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PTC Extension: Another Squeaker for Clean Energy

By Scott Sklar, The Stella Group
January 3, 2013   |   3 Comments

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3 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 3
January 3, 2013
Some of the squeak has been eliminated.

Gone is the requirement that projects have to be completed by the end of 2013 in order to earn the PTC. The details of how much progress must have been made and how long into future years the project might stretch have not yet been released.

What this change means is that the wind industry can start projects later into 2013 and let those projects carry things forward while Congress fiddles around with the 2014 support policy.

This is workable. And since the wind industry has announced that it needs only a five or so more years of support before it can compete on its own I suspect this is the last we'll see wind get jerked around.

By 2018 we should see wind and solar without subsidies competing nicely against subsidized fossil fuels and nuclear. And at that point it's going to be harder to justify the ff/nuke subsidies.
Comment
2 of 3
January 3, 2013
Found a bit more info...

Apparently the bill requires beginning construction by Jan 1, 2014. It does not define what "being construction" means. Nor does it specify a completion date.

"David Burton, partner at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, says the act's "begin construction" language may mean incurring 5% of the cost in 2013, which is how the Treasury interpreted the begin-construction rules for the Section 1603 cash-grant program.

Just the same, the Treasury or the IRS will need to rule on the interpretation, Burton says, adding that the Joint Committee on Taxation, a group of tax lawyers that advise the Senate Finance Committee, could help to clarify the matter in a few weeks.

As written, Burton says, the act does not include an end date. Therefore, savvy project developers could theoretically bank tax credits well into the future. For example, a wind farm owner could incur $5 million to purchase wind blades in 2013 and use those blades in a $100 million project that is completed in 2017. As currently written, the wind project would be eligible for 10 years of PTCs beginning in 2017.

According to Burton, if a developer plans well and banks enough 2013 PTC-eligible component parts, it may be able to continue to construct PTC-eligible wind farms indefinitely.

However, he cautions, "We do not know yet if the government will permit such an interpretation.""

http://www.nawindpower.com/naw/e107_plugins/content/content.php?content.10917#.UOX0yORQX6c

Sounds like victory to me.
No image available
Comment
3 of 3
Anonymous
January 6, 2013
Cool:
Even though clients excersise their tax-credit rights-
how do you explain to those around them who can not afford GT or Solar systems and have to see their tax dollars go to the neighbors' credits ...? It is a q that arrives every time a T Heat Pump loop gets installed in a city...
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Scott Sklar

View Scott Sklar's Profile
About: Scott, founder and president of The Stella Group, Ltd., in Washington, DC, is the Chair of the Steering Committee of the Sustainable Energy Coalition and serves... more »

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