Posts Tagged ‘solar 30% Treasury Grant Program (TGP)’

Happy New Year… Especially for Solar Hot Water

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012 by Solar Fred

At long last, it looks like it’s going to be a great year for solar thermal, especially with some exciting announcements that can potentially boost your commerical solar thermal business.

We’ll have more details in the coming weeks, but here are the highlights that Free Hot Water Installers can look forward to in 2012.

  • New Solar Thermal Financing! In 2012 and 2013, financing will be much easier for Free Hot Water installers. More details soon, but the gist is that we have a new solar thermal financing solution that does not require any customer loans. If you’re a California or Arizona solar thermal installer with prospective customers that own apartment buildings, hospitals, nursing homes, laundry facilities, hotels, condos, or other multi-unit housing, stay tuned for a win-win financing solution that will allow many of these prospects to move forward.
  • Free Hot Water drainbacks. You asked for it and we have them. Free Hot Water drainback systems have arrived. In the next week, you’ll see the new listings in our Free Hot Water catalogue. In addition to our SRCC OG-300 and closed loop solar water heating systems, we now have a complete line of solar thermal OG-300 drainback systems.
  • Free Hot Water is expanding and hiring. To meet the new demand for our new commercial solar thermal financing, Free Hot Water will be hiring solar thermal sales staff for California and Arizona territories, as well as solar thermal design engineers. If you know of anyone who’d like to join the Free Hot Water team, please contact info@freehotwater.com.

Happy New Year! 2012 is going to be a huge, terrific year for solar water heating. Stay tuned for more details about all of the above in the coming weeks.

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Posted in 30% Investment Tax Credit, Hotel Solar Hot Water, Solar 1603 Treasurty Grant Program (TGP), Solar Business Resources, Solar Hot Water, Solar Hot Water for Apartment Buildings, Solar Hot Water News, solar hot water resources, Solar Rebates, Solar Tax Incentives, Solar Thermal Economics, SRCC OG-300 solar systems | No Comments »

The 3 Differences Between Solar PV and Solar Thermal Success: Financing, Subsidies, and Artificially Low Gas Prices

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011 by Solar Fred

There is no dispute that solar PV has grown faster than solar thermal in the United States. Why? I think there are three basic reasons.

1) More and better financing for PV than solar thermal

Banks and venture capitalists have loved solar PV for quite some time, and the reason is that solar PV projects are profitable with solar power purchase agreements (PPAs).

Solar PPA’s for solar PV are a win-win. They provide low-upfront costs to the customer while also reducing energy costs. At the same time, banks and financiers are able to recoup profits over time by capturing all of the available solar incentives, plus charging the customer a discounted rate for the power that they consume.

What’s odd is that solar thermal applications have not attracted the same win-win attention from banks and finance people. Just as with solar PV, it’s possible to meter and measure solar hot water production and reduce the gas utility bills of large commercial applications, such as hotels, condos, apartment buildings, hospitals, laundromats, nursing homes, and so much more.

The bottom line is that bankers and other financiers need to become better informed about solar thermal applications, economics, and to develop more ways to finance projects.

2) More and better subsidies for PV than solar thermal

Clean solar energy is clean solar energy, and yet governments seem to be more amenable to subsidizing solar electric clean energy than solar water heating applications.  If you run down the list of all of the subsidies available on the DSIRE database, you’ll find many more—and richer—solar PV subsidies than for solar thermal.

Once again, I think the reason behind this tilt against solar thermal is the lack of awareness and understanding from legislators about the benefits of solar thermal applications. From hot water and heat, to air conditioning, solar thermal installations could be saving consumers, businesses, and government facilities thousands of dollars over the system’s lifetime. In large installations, hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Environmentally, solar thermal can not only reduce our dependence on fossil fuels, but also decrease the currently trend in hydrofracking, a process that may not only damage the environment, but also contaminate drinking water.

The solar industry needs better solar thermal lobbyists. Lobbyists are a dirty word, I know, and yet, they are effective getting in front of legislators and explaining the benefits of solar.

3) Subsidized low gas prices

Subsidizing the exploration of natural gas and other fossil fuels are not helping any consumer or business to consider purchasing renewable solar PV or solar thermal.

It’s hypocritical for the Federal government to say that it wants to move the nation towards clean, renewable, non-polluting energy while encouraging the development of natural gas, enabling natural gas prices to remain artificially low. Meanwhile, utilities are raising their coal-fired electric rates between 3% and 5% a year, making solar PV increasingly competitive.

I’m not saying that gas won’t play a role in our nations near-term energy portfolio, but the sooner our legislators encourage more renewable solar alternatives by leveling the playing field and eliminating gas subsidies, the more solar jobs will be created, and of course, the more energy independent our country will be.

Once again, the solution is better solar thermal lobbying. Solar PV and wind companies all have policy people who are constantly talking to legislators. Solar thermal needs that same face-to-face representation.

 

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Posted in 30% Investment Tax Credit, Hotel Solar Hot Water, Residential Solar Hot Water, Restaurant Solar Hot Water, Solar 1603 Treasurty Grant Program (TGP), Solar Hot Water, Solar Hot Water for Apartment Buildings, Solar Hot Water Monitoring, Solar Thermal & Solar Hot Water News | 1 Comment »

Solar’s 1603 Treasury Grant Program – Will It Survive?

Monday, October 31st, 2011 by Solar Fred

Cross your fingers for Solar's 1603 TGP

The 1603 Treasury Grant Program (TGP) is set to expire at the end of 2011, although it is still uncertain whether Congress will renew the program for another year or longer. Cross your fingers.

For those unfamiliar with the 1603 program, it is a law that was passed at the end of 2008 as part of the original economic stimulus bill. The 1603 provision essentially allowed commercial companies to receive a cash grant of 30% of the cost of a commercial solar PV or solar thermal system instead of the 30% Federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) – also part of that law.

This cash grant was a huge help to large scale solar developers, who would normally leverage the 30% ITC to finance their solar projects. Keep in mind that a tax credit is like an IRS gift card: It can be used to pay one’s taxes or a portion of taxes. Profitable banks, venture capitalists, and tax equity investors loved these credits to offset their very large tax bills. However, with the economy struggling, there were relatively few tax equity partners who could actually use the tax credits. Instead, banks and investors wanted to hold on to their cash on hand.

Enter the 1603 cash grant, which re-opened the doors to large scale solar financing. Now, investors and developers could immediately recoup their 30% incentive in cash, rather wait to use the 30% ITC to pay their taxes—if they owed taxes. If the company owed no taxes, the 30% ITC was not refundable; rather, the unused balance could be used towards paying corporate taxes for up to 5 years.

The other advantage of the 1603 was that financiers could use the grant to help fund solar PPA and solar lease projects, making it easier for businesses to go solar with little to no upfront payment.

As expected, the 1603 is widely credited for the large scale and solar boom in recent years. A recent report from SEIA projects that with another extension of 1603 in 2012:

  • An additional 37,000 jobs would be supported by the solar energy industry in 2012, a 12% increase over baseline.
  • 18,000 will be directly employed by solar companies or indirectly employed by firms that support the solar industry.
  • An additional 19,000 jobs would be induced by the industry’s economic activity.

Remember that 1603 is not just for solar PV. Developers of commercial solar hot water applications are also eligible for the grant. That means apartment building owners, restaurants, hotels, hospitals, laundry facilities, condominiums, private colleges, and other industries can utilize the program…at least until the end of the year.

So, will Congress act to extend the program? At this point, nothing is certain in the halls of Congress, but sources at SEIA tell Free Hot Water that they are “optimistic” that there will eventually be an extension.

The tricky part is packaging the 1603 extension with some type of bill that must be passed by both houses of Congress, such as a military spending bill or a general government funding bill. These bills don’t come along often, but they do come.

So, keep those fingers crossed that the 1603 gets into one of those bills sooner than later. Couldn’t hurt.

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Posted in 30% Investment Tax Credit, Hotel Solar Hot Water, Restaurant Solar Hot Water, Solar 1603 Treasurty Grant Program (TGP), Solar Business Resources, Solar Hot Water for Apartment Buildings, Solar Hot Water News, Solar Thermal & Solar Hot Water News, Solar Thermal Economics | No Comments »