
credit will be determined with respect to the facility for the taxable 
year.
    (3) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
the anti-stacking rules. For purposes of these examples, assume that X 
and Y are unrelated C corporations and that all other requirements for 
an anti-stacking credit are met.
    (i) Example 1. Interaction of section 45Z and section 45V credits; 
transportation fuel and qualified clean hydrogen produced at the same 
facility by persons with the same taxable year. During 2025 and 2026, 
X, a calendar year taxpayer, produces transportation fuel at a facility 
and sells the fuel in qualified sales in 2025 and 2026. X is otherwise 
eligible to claim the section 45Z credit with respect to the 
transportation fuel it produces at the facility. During 2025 and 2026, 
Y, a calendar year taxpayer, produces qualified clean hydrogen (as 
defined in section 45V(c)(2)) at the same facility. Y claims and is 
allowed a section 45V credit with respect to the facility for 2025, but 
not for 2026. No other person is allowed a section 45V credit with 
respect to the facility for 2025 or 2026. Because Y is allowed a 
section 45V credit with respect to the facility for 2025, the facility 
is not a qualified facility for purposes of section 45Z for 2025 and X 
is not eligible to claim a section 45Z credit with respect to the 
facility for 2025. Because no section 45V credit is allowed with 
respect to the facility for 2026, the facility is a qualified facility 
for purposes of section 45Z for 2026. Therefore, X is eligible to claim 
a section 45Z credit with respect to the facility for 2026.
    (ii) Example 2. Interaction of section 45Z and section 45V credits; 
transportation fuel and qualified clean hydrogen produced at the same 
facility by persons with different taxable years. During 2025, X, a 
calendar year taxpayer, produces transportation fuel at a facility and 
sells the fuel in a qualified sale. X is otherwise eligible to claim 
the section 45Z credit with respect to the facility. During 2025, Y 
produces qualified clean hydrogen (as defined in section 45V(c)(2)) at 
the same facility. Y has a taxable year of October 1 to September 30. Y 
claims and is allowed a section 45V credit with respect to the facility 
for its taxable year of October 1, 2024, to September 30, 2025, but not 
for its taxable year of October 1, 2025, to September 30, 2026. No 
other person is allowed a section 45V credit with respect to the 
facility for any portion of 2025. The facility is not a qualified 
facility for purposes of section 45Z for the period in 2025 for which Y 
is allowed a section 45V credit (that is, January 1 through September 
30, 2025). However, the facility is a qualified facility for purposes 
of section 45Z for the period in 2025 for which no section 45V credit 
is allowed with respect to the facility (that is, October 1 through 
December 31, 2025). Therefore, X is eligible to claim a section 45Z 
credit with respect to the facility for 2025, but only for the period 
during which the facility is a qualified facility (that is, October 1 
through December 31, 2025).
    (iii) Example 3. Interaction of section 45Z credit and section 
48(a)(15) election. During 2025, X, a calendar year taxpayer, produces 
transportation fuel at a facility and sells the fuel in a qualified 
sale. During 2025, X also produces qualified clean hydrogen (as defined 
in section 45V(c)(2)) at the same facility, which is a specified clean 
hydrogen production facility (as defined in section 48(a)(15)(C)). X is 
otherwise eligible to claim the section 45Z credit and to make a 
section 48(a)(15) election with respect to the facility. For 2025, X 
makes an election under section 48(a)(15) to treat the facility as 
energy property for purposes of the energy credit under section 48. X 
claims and is allowed the section 48 credit. Because the transportation 
fuel and the qualified clean hydrogen are produced at the same 
facility, and X is allowed a section

[[Page 5200]]

48 credit attributable to a section 48(a)(15) election with respect to 
the facility for 2025, the facility is not a qualified facility for 
purposes of section 45Z for 2025. Because the section 48(a)(15) 
election is irrevocable, the facility also will not be a qualified 
facility for purposes of section 45Z for any subsequent taxable year. 
Therefore, X is not eligible to claim the section 45Z credit with 
respect to the facility for 2025 or for any subsequent taxable year.
    (iv) Example 4. Interaction of section 45Z and section 45Q credits; 
transportation fuel produced at a facility that includes carbon capture 
equipment. During 2025 and 2026, X, a calendar year taxpayer, produces 
transportation fuel at a facility and sells the fuel in a qualified 
sale. X is otherwise eligible to claim the section 45Z credit with 
respect to the facility. The facility includes carbon capture equipment 
(within the meaning of section 45Q). Y, a calendar year taxpayer, owns 
and uses the carbon capture equipment at the facility to capture carbon 
oxide. During 2025, Y utilizes or disposes of the carbon oxide in a 
manner that qualifies for the section 45Q credit. Y claims and is 
allowed a section 45Q credit with respect to the facility for 2025, but 
not for 2026. No other person is allowed a section 45Q credit with 
respect to the facility for 2025 or 2026. Because Y is allowed a 
section 45Q credit with respect to the facility for 2025, the facility 
is not a qualified facility for purposes of section 45Z for 2025, and X 
is not eligible to claim a section 45Z credit with respect to the 
facility for 2025. Because no section 45Q credit is allowed with 
respect to the facility for 2026, the facility is a qualified facility 
for purposes of section 45Z for 2026. Therefore, X is eligible to claim 
a section 45Z credit with respect to the facility for 2026.
    (c) Anti-abuse rules. The rules of section 45Z and the section 45Z 
regulations must be applied in a manner consistent with the purposes of 
section 45Z and the section 45Z regulations (and the regulations in 
this chapter under sections 6417 and 6418 related to the section 45Z 
credit). These purposes include incentivizing the domestic production 
and use of clean transportation fuel and ensuring that taxpayers do not 
circumvent the feedstock origin and anti-stacking rules. Therefore, no 
section 45Z credit is determined if a taxpayer's primary purpose in 
producing and selling a transportation fuel is to obtain the benefit of 
the section 45Z credit in a manner that is wasteful, such as 
discarding, disposing of, or destroying the transportation fuel without 
putting it to a productive use. Whether the production and sale of 
transportation fuel is consistent with the purposes of section 45Z and 
the section 45Z regulations (and the regulations in this chapter under 
sections 6417 and 6418 related to the section 45Z credit) is based on 
all facts and circumstances.
    (d) Production attributable to the taxpayer--(1) In general. Except 
as provided in paragraph (e)(2) of this section, in the case of a 
facility in which more than one person has an ownership interest (and 
the arrangement is not classified as a partnership for Federal tax 
purposes), production from the facility is allocated among those 
persons in proportion to their respective ownership interests in the 
gross sales from the facility. Each owner's respective allocable share 
of the section 45Z credit is based on each owner's allocable share of 
production, determined pursuant to section 45Z and the section 45Z 
regulations. See section 45Z(f)(2).
    (2) Example. X, Y, and Z are all calendar year taxpayers, and each 
owns an interest in Facility, which is a qualified facility. X has a 45 
percent ownership interest in Facility, Y has a 35 percent ownership 
interest in Facility, and Z has a 20 percent ownership interest in 
Facility. Gross sales from Facility are allocated among X, Y, and Z in 
proportion to their ownership interests. During 2025, Facility produced 
10 million gallons of transportation fuel. X, Y, and Z will each 
determine the amount of their section 45Z credit for 2025 based on 
their allocable share of the 10 million gallons of transportation fuel 
produced at Facility during 2025. Thus, X will determine the amount of 
its section 45Z credit based on 4.5 million gallons, Y will determine 
the amount of its section 45Z credit based on 3.5 million gallons, and 
Z will determine the amount of its section 45Z credit based on 2 
million gallons.
    (3) Section 761(a) election. If a facility is owned through an 
unincorporated organization that has made a valid election under 
section 761(a) of the Code, each member's undivided ownership interest 
in the facility will be treated as a separate facility owned by the 
member.
    (e) No requirement of facility ownership--(1) In general. A 
taxpayer is not required to own the qualified facility at which the 
taxpayer produces transportation fuel in order for a section 45Z credit 
to be determined with respect to that fuel.
    (2) Application of production attribution rules if taxpayer does 
not own facility. If a taxpayer produces transportation fuel at a 
facility owned by another person, production of that fuel will be 
attributed to the taxpayer unless otherwise specified in the Code or in 
the section 45Z regulations. In the case of a production arrangement 
under which multiple taxpayers produce transportation fuel at a 
facility that is not owned by all those taxpayers, production of the 
transportation fuel will be allocated among the taxpayers in proportion 
to their respective interests in the gross sales from that fuel, as 
determined under the applicable contract or other legal arrangement 
with respect to the fuel.
    (f) Foreign feedstock and prohibited foreign entity restrictions--
(1) Foreign feedstock restrictions. Transportation fuel that is 
produced after December 31, 2025, must be exclusively derived from a 
feedstock that was produced or grown in the United States, Mexico, or 
Canada. See section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(iii).
    (2) Prohibited foreign entity restrictions--(i) Specified foreign 
entity. No section 45Z credit is determined for any taxable year of a 
taxpayer beginning after July 4, 2025, if the taxpayer is a specified 
foreign entity (as defined in section 7701(a)(51)(B) of the Code). See 
section 45Z(f)(8)(A).
    (ii) Other prohibited foreign entity. No section 45Z credit is 
determined for any taxable year of a taxpayer beginning after July 4, 
2027, if the taxpayer is a foreign-influenced entity (as defined 
section 7701(a)(51)(D) of the Code, without regard to section 
7701(a)(51)(D)(i)(II)). See section 45Z(f)(8)(B).
    (g) Recordkeeping and substantiation--(1) In general. A taxpayer 
claiming a section 45Z credit must maintain records sufficient to 
establish the taxpayer's eligibility for the section 45Z credit and the 
amount of the credit claimed on the return. At a minimum, those records 
must include records:
    (i) Establishing that each fuel produced is a transportation fuel;
    (ii) Establishing any relevant information relating to the primary 
feedstock(s) used to produce each such fuel;
    (iii) Establishing that each fuel meets any additional 
specifications for the type of fuel described in Sec.  1.45Z-1(b)(24) 
or (30);
    (iv) Substantiating how the emissions rate for each fuel was 
determined (including, if applicable, the specific type(s) and 
category(ies) under the applicable emissions rate table);
    (v) Relating to any fuel testing obtained by the taxpayer;

[[Page 5201]]

    (vi) Establishing that each facility used to produce fuel is a 
qualified facility;
    (vii) Establishing the date each facility was placed in service;
    (viii) Establishing that each fuel was sold in a qualified sale;
    (ix) Establishing any certification from an unrelated person and 
substantiating the information therein; and
    (x) Used for or related to any petition for a provisional emissions 
rate (PER), including raw data.
    (2) Safe harbor for substantiation of emissions rate. A taxpayer 
may substantiate the emissions rate for a transportation fuel which is 
not sustainable aviation fuel (non-SAF transportation fuel) that was 
determined using the 45ZCF-GREET model by obtaining certification with 
respect to that fuel in substantially the same form and manner 
described in Sec.  1.45Z-5 for certifying an emissions rate for SAF 
transportation fuel determined using the 45ZCF-GREET model. A taxpayer 
must provide the qualified certifier with all information necessary to 
provide the certification, as described in Sec.  1.45Z-5. The Secretary 
may provide other methods through which a taxpayer may substantiate the 
emissions rate for a non-SAF transportation fuel. The Secretary will 
prescribe any such methods in guidance published in the Internal 
Revenue Bulletin or in IRS forms, instructions, or publications. See 
Sec. Sec.  601.601 and 601.602 of this chapter.
    (3) Safe harbor for substantiation of qualified sale--(i) In 
general. A taxpayer may substantiate a qualified sale of transportation 
fuel by obtaining from the purchaser a certificate in substantially the 
same form as described in paragraph (g)(3)(ii) of this section. If the 
certificate relates to a single purchase, the taxpayer must obtain the 
certificate from the purchaser prior to or at the time of sale. If the 
certificate relates to purchases made over a period of time, the 
taxpayer must obtain the certificate from the purchaser prior to or at 
the same time as the first of the sales to which the certificate 
relates. A taxpayer receiving a certificate from a purchaser must have 
no reason to believe that any information in the certificate regarding 
the use of the transportation fuel is false. The Secretary of the 
Treasury or the Secretary's delegate (Secretary) may provide other 
methods through which a taxpayer may substantiate a qualified sale. The 
Secretary will prescribe any such methods in guidance published in the 
Internal Revenue Bulletin or in IRS forms, instructions, or 
publications. See Sec. Sec.  601.601 and 601.602 of this chapter.
    (ii) Qualified sale model certificate--
    Certificate for Qualified Sale of Transportation Fuel

(To support a taxpayer's claim under section 45Z of the Internal 
Revenue Code.)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(Name, address, and Employer Identification Number (``EIN'') of 
Taxpayer)

    The undersigned purchaser of transportation fuel (``Purchaser'') 
hereby certifies the following under the penalty of perjury:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Name of Purchaser

    Type of transportation fuel purchased:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
    The transportation fuel to which this certificate applies will be 
(mark below):

___Used by Purchaser in the production of a fuel mixture;
___Used by Purchaser in a trade or business; or
___Sold by Purchaser at retail to another person and placed in the fuel 
tank of such other person.

    This certificate applies to the following (complete as applicable):

___This is a single purchase certificate:
    1. ______Invoice or delivery ticket number
    2. ______Number of gallons
___This is a certificate covering all purchases under a specified 
account or order number:
    1. ______Effective date
    2. ______Expiration date (period not to exceed 1 year after the 
effective date)
    3. ______Purchaser's account number

    Purchaser agrees to provide the person liable for tax with a new 
certificate if any information in this certificate changes.
    Purchaser is unrelated (within the meaning of section 52(b) of the 
Code and the regulations thereunder) to the Taxpayer selling the 
transportation fuel to which this certificate relates.
    Purchaser understands that it may be liable for the penalty under 
section 6701 of the Code (relating to aiding and abetting an 
understatement of tax liability) if this is an erroneous certification.
    Purchaser understands that the fraudulent use of this certificate 
may subject Purchaser and all parties making any fraudulent use of this 
certificate to a fine or imprisonment, or both, together with the costs 
of prosecution.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Signature and date signed

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Printed or typed name of person signing

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Title of person signing

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
EIN of Purchaser

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Address of Purchaser

    (h) Applicability date. This section applies to qualified sales 
occurring in taxable years ending on or after [date of publication of 
final regulations in the Federal Register].


Sec.  1.45Z-5   Procedures for certification of lifecycle greenhouse 
gas emissions rates.

    (a) In general. This section provides rules on certification from 
an unrelated person for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) transportation 
fuel pursuant to section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II) of the Code.
    (b) Certification requirements--(1) In general. For each taxable 
year for which a taxpayer claims a section 45Z credit for SAF 
transportation fuel, the taxpayer must obtain certification from an 
unrelated person and include such certification with the taxpayer's 
Form 7218, which is filed with the taxpayer's Federal income tax return 
or Federal information return, for each qualified facility at which the 
taxpayer produces SAF transportation fuel.
    (2) Content. The certification described in paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section must be prepared by a qualified certifier and signed by 
the qualified certifier under penalty of perjury. The certification 
must contain information that is in substantially the same form as the 
model certification provided in paragraph (h) of this section and must 
contain all information necessary to complete the model certification. 
Specifically, the certification must include--
    (i) A production statement described in paragraph (c) of this 
section from the qualified certifier regarding the production of SAF 
transportation fuel, including that the inputs used to determine the 
lifecycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions rate of the production process 
are accurate;
    (ii) A conflict statement described in paragraph (d) of this 
section from the qualified certifier regarding conflicts of interest;
    (iii) A qualified certifier statement described in paragraph (e) of 
this section from the qualified certifier providing information 
regarding the qualified certifier, including documentation of the 
qualified certifier's qualifications;
    (iv) A qualified facility statement described in paragraph (f) of 
this section from the qualified certifier providing

[[Page 5202]]

certain general information about the qualified facility at which the 
SAF transportation fuel production undergoing certification occurred;
    (v) Any documentation necessary to substantiate the certification 
process given the standards and best practices prescribed by the 
qualified certifier's accrediting body as they apply to the 
circumstances of the taxpayer and the qualified facility; and
    (vi) Any other information or documentation required by applicable 
IRS tax forms or form instructions.
    (3) Qualified certifier--(i) CORSIA methodologies. For taxpayers 
using the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International 
Aviation (CORSIA) Default Life Cycle Emissions Values for CORSIA 
Eligible Fuels lifecycle approach (CORSIA Default) or the CORSIA 
Methodology for Calculating Actual Life Cycle Emissions Values 
lifecycle approach (CORSIA Actual) to determine the emissions rate for 
SAF transportation fuel, the term qualified certifier means any 
individual or organization that is unrelated to the taxpayer and is not 
an employee of the taxpayer, and that has an active accreditation from 
International Sustainability and Carbon Certification, Roundtable on 
Sustainable Biomaterials, ClassNK, or other sustainability 
certification scheme approved by the ICAO.
    (ii) 45ZCF-GREET model. For taxpayers using the 45ZCF-GREET model 
to determine the emissions rate for SAF transportation fuel, the term 
qualified certifier means any individual or organization that is 
unrelated to the taxpayer and is not an employee of the taxpayer, and 
that has an active accreditation--
    (A) From the American National Standards Institute National 
Accreditation Board to conduct validation and verification in 
accordance with the requirements of International Organization for 
Standardization (ISO) 14065; or
    (B) As a verifier, lead verifier, or verification body under the 
California Air Resources Board Low Carbon Fuel Standard (CARB LCFS) 
program.
    (iii) Qualifications are methodology specific. Qualified certifiers 
are qualified to provide certification only for the associated 
methodologies identified in this paragraph (b)(3). A qualified 
certifier must have active accreditation for the associated methodology 
as of the date it provides a certification to a taxpayer. A taxpayer 
must use the qualified certifier identified in this paragraph (b)(3) 
for the identified emissions rate methodology used by the taxpayer.
    (c) Requirements for the production statement. The requirements set 
forth in this paragraph (c) apply to the production statement required 
by paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section. See section 
45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(II)(aa).
    (1) Data accuracy. The production statement must be a statement 
that the qualified certifier performed a certification sufficient for 
the IRS to determine that any lifecycle GHG emissions data inputs and 
the operation, during the applicable taxable year, of the qualified 
facility that produced the SAF transportation fuel for which the 
section 45Z credit is claimed are accurately reflected in--
    (i) The number of gallons of SAF transportation fuel produced by 
the taxpayer that is entered on the Form 7218 with which the 
certification is included; and
    (ii) Either--
    (A) The data the taxpayer input into the allowed methodology under 
Sec.  1.45Z-2(e)(3) used to determine the lifecycle GHG emissions rate 
that is entered on the Form 7218 with which the certification is 
included; or
    (B) The data the taxpayer submitted in its provisional emissions 
rate (PER) petition relating to the SAF transportation fuel for which 
the taxpayer is claiming the section 45Z credit, including data 
provided to the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) in support of the 
taxpayer's request for the emissions value provided in the PER 
petition.
    (2) Emissions value. If the production statement includes the 
information specified in paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B) of this section, then 
the production statement must also specify the emissions value received 
from the DOE that was calculated using such data, expressed in 
kilograms of equivalent carbon dioxide (CO2e) per 1,000,000 
British thermal units (mmBTU).
    (3) Lifecycle GHG emissions rate and production amount. The 
production statement must specify the lifecycle GHG emissions rate 
(expressed in kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU) and the amount of 
SAF transportation fuel produced by the taxpayer (expressed in 
gallons), that are entered on the Form 7218 with which the 
certification is included.
    (d) Requirements for the conflict statement--(1) In general. The 
conflict statement required by paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section 
must state that--
    (i) The qualified certifier has not received a fee based to any 
extent on the value of any section 45Z credit that has been or is 
expected to be claimed by the taxpayer and no arrangement has been made 
for such fee to be paid at any time in the future;
    (ii) The qualified certifier has not been a party to any 
transaction involving the sale of SAF transportation fuel the taxpayer 
produced or in which the taxpayer purchased primary feedstocks for the 
production of such SAF transportation fuel;
    (iii) The qualified certifier is unrelated to the taxpayer, within 
the meaning of section 52(b) and the regulations thereunder, and is not 
an employee of the taxpayer; and
    (iv) The qualified certifier is not married to anyone who is 
related to, or an employee of, the taxpayer.
    (2) Additional attestations required in certain circumstances. If 
the qualified certifier is acting in his or her capacity as a partner 
in a partnership, an employee of any person, whether an individual, 
corporation, or partnership, or an independent contractor engaged by a 
person other than the taxpayer, the attestations under paragraphs 
(d)(1)(i) through (iv) of this section must also be made with respect 
to the partnership or the person that employs or engages the qualified 
certifier.
    (e) Requirements for the qualified certifier statement. The 
qualified certifier statement required by paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of this 
section must include the items set forth in this paragraph (e):
    (1) Certifier identifying information. The qualified certifier's 
name, address, and certifier identification number (for example, the 
CARB LCFS Verifier Executive Order Number);
    (2) Qualification description. The qualified certifier's 
qualifications to conduct the certification, including a description of 
the certification the qualified certifier received from the accrediting 
body;
    (3) Partnership or employer identifying information. If the 
qualified certifier is acting in his or her capacity as a partner in a 
partnership, an employee of any person, whether an individual, 
corporation, or partnership, or an independent contractor engaged by a 
person other than the taxpayer, the name, address, and certifier 
identification number of the partnership or the person that employs or 
engages the qualified certifier;
    (4) Signature. The signature of the qualified certifier and the 
date of signature; and
    (5) Certification purpose. A statement that the certification was 
conducted for Federal tax purposes.
    (f) Requirements for the qualified facility statement. The 
qualified facility statement required by paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this 
section must include

[[Page 5203]]

the information set forth in this paragraph (f) for the qualified 
facility at which the SAF transportation fuel production undergoing 
certification occurred:
    (1) Facility location. The location of the qualified facility;
    (2) Facility description. A description of the qualified facility, 
including its method of producing SAF transportation fuel;
    (3) Primary feedstock. The type(s) of primary feedstock(s) used by 
the qualified facility to produce the SAF transportation fuel during 
the taxable year of production;
    (4) Amount of primary feedstock. The amount(s) of primary 
feedstock(s) used by the qualified facility to produce the SAF 
transportation fuel during the taxable year of production;
    (5) Primary feedstock source location. The location(s) from which 
the qualified facility sourced the primary feedstock(s) used to produce 
the SAF transportation fuel during the taxable year of production;
    (6) Metering devices. A list of the metering devices used to record 
any data used by the qualified certifier to support the production 
statement under paragraph (c) of this section, along with a statement 
that to the best of the certifier's knowledge, the device(s) underwent 
industry-appropriate quality assurance and quality control, and the 
accuracy and calibration of the device has been tested in the year 
prior to the time of observation by the qualified certifier; and
    (7) Emissions rate accuracy. Confirmation that the emissions rate 
of the SAF transportation fuel produced during the taxable year of 
production is accurate to the higher of +/-5% or 2 kilograms of 
CO2e per mmBTU.
    (g) Timely certification required. A certification described in 
paragraph (b)(1) of this section that includes all information required 
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section is valid with respect to a 
particular claim only if it is signed and dated by the qualified 
certifier no later than the due date, including extensions, of the 
Federal income tax return or Federal information return for the taxable 
year during which the SAF transportation fuel undergoing certification 
is sold in a qualified sale. In the case of a section 45Z credit first 
claimed for the taxable year on an amended return or administrative 
adjustment request (AAR), a certification described in paragraph (b)(1) 
of this section that includes all information required under paragraph 
(b)(2) of this section is valid with respect to the claim only if it is 
signed and dated by the qualified certifier no later than the date on 
which the amended return or AAR is filed.
    (h) Model certification.

Certification of Lifecycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions Rates for 
Sustainable Aviation Fuel Production

Certification Identification Number:__________

    (To support taxpayer's claim related to sustainable aviation fuel 
(SAF) under section 45Z of the Internal Revenue Code.)
    The undersigned qualified certifier (``Certifier'') hereby 
certifies the following:
    This certificate applies to SAF produced by __________ (``SAF 
Producer''). __________(name, address, and EIN of SAF producer)
    Registration number of the SAF producer: __________
    Number of gallons of SAF produced to which this certification 
relates: __________
    Lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rate expressed in kilograms of 
CO2e per mmBTU: __________
    ___: Initial here to affirmatively confirm that the emissions rate 
is accurate to the higher of +/-5% or 2 kilograms of CO2e 
per mmBTU.
    Taxable year SAF undergoing certification was produced: __________
    Location of qualified facility at which the SAF production 
undergoing certification occurred (``Facility''): __________
    Facility description including its method of producing SAF:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Type(s) of primary feedstock(s) used by the Facility to produce SAF 
during the taxable year of production:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Location(s) from which the Facility sourced the primary 
feedstock(s) used during the taxable year of production:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ___: Initial here to affirmatively state that the Certifier has 
verified that any metering device(s) used to support this certification 
has been properly calibrated pursuant to industry-appropriate quality 
assurance and quality control standards, and the accuracy and 
calibration of the device has been tested within the year prior to the 
time of observation by the Certifier. List the metering device(s) and 
calibration date(s):
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
    The Certifier performed a certification sufficient for the IRS to 
determine that any lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions data inputs and 
the operation, during the applicable taxable year, of the Facility that 
produced the SAF for which the credit is claimed are accurately 
reflected in--
    The number of gallons of SAF produced by the taxpayer that is 
entered on the Form 7218 with which this certification is included; and
    Either (check the line that applies):
    ___: The data the taxpayer input into the allowed methodology used 
to determine the lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions rate that is 
entered on the Form 7218 with which this certification is included; or
    ___: The data the taxpayer submitted in its provisional emissions 
rate (``PER'') petition relating to the SAF for which the taxpayer is 
claiming the credit, including data provided to the U.S. Department of 
Energy (``DOE'') in support of the taxpayer's request for the emissions 
value provided in the PER petition.
    Emissions value received from the DOE that was calculated using 
such data, expressed in kilograms of CO2e per mmBTU: ___
    The Certifier, and, if applicable, the partnership or the person 
that employs or engages the Certifier is/has not:
    1. Received a fee based to any extent on the value of any section 
45Z credit that has been or is expected to be claimed by the taxpayer 
and no arrangement has been made for such fee to be paid at any time in 
the future;
    2. Been a party to any transaction involving the sale of SAF the 
taxpayer produced or in which the taxpayer purchased primary feedstocks 
for the production of such SAF;
    3. Related, within the meaning of section 52(b) of the Code and the 
regulations thereunder, to the taxpayer, or an employee of, the 
taxpayer; or
    4. Married to anyone who is related to, or an employee of, the 
taxpayer.
    Certifier's identifying information:
    Certifier's name: _______
    Address: ___________
    Certifier ID number: ______
    Description of Certifier's qualifications to conduct the 
certification, including a description of the certification Certifier 
received from the relevant accrediting body.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
    If applicable, identifying information for the partnership or the 
person that employs or engages Certifier:
    Name of partnership or employer: __________
    Address: ___________
    Certifier ID number: ______
    This certification was conducted for Federal tax purposes.

[[Page 5204]]

    Certifier has attached:

--Any documentation necessary to substantiate the certification process 
given the standards and best practices prescribed by the Certifier's 
accrediting body as they apply to the circumstances of the taxpayer and 
the qualified facility; and
--Any other information or documentation required by applicable IRS tax 
forms or form instructions.

    Under penalty of perjury, Certifier declares that Certifier has 
examined this certification, including any accompanying documentation, 
and, to the best of Certifier's knowledge and belief, it is true, 
correct, and complete.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Signature and date signed
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Printed or typed name of person signing
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Title of person signing
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Certifier identification number of the person signing

    (i) Applicability date. This section applies to qualified sales 
occurring in taxable years ending on or after [date of publication of 
final regulations in the Federal Register].


Sec.  1.45Z-6   Procedures for filing a claim for the clean fuel 
production credit.

    (a) Time and manner of filing a claim. To claim the section 45Z 
credit, a taxpayer must include a completed Form 7218 with the 
taxpayer's timely filed (including extensions) Federal income tax 
return or Federal information return for the taxable year for which the 
taxpayer is claiming the section 45Z credit. A separate Form 7218 is 
required for each qualified facility at which transportation fuel for 
which the taxpayer is claiming the section 45Z credit is produced. A 
taxpayer must complete Form 7218 in accordance with the instructions to 
that form and provide all information required by the form and 
instructions. A taxpayer must include with its Form 7218 any applicable 
certification required by Sec.  1.45Z-5.
    (b) Proper claimant--(1) In general. Except as provided in 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, only a taxpayer that is registered by 
the IRS as a producer of transportation fuel at the time of production 
may claim the section 45Z credit. See section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I) of the 
Code. See Sec.  1.4101-1 for rules related to registration, including 
the activity letters, under which producers of transportation fuel must 
be registered to claim the section 45Z credit.
    (2) Special rules--(i) Producer is a disregarded entity. If a 
taxpayer owns an entity that is disregarded as an entity separate from 
its owner within the meaning of Sec.  301.7701-2(c)(2)(i) of this 
chapter (disregarded entity) that produces transportation fuel, and 
such disregarded entity is registered as a producer of transportation 
fuel at the time of production, the taxpayer that owns the disregarded 
entity is treated as the registered producer for purposes of claiming 
the section 45Z credit. The registration number (within the meaning of 
section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I) and Sec.  1.4101-1) of that disregarded 
entity is attributed to the taxpayer. A taxpayer claiming a section 45Z 
credit with respect to transportation fuel produced by a disregarded 
entity that it owns must satisfy the recordkeeping requirements in 
Sec.  1.45Z-4(g)(1).
    (ii) Producer is a qualified subchapter S subsidiary. If a taxpayer 
owns an entity that is a qualified subchapter S subsidiary within the 
meaning of section 1361(b)(3)(B) of the Code (QSub) that produces 
transportation fuel, and such QSub is registered as a producer of 
transportation fuel at the time of production, the taxpayer that owns 
the QSub is treated as the registered producer for purposes of claiming 
the section 45Z credit. The registration number (within the meaning of 
section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I) and Sec.  1.4101-1) of that QSub is 
attributed to the taxpayer. A taxpayer claiming a section 45Z credit 
with respect to transportation fuel produced by a QSub that it owns 
must satisfy the recordkeeping requirements in Sec.  1.45Z-4(g)(1).
    (iii) Producer is a member of a consolidated group. If a member of 
a consolidated group (as defined in Sec.  1.1502-1(b) and (h), 
respectively) that produces transportation fuel is registered as a 
producer of transportation fuel at the time of production, the agent 
for such consolidated group is treated as the registered producer for 
purposes of claiming the section 45Z credit on the group's return. The 
registration number (within the meaning of section 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I) 
and Sec.  1.4101-1) of the member is attributed to the agent when 
claiming the section 45Z credit. The member producing the 
transportation fuel must satisfy all applicable requirements of section 
45Z and the section 45Z regulations. For rules applicable to the agent 
for a consolidated group (generally the common parent), see Sec.  
1.1502-77.
    (c) Applicability date. This section applies to qualified sales 
occurring in taxable years ending on or after [date of publication of 
final regulations in the Federal Register].


Sec.  1.1361-4   [Amended]

0
Par. 4. Section 1.1361-4 is amended by removing the comma after the 
language ``and (a)(9) of this section'' in paragraph (a)(1) and adding 
``and in Sec.  1.4101-1(a)(3)(iii),'' in its place.
0
Par. 5. Section 1.4101-1 is added to read as follows:


Sec.  1.4101-1   Registration.

    (a) In general--(1) Overview. This section provides rules relating 
to registration for purposes of the section 45Z credit. See sections 
4101(a)(1) and 45Z(f)(1)(A)(i)(I).
    (2) Letter of Registration required. A person is registered under 
section 4101 of the Code for purposes of the section 45Z credit only if 
the IRS has issued a Letter of Registration to the person under 
activity letter CN (in the case of a producer of transportation fuel 
which is not sustainable aviation fuel (non-SAF transportation fuel)), 
or activity letter CA (in the case of a producer of SAF transportation 
fuel), or such other activity letter(s) as the IRS may designate, and 
the registration has not been revoked or suspended. A person with a 
Letter of Registration from the IRS under any other activity letter is 
not registered under section 4101 for purposes of the section 45Z 
credit.
    (3) Separate entity treatment--(i) In general. Each business unit 
that has, or is required to have, a separate employer identification 
number (EIN) is treated as a separate person for purposes of 
registration under this section. Thus, two business units (for example, 
a parent corporation and a subsidiary corporation), each of which has a 
different EIN, are two persons.
    (ii) Disregarded entity. Section 301.7701-2(c)(2)(i) of this 
chapter (relating to certain wholly owned entities) does not apply for 
purposes of registration under this section. An entity that is 
disregarded as an entity separate from its owner for any purpose under 
Sec.  301.7701-2 of this chapter and that has, or is required to have, 
an EIN is treated as a corporation (consistent with Sec.  301.7701-
2(c)(2)(v)(B) of this chapter) for purposes of registration under this 
section. Therefore, if such an entity produces transportation fuel, it 
must be registered as a producer of transportation fuel at the time of 
production for its owner to be eligible to claim the section 45Z credit 
for such fuel.
    (iii) Qualified subchapter S subsidiary. A qualified subchapter S 
subsidiary as defined in section 1361(b)(3)(B) of the Code (QSub) is 
treated as separate from the S corporation that owns it for purposes of 
registration under this section.

[[Page 5205]]

Therefore, a QSub that has an EIN and that produces transportation fuel 
must be registered as a producer of transportation fuel at the time of 
production in order for its S corporation owner to be eligible to claim 
the section 45Z credit for such fuel.
    (4) Reregistration--(i) Reregistration in the event of change of 
ownership. As provided in section 4101(a)(5), a person is required to 
reregister under this section if after a transaction (or series of 
related transactions) more than 50 percent of ownership interests in, 
or assets of, such person are held by persons other than persons (or 
persons related thereto) who held more than 50 percent of such 
interests or assets before the transaction (or series of related 
transactions). Reregistration does not apply to a company whose stock 
is regularly traded on an established securities market.
    (ii) Reregistration in the event of change of EIN. If a registrant 
changes its EIN, such registrant must reregister under this section 
using its new EIN.
    (iii) Safe harbor. A person that is required to reregister as a 
producer of transportation fuel due to a change in ownership or EIN is 
eligible to claim a section 45Z credit (provided that all requirements 
of section 45Z are met) as of the date the IRS received the application 
for reregistration, even if, at the time of fuel production, the IRS 
has not yet approved the reregistration. Provided the registration 
tests for the reregistration are met, the original registration remains 
in effect until the IRS revokes that registration and issues a new one.
    (b) Definitions--(1) Applicant. An applicant is a person that has 
applied for registration as described in paragraph (d) of this section.
    (2) Letter of Registration. A Letter of Registration is a letter 
issued by the IRS to approve a registration required under section 
4101. A Letter of Registration includes the registrant's registration 
number and the effective date of the registration.
    (3) Penalized for a wrongful act. A person has been penalized for a 
wrongful act if the person has--
    (i) Been assessed any penalty under chapter 68 of the Code (or 
similar provision of the law of any State) for fraudulently failing to 
file any return or pay any tax, and the penalty has not been wholly 
abated, refunded, or credited;
    (ii) Been assessed any penalty under chapter 68 of the Code, and 
such penalty has not been wholly abated, refunded, or credited, and the 
IRS determines that the conduct resulting in the penalty is part of a 
consistent pattern of failing to deposit, pay, or pay over a 
substantial amount of tax;
    (iii) Been convicted of a crime under chapter 75 of the Code (or 
similar provision of the law of any State), or of conspiracy to commit 
such a crime, and the conviction has not been wholly reversed by a 
court of competent jurisdiction;
    (iv) Been convicted, under the laws of the United States or any 
State, of a felony for which an element of the offense is theft, fraud, 
or the making of false statements, and the conviction has not been 
wholly reversed by a court of competent jurisdiction;
    (v) Been assessed any tax under section 4103 of the Code and the 
tax has not been wholly abated, refunded, or credited; or
    (vi) Had its registration under section 4101, section 4222, section 
4662, or section 4682 of the Code revoked.
    (4) Related person. For purposes of registration under section 4101 
and this section, a related person is a person that--
    (i) Directly or indirectly exercises control over an activity of 
the applicant;
    (ii) Owns, directly or indirectly, five percent or more of the 
applicant;
    (iii) Is under a duty to assure the payment of a tax for which the 
applicant is responsible;
    (iv) Is a member, with the applicant, of a group of organizations 
(as defined in Sec.  1.52-1(b)) that would be treated as a group of 
trades or businesses under common control for purposes of Sec.  1.52-1; 
or
    (v) Distributed or transferred assets to the applicant in a 
transaction in which the applicant's basis in the assets is determined 
by reference to the basis of the assets in the hands of the distributor 
or transferor.
    (5) Registrant. A registrant is a person that the IRS has, in 
accordance with paragraph (f)(3) of this section, registered under 
section 4101 and whose registration has not been revoked or suspended.
    (c) Requirement to register--(1) In general. Every person producing 
a transportation fuel is required to register with the IRS in 
accordance with this section. See section 4101(a)(1).
    (2) Consequences of failing to register. For the criminal penalty 
imposed for failure to register, see section 7232 of the Code. For the 
civil penalties imposed for failure to register or reregister, see 
sections 6719 and 7272 of the Code.
    (d) Application instructions. Application for registration under 
section 4101 must be made on Form 637, Application for Registration 
(For Certain Excise Tax Activities), or such other form as the IRS may 
designate, in accordance with the instructions to such form. See Sec.  
601.602 of this chapter. An applicant for registration as a producer of 
non-SAF transportation fuel must apply for registration under activity 
letter CN, or such other activity letter as the IRS may designate. An 
applicant for registration as a producer of SAF transportation fuel 
must apply for registration under activity letter CA, or such other 
activity letter as the IRS may designate.
    (e) Registration tests--(1) In general. The IRS will register an 
applicant only if the IRS determines that the applicant meets the 
following three tests (collectively, the registration tests):
    (i) The activity test;
    (ii) The acceptable risk test; and
    (iii) The satisfactory tax history test.
    (2) Activity test. An applicant meets the activity test only if the 
IRS determines that the applicant--
    (i) Is, in the course of its trade or business, regularly engaged 
in the activity for which it is requesting registration; or
    (ii) Is likely to be (because of such factors as the applicant's 
business experience, financial standing, or trade connections), in the 
course of its trade or business, regularly engaged in the activity for 
which it is requesting registration within 6 months after becoming 
registered under section 4101.
    (3) Acceptable risk test--(i) In general. An applicant meets the 
acceptable risk test if neither the applicant nor a related person (as 
defined in paragraph (b)(4) of this section) has been penalized for a 
wrongful act. If an applicant or a related person has been penalized 
for a wrongful act, the IRS may nonetheless determine that an applicant 
meets the acceptable risk test based on consideration of the factors 
enumerated in paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of this section.
    (ii) Factors to consider. In making the determination described in 
paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this section, the IRS may consider factors such 
as the following:
    (A) The time elapsed since the applicant or related person was 
penalized for a wrongful act.
    (B) The present relationship between the applicant and any related 
person that was penalized for any wrongful act.
    (C) The degree of rehabilitation of the person penalized for any 
wrongful act.
    (4) Satisfactory tax history test--(i) In general. An applicant 
meets the satisfactory tax history test only if the IRS determines that 
the applicant has a satisfactory tax history as described in paragraph 
(e)(4)(ii) of this section.
    (ii) Satisfactory tax history. An applicant has a satisfactory tax 
history only if the Commissioner determines

[[Page 5206]]

that the filing, deposit, and payment history for all Federal taxes of 
the applicant and any related person (as defined in paragraph (b)(4) of 
this section) supports the conclusion that the applicant will comply 
with its obligations under this section.
    (f) Action on the application for registration by the IRS--(1) 
Review of application. The IRS may investigate the accuracy and 
completeness of any representations made by an applicant and request 
any additional relevant information from the applicant.
    (2) Denial. If the IRS determines that an applicant does not meet 
all the registration tests described in paragraph (e) of this section, 
the IRS will notify the applicant, in writing, that its application for 
registration is denied and state the basis for the denial.
    (3) Approval. If the IRS determines that an applicant meets all the 
registration tests described in paragraph (e) of this section, the IRS 
will register the applicant under section 4101 and issue the applicant 
a Letter of Registration that includes the effective date of the 
registration and the appropriate activity letter(s). A copy of an 
application for registration (Form 637) is not a Letter of 
Registration.
    (g) Terms and conditions of registration--(1) Affirmative duties. 
Each applicant or registrant must--
    (i) Make deposits, file returns, and pay taxes as required by the 
Code and the regulations;
    (ii) Keep records sufficient to show production of a transportation 
fuel;
    (iii) Notify the IRS of any change in the information the 
registrant submitted in connection with its application for 
registration or previously submitted under this paragraph (g)(1)(iii) 
within 10 days after the change occurs. Changes requiring IRS 
notification include, but are not limited to, changes in ownership, 
address, and business activities.
    (2) Prohibited actions. An applicant or registrant may not--
    (i) Sell, lease, or otherwise allow another person to use its 
registration, except as otherwise provided in Sec.  1.45Z-6(b)(2); or
    (ii) Make any false statement to the IRS in connection with a 
submission under section 4101.
    (h) Effect of Letter of Registration. A Letter of Registration is 
not a determination of liability for tax, eligibility for a tax credit 
or deduction, or any other tax treatment under the Code. For example, a 
Letter of Registration issued under activity letter CN to a person 
producing a fuel is not a determination that such fuel is a 
transportation fuel under section 45Z(d)(5)(A) or that the facility at 
which the person produces such fuel is a qualified facility under 
section 45Z(d)(4). A Letter of Registration is also not a determination 
letter, as defined in Sec.  601.201(a)(3) of this chapter.
    (i) Adverse actions by the IRS against a registrant--(1) Mandatory 
revocation or suspension. The IRS will revoke or suspend the 
registration of any registrant if the IRS determines that the 
registrant, at any time--
    (i) Does not meet one or more of the registration tests in 
paragraph (e) of this section and has not corrected the deficiency 
within a reasonable period of time after notification by the IRS;
    (ii) Has used its registration to evade, or attempt to evade, the 
payment of any tax, or to postpone or in any manner to interfere with 
the collection of any such tax, or to make a fraudulent claim for a 
credit or payment;
    (iii) Has aided or abetted another person in evading, or attempting 
to evade, payment of any tax, or in making a fraudulent claim for a 
credit or payment; or
    (iv) Has sold, leased, or otherwise allowed another person to use 
its registration, except as otherwise provided in Sec.  1.45Z-6(b)(2).
    (2) Remedial action permitted in other cases. If the IRS determines 
that a registrant has, at any time, failed to comply with the terms and 
conditions of registration in paragraph (g) of this section, made a 
false statement to the IRS in connection with its application for 
registration (or reregistration) or for retention of registration, or 
otherwise used its registration in a manner that creates a significant 
risk of nonpayment or late payment of tax, then the IRS may revoke or 
suspend the registrant's registration.
    (3) Action by the IRS to revoke or suspend a registration. If the 
IRS revokes or suspends a registration, the IRS will notify the 
registrant in writing and state the basis for the revocation or 
suspension and the activity letter(s) to which the revocation or 
suspension relates. The effective date of the revocation or suspension 
may not be earlier than the date on which the IRS notifies the 
registrant.
    (j) Applicability date. This section applies to persons producing 
transportation fuel in taxable years ending on or after [date of 
publication of final regulations in the Federal Register].
0
Par. 6. Section 1.6417-2 is amended by revising paragraphs (c)(4) and 
(f) to read as follows:


Sec.  1.6417-2   Rules for elective payment elections.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (4) Credits must be determined with respect to the applicable 
entity or electing taxpayer. Any credits for which an elective payment 
election is made must have been determined with respect to the 
applicable entity or electing taxpayer. An applicable credit is 
determined with respect to an applicable entity or electing taxpayer if 
the applicable entity or electing taxpayer owns the underlying 
applicable credit property and conducts the activities giving rise to 
the credit or, if ownership is not required to give rise to the 
applicable credit, such as a credit under section 45Z or section 
45(d)(3)(C), the applicable entity or electing taxpayer must conduct 
the activities giving rise to the credit. In the case of section 45X 
(under which ownership of applicable credit property is also not 
required, but for which rules related to contract manufacturing 
arrangements may be applicable), the applicable entity or electing 
taxpayer must be considered (under the section 45X regulations) the 
taxpayer with respect to which the section 45X credit is determined. 
Thus, no election may be made under this section for any credits 
transferred pursuant to section 6418, allowed pursuant to section 
45Q(f)(3), acquired by a lessee from a lessor by means of an election 
to pass through the credit to a lessee under former section 48(d) 
(pursuant to section 50(d)(5)), owned by a third party, or otherwise 
not determined with respect to the applicable entity or electing 
taxpayer.
* * * * *
    (f) Applicability dates--(1) In general. Except as otherwise 
provided in this paragraph (f), this section applies to taxable years 
ending on or after March 11, 2024. For taxable years ending before 
March 11, 2024, taxpayers, however, may choose to apply the rules of 
Sec. Sec.  1.6417-1 through 1.6417-4 and 1.6417-6, provided the 
taxpayers apply the rules in their entirety and in a consistent manner.
    (2) Paragraph (c)(4). Paragraph (c)(4) of this section applies to 
taxable years ending on or after [date of publication of final 
regulations in the Federal Register]. For taxable years ending before 
[date of publication of final regulations in the Federal Register], see 
Sec.  1.6417-2(c)(4) as contained in 26 CFR part 1, revised April 1, 
2025.
0
Par. 7. Section 1.6418-2 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(1) and 
(g) to read as follows:

[[Page 5207]]

Sec.  1.6418-2   Rules for making transfer elections.

* * * * *
    (d) Determining the eligible credit--(1) In general. An eligible 
taxpayer may only transfer eligible credits determined with respect to 
the eligible taxpayer (paragraph (a)(4) of this section disallows 
transfer elections in other situations). An eligible credit is 
determined with respect to an eligible taxpayer if the eligible 
taxpayer owns the underlying eligible credit property and conducts the 
activities giving rise to the credit or, if ownership is not required 
to give rise to the eligible credit, such as a credit under section 45Z 
or section 45(d)(3)(C), the eligible taxpayer must conduct the 
activities giving rise to the credit. In the case of section 45X (under 
which ownership of eligible credit property is also not required, but 
for which rules related to contract manufacturing arrangements may be 
applicable), the eligible taxpayer must be considered (under the 
section 45X regulations) the taxpayer with respect to which the section 
45X credit is determined. All rules that relate to the determination of 
the eligible credit, such as the rules in sections 49 and 50(b) of the 
Code, apply to the eligible taxpayer and therefore can limit the amount 
of eligible credit determined with respect to an eligible credit 
property that can be transferred. Rules relating to the amount of an 
eligible credit that is allowed to be claimed by an eligible taxpayer, 
such as the rules in section 38(c) or section 469 of the Code, do not 
limit the eligible credit determined, but do apply to a transferee 
taxpayer as described in paragraph (f)(3) of this section.
* * * * *
    (g) Applicability dates--(1) In general. Except as otherwise 
provided in this paragraph (g), this section applies to taxable years 
ending on or after April 30, 2024. For taxable years ending before 
April 30, 2024, taxpayers, however, may choose to apply the rules of 
this section and Sec. Sec.  1.6418-1, 1.6418-3, and 1.6418-5, provided 
the taxpayers apply the rules in their entirety and in a consistent 
manner.
    (2) Paragraph (d)(1). Paragraph (d)(1) of this section applies to 
taxable years ending on or after [date of publication of final 
regulations in the Federal Register]. For taxable years ending before 
[date of publication of final regulations in the Federal Register], see 
Sec.  1.6418-2(d)(1) as contained in 26 CFR part 1, revised April 1, 
2025.

PART 48--MANUFACTURERS AND RETAILERS EXCISE TAXES

0
Par. 8. The authority citation for part 48 continues to read in part as 
follows:

    Authority:  26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *

* * * * *
    Section 48.4101-1 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 4101(a)(1).
* * * * *

0
Par. 9. Section 48.4101-1 is amended by adding paragraphs (a)(7) and 
(8), and (l)(6), to read as follows:


Sec.  48.4101-1   Taxable fuel; registration.

* * * * *
    (a) * * *
    (7) A letter of registration is not a determination of liability 
for tax, eligibility for a tax credit or deduction, or any other tax 
treatment under the Code. For example, a registration letter issued 
under activity letter SA to a person producing or importing a fuel that 
may be eligible for a credit under section 6426(k) of the Code is not a 
determination that such fuel qualifies for the section 6426(k) credit. 
A letter of registration is also not a determination letter, as defined 
in Sec.  601.201(a)(3) of this chapter. The terms letter of 
registration and registration letter as used in this section have the 
same meaning as the term Letter of Registration as defined in Sec.  
1.4101-1(b)(2) of this chapter.
    (8) A person is required to reregister under this section if after 
a transaction (or series of related transactions) more than 50 percent 
of ownership interests in, or assets of, such person are held by 
persons other than persons (or persons related thereto) who held more 
than 50 percent of such interests or assets before the transaction (or 
series of related transactions). Reregistration does not apply to any 
company whose stock is regularly traded on an established securities 
market. If a registrant changes its employer identification number 
(EIN), such registrant must reregister under this section using its new 
EIN.
* * * * *
    (l) * * *
    (6) Paragraphs (a)(7) and (8) of this section apply to taxable 
years ending on or after [date of publication of final regulations in 
the Federal Register].

Frank J. Bisignano,
Chief Executive Officer.
[FR Doc. 2026-02246 Filed 2-3-26; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4831-GV-P