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ENERGY SUMMIT
for Self Storage
Owners and Managers



CTSSA Program
March 12, 2013
Overview

 Discuss economic benefits of investing in
  energy efficiency measures from both an
  investment and a tax perspective.
 Discuss low interest financing options.
 Review a case study – i.e. take you through an
  actual proposal and financial analysis for a CT
  storage facility.
Introductions
Panelists
 • Stephanie Grubb, Cohn Reznick - Investment Considerations and Tax Benefits
 • Jessica Bailey, CEFIA Commercial & Industrial Property Assessed
   Clean Energy - C-PACE Financing
 • Elena Cahill, Globele Energy - Audit Requirements and Benefits
 • Nicholas Malagisi, Sperry Van Ness Advisors; Real Estate Benefits
 • Scott Hainey, Storage Insurance Brokers - Insurance Requirements
 • Tim McGrew, Connecticut Light & Power – CL&P Assistance to Improve
   Energy Efficiency
 • Christy Bradway, Connecticut Light & Power – Discussion of ZRECs
 • Ted Lawrence, Renewable Resources Inc. – Solar Process and Case Study
 • Tom Loredo, Renewable Resources Inc. - Panel Moderator
Energy Outlook
“Fuel for Thought”
                               UN Population Growth Estimate
                                    to 9 Billion by 2040



 What will the effect be on:

     The Use of Energy?

     The Cost of Energy?

      The Environment, if
     we continue to use
     fossil fuel based
     energy?
World Energy Outlook by 2035

 World primary energy demand will increase 36%
 China’s demand for energy is rising by 75%
 The US is now the second largest energy
  consumer behind China
 The use of renewable energy will triple
 Renewables account for 7% of all energy and will
  rise to 14%
Electricity Rates

  On average, CT electric rates have increased
   5% per year, over the last 10 years.
                                      (Source: US Energy Information
   Administration)




  Currently, the average commercial cost is
   between $0.16 - $0.17/kWh in CT

  Straight line projection of 5%/year =
   $0.27/kWh in 2023
Energy Conservation,
Generation and Alternative
         Supply
      On overview
How can you conserve energy in a building:
1. Look at your process and learn if you can lean
   out the process;
2. Make process equipment more energy
   efficient;
3. Look at the building systems and determine if
   you can replace any systems with energy
   efficient technology;
4. Manage you process and building systems with
   technology.
5. An audit or benchmarking will help you
   determine the present situation and provide
   options for you
Next make sure you understand the economics of
  conservation.
As you will learn today there are many programs available to
  assist with funding for conservation projects.
Understand some monies are incentive monies to do the
  project, other programs can help you finance the project,
  and yet other benefits are federal tax credits or deductions.
The benefits are cumulative: you may be qualify for incentive
  dollars which requires less funding for the projects and
  then take the federal tax credit or deduction on your tax
  return.
 Federal programs apply to every state.
 Every state and within the sate the utility company
  may have their own programs for conservation or
  generation.
 CT has the energy efficiency fund and CEFIA and now
  CPACE
 MA has Massachusetts Energy and Utility Assistance,
 National Grid has efficiency programs, etc
 NY has NYSERDA, Con ED has efficiency
  programs, etc
 DSIRE website for the benefits in your state
 Alternative electric and natural gas supply.
 Deregulation intended to save money and it can but be
  knowledgeable
 CT utility companies can change their rates January 1
  and July 1 – this year UI will change their rate next in
  January 1, 2014 and CLP in July 2013.
 Present 24 hr rates- UI -.076 CLP - .078
 Make sure the rate can not go up.
 Natural Gas utility companies change their rates
  monthly on the 1st.
 You can generate energy through renewable
  technologies such as solar, wind, etc
 You can generate energy with cleaner technologies
  such as fuel cell, co-gen etc
 Federal tax credits available for projects through 2016
 In CT - CPACE program can potentially fund the
  projects, you will learn more later-CPACE is in 27
  other states
 Cumulative benefits again- CPACE- Fed tax credits,
  etc
 DSIRE will list renewable programs as well
Why Solar Power
Why Solar Power?
 Solar is a clean and renewable
  energy source

 Every hour, enough sunlight shines on
  the earth to meet global energy needs
  for an entire year
It’s Natural – Just like the Sun

                        Silicon
                         Ingot

              Virgin
                                   Wafer
              Silicon




              Array               Solar Cell


                        Modules
PV System on Building
Calculating Solar Efficiency


                               Azimuth


  Pitch

                  Shading
Solar Economics
The Economics of Solar
   Avoided Cost of Electricity equals Lower
    Operating Expenses

   Federal Tax Benefits – ITC and Depreciation


   State/Utility Incentives - ZREC


   Life of Solar System (25 Year Warranties)
Federal Solar Programs

    30% Federal Tax Credit through 2016
    5-year accelerated depreciation (MACRS)
    50% bonus depreciation in 2013
    Depreciable base is reduced by 50% of ITC
     credit value
Project Finance
 Direct Purchase – Conventional financing

 Capital Lease – 10 year term with $1 Buyout

 C-PACE – Property Assessed Lending
Solar Project Development Timeline
         Month                           1                               2                                   3                4

          Week             1         2       3       4        5         6        7       8   9        10          11   12     13

          Stage                I                         II                                            III


                                                                     B. Physical
                               A. Agreements
 Stage I - Design                                                     Plan/Site              C. Final Design
                                 Completed                             Review



                                                                     Municipal
                                                                      Permits                         Utility
                                 D. State
Stage II - Applications        Authorization
                                                                                                   Application/
                                                                  Assumes no zoning or           Interconnection
                                                                   variances required




                                    E. System
                                   Installation                    F. Municipal                  G. Utility-Net              H. State
Stage III - Installation         (Assumes good                      Inspection                   Meter Install              Inspection
                               weather conditions)
Next Steps
   Data Collection
      12 Month History of Electric Use
      Site plan
      Blue Prints
   Site review and structural analysis
   Proposal
   Financing Discussion
   Preliminary Project Timing
Proposed Bill No. 203

 AN ACT CONCERNING PROPERTY TAX EXEMPTIONS FOR
 RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES.
 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly
 convened:
 That section 12-81 of the general statutes be amended to exempt from property
 tax any Class I renewable energy source installed for the generation of
 electricity for commercial and industrial use, and to make such exemption
 applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2012.

 Statement of Purpose:
 To encourage the use of renewable energy sources, and to allow the commercial
 and industrial sectors to benefit from such sources by expanding current law
 that allows the property tax exemption for renewable energy sources only if the
 generation of electricity is for residential or farm use.
Storage Insurance Brokers
Commercial Business Case Study

  Building Overview
  Building Type: Pre-engineered, steel
  Roof Type: Metal, low pitch
  Electric Company: CL&P
  Electric Rate: $0.179/kWh
  Electric Consumption: Approx. 52,300 kWh/ yr.
  Anticipated Utility Rate Escalation: 3%
Metal Roof Installation
Commercial Business Case Study

  Solar Installation
  •   System Size— 46.08 kW
  •   Panels— 192 @ 240 watts
  •   System Production— 51,358 kWh (Year 1)
  •   Percentage of Electricity Produced by Solar— 98%
  •   System Degradation— 0.8%/year
  •   System Mounting— S5 Metal Roof Clips
  •   System Warranty— 25 year manufacturer’s warranty
Solar Array Mock-up
Investment – Financial Evaluation
 Investment analysis considers ‘at-risk’ rule, therefore the project is
 financed at 80% maximum. Balance of system cost is invested by
 owner. Also, a 35% corporate tax rate is assumed.

 Considerations
  • Project Cost— $175,104
  • Cost/Watt— $3.80
  • Avoided Electric Costs Savings— $0.16/kWh (with 3% yearly
    escalator)
  • 30% ITC Value— $52,531
  • MACRS Value— $148,838
  • Loan Value— $140,083
  • Loan Term— 10 years
  • Loan Rate— 6%
  • Annual Loan Payment— $19,033 (assumes 1 yearly payment)
Investment – Financial Evaluation

Evaluation Without ZREC Income
 •   Avoided Electric Cost Savings over 25 years – $269,200
 •   $52,531 ITC—Year 1
 •   $148,838 available MACRS
 •   ROI— 77%
 •   IRR— 9.21%
Investment – Financial Evaluation
 Evaluation With ZREC Income
  •   Avoided Electric Cost Savings over 25 years –
  •   $269,200
  •   ZREC Income— $119,665; ZREC Value = $164.22
  •   $52,531 ITC— Year 1
  •   $148,838 available MACRS
  •   ROI— 121%
  •   IRR— 21.77%
Renewable Energy Project Finance




                           March 2013

CohnReznick LLP
Agenda

•   What drives the Renewable Energy Market
•   What is the ITC
•   How to finance a renewable energy project
•   What are the benefits to you
Renewable Energy Market Drivers

• Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS)
• Financial incentives
  ̶ Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs), particularly for Solar (SRECs)
   ̶ Feed-in Tariffs (FIT)
    ̶ Rebate and grant programs
     ̶ Federal tax incentives
      ̶ State tax incentives
• Rising cost of electricity
       ̶ Driven by fossil fuel prices and growth in demand
        ̶ Electricity prices (average retail price) vary considerably across the country
          • U.S average retail price for electricity is $0.0983/kWh
          • California costs are high, ~$0.13/kWh
          • New Jersey costs are higher, ~$0.147/kWh
          • Rates in Hawaii are among the highest, ~$0.25/kWh
          • Source (as of 1/30/2012): http://www.eia.gov/electricity/state/
Key Renewable Energy and Solar Terms

PPA – Power Purchase Agreement = Contract for sale of electricity
MW – Mega Watt - Utility Scale Power generation. Powers neighborhoods
kWh – Kilowatt-hour – smaller unit of power output – e.g., a solar panel’s
electrical output
REC or SREC – Renewable Energy Certificate or “credit.” NOT a tax credit.
Represents the green/clean aspect of actual energy that is separately
produced. S in “SREC” means a Solar REC.
EPC – Engineering Procurement and Construction contractor
Off-taker – purchaser or user of the electricity
Host – person or place where a project is physically located (could be the
buyer in a PPA)
COD – Commence Operations Date (aka “Placed in Service”)
Key Renewable Energy and Solar Terms

Sponsor – Energy Project developer or project manager
PV – Solar Photovoltaic (PV) technology. Makes electricity directly from
sunlight Light
SPE – a Special Purpose Entity (often an LLC) that plays a specific role in
the renewable energy project such as owning and/or operating it.
ITC – Investment Tax Credit (more on this later)
PTC – Production Tax Credit (more on this later)
Net Metering – Excess electricity is fed into the electrical grid. Project
owner is given a credit on their utility bill to use when the system generates
less electricity than needed.
Key Renewable Energy and Solar Terms

Avoided Cost- is the cost the utility would have incurred had it supplied the power itself
or obtained it from another source. It is the price at which an electric utility purchases the
output of a Qualified Facility (QF)
Federal Tax Incentives
T a x D e d u c t i o n v s . Ta x C r e d i t

Tax deductions are a reduction of a taxpayer’s total income that
decreases the taxable income used in calculating the actual tax to be
paid.
         What is a deduction worth?
       ̶ $1 Deduction = $1 x tax rate
    ̶ Assume 35% tax rate

   ̶ $1 x 0.35 = 0.35¢ of after tax value

Tax credits reduce dollar for dollar the amount of tax actually owed and
payable to IRS.
         What is a tax credit worth?
    ̶ $1 tax credit = $1 of after tax value
Renewable Technology: Solar Electricity

Use of solar equipment (e.g. photo-voltaic (“PV”) or concentrated solar
power) to generate electricity.

Eligible for 30% ITC (or 1603) through December 31, 2016, 10% thereafter.
IRC      48 – Energy Investment Tax Credit (ITC)

• ITC is based on the percent of eligible equipment, not on how much
  electricity is produced and not on total project cost. Most ITCs are 30%
  with some 10% credits depending on technology.

• Unlike production tax credits (PTCs), there is no requirement that
  electricity    be     sold,   only      that   the    facility  generates
  electricity, heating, cooling or lighting or meets other standards per the
  tax code.

• One year credit – generally claimed in year placed-in-service (PIS)
    ̶   End-user of tax credit must be an owner/partner in the deal before
        COD/PIS date
    ̶   5 year compliance/holding period (like § 47 Historic Rehab Tax
        Credits)
    ̶   Credit vests and recapture period burns off 20% per year for 5
        years from date of COD/PIS
IRC       48 – Energy Investment Tax Credit (ITC)

• 5 year MACRS depreciation on most technologies (Bonus Depreciation
  applies when law allows)

• Basis reduction – Must reduce depreciable tax basis by 50% of the credit
  amount

• No governmental or tax exempt use allowed (“use” means ownership or
  lease)

• Credits are Allocated by profit/loss ratio (like Historic Rehab Tax Credit)

• May offset Alternative Minimum Tax liability (for tax years starting after
  2008)

• Note, the ATRA of 2012 extended the election to claim the section 48
  investment tax credit (ITC) rather than the PTC for eligible wind and
  other PTC facilities. Not all PTC eligible facilities are allowed this option.
  For those that are, the election now applies for projects where
  construction begins prior to January 1, 2014. This is a new rule.
Ta x E q u i t y C a l c u l a t i o n

$1,000,000    Eligible Cost of Energy Property

x     30%     Applicable ITC Rate (sometimes 10%)

$ 300,000     ITC to standalone project
Solar Tax Credits: Eligible Property Defined

Equipment that uses solar energy to generate electricity

  Constructed/Purchased by the taxpayer

  Must be Depreciable or Amortizable (i.e., used in a trade or business)

  Acquired by the taxpayer and first used by the taxpayer

  – Exception for sale-leasebacks - 90 day rule (Old IRC Section 48(b)(2))
Eligible Energy Tax Credit Basis – Solar ITC

Which costs are eligible for the credit?

• Solar panels, mounts, racks, wiring, inverters etc.
• Hard construction costs in general
• Direct and indirect costs of installation
         System integration/design/testing
         Permits, fees etc.
         Interest expense prior to PIS – Subject to Section 266 Election
         Developer fee if Reasonable
         Other soft costs properly capitalized
Eligible Energy Tax Credit Basis

Practical Issue: The extent to which a support system (i.e., “racking”) for
solar qualifies for the credit. Note– roof surfaces do not qualify, unless the
solar panel is also the actual roof; See, PLR 201121005.

• Base for ground-mounted units that have no other uses do qualify

• Parking garage structures which support panels but provide shade?

  ̶ Portion of roofing repair?

  ̶ Parking garage/carport cost? What portion?

  For Solar Walls – See, PLR 201043023
Test Your Knowledge: What is Eligible for ITC Basis?
Bonus Depreciation

ATRA Extended Bonus Depreciation


50% - Additional 1 st year depreciation of 50% for qualified property
acquired and placed in service before Jan. 1, 2014 (before Jan. 1, 2015 for
certain longer-lived and transportation property). (Code Sec. 168(k)(2), as
amended by Act Sec. 331(a)).

A conforming change is made to Code Sec. 460(c)(6)(B) (relating to 50%
bonus depreciation not being taken into account as a cost in applying the
percentage of completion method for certain long-term contracts).

Bonus depreciation may be allocated as of the placed in service date, so
planning of Investor entry is important.
MACRS Depreciation

•   Wind, solar and geothermal are generally classified as five -year
    property
•   Biomass is typically classified as seven-year property
•   Ancillary components such as transmission lines are depreciated over a
    longer period, generally not include in tax credit basis.
•   MACRS Permanent part of the tax code


     Wind/          Year 1   Year 2   Year 3   Year 4   Year 5   Year 6
     Solar
     MACRS          20.00%   32.00%   19.20%   11.52%   11.52%   5.76%

     MACRS +        60.00%   16.00%   9.60%    5.76%    5.76%    2.88%
     50% bonus
     depreciation
Financing Renewable
   Energy Projects

   Why and How.


                      58
Why Finance Renewable Energy?

For investors –
  Tax incentives:
  – Solar - 30% Investment Tax Credit (ITC), and for certain other
    technologies, owners can elect Production Tax Credits (PTC) or a 30%
    immediate Investment Tax Credit depending on technology.
  – Five year tax depreciation (with some exceptions) on the equipment.
  Yields can be considerably higher with shorter holding periods than
  LIHTC and other tax credit investments.
For owner-operators –
  Cash flow from the sale of energy to tenants or utilities under long term
  agreements and renewable energy certificates (REC’s)
For energy user or “off-takers” –
  Lock in their energy costs for 10-20 years
• Bloomberg Energy estimates the US energy tax credit equity market is at
  $7B (source
  http://www.cohnreznick.com/sites/default/files/The%20Return%20%E2%8
  0%93%20and%20Returns%20%E2%80%93%20of%20Tax%20Equity%20for%20
  US%20Renewable%20Projects.pdf)
How to Finance Renewable Energy
Property

•Educate Lenders

•Be aware of “At Risk Rules”
What Does This Mean To
        You?

   More Tax Rules!


                         61
W h o C a n U s e E n e r g y Ta x C r e d i t s ?

Corporate investors (widely-held corporations)
  An estimated 15-20 active investors; expiration of the Sec.1603 grant will
  create demand for much more tax equity from investors
Individuals (and closely-held corporations)
  There are several rules that may come into play here.
Tax-exempt and government entities
  Qualified allocations
  – Not eligible for tax credits, but won’t affect other partners if there are
    “qualified allocations.” A technical rule.
  – Section 168(h) election required for wholly-owned subsidiaries of tax-
    exempts
  PPA needs to be respected as sales/service contract… or lose / defer
  incentives
Where can I find more information?

CohnReznick – Renewable Energy
 http://www.cohnreznick.com/industries/renewable-energy

Energy Tax Credits – DSIRE
  http://www.dsireusa.org/
  – Information on federal tax credits and incentives
  – Provides links to relevant state websites

Solar Energy Industries Association
  http://www.seia.org/

American Wind Energy Association
 http://www.awea.org/
C o h n R e z n i c k C a n H e l p Yo u

              Stephanie Grubb, CPA
                    Manager

                 CohnReznick LLP
                525 N. Tryon Street
                    Suite 1000
               Charlotte, NC 28202

                Main (704) 332-9100
               Direct (704) 837-7252

        stephanie.grubb@cohnreznick.com

              www.cohnreznick.com
 www.cohnreznick.com/industries/renewable-energy
The LREC/ZREC
PROGRAM
An Opportunity to Develop Behind-The-Meter Renewable
Generation in Connecticut
Christie Bradway
Manager, Renewable Power Contracts
Northeast Utilities
Why are People Interested in Renewable
Generation?
Drivers:
  • To “Go-Green”
  • To reduce, or better predict, spending on energy
Barriers:
  • Cost of Systems
  • No clear long-term revenue streams to support capital
    investments

• Public Act 11-80 created a billion dollar opportunity for
  developers and installers of small renewable systems
• CL&P and UI will enter into 15 year contracts to purchase
  “RECs” from new small renewable projects
What is a REC? = Renewable Energy Certificate
• How is a REC Created?
 Each time a renewable generation unit produces, the energy is
  considered “renewable”
    LREC: Low – emission RECs = e.g Fuel Cells
    ZREC: Zero – emission RECs = e.g Solar, Wind, Small Hydro
 Each megawatt hour of energy produced = 1 REC




• Why Should You Care About RECs?
 • RECs have a value (commodity) and are used by electric companies to
   satisfy regulatory requirements (RPS)
How Many RECs & How Much Are These RECs Worth?
 RECs from Zero Emission units (solar, wind, hydro) may be worth up to $350 each* (cap) :
  However, average price of selected medium zrec bids from 2012 = +/- $150 each

 Example 1: Residential Home = 5 kW Solar System= 6 RECs/year
    Annual Payment = $900.
        $150/REC x 6 RECs/year =+/- $900. per year
    Total Payment over 15 years = $13,500.
        $900 x 15 years = $13,500

 Example 2: Commercial Business = 100 kW Solar System = 114 RECs/year
    Annual Payment = $17,100.
    Total Payment over 15 years = $256,500.

 RECs from Low Emission units (Fuel Cells) may be worth up to $200 each* (cap)
  However, average price of selected bids from 2012 = +/- $90 each


 Example 3: Commercial Business = 400 kW Fuel Cell = 3,154 RECs/year
    Annual Payment = $283,860
    Total Payment over 15 years = $4,257,900
REC Contract directly with
customer
                             The REC
Utility purchases
                             purchase is a
excess energy under
                             separate
existing tariff
                             transaction
Rec Contract with a developer
             Electric Supply
LREC & ZREC Eligibility
General Project Eligibility Criteria
  • Must be located behind contracting utility distribution meter
  • Must not have received funding/grants from Clean Energy Finance Investment
    Authority, or its predecessor the CT Clean Energy Fund (other than low cost
    financing)
  • Projects must be in service on, or after, July 1, 2011
LRECs
  • No larger than 2,000 kW
  • Must have low emissions
     • <0.07 lbs/MWh NOx; <0.10 lbs/MWh CO; 0.02 lb/MWh VOCs, 1 grain per 100
        standard cubic feet
  • May include fuel cells and other low emission Class I resources, as well as all zero
    emission Class I resources
ZRECs
  • No larger than 1,000 kW
  • Must have zero emissions
  • May include solar, hydro and wind
Procurement Processes
1) Competitive Solicitation - (RFP)
 Project        Size        Annual       Renewable Energy Credit         RFP Timeframe and Frequency
  Type                      Budget             Price Cap*

Large      ≥250 kW to      ~$2.13 M    Max. $350/REC                     Annual in April for 6 years
ZRECs      1,000 kW                                                      2013 will be year 2

Medium     >100 kW < 250   Approxim    Max. $350/REC                     Annual in April for 6 years
ZRECs      kW              ately                                         2013 will be year 2
                           $2.13 M

LRECs      Up to 2,000     $4 M        Max. $200/REC                     Annual in April for 5 years
           kW                                                            2013 will be year 2



2) Tariff
 Project         Size        Annual     Renewable Energy Credit Price           Tariff Availability and
  Type                       Budget                Cap                                Frequency


Small      Up to 100 kW     ~$2.13 M   Weighted Average of the Medium      Annually, after the approval of the
ZRECs                                  ZREC price + 10% up to $350/REC     RFP and the filing of the medium
                                       - Year 1 Avg = $164.22/REC          ZREC rate + 10%
                                                                           Expect to offer Yr. 2 Q4 2013 or
                                                                           Q1 2014
Budget & commitment
schedule
Final Results of 1st RFP
Category   Size          # Bids   #          Average     Committed     Uncommitted    % of Budget   15 Year
                                  Bids       Weighted    Budget ($M)   Budget ($M)    Uncommitted   Contract
                                  Selected   Price/REC                                              Value ($M)
LRECs      Up to 2 MW    43       12         $65.94      $3.0          $162K          5%            $45.6

Medium     100 – 250     113      47         $149.29     $2.0          $78K           4%            $29.8
ZRECs      kW
Large      250 – 1,000   140      21         $101.36     $2.1          $145K          7%            $30.8
ZRECs      kW
Total                    296      80         $89.13      $7.0          $386 k         5%            $106


    • Final Selected Projects weighted average price/REC = $89

    1. Average prices were about 1/3 of the cap
        • LREC Cap = $200 and Avg. Weighted Price/LREC = $65.94
        • ZREC Cap = $350 and Avg. Weighted Price/ZREC = $121.13

    2. RFP contracts will result in approximately 27 MW of installed renewable capacity in CT
        • LRECs = 5.6 MW – fuel cells
        • ZRECs = 21 MW - solar
Small ZREC Tariff
• Instead of competitive bidding - projects less than or equal to 100
  kW are eligible to enroll in a tariff

• Price takers = $164.22/REC
  • Program establishes the price as the average of the selected Medium ZREC
    projects +10%


• Schedule - Small ZREC Tariff Program must open 30 days from
  approval of Medium ZREC Contracts
  • Medium ZREC Contracts approved 11/21/13
  • Opened Small ZREC Program 1/8/13 (with PURA approval for extension due to
    holidays)
  • Initial two-week window closed 1/22/13
Small ZREC Tariff
Category         Size             #              Approx. # of         Price/REC     Available     Total Annual          15 Year
                             Applications        Contracts to                        Budget         Value of            Contract
                              Received           be awarded                           ($M)        Applications        Commitment
                                                                                                                       Value ($M)


Small       0 – 100 kW      479                200                    $164.22      $2.36          $5.6               $35.4
ZREC

   •    At the close of the Small ZREC 2-week , CL&P received 479 completed Small ZREC Applications, which totaled over $5.6M in requested
        Small ZREC funding - more than 138% above CL&P’s available Small ZREC budget of $2.36M for this round of the Small ZREC Program.

   •    Based on the volume of applications received during the two-week window, CL&P conducted a random selection process of completed
        Applications submitted during the 2-week window, which process was observed by a representative of the State of Connecticut Office
        of Consumer Counsel (OCC). The random selection process resulted in a numerical rank of all completed Applications received
        during the two-week window.

   •    Based on the queue and available budget, we expect to enter into contracts with approximately 200 applications

   •    PURA approval of these individual contracts is not required

   •    PURA approved the Small ZREC Tariff and the price of tariff = $164.22/REC

   •    Small ZREC Tariff will be open until all available budget has been allocated, or at the time when a new Small ZREC price has been
        established for the next year Small ZREC applications.

   •    Expect this round of the Small ZREC Program will result in an approximately 9 MW additional installed solar in CT
Timeline and Next Steps
Action                             Date                  Comments

Small ZREC Tariff Service          January – July 2013   Execution of ~200 Service Attachments
Attachment Execution
LREC and Medium/Large ZREC RFP –   April, 2013           Year 2 RFP to open in April 2013
Year 2 Opening
For additional information visit:
Website: CL-P.com, and Click on Renewable
 Energy Credits under the “Going Green” tab

Email: LREC.ZREC@NU.COM

UI: www.uinet.com/powerprocurement

Email: LREC.ZREC@uinet.com
Energy Efficiency Programs for
     Business Customers

   Conservation & Load Management
    Connecticut Light & Power and
             Yankee Gas
Energize Connecticut: New
         name, same great programs
•   Energize Connecticut is the state’s new branding initiative to help
    consumers save money and use clean, affordable energy.
•   A partnership of the Energy Efficiency Fund, the Clean Energy Finance and
    Investment Authority, and local electric and gas utilities
•   Energy efficiency is a valuable resource for Connecticut, it:
     –   Reduces air pollutants and greenhouse gases
     –   Saves customers money
     –   Reduces need for more energy generation
     –   Creates jobs
•   Program funding:
     – Electric customers pay 3 mills per kilowatt-hour
     – Natural gas programs are funded through gas utility bills and approved by the Public
       Utilities Regulatory Authority
2013 Program Incentive
          Budgets & Caps
                        Budgets
         CL&P C&I             $ 35.2 M
         YGS                  $ 2.4 M
         CNG                  $ 2.3 M
         SCG                  $ 2.1 M
Project caps
•   CL&P $1,000,000 per federal tax ID
•   YGS/CNG/SCG projects with an incentive amount greater
    than $100,000 require PURA approval
New Construction & Equipment
• Captures electric and natural gas
  savings where they are most cost-
  effective: during design                 New Construction
                                           Major Renovation
• Covers up to:                            Equipment Replacement
   – 95% of the incremental
     cost of installing       Energy
                                              Lighting        HVAC
     measures in new          Efficient
                                              Controls      Equipment
     construction             Lighting
   – 75% of the incremental
     cost for equipment       Building
                                            Refrigeration
                                                             Process
     replacement projects     Envelope                      Equipment



                                     Gas Boilers         VFDs
Prescriptive Rebates
• HVAC Unitary           • Gas heating
  Equipment                equipment
• Heat pumps               – Condensing boilers
• Infrared heaters         – Non-condensing
                             boilers
• Water heaters            – Condensing furnaces
• Food service rebates     – Condensing unit
                             heaters
Existing Buildings
• Incentives to replace functioning equipment with
  more energy-efficient options

Covers up to:             Energy                            EMS/
• 40% of installed cost   efficient
                                          Lighting
                                                        Programmable
                                          controls
• 50% of installed cost   lighting                       Thermostats
  for comprehensive
  projects
                                   Process
                                                     VFDs
                                  Equipment



                                        Refrigeration
                          HVAC                          Gas Measures
                                         Controls
Small Business Energy Advantage
                   (SBEA)
• Turnkey energy-saving program
• Pay nothing upfront
• Existing business, municipal, and
  government customers
• Average 12-month peak demand between 10
  kW and 200 kW
• All possible energy efficiency measures
• On-bill, 0% financing to qualifying customers
Retro Commissioning/PRIME/O&M Services/Training & Outreach

BUSINESS & ENERGY
SUSTAINABILITY (BES)
Business & Energy Sustainability
                        (BES)
• The next level after all or most
  major capital improvements
  have been completed
• Maximize operational
  strategies with existing capital
  equipment & people
• Develop management
  practices
BES Programs
• Retro Commissioning: Optimizes operation of
  customer’s facility without installing capital
  equipment
• PRIME: Focuses on industrial manufacturing
  processes
• Operations & Maintenance: Improves efficiency
  through changes and repairs that can be classified
  as maintenance or operational procedures
• Training & Outreach
Financing
Type       Min       Max          Rate        Term     Pymt        Source
                                              Max
SBEA/      $500      $150,000     0%          4 yrs    On-Bill     Utility
Muni
C&I        $2,000 $1 Million      2.99% or    5 yrs    3rd Party   3rd Party
                  (1st $100,000   4.99%
                  w/ subsidy)
PURA       $1                     1% below    10 yrs   3rd Party   3rd Party
Loan       Million                rate/no
(>50 kW                           more than
savings)                          prime
Residential Programs
          Home Energy Solutions


           HES – Income Eligible


        Residential New Construction


              Retail Products


             Heating & Cooling
CL&P Contacts
•   New Construction (ECB): Rich Asselin (860) 665-3292
•   Retrofit (EO): Glen Eigo (860) 665-5084
•   Business & Energy Sustainability: Dave McIntosh (860) 665-3531
•   Cool Choice: Dennis Beauregard (860) 665-4758
•   Express Lighting Rebates: Dennis Beauregard (860) 665-4758
•   Small Business: Randy Vagnini (860) 665-4753
•   Financing: Gentiana Darragjati (860) 665-4757
•   Residential Programs: Lomont White (860) 665-3790
•   Natural Gas Programs: Matt Fox (860) 665-3749
•   Your Account Executive
UI Contacts
•   New Construction (ECB) : Peter Aufdemorte (203) 499-4715
•   Retrofit (EO) : Peter Aufdemorte (203) 926-4715
•   Cool Choice ( CCH) : Will Riddle (203) 499 -2407
•   Express Lighting : Will Riddle (203) 499 -2407
•   Your account manager
QUESTIONS?
  Thank you!

1-877-WISE-USE
EnergizeCT.com
Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority

C-PACE:
A financing tool for multi-family
Property Assessed Clean Energy
▪ An innovative financing structure that enables commercial, industrial, and
  multi-family property owners to access financing for qualified energy
  upgrades and repay through a benefit assessment on their property tax.




     Private capital                                       A senior PACE lien is
     provides 100%            Repayment through            put on the property
   upfront, low-cost,           property taxes             and stays regardless
   long-term funding                                          of ownership
CRE Owners Face Barriers to Upgrades




           REFERENCES
           EE Indicator – NA 2010, Johnson Controls and International
           Facilities Management Association (IFMA)
PACE Addresses Key Barriers




          REFERENCES
          EE Indicator – NA 2010, Johnson Controls and International
          Facilities Management Association (IFMA)
Why C-PACE
▪ Zero up-front cash investment
▪ Immediate positive cash flow
▪ Long-term financing (up to 20 years) and low interest
  rates
▪ PACE assessment stays with the property upon sale
▪ Ability to pass payments through to tenants
▪ Higher rents and greater long-term property value
  because of energy efficiency
▪ Preservation of borrowing capacity through off-balance–
  sheet financing
Connecticut Special Session
Public Act 12-2 (June 2012)

▪ Commercial, industrial & multi-family property

▪ Requires the consent of the existing mortgage lender

▪ Requires SIR>1; permanently affixed

▪ Enables municipalities to opt-in

▪ Enables CEFIA to administer a statewide program
CEFIA’s Role in C-PACE
                • Publish Guidelines November 2012
     Design     • Onboard Municipalities
    Program     • Website launched (www.c-pace.com)




                • Technical Underwriting
   Administer   • Marketing & Outreach
    Program     • Work with Existing Mortgage Lenders




    Attract     • Qualify Capital Providers
                • Offer Credit Enhancement tools (as needed)
    Private     • Provide capital (as needed)
    Capital     • Develop warehouse / bonding authority (Q2 2013)
CEFIA’s Role in C-PACE
                • Publish Guidelines November 2012
     Design     • Onboard Municipalities
    Program     • Website launched (www.c-pace.com)




                • Technical Underwriting
   Administer   • Marketing & Outreach
    Program     • Work with Existing Mortgage Lenders




    Attract     • Qualify Capital Providers
                • Offer Credit Enhancement tools (as needed)
    Private     • Provide capital (as needed)
    Capital     • Develop warehouse / bonding authority (Q2 2013)
Municipalities Opted into C-PACE
  ▪   Beacon Falls                          ▪ Simsbury
  ▪   Bridgeport                            ▪ Southbury
  ▪   Durham                                ▪ Stamford                           Hartford
  ▪   Hartford                              ▪ Stratford                     West Hartford
                                                                              Bridgeport

  ▪   Middletown                            ▪ West Hartford
                                                                                 Norwalk
                                                                                Simsbury
                                                                                Stamford
  ▪   Norwalk                                                                   Stratford
                                            ▪ Westport                         Southbury

  ▪   Old Saybrook
                                            ▪ Wilton
  ▪   Putnam
                                            ▪ Windham
Coming Soon: Cheshire, Clinton, East Granby, East Hartford, Fairfield, Hamden,
Manchester, Meriden, New Haven, Plymouth, Torrington, Waterbury, Wethersfield
C-PACE Opportunities in Connecticut


                                      Hartford
                                 West Hartford
                                   Bridgeport
                                      Norwalk
                                     Simsbury
                                     Stamford
                                     Stratford
                                    Southbury
Customers Apply Into C-PACE


                                   Hartford
                              West Hartford
                                Bridgeport
                                   Norwalk
                                  Simsbury
                                  Stamford
                                  Stratford
                                 Southbury
CEFIA’s Role in C-PACE
                • Publish Guidelines November 2012
     Design     • Onboard Municipalities
    Program     • Website launched (www.c-pace.com)




                • Technical Underwriting
   Administer   • Marketing & Outreach
    Program     • Work with Existing Mortgage Lenders




    Attract     • Qualify Capital Providers
                • Offer Credit Enhancement tools (as needed)
    Private     • Provide capital (as needed)
    Capital     • Develop warehouse / bonding authority (Q2 2013)
C-PACE Partners do Technical Underwriting
                                   Technical Expertise:
                                         Celtic Energy
                                  • Glastonbury, CT
                                  • $1bn of energy-related projects                                           Hartford
   Program Expertise:             • Experience with large commercial       Real Estate Expertise:        West Hartford
                                    end-users, utilities, and government                                   Bridgeport
   Buonicore Partners                                                           Sustainable Real              Norwalk
                                                                                                             Simsbury
 • Milford, CT                                                                  Estate Solutions             Stamford
                                                                                                             Stratford
 • Modeled Energy Profile of CT
                                                                           • Trumbull, CT                   Southbury
 • Nationwide PACE experience
                                                                           • Benchmarking Database
                                                                           • Industry leader in building energy
                                                                             performance assessment
                                           3rd Party
                                        Administrator:
                                          Buonicore
                                           Partners
Upgrades: What’s Eligible
Anything that saves energy from baseline … as long as it isn’t going anywhere

▪ High efficiency lighting                 ▪ Combustion and burner upgrades
▪ HVAC upgrades                                                            Hartford
                                           ▪ Fuel switching           West Hartford
▪ New automated building and HVAC                                       Bridgeport
  controls                                 ▪ Water conservation            Norwalk
                                                                          Simsbury
▪ Variable speed drives (VSDs) on motors   ▪ Heat recovery and steam trapsStamford
                                                                          Stratford
  fans and pumps
                                           ▪ Building enclosure/envelope Southbury
▪ High efficiency chillers, boilers, and
  furnaces                                   improvements
▪ High efficiency hot water heating        ▪ BMS
  systems                                  ▪ Renewable energy systems
Upgrades: What’s Not
▪ Appliances, e.g., refrigerators,           ▪ Any measure that is easily
  dishwashers, etc.                            removed/not permanently
▪ Plug load devices                            installed
                                                                                Hartford
▪ Vending machine controls                   ▪ Any measure that does not West Hartford
                                                                            result
                                               in improved energy efficiencyBridgeport
▪ Any package of measures with a                                                Norwalk
                                                                               Simsbury
  weighted average effective useful life     ▪ Extending natural gas lines to the
                                                                               Stamford
                                                                               Stratford
  (EUL) that does not meet or exceed           property line to enable a PACE-Southbury

  the life of the loan                         eligible gas conversion project.
▪ Any package of measures that does
  not achieve an energy savings (over
  the life of the loan) to [total project]
  investment ratio > 1
CEFIA’s Role in C-PACE
                • Publish Guidelines November 2012
     Design     • Onboard Municipalities
    Program     • Website launched (www.c-pace.com)




                • Technical Underwriting
   Administer   • Marketing & Outreach
    Program     • Work with Existing Mortgage Lenders




    Attract     • Qualify Capital Providers
                • Offer Credit Enhancement tools (as needed)
    Private     • Provide capital (as needed)
    Capital     • Develop warehouse / bonding authority (Q2 2013)
Capital Partners
Qualified Capital Providers
▪ CEFIA qualified 8 capital providers
  through a RFI.
▪ “Lending tree” model                       Hartford
                                        West Hartford
Owner Arranged Financing                  Bridgeport
                                             Norwalk
▪ Property owner is free to choose          Simsbury
                                            Stamford
  their capital provider from the           Stratford
  private market. There is no              Southbury
  government financing required.
Construction and Term Financing from
CEFIA
▪ CEFIA authorized $20M short term
  facility for construction and term
  financing.
Requirements


▪ Building must be commercial, industrial, or multifamily
▪ Non-profits eligible if municipality allows
▪ Building must be located in a municipality which has
  opted in
▪ Feasibility study required for renewables
▪ Mortgage lender must consent
Application Review: Two Paths
▪ Full Assessment – Whole Building Analysis
  – Begin with a Level I screening step (by CRE owners consultant),
    designed to cost effectively identify projects with compelling
    savings & ROI
  – Proceed to Level II/III audit when significant savings potential
    exists. Determine the optimized bundle of ECMs, calculate
    project cost, projected energy savings & key financial metrics
▪ Fast Track
  – Designed for buildings where prior energy audits have been
    completed including ECM recommendations, but failed to get
    implemented due to owner inability to self-fund the project
  – Less technically complex projects (single ECM)
  – Pre-approved projects under utility EE incentive/rebate programs
Application Review: Technical Standards
▪ Developed in light of other PACE and leading CRE energy
  retrofit finance programs around the country
▪ Incorporates three established industry protocols
  – ASTM Building Energy Performance Assessment (BEPA) Standard
    E2797-11 for baseline energy use data collection and analysis
  – ASHRAE Level 1, 2, 3 Energy Audit Guidelines to identify ECMs
    and project energy savings
  – International Performance Measurement & Verification Protocol
    (IPMVP) for energy savings measurement and verification
▪ Underwriting methodology is technically sound,
  standardized, reliable & fully-transparent
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                             Mortgage Holder

                            Funding             Notification &
                           Agreement              Consent


      C-Pace Capital
         Provider
                               $$$           Property Owner      $$$    Contractor



 Financial             Assessment & C-PACE
 Conduit
              $          Services Contract
                                                     $                 Property/ECMs
Agreement     $                                      $
                                                Town Tax
             CEFIA             $$$              Collector
                                                                           Lien


                                                                        Town Land
                                                 “M&V”                   Records
Funding: Capital Flow Process



                  Property Owner        $$$            Contractor

                                    Property Audit/
                                   Energy Assessment
   $                    $
   $                    $

            $$$
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                  Mortgage Holder

                    Notification &
                      Consent



                  Property Owner     $$$   Contractor



   $                      $
   $                      $

            $$$
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                  Mortgage Holder

                     Notification &
                       Consent



                  Property Owner      $$$   Contractor


                      Technical
   $                     $
                       Review
   $                      $

                     Program
  CEFIA     $$$
                   Administrator
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                             Mortgage Holder

                  Funding       Notification &
                 Agreement        Consent


C-Pace Capital
   Provider
                             Property Owner      $$$   Contractor



      $                              $
      $                              $

    CEFIA
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                       Mortgage Holder

                      Funding            Notification &
                     Agreement             Consent


C-Pace Capital
   Provider
                                       Property Owner     $$$   Contractor



                 Assessment & C-PACE
      $            Services Contract
                                               $
      $                                        $

    CEFIA
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                 Mortgage Holder

                      Funding       Notification &
                     Agreement        Consent


C-Pace Capital
   Provider
                                 Property Owner      $$$   Contractor



 Financial Conduit
       $
    Agreement
                                         $
       $                                 $

    CEFIA
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                  Mortgage Holder

                     Funding          Notification &
                    Agreement           Consent


C-Pace Capital
   Provider
                                   Property Owner      $$$    Contractor



Financial Conduit   Assessment & C-PACE
        $
   Agreement          Services Contract
                                           $                 Property/ECMs
        $                                  $

     CEFIA
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                  Mortgage Holder

                     Funding          Notification &
                    Agreement           Consent


C-Pace Capital
   Provider
                                   Property Owner      $$$    Contractor



Financial Conduit   Assessment & C-PACE
       $
   Agreement          Services Contract
                                           $                 Property/ECMs
       $                                   $

    CEFIA                                                        Caveat


                                                              Town Land
                                                               Records
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                          Mortgage Holder

                         Funding             Notification &
                        Agreement              Consent


 C-Pace Capital
    Provider
                            $$$           Property Owner        $$$          Contractor
                                                              Equipment &
                                                                Services
Financial Conduit   Assessment & C-PACE
          $
   Agreement          Services Contract                                     Property/ECMs
         $

      CEFIA                                                                     Caveat


                                                                             Town Land
                                                                              Records
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                          Mortgage Holder

                         Funding             Notification &
                        Agreement              Consent


 C-Pace Capital
    Provider
                            $$$           Property Owner      $$$    Contractor



Financial Conduit   Assessment & C-PACE
          $
   Agreement          Services Contract
                                                  $                 Property/ECMs
         $                                        $

      CEFIA                                                             LIEN


                                                                     Town Land
                                                                      Records
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                          Mortgage Holder

                          Funding            Notification &
                         Agreement             Consent


  C-Pace Capital
     Provider
                             $$$          Property Owner      $$$    Contractor



Financial Conduit   Assessment & C-PACE
           $
   Agreement          Services Contract
                                                  $                 Property/ECMs
          $                                       $
                                             Town Tax
        CEFIA                                                           LIEN
                                             Collector

                                                                     Town Land
                                                                      Records
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                          Mortgage Holder

                          Funding            Notification
                         Agreement           & Consent


  C-Pace Capital
     Provider
                            $$$           Property Owner    $$$    Contractor



Financial Conduit   Assessment & C-PACE
           $
   Agreement          Services Contract
                                                  $               Property/ECMs
          $                                       $
                                             Town Tax
       CEFIA                $$$                                       LIEN
                                             Collector

                                                                   Town Land
                                                                    Records
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                           Mortgage Holder

                          Funding             Notification
                         Agreement            & Consent


    C-Pace Capital
       Provider
                             $$$           Property Owner    $$$    Contractor



 Financial           Assessment & C-PACE
 Conduit
             $$        Services Contract
                                                   $               Property/ECMs
Agreement    $$                                    $
                                              Town Tax
        CEFIA                $$$                                       LIEN
                                              Collector

                                                                    Town Land
                                                                     Records
Funding: Capital Flow Process
                                             Mortgage Holder

                            Funding             Notification &
                           Agreement              Consent


      C-Pace Capital
         Provider
                               $$$           Property Owner      $$$    Contractor



 Financial             Assessment & C-PACE
 Conduit
              $          Services Contract
                                                     $                 Property/ECMs
Agreement     $                                      $
                                                Town Tax
             CEFIA             $$$              Collector
                                                                           Lien


                                                                        Town Land
                                                 “M&V”                   Records
Funding: Capital Flow Process
Recap:
▪ Audit
▪ Notification to Mortgage Holder / Consent
▪ Project Review by Program Administrator
▪ Referral out to Qualified Capital Providers
▪ Capital Provider Selected by Owner
▪ Negotiations  Funding Agreement
▪ Assessment & C-PACE Services Agreement & Financial Conduit Agreement (CEFIA – Owner
  – Cap Provider)
▪ Caveat on the Property (CEFIA – Town/City)
▪ Funding Disbursement(s) & Project Work Commences
▪ Project Completion
▪ Finalization of the Lien on the Property, Payment Schedule, etc.
▪ Owner Enjoys More Efficient Building & Repays Funding via Tax Bill                130
M&V: Data Management Platform
▪ Full Assessment & Fast Track project data are entered & tracked in CEFIA’s Data
  Management Platform (CDMP)

        CDMP is powered by SRS’s cloud-
         based software platform
        CDMP facilitates key project data &
         analytics management across the
         entire project life cycle (project
         development through M&V)
Benefits to Other Stakeholders
   Capital Providers         Mortgage Lenders               Municipalities

• Low risk investment      • Improves Building         • Creates economicHartford
  opportunity                Financials/Risk             developmentWestjobs
                                                                      & Hartford
                                                                         Bridgeport
  • Senior lien              • Lowers OPEX                                 Norwalk
                                                                          Simsbury
  • Secure repayment         • SIR>1                   • Reduces energy costs
                                                                          Stamford
    mechanism (taxes)        • No acceleration           for businesses   Stratford
                                                                         Southbury


• Legal and technical      • Creates a more            • Reduces pollution
  structure administered     attractive building for
  by CEFIA                   occupants and owners

                           • Finances deferred
                             maintenance needs
The Customer (Building Owner):
PACE Addresses Key Barriers



 Near term plan to sell?                  Tax obligation fixed to property Hartford
                                                                         West Hartford
                                                                           Bridgeport
 Lack of funding?                         100% upfront, 20 year financing     Norwalk
                                                                             Simsbury
                                                                             Stamford
 Cannot assume more debt?                 PACE assessments qualify as OPEX   Stratford
                                                                            Southbury


 Insufficient payback/ROI?                Positive cash flow in year 1

 Split incentives?                        Assessment/savings pass to tenants

 Uncertain savings/technical expertise?   Technical underwriting / SIR>1
PACE Project Example
     $1,500,000 add to Building Value (8.9%)
 30 Year Old,
  200,000 ft2
 commercial
   building




                       134
Jessica Bailey, Director C-PACE
Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority
860.257.2888
jessica.bailey@ctcleanenergy.com
www.c-pace.com
Thank you!

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CTSSA ENERGY SUMMIT FOR SELF STORAGE OWNERS

  • 1. ENERGY SUMMIT for Self Storage Owners and Managers CTSSA Program March 12, 2013
  • 2. Overview Discuss economic benefits of investing in energy efficiency measures from both an investment and a tax perspective. Discuss low interest financing options. Review a case study – i.e. take you through an actual proposal and financial analysis for a CT storage facility.
  • 3. Introductions Panelists • Stephanie Grubb, Cohn Reznick - Investment Considerations and Tax Benefits • Jessica Bailey, CEFIA Commercial & Industrial Property Assessed Clean Energy - C-PACE Financing • Elena Cahill, Globele Energy - Audit Requirements and Benefits • Nicholas Malagisi, Sperry Van Ness Advisors; Real Estate Benefits • Scott Hainey, Storage Insurance Brokers - Insurance Requirements • Tim McGrew, Connecticut Light & Power – CL&P Assistance to Improve Energy Efficiency • Christy Bradway, Connecticut Light & Power – Discussion of ZRECs • Ted Lawrence, Renewable Resources Inc. – Solar Process and Case Study • Tom Loredo, Renewable Resources Inc. - Panel Moderator
  • 5. “Fuel for Thought” UN Population Growth Estimate to 9 Billion by 2040 What will the effect be on:  The Use of Energy?  The Cost of Energy?  The Environment, if we continue to use fossil fuel based energy?
  • 6. World Energy Outlook by 2035  World primary energy demand will increase 36%  China’s demand for energy is rising by 75%  The US is now the second largest energy consumer behind China  The use of renewable energy will triple  Renewables account for 7% of all energy and will rise to 14%
  • 7.
  • 8. Electricity Rates On average, CT electric rates have increased 5% per year, over the last 10 years. (Source: US Energy Information Administration) Currently, the average commercial cost is between $0.16 - $0.17/kWh in CT Straight line projection of 5%/year = $0.27/kWh in 2023
  • 9. Energy Conservation, Generation and Alternative Supply On overview
  • 10. How can you conserve energy in a building: 1. Look at your process and learn if you can lean out the process; 2. Make process equipment more energy efficient; 3. Look at the building systems and determine if you can replace any systems with energy efficient technology; 4. Manage you process and building systems with technology. 5. An audit or benchmarking will help you determine the present situation and provide options for you
  • 11. Next make sure you understand the economics of conservation. As you will learn today there are many programs available to assist with funding for conservation projects. Understand some monies are incentive monies to do the project, other programs can help you finance the project, and yet other benefits are federal tax credits or deductions. The benefits are cumulative: you may be qualify for incentive dollars which requires less funding for the projects and then take the federal tax credit or deduction on your tax return.
  • 12.  Federal programs apply to every state.  Every state and within the sate the utility company may have their own programs for conservation or generation.  CT has the energy efficiency fund and CEFIA and now CPACE  MA has Massachusetts Energy and Utility Assistance,  National Grid has efficiency programs, etc  NY has NYSERDA, Con ED has efficiency programs, etc  DSIRE website for the benefits in your state
  • 13.  Alternative electric and natural gas supply.  Deregulation intended to save money and it can but be knowledgeable  CT utility companies can change their rates January 1 and July 1 – this year UI will change their rate next in January 1, 2014 and CLP in July 2013.  Present 24 hr rates- UI -.076 CLP - .078  Make sure the rate can not go up.  Natural Gas utility companies change their rates monthly on the 1st.
  • 14.  You can generate energy through renewable technologies such as solar, wind, etc  You can generate energy with cleaner technologies such as fuel cell, co-gen etc  Federal tax credits available for projects through 2016  In CT - CPACE program can potentially fund the projects, you will learn more later-CPACE is in 27 other states  Cumulative benefits again- CPACE- Fed tax credits, etc  DSIRE will list renewable programs as well
  • 16. Why Solar Power?  Solar is a clean and renewable energy source  Every hour, enough sunlight shines on the earth to meet global energy needs for an entire year
  • 17. It’s Natural – Just like the Sun Silicon Ingot Virgin Wafer Silicon Array Solar Cell Modules
  • 18. PV System on Building
  • 19. Calculating Solar Efficiency Azimuth Pitch Shading
  • 21. The Economics of Solar  Avoided Cost of Electricity equals Lower Operating Expenses  Federal Tax Benefits – ITC and Depreciation  State/Utility Incentives - ZREC  Life of Solar System (25 Year Warranties)
  • 22. Federal Solar Programs  30% Federal Tax Credit through 2016  5-year accelerated depreciation (MACRS)  50% bonus depreciation in 2013  Depreciable base is reduced by 50% of ITC credit value
  • 23. Project Finance  Direct Purchase – Conventional financing  Capital Lease – 10 year term with $1 Buyout  C-PACE – Property Assessed Lending
  • 24. Solar Project Development Timeline Month 1 2 3 4 Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Stage I II III B. Physical A. Agreements Stage I - Design Plan/Site C. Final Design Completed Review Municipal Permits Utility D. State Stage II - Applications Authorization Application/ Assumes no zoning or Interconnection variances required E. System Installation F. Municipal G. Utility-Net H. State Stage III - Installation (Assumes good Inspection Meter Install Inspection weather conditions)
  • 25. Next Steps  Data Collection  12 Month History of Electric Use  Site plan  Blue Prints  Site review and structural analysis  Proposal  Financing Discussion  Preliminary Project Timing
  • 26.
  • 27.
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30. Proposed Bill No. 203 AN ACT CONCERNING PROPERTY TAX EXEMPTIONS FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened: That section 12-81 of the general statutes be amended to exempt from property tax any Class I renewable energy source installed for the generation of electricity for commercial and industrial use, and to make such exemption applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2012. Statement of Purpose: To encourage the use of renewable energy sources, and to allow the commercial and industrial sectors to benefit from such sources by expanding current law that allows the property tax exemption for renewable energy sources only if the generation of electricity is for residential or farm use.
  • 32.
  • 33. Commercial Business Case Study  Building Overview Building Type: Pre-engineered, steel Roof Type: Metal, low pitch Electric Company: CL&P Electric Rate: $0.179/kWh Electric Consumption: Approx. 52,300 kWh/ yr. Anticipated Utility Rate Escalation: 3%
  • 35. Commercial Business Case Study  Solar Installation • System Size— 46.08 kW • Panels— 192 @ 240 watts • System Production— 51,358 kWh (Year 1) • Percentage of Electricity Produced by Solar— 98% • System Degradation— 0.8%/year • System Mounting— S5 Metal Roof Clips • System Warranty— 25 year manufacturer’s warranty
  • 37. Investment – Financial Evaluation Investment analysis considers ‘at-risk’ rule, therefore the project is financed at 80% maximum. Balance of system cost is invested by owner. Also, a 35% corporate tax rate is assumed. Considerations • Project Cost— $175,104 • Cost/Watt— $3.80 • Avoided Electric Costs Savings— $0.16/kWh (with 3% yearly escalator) • 30% ITC Value— $52,531 • MACRS Value— $148,838 • Loan Value— $140,083 • Loan Term— 10 years • Loan Rate— 6% • Annual Loan Payment— $19,033 (assumes 1 yearly payment)
  • 38. Investment – Financial Evaluation Evaluation Without ZREC Income • Avoided Electric Cost Savings over 25 years – $269,200 • $52,531 ITC—Year 1 • $148,838 available MACRS • ROI— 77% • IRR— 9.21%
  • 39. Investment – Financial Evaluation Evaluation With ZREC Income • Avoided Electric Cost Savings over 25 years – • $269,200 • ZREC Income— $119,665; ZREC Value = $164.22 • $52,531 ITC— Year 1 • $148,838 available MACRS • ROI— 121% • IRR— 21.77%
  • 40. Renewable Energy Project Finance March 2013 CohnReznick LLP
  • 41. Agenda • What drives the Renewable Energy Market • What is the ITC • How to finance a renewable energy project • What are the benefits to you
  • 42. Renewable Energy Market Drivers • Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) • Financial incentives ̶ Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs), particularly for Solar (SRECs) ̶ Feed-in Tariffs (FIT) ̶ Rebate and grant programs ̶ Federal tax incentives ̶ State tax incentives • Rising cost of electricity ̶ Driven by fossil fuel prices and growth in demand ̶ Electricity prices (average retail price) vary considerably across the country • U.S average retail price for electricity is $0.0983/kWh • California costs are high, ~$0.13/kWh • New Jersey costs are higher, ~$0.147/kWh • Rates in Hawaii are among the highest, ~$0.25/kWh • Source (as of 1/30/2012): http://www.eia.gov/electricity/state/
  • 43. Key Renewable Energy and Solar Terms PPA – Power Purchase Agreement = Contract for sale of electricity MW – Mega Watt - Utility Scale Power generation. Powers neighborhoods kWh – Kilowatt-hour – smaller unit of power output – e.g., a solar panel’s electrical output REC or SREC – Renewable Energy Certificate or “credit.” NOT a tax credit. Represents the green/clean aspect of actual energy that is separately produced. S in “SREC” means a Solar REC. EPC – Engineering Procurement and Construction contractor Off-taker – purchaser or user of the electricity Host – person or place where a project is physically located (could be the buyer in a PPA) COD – Commence Operations Date (aka “Placed in Service”)
  • 44. Key Renewable Energy and Solar Terms Sponsor – Energy Project developer or project manager PV – Solar Photovoltaic (PV) technology. Makes electricity directly from sunlight Light SPE – a Special Purpose Entity (often an LLC) that plays a specific role in the renewable energy project such as owning and/or operating it. ITC – Investment Tax Credit (more on this later) PTC – Production Tax Credit (more on this later) Net Metering – Excess electricity is fed into the electrical grid. Project owner is given a credit on their utility bill to use when the system generates less electricity than needed.
  • 45. Key Renewable Energy and Solar Terms Avoided Cost- is the cost the utility would have incurred had it supplied the power itself or obtained it from another source. It is the price at which an electric utility purchases the output of a Qualified Facility (QF)
  • 47. T a x D e d u c t i o n v s . Ta x C r e d i t Tax deductions are a reduction of a taxpayer’s total income that decreases the taxable income used in calculating the actual tax to be paid. What is a deduction worth? ̶ $1 Deduction = $1 x tax rate ̶ Assume 35% tax rate ̶ $1 x 0.35 = 0.35¢ of after tax value Tax credits reduce dollar for dollar the amount of tax actually owed and payable to IRS. What is a tax credit worth? ̶ $1 tax credit = $1 of after tax value
  • 48. Renewable Technology: Solar Electricity Use of solar equipment (e.g. photo-voltaic (“PV”) or concentrated solar power) to generate electricity. Eligible for 30% ITC (or 1603) through December 31, 2016, 10% thereafter.
  • 49. IRC 48 – Energy Investment Tax Credit (ITC) • ITC is based on the percent of eligible equipment, not on how much electricity is produced and not on total project cost. Most ITCs are 30% with some 10% credits depending on technology. • Unlike production tax credits (PTCs), there is no requirement that electricity be sold, only that the facility generates electricity, heating, cooling or lighting or meets other standards per the tax code. • One year credit – generally claimed in year placed-in-service (PIS) ̶ End-user of tax credit must be an owner/partner in the deal before COD/PIS date ̶ 5 year compliance/holding period (like § 47 Historic Rehab Tax Credits) ̶ Credit vests and recapture period burns off 20% per year for 5 years from date of COD/PIS
  • 50. IRC 48 – Energy Investment Tax Credit (ITC) • 5 year MACRS depreciation on most technologies (Bonus Depreciation applies when law allows) • Basis reduction – Must reduce depreciable tax basis by 50% of the credit amount • No governmental or tax exempt use allowed (“use” means ownership or lease) • Credits are Allocated by profit/loss ratio (like Historic Rehab Tax Credit) • May offset Alternative Minimum Tax liability (for tax years starting after 2008) • Note, the ATRA of 2012 extended the election to claim the section 48 investment tax credit (ITC) rather than the PTC for eligible wind and other PTC facilities. Not all PTC eligible facilities are allowed this option. For those that are, the election now applies for projects where construction begins prior to January 1, 2014. This is a new rule.
  • 51. Ta x E q u i t y C a l c u l a t i o n $1,000,000 Eligible Cost of Energy Property x 30% Applicable ITC Rate (sometimes 10%) $ 300,000 ITC to standalone project
  • 52. Solar Tax Credits: Eligible Property Defined Equipment that uses solar energy to generate electricity Constructed/Purchased by the taxpayer Must be Depreciable or Amortizable (i.e., used in a trade or business) Acquired by the taxpayer and first used by the taxpayer – Exception for sale-leasebacks - 90 day rule (Old IRC Section 48(b)(2))
  • 53. Eligible Energy Tax Credit Basis – Solar ITC Which costs are eligible for the credit? • Solar panels, mounts, racks, wiring, inverters etc. • Hard construction costs in general • Direct and indirect costs of installation System integration/design/testing Permits, fees etc. Interest expense prior to PIS – Subject to Section 266 Election Developer fee if Reasonable Other soft costs properly capitalized
  • 54. Eligible Energy Tax Credit Basis Practical Issue: The extent to which a support system (i.e., “racking”) for solar qualifies for the credit. Note– roof surfaces do not qualify, unless the solar panel is also the actual roof; See, PLR 201121005. • Base for ground-mounted units that have no other uses do qualify • Parking garage structures which support panels but provide shade? ̶ Portion of roofing repair? ̶ Parking garage/carport cost? What portion? For Solar Walls – See, PLR 201043023
  • 55. Test Your Knowledge: What is Eligible for ITC Basis?
  • 56. Bonus Depreciation ATRA Extended Bonus Depreciation 50% - Additional 1 st year depreciation of 50% for qualified property acquired and placed in service before Jan. 1, 2014 (before Jan. 1, 2015 for certain longer-lived and transportation property). (Code Sec. 168(k)(2), as amended by Act Sec. 331(a)). A conforming change is made to Code Sec. 460(c)(6)(B) (relating to 50% bonus depreciation not being taken into account as a cost in applying the percentage of completion method for certain long-term contracts). Bonus depreciation may be allocated as of the placed in service date, so planning of Investor entry is important.
  • 57. MACRS Depreciation • Wind, solar and geothermal are generally classified as five -year property • Biomass is typically classified as seven-year property • Ancillary components such as transmission lines are depreciated over a longer period, generally not include in tax credit basis. • MACRS Permanent part of the tax code Wind/ Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Year 6 Solar MACRS 20.00% 32.00% 19.20% 11.52% 11.52% 5.76% MACRS + 60.00% 16.00% 9.60% 5.76% 5.76% 2.88% 50% bonus depreciation
  • 58. Financing Renewable Energy Projects Why and How. 58
  • 59. Why Finance Renewable Energy? For investors – Tax incentives: – Solar - 30% Investment Tax Credit (ITC), and for certain other technologies, owners can elect Production Tax Credits (PTC) or a 30% immediate Investment Tax Credit depending on technology. – Five year tax depreciation (with some exceptions) on the equipment. Yields can be considerably higher with shorter holding periods than LIHTC and other tax credit investments. For owner-operators – Cash flow from the sale of energy to tenants or utilities under long term agreements and renewable energy certificates (REC’s) For energy user or “off-takers” – Lock in their energy costs for 10-20 years • Bloomberg Energy estimates the US energy tax credit equity market is at $7B (source http://www.cohnreznick.com/sites/default/files/The%20Return%20%E2%8 0%93%20and%20Returns%20%E2%80%93%20of%20Tax%20Equity%20for%20 US%20Renewable%20Projects.pdf)
  • 60. How to Finance Renewable Energy Property •Educate Lenders •Be aware of “At Risk Rules”
  • 61. What Does This Mean To You? More Tax Rules! 61
  • 62. W h o C a n U s e E n e r g y Ta x C r e d i t s ? Corporate investors (widely-held corporations) An estimated 15-20 active investors; expiration of the Sec.1603 grant will create demand for much more tax equity from investors Individuals (and closely-held corporations) There are several rules that may come into play here. Tax-exempt and government entities Qualified allocations – Not eligible for tax credits, but won’t affect other partners if there are “qualified allocations.” A technical rule. – Section 168(h) election required for wholly-owned subsidiaries of tax- exempts PPA needs to be respected as sales/service contract… or lose / defer incentives
  • 63. Where can I find more information? CohnReznick – Renewable Energy http://www.cohnreznick.com/industries/renewable-energy Energy Tax Credits – DSIRE http://www.dsireusa.org/ – Information on federal tax credits and incentives – Provides links to relevant state websites Solar Energy Industries Association http://www.seia.org/ American Wind Energy Association http://www.awea.org/
  • 64. C o h n R e z n i c k C a n H e l p Yo u Stephanie Grubb, CPA Manager CohnReznick LLP 525 N. Tryon Street Suite 1000 Charlotte, NC 28202 Main (704) 332-9100 Direct (704) 837-7252 stephanie.grubb@cohnreznick.com www.cohnreznick.com www.cohnreznick.com/industries/renewable-energy
  • 65. The LREC/ZREC PROGRAM An Opportunity to Develop Behind-The-Meter Renewable Generation in Connecticut Christie Bradway Manager, Renewable Power Contracts Northeast Utilities
  • 66. Why are People Interested in Renewable Generation? Drivers: • To “Go-Green” • To reduce, or better predict, spending on energy Barriers: • Cost of Systems • No clear long-term revenue streams to support capital investments • Public Act 11-80 created a billion dollar opportunity for developers and installers of small renewable systems • CL&P and UI will enter into 15 year contracts to purchase “RECs” from new small renewable projects
  • 67. What is a REC? = Renewable Energy Certificate • How is a REC Created? Each time a renewable generation unit produces, the energy is considered “renewable” LREC: Low – emission RECs = e.g Fuel Cells ZREC: Zero – emission RECs = e.g Solar, Wind, Small Hydro Each megawatt hour of energy produced = 1 REC • Why Should You Care About RECs? • RECs have a value (commodity) and are used by electric companies to satisfy regulatory requirements (RPS)
  • 68. How Many RECs & How Much Are These RECs Worth?  RECs from Zero Emission units (solar, wind, hydro) may be worth up to $350 each* (cap) : However, average price of selected medium zrec bids from 2012 = +/- $150 each  Example 1: Residential Home = 5 kW Solar System= 6 RECs/year  Annual Payment = $900.  $150/REC x 6 RECs/year =+/- $900. per year  Total Payment over 15 years = $13,500.  $900 x 15 years = $13,500  Example 2: Commercial Business = 100 kW Solar System = 114 RECs/year  Annual Payment = $17,100.  Total Payment over 15 years = $256,500.  RECs from Low Emission units (Fuel Cells) may be worth up to $200 each* (cap) However, average price of selected bids from 2012 = +/- $90 each  Example 3: Commercial Business = 400 kW Fuel Cell = 3,154 RECs/year  Annual Payment = $283,860  Total Payment over 15 years = $4,257,900
  • 69. REC Contract directly with customer The REC Utility purchases purchase is a excess energy under separate existing tariff transaction
  • 70. Rec Contract with a developer Electric Supply
  • 71. LREC & ZREC Eligibility General Project Eligibility Criteria • Must be located behind contracting utility distribution meter • Must not have received funding/grants from Clean Energy Finance Investment Authority, or its predecessor the CT Clean Energy Fund (other than low cost financing) • Projects must be in service on, or after, July 1, 2011 LRECs • No larger than 2,000 kW • Must have low emissions • <0.07 lbs/MWh NOx; <0.10 lbs/MWh CO; 0.02 lb/MWh VOCs, 1 grain per 100 standard cubic feet • May include fuel cells and other low emission Class I resources, as well as all zero emission Class I resources ZRECs • No larger than 1,000 kW • Must have zero emissions • May include solar, hydro and wind
  • 72. Procurement Processes 1) Competitive Solicitation - (RFP) Project Size Annual Renewable Energy Credit RFP Timeframe and Frequency Type Budget Price Cap* Large ≥250 kW to ~$2.13 M Max. $350/REC Annual in April for 6 years ZRECs 1,000 kW 2013 will be year 2 Medium >100 kW < 250 Approxim Max. $350/REC Annual in April for 6 years ZRECs kW ately 2013 will be year 2 $2.13 M LRECs Up to 2,000 $4 M Max. $200/REC Annual in April for 5 years kW 2013 will be year 2 2) Tariff Project Size Annual Renewable Energy Credit Price Tariff Availability and Type Budget Cap Frequency Small Up to 100 kW ~$2.13 M Weighted Average of the Medium Annually, after the approval of the ZRECs ZREC price + 10% up to $350/REC RFP and the filing of the medium - Year 1 Avg = $164.22/REC ZREC rate + 10% Expect to offer Yr. 2 Q4 2013 or Q1 2014
  • 74. Final Results of 1st RFP Category Size # Bids # Average Committed Uncommitted % of Budget 15 Year Bids Weighted Budget ($M) Budget ($M) Uncommitted Contract Selected Price/REC Value ($M) LRECs Up to 2 MW 43 12 $65.94 $3.0 $162K 5% $45.6 Medium 100 – 250 113 47 $149.29 $2.0 $78K 4% $29.8 ZRECs kW Large 250 – 1,000 140 21 $101.36 $2.1 $145K 7% $30.8 ZRECs kW Total 296 80 $89.13 $7.0 $386 k 5% $106 • Final Selected Projects weighted average price/REC = $89 1. Average prices were about 1/3 of the cap • LREC Cap = $200 and Avg. Weighted Price/LREC = $65.94 • ZREC Cap = $350 and Avg. Weighted Price/ZREC = $121.13 2. RFP contracts will result in approximately 27 MW of installed renewable capacity in CT • LRECs = 5.6 MW – fuel cells • ZRECs = 21 MW - solar
  • 75. Small ZREC Tariff • Instead of competitive bidding - projects less than or equal to 100 kW are eligible to enroll in a tariff • Price takers = $164.22/REC • Program establishes the price as the average of the selected Medium ZREC projects +10% • Schedule - Small ZREC Tariff Program must open 30 days from approval of Medium ZREC Contracts • Medium ZREC Contracts approved 11/21/13 • Opened Small ZREC Program 1/8/13 (with PURA approval for extension due to holidays) • Initial two-week window closed 1/22/13
  • 76. Small ZREC Tariff Category Size # Approx. # of Price/REC Available Total Annual 15 Year Applications Contracts to Budget Value of Contract Received be awarded ($M) Applications Commitment Value ($M) Small 0 – 100 kW 479 200 $164.22 $2.36 $5.6 $35.4 ZREC • At the close of the Small ZREC 2-week , CL&P received 479 completed Small ZREC Applications, which totaled over $5.6M in requested Small ZREC funding - more than 138% above CL&P’s available Small ZREC budget of $2.36M for this round of the Small ZREC Program. • Based on the volume of applications received during the two-week window, CL&P conducted a random selection process of completed Applications submitted during the 2-week window, which process was observed by a representative of the State of Connecticut Office of Consumer Counsel (OCC). The random selection process resulted in a numerical rank of all completed Applications received during the two-week window. • Based on the queue and available budget, we expect to enter into contracts with approximately 200 applications • PURA approval of these individual contracts is not required • PURA approved the Small ZREC Tariff and the price of tariff = $164.22/REC • Small ZREC Tariff will be open until all available budget has been allocated, or at the time when a new Small ZREC price has been established for the next year Small ZREC applications. • Expect this round of the Small ZREC Program will result in an approximately 9 MW additional installed solar in CT
  • 77. Timeline and Next Steps Action Date Comments Small ZREC Tariff Service January – July 2013 Execution of ~200 Service Attachments Attachment Execution LREC and Medium/Large ZREC RFP – April, 2013 Year 2 RFP to open in April 2013 Year 2 Opening
  • 78. For additional information visit: Website: CL-P.com, and Click on Renewable Energy Credits under the “Going Green” tab Email: LREC.ZREC@NU.COM UI: www.uinet.com/powerprocurement Email: LREC.ZREC@uinet.com
  • 79. Energy Efficiency Programs for Business Customers Conservation & Load Management Connecticut Light & Power and Yankee Gas
  • 80. Energize Connecticut: New name, same great programs • Energize Connecticut is the state’s new branding initiative to help consumers save money and use clean, affordable energy. • A partnership of the Energy Efficiency Fund, the Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority, and local electric and gas utilities • Energy efficiency is a valuable resource for Connecticut, it: – Reduces air pollutants and greenhouse gases – Saves customers money – Reduces need for more energy generation – Creates jobs • Program funding: – Electric customers pay 3 mills per kilowatt-hour – Natural gas programs are funded through gas utility bills and approved by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority
  • 81. 2013 Program Incentive Budgets & Caps Budgets CL&P C&I $ 35.2 M YGS $ 2.4 M CNG $ 2.3 M SCG $ 2.1 M Project caps • CL&P $1,000,000 per federal tax ID • YGS/CNG/SCG projects with an incentive amount greater than $100,000 require PURA approval
  • 82. New Construction & Equipment • Captures electric and natural gas savings where they are most cost- effective: during design  New Construction  Major Renovation • Covers up to:  Equipment Replacement – 95% of the incremental cost of installing Energy Lighting HVAC measures in new Efficient Controls Equipment construction Lighting – 75% of the incremental cost for equipment Building Refrigeration Process replacement projects Envelope Equipment Gas Boilers VFDs
  • 83. Prescriptive Rebates • HVAC Unitary • Gas heating Equipment equipment • Heat pumps – Condensing boilers • Infrared heaters – Non-condensing boilers • Water heaters – Condensing furnaces • Food service rebates – Condensing unit heaters
  • 84. Existing Buildings • Incentives to replace functioning equipment with more energy-efficient options Covers up to: Energy EMS/ • 40% of installed cost efficient Lighting Programmable controls • 50% of installed cost lighting Thermostats for comprehensive projects Process VFDs Equipment Refrigeration HVAC Gas Measures Controls
  • 85. Small Business Energy Advantage (SBEA) • Turnkey energy-saving program • Pay nothing upfront • Existing business, municipal, and government customers • Average 12-month peak demand between 10 kW and 200 kW • All possible energy efficiency measures • On-bill, 0% financing to qualifying customers
  • 86. Retro Commissioning/PRIME/O&M Services/Training & Outreach BUSINESS & ENERGY SUSTAINABILITY (BES)
  • 87. Business & Energy Sustainability (BES) • The next level after all or most major capital improvements have been completed • Maximize operational strategies with existing capital equipment & people • Develop management practices
  • 88. BES Programs • Retro Commissioning: Optimizes operation of customer’s facility without installing capital equipment • PRIME: Focuses on industrial manufacturing processes • Operations & Maintenance: Improves efficiency through changes and repairs that can be classified as maintenance or operational procedures • Training & Outreach
  • 89. Financing Type Min Max Rate Term Pymt Source Max SBEA/ $500 $150,000 0% 4 yrs On-Bill Utility Muni C&I $2,000 $1 Million 2.99% or 5 yrs 3rd Party 3rd Party (1st $100,000 4.99% w/ subsidy) PURA $1 1% below 10 yrs 3rd Party 3rd Party Loan Million rate/no (>50 kW more than savings) prime
  • 90. Residential Programs Home Energy Solutions HES – Income Eligible Residential New Construction Retail Products Heating & Cooling
  • 91. CL&P Contacts • New Construction (ECB): Rich Asselin (860) 665-3292 • Retrofit (EO): Glen Eigo (860) 665-5084 • Business & Energy Sustainability: Dave McIntosh (860) 665-3531 • Cool Choice: Dennis Beauregard (860) 665-4758 • Express Lighting Rebates: Dennis Beauregard (860) 665-4758 • Small Business: Randy Vagnini (860) 665-4753 • Financing: Gentiana Darragjati (860) 665-4757 • Residential Programs: Lomont White (860) 665-3790 • Natural Gas Programs: Matt Fox (860) 665-3749 • Your Account Executive
  • 92. UI Contacts • New Construction (ECB) : Peter Aufdemorte (203) 499-4715 • Retrofit (EO) : Peter Aufdemorte (203) 926-4715 • Cool Choice ( CCH) : Will Riddle (203) 499 -2407 • Express Lighting : Will Riddle (203) 499 -2407 • Your account manager
  • 93. QUESTIONS? Thank you! 1-877-WISE-USE EnergizeCT.com
  • 94. Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority C-PACE: A financing tool for multi-family
  • 95. Property Assessed Clean Energy ▪ An innovative financing structure that enables commercial, industrial, and multi-family property owners to access financing for qualified energy upgrades and repay through a benefit assessment on their property tax. Private capital A senior PACE lien is provides 100% Repayment through put on the property upfront, low-cost, property taxes and stays regardless long-term funding of ownership
  • 96. CRE Owners Face Barriers to Upgrades REFERENCES EE Indicator – NA 2010, Johnson Controls and International Facilities Management Association (IFMA)
  • 97. PACE Addresses Key Barriers REFERENCES EE Indicator – NA 2010, Johnson Controls and International Facilities Management Association (IFMA)
  • 98. Why C-PACE ▪ Zero up-front cash investment ▪ Immediate positive cash flow ▪ Long-term financing (up to 20 years) and low interest rates ▪ PACE assessment stays with the property upon sale ▪ Ability to pass payments through to tenants ▪ Higher rents and greater long-term property value because of energy efficiency ▪ Preservation of borrowing capacity through off-balance– sheet financing
  • 99.
  • 100. Connecticut Special Session Public Act 12-2 (June 2012) ▪ Commercial, industrial & multi-family property ▪ Requires the consent of the existing mortgage lender ▪ Requires SIR>1; permanently affixed ▪ Enables municipalities to opt-in ▪ Enables CEFIA to administer a statewide program
  • 101. CEFIA’s Role in C-PACE • Publish Guidelines November 2012 Design • Onboard Municipalities Program • Website launched (www.c-pace.com) • Technical Underwriting Administer • Marketing & Outreach Program • Work with Existing Mortgage Lenders Attract • Qualify Capital Providers • Offer Credit Enhancement tools (as needed) Private • Provide capital (as needed) Capital • Develop warehouse / bonding authority (Q2 2013)
  • 102. CEFIA’s Role in C-PACE • Publish Guidelines November 2012 Design • Onboard Municipalities Program • Website launched (www.c-pace.com) • Technical Underwriting Administer • Marketing & Outreach Program • Work with Existing Mortgage Lenders Attract • Qualify Capital Providers • Offer Credit Enhancement tools (as needed) Private • Provide capital (as needed) Capital • Develop warehouse / bonding authority (Q2 2013)
  • 103. Municipalities Opted into C-PACE ▪ Beacon Falls ▪ Simsbury ▪ Bridgeport ▪ Southbury ▪ Durham ▪ Stamford Hartford ▪ Hartford ▪ Stratford West Hartford Bridgeport ▪ Middletown ▪ West Hartford Norwalk Simsbury Stamford ▪ Norwalk Stratford ▪ Westport Southbury ▪ Old Saybrook ▪ Wilton ▪ Putnam ▪ Windham Coming Soon: Cheshire, Clinton, East Granby, East Hartford, Fairfield, Hamden, Manchester, Meriden, New Haven, Plymouth, Torrington, Waterbury, Wethersfield
  • 104. C-PACE Opportunities in Connecticut Hartford West Hartford Bridgeport Norwalk Simsbury Stamford Stratford Southbury
  • 105. Customers Apply Into C-PACE Hartford West Hartford Bridgeport Norwalk Simsbury Stamford Stratford Southbury
  • 106. CEFIA’s Role in C-PACE • Publish Guidelines November 2012 Design • Onboard Municipalities Program • Website launched (www.c-pace.com) • Technical Underwriting Administer • Marketing & Outreach Program • Work with Existing Mortgage Lenders Attract • Qualify Capital Providers • Offer Credit Enhancement tools (as needed) Private • Provide capital (as needed) Capital • Develop warehouse / bonding authority (Q2 2013)
  • 107. C-PACE Partners do Technical Underwriting Technical Expertise: Celtic Energy • Glastonbury, CT • $1bn of energy-related projects Hartford Program Expertise: • Experience with large commercial Real Estate Expertise: West Hartford end-users, utilities, and government Bridgeport Buonicore Partners Sustainable Real Norwalk Simsbury • Milford, CT Estate Solutions Stamford Stratford • Modeled Energy Profile of CT • Trumbull, CT Southbury • Nationwide PACE experience • Benchmarking Database • Industry leader in building energy performance assessment 3rd Party Administrator: Buonicore Partners
  • 108. Upgrades: What’s Eligible Anything that saves energy from baseline … as long as it isn’t going anywhere ▪ High efficiency lighting ▪ Combustion and burner upgrades ▪ HVAC upgrades Hartford ▪ Fuel switching West Hartford ▪ New automated building and HVAC Bridgeport controls ▪ Water conservation Norwalk Simsbury ▪ Variable speed drives (VSDs) on motors ▪ Heat recovery and steam trapsStamford Stratford fans and pumps ▪ Building enclosure/envelope Southbury ▪ High efficiency chillers, boilers, and furnaces improvements ▪ High efficiency hot water heating ▪ BMS systems ▪ Renewable energy systems
  • 109. Upgrades: What’s Not ▪ Appliances, e.g., refrigerators, ▪ Any measure that is easily dishwashers, etc. removed/not permanently ▪ Plug load devices installed Hartford ▪ Vending machine controls ▪ Any measure that does not West Hartford result in improved energy efficiencyBridgeport ▪ Any package of measures with a Norwalk Simsbury weighted average effective useful life ▪ Extending natural gas lines to the Stamford Stratford (EUL) that does not meet or exceed property line to enable a PACE-Southbury the life of the loan eligible gas conversion project. ▪ Any package of measures that does not achieve an energy savings (over the life of the loan) to [total project] investment ratio > 1
  • 110. CEFIA’s Role in C-PACE • Publish Guidelines November 2012 Design • Onboard Municipalities Program • Website launched (www.c-pace.com) • Technical Underwriting Administer • Marketing & Outreach Program • Work with Existing Mortgage Lenders Attract • Qualify Capital Providers • Offer Credit Enhancement tools (as needed) Private • Provide capital (as needed) Capital • Develop warehouse / bonding authority (Q2 2013)
  • 111. Capital Partners Qualified Capital Providers ▪ CEFIA qualified 8 capital providers through a RFI. ▪ “Lending tree” model Hartford West Hartford Owner Arranged Financing Bridgeport Norwalk ▪ Property owner is free to choose Simsbury Stamford their capital provider from the Stratford private market. There is no Southbury government financing required. Construction and Term Financing from CEFIA ▪ CEFIA authorized $20M short term facility for construction and term financing.
  • 112. Requirements ▪ Building must be commercial, industrial, or multifamily ▪ Non-profits eligible if municipality allows ▪ Building must be located in a municipality which has opted in ▪ Feasibility study required for renewables ▪ Mortgage lender must consent
  • 113. Application Review: Two Paths ▪ Full Assessment – Whole Building Analysis – Begin with a Level I screening step (by CRE owners consultant), designed to cost effectively identify projects with compelling savings & ROI – Proceed to Level II/III audit when significant savings potential exists. Determine the optimized bundle of ECMs, calculate project cost, projected energy savings & key financial metrics ▪ Fast Track – Designed for buildings where prior energy audits have been completed including ECM recommendations, but failed to get implemented due to owner inability to self-fund the project – Less technically complex projects (single ECM) – Pre-approved projects under utility EE incentive/rebate programs
  • 114. Application Review: Technical Standards ▪ Developed in light of other PACE and leading CRE energy retrofit finance programs around the country ▪ Incorporates three established industry protocols – ASTM Building Energy Performance Assessment (BEPA) Standard E2797-11 for baseline energy use data collection and analysis – ASHRAE Level 1, 2, 3 Energy Audit Guidelines to identify ECMs and project energy savings – International Performance Measurement & Verification Protocol (IPMVP) for energy savings measurement and verification ▪ Underwriting methodology is technically sound, standardized, reliable & fully-transparent
  • 115. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider $$$ Property Owner $$$ Contractor Financial Assessment & C-PACE Conduit $ Services Contract $ Property/ECMs Agreement $ $ Town Tax CEFIA $$$ Collector Lien Town Land “M&V” Records
  • 116. Funding: Capital Flow Process Property Owner $$$ Contractor Property Audit/ Energy Assessment $ $ $ $ $$$
  • 117. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Notification & Consent Property Owner $$$ Contractor $ $ $ $ $$$
  • 118. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Notification & Consent Property Owner $$$ Contractor Technical $ $ Review $ $ Program CEFIA $$$ Administrator
  • 119. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider Property Owner $$$ Contractor $ $ $ $ CEFIA
  • 120. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider Property Owner $$$ Contractor Assessment & C-PACE $ Services Contract $ $ $ CEFIA
  • 121. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider Property Owner $$$ Contractor Financial Conduit $ Agreement $ $ $ CEFIA
  • 122. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider Property Owner $$$ Contractor Financial Conduit Assessment & C-PACE $ Agreement Services Contract $ Property/ECMs $ $ CEFIA
  • 123. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider Property Owner $$$ Contractor Financial Conduit Assessment & C-PACE $ Agreement Services Contract $ Property/ECMs $ $ CEFIA Caveat Town Land Records
  • 124. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider $$$ Property Owner $$$ Contractor Equipment & Services Financial Conduit Assessment & C-PACE $ Agreement Services Contract Property/ECMs $ CEFIA Caveat Town Land Records
  • 125. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider $$$ Property Owner $$$ Contractor Financial Conduit Assessment & C-PACE $ Agreement Services Contract $ Property/ECMs $ $ CEFIA LIEN Town Land Records
  • 126. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider $$$ Property Owner $$$ Contractor Financial Conduit Assessment & C-PACE $ Agreement Services Contract $ Property/ECMs $ $ Town Tax CEFIA LIEN Collector Town Land Records
  • 127. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification Agreement & Consent C-Pace Capital Provider $$$ Property Owner $$$ Contractor Financial Conduit Assessment & C-PACE $ Agreement Services Contract $ Property/ECMs $ $ Town Tax CEFIA $$$ LIEN Collector Town Land Records
  • 128. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification Agreement & Consent C-Pace Capital Provider $$$ Property Owner $$$ Contractor Financial Assessment & C-PACE Conduit $$ Services Contract $ Property/ECMs Agreement $$ $ Town Tax CEFIA $$$ LIEN Collector Town Land Records
  • 129. Funding: Capital Flow Process Mortgage Holder Funding Notification & Agreement Consent C-Pace Capital Provider $$$ Property Owner $$$ Contractor Financial Assessment & C-PACE Conduit $ Services Contract $ Property/ECMs Agreement $ $ Town Tax CEFIA $$$ Collector Lien Town Land “M&V” Records
  • 130. Funding: Capital Flow Process Recap: ▪ Audit ▪ Notification to Mortgage Holder / Consent ▪ Project Review by Program Administrator ▪ Referral out to Qualified Capital Providers ▪ Capital Provider Selected by Owner ▪ Negotiations  Funding Agreement ▪ Assessment & C-PACE Services Agreement & Financial Conduit Agreement (CEFIA – Owner – Cap Provider) ▪ Caveat on the Property (CEFIA – Town/City) ▪ Funding Disbursement(s) & Project Work Commences ▪ Project Completion ▪ Finalization of the Lien on the Property, Payment Schedule, etc. ▪ Owner Enjoys More Efficient Building & Repays Funding via Tax Bill 130
  • 131. M&V: Data Management Platform ▪ Full Assessment & Fast Track project data are entered & tracked in CEFIA’s Data Management Platform (CDMP)  CDMP is powered by SRS’s cloud- based software platform  CDMP facilitates key project data & analytics management across the entire project life cycle (project development through M&V)
  • 132. Benefits to Other Stakeholders Capital Providers Mortgage Lenders Municipalities • Low risk investment • Improves Building • Creates economicHartford opportunity Financials/Risk developmentWestjobs & Hartford Bridgeport • Senior lien • Lowers OPEX Norwalk Simsbury • Secure repayment • SIR>1 • Reduces energy costs Stamford mechanism (taxes) • No acceleration for businesses Stratford Southbury • Legal and technical • Creates a more • Reduces pollution structure administered attractive building for by CEFIA occupants and owners • Finances deferred maintenance needs
  • 133. The Customer (Building Owner): PACE Addresses Key Barriers Near term plan to sell? Tax obligation fixed to property Hartford West Hartford Bridgeport Lack of funding? 100% upfront, 20 year financing Norwalk Simsbury Stamford Cannot assume more debt? PACE assessments qualify as OPEX Stratford Southbury Insufficient payback/ROI? Positive cash flow in year 1 Split incentives? Assessment/savings pass to tenants Uncertain savings/technical expertise? Technical underwriting / SIR>1
  • 134. PACE Project Example $1,500,000 add to Building Value (8.9%) 30 Year Old, 200,000 ft2 commercial building 134
  • 135. Jessica Bailey, Director C-PACE Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority 860.257.2888 jessica.bailey@ctcleanenergy.com www.c-pace.com

Editor's Notes

  1. These should be a refresher of terms and acronyms….Note PPA, SPE ITC and PTC will be covered soon
  2. These should be a refresher of terms and acronyms….Note PPA, SPE ITC and PTC will be covered soon
  3. These should be a refresher of terms and acronyms….Note PPA, SPE ITC and PTC will be covered soon
  4. Many ways to incentivize investments in renewable energy and energy efficiency, such as a direct cash payments. Feed In Tariffs have been used in Canada, Germany and Spain for solar.America differs from other nations in the manner it implements its federal energy policy through the income tax code. TIME CHECK = 12:10 pm (10 mins in)
  5. Recap of the various technologies that are typically financedSolar PVis probably the most common renewable energy technology financed today.
  6. Recent section 167 PPA PLR ???????
  7. TIME CHECK = 1:40 pm (100 minutes in)
  8. TIME CHECK = 12:20 pm (20 mins in)
  9. 1st Bullet THEN…Will supply match demand? Not likely in the near future….
  10. Whole Building Approach up to $3 per square foot.Incremental cost = Cost for Code (or Standard design) - Cost of proposed
  11. Rebates on table in back of room
  12. Up to 35% of installed cost of standard lightingUp to 40% of installed cost of high performance lighting (LED &amp; induction)Up to 40% of installed cost of non lighting measuresComprehensive initiative – lesser of:Up to 50% of installed cost, orEnergy savings up to $0.50/kWh or $1500/kW
  13. Energy dashboardsToolkits to manage &amp; operate specific facilities
  14. Services and incentives to create a more comfortable, affordable home.
  15. Audit
  16. Notification to Mortgage Holder / Consent
  17. Referral then Capital Provider selected then Negotiations  Funding Agreement
  18. Disclosure mattersFunding is paid through an assessment levied on propertyFinancing particularsPrincipalInterestOther costsProcess for collectionRemedies for non-paymentCredit Enhancement (if applicable)M&amp;VProgram compliance
  19. Disclosure mattersFunding is paid through an assessment levied on propertyFinancing particularsPrincipalInterestOther costsProcess for collectionRemedies for non-paymentCredit Enhancement (if applicable)M&amp;VProgram compliance
  20. Funding Disbursement(s) &amp; Project Work Commences
  21. Project Completion, Finalization of the Lien on the Property, Payment Schedule, etc.