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Cash Incentives for Renewables are Twice as Effective as Tax Credits

John Farrell
May 19, 2011  |  2 Comments

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Using the tax code rather than cash incentives to support wind and solar power costs ratepayers significantly more.  I wrote about this problem last year because project developers were selling their federal tax credits to third parties at 50 to 70 cents on the dollar.

Along these lines, the Bipartisan Policy Center released a study [last week] showing that simply handing cash to clean energy developers is twice -- yes, twice -- as effective as supporting them through tax credits. [emphasis added]

The problem is that all but the largest renewable energy developers or buyers can't capture the full value of the federal tax credits.  So, prior to the economic collapse, a number of enterprising investment banks (and others) started buying up tax credits to reduce their tax bills. 

Banks took their cut, of course, which decreased the value of the tax credits to the actual wind or solar project.

This was great for big banks, but lousy for taxpayers and electric ratepayers.  In fact, using tax credits instead of cash grants for wind and solar projects increased the cost per kilowatt-hour produced by 18 and 27 percent, respectively.  (Wait, why not 50 percent?  Because even though the tax credit is only half as good as cash, the cash payment only covers up to 30 percent of a wind or solar project's costs.  So cash in lieu of tax credits can only improve that portion of a project's finances.)

Seen another way, if the $4 billion spent on renewable tax incentives in 2007 had been given as cash instead, it could have leveraged 3,400 MW of additional wind power and 52 MW of additional solar power.  This would have increased incremental installed wind capacity in 2007 by 64%, and installed solar capacity by 25%. 

The increased costs come from higher prices that utilities pay for wind and solar power (and pass on to consumers) as well as the the cost to taxpayers of passing half of the tax credit value to investment bank shareholders instead of wind and solar projects.

The problem isn't solved, but has simply been postponed.

When the economy tanked, so did profits (and tax liability) for big banks.  Wind and solar producers had no one to buy their tax credits and the entire industry was in danger of collapsing.  The adjacent chart illustrates the idiocy of relying on the tax code for energy policy.

Congress stepped in with a temporary fix, allowing project developers to receive a cash grant in lieu of the tax credit.  The temporary cash grant (currently extended through 2011) kept the wind and solar industry running during the recession and has saved taxpayers and ratepayers billions of dollars. 

It's also helped level the playing field, allowing for local ownership of wind and solar projects (such as the cooperative-owned Crow Lake wind Project in South Dakota), rather than requiring complex tax equity partnerships.  It's meant more revenue from wind and solar staying in the local community.  And this means a larger, stronger constituency for renewable energy.

The cash grant option will expire at the end of 2011, but hopefully the climate hawks and fiscal hawks in Congress will take note: we can support wind and solar at half the price with smarter policy.

Hat tip to David Roberts at Grist for the study link.

This post originally appeared on Energy Self-Reliant States, a resource of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance's New Rules Project.

Contact John Farrell at jfarrell@ilsr.org, find more content at energyselfreliantstates.org, follow @johnffarrell on Twitter, or friend the New Rules Project on Facebook.

The information and views expressed in this blog post are solely those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on this Web site and other publications. This blog was posted directly by the author and was not reviewed for accuracy, spelling or grammar.

2 Comments

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Ronald Barrett, Pres. EWEI
Ronald Barrett, Pres. EWEI
May 20, 2011
As a two year old start-up Renewable Energy (RE) company doing RD&T for the manufacturing of Advanced Compound Savonius wind/solar turbines, Emerald Wind Energy International in Missouri can attest to the fact the real thing that counts to any such RE effort is cash.

All of the current tax-credits,incentives, E-ARPAs, etc,etc, are fine for the big companies. However they are of "ZERO" use to the RE start-ups and entrepreneurs.

The best return on our money is to cash support start-up manufacturing in RE enterprises. I give that a "Zero" chance of happening in the US. Ron Barrett.com, President EWEI
Jonathan Chance
Jonathan Chance
May 19, 2011
Since the real costs of the global petro-banking warfare racket are incalculably high, appropriately issued Renewable Energy Credits (US RECs) are infinitely more effective than so-called "money" (central bank debt) for creating a free, fair, healthy, peaceful, prosperous, regenerative economy.

Article 26.

Treasurynet.US

26.1 - United States renewable energy credits and United States peak renewable energy credits shall be directly issued to individual United States Citizens, age sixteen years or more, who are owners of publicly certified renewable energy systems.

26.2 - US renewable energy credits and US peak renewable energy credits shall be lawful tender for any and all claims of legitimate debt, public and private, exempting lawful voluntary transactions among individual human persons in the currency or currencies of their choice.

26.3 - One US renewable energy credit represents twenty kilowatt-hours of certified renewable energy produced in the United States.

26.4 - One US peak renewable energy credit represents ten kilowatt-hours of certified grid-tied peak-demand photovoltaic electricity produced in the United States.

26.5 - Energy for US renewable energy credits shall be derived only from publicly certified environmentally benign sources, including appropriate photovoltaic systems, grid-tied solar-thermal electric systems, grid-tied solar water heating systems, grid-tied wind power systems, grid-tied hydroelectric systems, grid-tied closed-loop geothermal systems, cellulosic ethanol, and organic vegetable oil.

26.6 - Other than the Sun's radiation, a minimum of ninety-five percent of physical natural resources, materials, components, and other direct manufacturing costs contributing toward US renewable energy credits shall be produced in the United States....

Treasurynet.US

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John Farrell

John Farrell

John Farrell directs the Energy Self-Reliant States and Communities program at ILSR and he focuses on energy policy developments that best expand the benefits of local ownership and dispersed generation of renewable energy. His latest paper,...
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