Archive for the 'Solar Financing' Category

1BOG in Sonoma County

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

solar in sonoma county1BOG is going wine tasting! Well, not really, but we are bring solar to Sonoma County.

Though I’ve been working for Virgance (1BOG’s parent company) for some time now, I’ve just started working with the 1BOG team, and my first project is launching the Sonoma County campaign.

Why Sonoma? Why now?
Because Sonoma County recently announced $100 million in municipal solar financing for home energy improvements, like solar panels!

This “property tax” solar financing option means that Sonoma homeowners can invest in home energy improvements without paying huge up front costs. The loans will be paid back over time through additional property taxes to the homeowner (not the whole county), and will stick with the house even if you sell it.

Programs like this are starting to pop up all over the country, and 1BOG is keeping track of all of them. See if your city has municipal financing for solar.

So basically, this is a great time to go solar in Sonoma County, and 1BOG wants to contribute to the effort. Homeowners need a bid from an installer before they can begin applying for this municipal financing, and 1BOG is the easiest way to get one for solar!

New Solar Financing Page – Info for Solar Financing on your Home from 1BOG

Friday, March 27th, 2009

solar-financing

1BOG Solar Financing powered by SunRun

You told us that removing the out-of-pocket cost of going solar was important to you, and we listened. 1BOG has partnered with SunRun to offer financing for our 1BOG participants. We will also be working to bring you all financing options that make sense and help create the tipping point for residential solar energy. Getting people together in a group and making the buying process painless is a big part of this. Making it easy to afford solar energy for your home in this economy is the other.

All the details on solar energy financing can be found at solarfinancing.1bog.org.

There is information on PPAs, Solar Leases, Municipal Solar Financing (the property financing for solar), and traditional home equity.

Thanks!

Berkeley First – Financing Solar Energy through Property Taxes

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

Note: I am not a tax professional by any means. Please consult one before acting on, or really, even listening to, anything I have to say.

Update 2/10/09:  Looks like the Berkeley First program got the attention it needs on the Federal Level to make it scale.  Check the bottom of this post.

San Francisco and Berkeley both have groundbreaking solar incentive programs. San Francisco went first with a cash incentive for installing solar energy… something I followed extremely closely over it’s gestation. Berkeley decided to take another route and to finance residential solar installs using additions to the homes’ property tax bill over 20 years. I didn’t follow this as closely because it seemed to me that it was doomed from the start for one simple reason: It didn’t jibe with the federal investment tax credit.

The tax credit, or ITC, can only be applied if the solar financing is “at risk.” Financing through an addition to property taxes – an addition that transfers with the property when it is sold, didn’t sound “at risk.” (again, I’m no tax attorney.)  I wasn’t sure about this, but it boggled my mind that seemingly, this was working it’s way through city government all the way without being addressed.

I did come across some diagrams trying to show it was still a valid option because the interest rate was lower and that counteracted the $2000 credit, but last I heard the interest rate was quite high, and the federal tax incentive has increased dramatically, making it impossible to overcome even if there were no interest.

It looks like this is further confirmed by a recent call to action on Vote Solar requesting that its readers pressure congress to tweak the ITC with these proposed changes:

First, eliminate the barrier to utilizing the Federal Energy Tax Credit. The federal government now provides a 30% Energy Tax Credit for the installation of specified energy projects. Expenditures are not considered eligible for purposes of calculating the Energy Tax Credit if the related improvements were financed by “subsidized energy financing” or tax‐exempt bonds. Legislation can clarify that this type of renewable and energy efficiency financing program does not adversely impact the availability of the Energy Tax Credit regardless of its structure.

Second, allow the use of federally tax exempt bonds to finance the program. The revenue bonds supporting this program cannot take advantage of the federal tax exemption normally available to local government because the renewable energy and energy efficiency projects financed by bonds are made to private property and the bonds are payable from private loan payments made by participating property owners. This makes the program much less cost‐effective for property owners. Given the requirement that we quickly address energy security and climate change, Congress can amend the code to recognize that bonds issued to finance renewable energy and energy efficiency improvements to private property are governmental bonds the interest on which may be tax‐exempt.

If they can get this thing to play nice with the ITC, it could have a drastic positive impact on the number of solar installations the US.  Please visit Vote Solar to contact your representative when you have some free time.  They make it very easy for you to do.