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Don't Miss The Great Solar Debate: Where Does the Global Solar Industry Stand? ×

Why the Renewable Energy Industry Needs Green Banks

Bert Hunter, Chief Investment Officer, Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority
January 16, 2013  |  8 Comments

On October 25, 2012, the world watched as Hurricane Sandy swept up the east coast. Over these past few years, we have seen storm after storm leave our homes battered, our possessions ruined, and our towns and cities without power for weeks on end. Most of us in the renewable energy world take it for granted that man-made climate change contributes to the increased intensity of these major weather events, and that renewable energy will reduce the already adverse effects of climate change. But the recent barrage of natural disasters has also revealed something else: the utility company model – based on the centralized delivery of a commodity product – leaves something to be desired, and solar power can help there, too.

The fact is that energy is a service, no matter how it’s provided (whether through gas-fired generation, nuclear plants, or one’s own roof). Rather than trying to sell capital improvements to risk-averse and cash-strapped customers, the clean energy industry needs to be in the business of offering a cleaner, cheaper, and more reliable energy service.

Few customers want to make a major cash outlay for the mere possibility of procuring their home or business’ kilowatt-hours a few cents more cheaply.  But tell the customer a story about “islanding” the solar PV system you’re selling so that she knows her power will stay on when the grid goes down, and she’s listening. Then, tell her you’ve got a financing option that uses her energy savings to make her cash-flow positive, as well, and she’s asking for documents to sign. Our industry’s business models can’t be driven by technology-prescriptive government policy any longer. With no guarantee on what state and federal incentives will look like in the next few years, we can’t stick to the same old script of selling a specific product because it happens to be subsidized at that moment: instead, we need to deliver a service that brings real and lasting value to our customers.

The “green bank” model that Connecticut recently launched, and that New York announced on January 9, helps foment exactly this kind of transformation in market thinking by taking a holistic, long-term view of industry support.  Green banks are public institutions with below-market return requirements that aim to create replicable financial structures in order to encourage private investment into the clean energy industry, so as to deliver sustained industry development and lower cost per unit of clean energy delivered.

For instance, in 2008, as a precursor to Connecticut’s green bank (the Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority, or CEFIA), the state launched a public-private solar lease program to assist small developers in accessing federal ITC and accelerated depreciation incentives and enabling them to offer a competitive product.  The program, an investment partnership between the state and U.S. Bank, brought $22M of private solar investment into Connecticut and resulted in 6.2MW of new solar capacity. It contributed to scale and industry transformation in the state: residential installed costs per watt fell by 40% (from $8.19 to $4.85), despite a simultaneous 55% drop in incentive per watt from 2008-2012.  With the state’s market now more mature, a new CT Solar Lease will roll out this year, broadened to include more private capital in the structure, and opened to the solar hot water and commercial solar industries in Connecticut, as well.  

The CT Solar Lease is but one example of what’s needed. To reach the scale required by ambitious policy goals in Washington and state capitals across the country, we must attract significant private investment at low rates into a sector that has traditionally required public subsidies to compensate for expensive capital. Green banks, through low-cost subordinated debt, equity, or a variety of credit enhancements, can use their funds to make deals attractive to capital providers who are unfamiliar with renewable energy or energy efficiency. With such financial support, and with knowledgeable green bank staff helping guide the way, private entities experienced in providing low-cost debt at scale (i.e. car loans or small business  lines of credit) can gain exposure to financing energy products that will ultimately drive down the cost of their capital.

Over the long-term, then, in combination with the declining costs of clean energy technology itself, the availability of this low-cost capital will allow clean energy developers to stop chasing subsidies, and instead compete more directly in the market. The market will truly transform when customers can make their energy decision inclusive of both quality of service and price.   And Green Banks like CEFIA are going to help us get there.

Bert Hunter is Chief Investment Officer at Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority based in CT. He will be speaking in a panel discussion entitled 2013 & Beyond: Which States and Policies Will Drive Market Opportunities set to take place during Solar Power-Gen in San Diego in February.  Click here for more information about the show.

Benjamin Healey and Alexandra Lieberman of CEFIA contributed to this editorial.

Lead image: Coins and plant via Shutterstock

8 Comments

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terry hallinan
terry hallinan
January 23, 2013
Hi craig-dolston,

I don't believe estimates of reserves are worth a bucket of spit.

I can't be the only one here who can recall when we were treated nightly to assurances, most memorably to me from Huntley and Brinkley, that natural gas would only last a maximum of 10 years. A couple times a week it seemed Sen. Henry (Scoop) Jackson would predict $200/bbl oil.

Would be far better for life on the planet had those folks been right but they weren't and never are. The Indians knew the buffalo were gone when they were gone.

"It's tough to make predictions - especially about the future." Yogi Berra

Best, Terry
Craig Dolston
Craig Dolston
January 23, 2013
This would be related to this kind of news http://regenelectronics.com/the-limitation-of-the-fossil-fuels
terry hallinan
terry hallinan
January 22, 2013
Hayden Snyder,

"you think solar cells are just lying on the ground for the taking?"

LOL! Sun worshipers seem to think so but distributed geothermal is baseload power [always on]. Boise, ID, was an early pioneer in geothermal heating utilities and then forgot for a long time as fossil fuels grabbed all the attention.

Husavik, Iceland, even used a garbage burning facility to add heat to its tepid warm spring and squeeze out 3MW of power for the isolated hamlet. Birdsville, Australia, was much earlier in tapping warm geothermal water for power before the upside-down people Down Under went bonkers for EGS:

http://thinkgeoenergy.com/archives/1900

Thank you for a bit of sunlight despite all those chasing star beams and sometime wind for power.

Best, Terry
Thomas M
Thomas M
January 20, 2013
Hayden, you said "you have to spend energy to make energy". So where are you getting this energy to spend? You buying it at the supermaket?(Everthing else in the store was made from free energy.) You going to the local bank to borrow some? (The bank building was made from products as result of free energy.) Of course you should understand I can go on and on.
All the materials that you speak of come from the earth, free, all the manufacturing systems made from these materials are therefore free, thus leading to a free product and array.
The only thing that cost anything is the labor, that's if you believe your labor can be bought for paper and metal that you yourself are harvesting and is more valuable in it's natural state.
And once you get that small amount of free energy, with little work, or expent energy, on your part, then getting that magnet spinning won't be a problem
Hayden Snyder
Hayden Snyder
January 18, 2013
@thomas-mayrand-14505, energy is not free, you can't just take energy willy nilly; you have to spend energy to make energy. you think solar cells are just lying on the ground for the taking? no! the materials found in them have to be mined, processed, manufactured and then assembled into arrays and sold to you and even then they only last for 20 years and you have to do the whole thing all over again. if you want to spend your entire life hand cranking a magnet - which would spend your own energy - between some wires to keep 1 light bulb lit in your house then be my guest, the rest of us will carry on paying for the SERVICE of energy so that we can live our lives.
Thomas M
Thomas M
January 17, 2013
"The fact is that energy is a service, no matter how it's provided"

I don't think this statement is true. Energy is energy and the universe is full of it and is free to all living and non living entities. It is the harnessing and delivery of energy that is the service. If I pick an apple from a tree that grows in a field, it is free. If I then turn around and deliver it to a store and sell it, that is the service, saving you from picking it yourself.
So basically, utilities are the middlemen we need to avoid. If we all had an apple tree in our yard or one or two in the neighborhood, I and the neighbors would have apples free for life and there would be no need to have a bank or any other institution to sell us financing in order to have an apple, unless they somehow convince us that they are needed in order for the tree to grow, or laws are passed that make having your own apple tree illegal.
Maximilian Breckbill
Maximilian Breckbill
January 17, 2013
I love it. While I understand ITC incentives as a measure to keep ownership domestic, it makes no sense to create an incentive where only big players with a hefty tax appetite can invest.

Looking forward to seeing what CT solar lease II will generate.
NEAL ZISLIN
NEAL ZISLIN
January 17, 2013
Affordable financing and long-term power purchase agreements or capital leases are vital prerequisites for a sustainable industry of renewable energy project developers/owners. Decentralizing access to electric power will reduce the necessity of having to upgrade and expand transmission networks which invoke a protracted permitting process and expensive investments. I would also propose that low cost capital be made available to a competitive backup power delivering technology because solar is not available 24/7. Consideration should be given to expanding eligibility for the low cost capital offering to automated natural gas-powered generation systems that can supplement solar as the primary off-grid power source. Battery systems may also become a desired backup power source in the future as the investment cost decreases over time with technology development and increasing demand.

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Bert Hunter

Bert Hunter

As Chief Investment Officer of Connecticut’s Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority or “CEFIA” (SÈ-fee-uh), Bert Hunter leads the development of new and innovative financing programs. With a mission to attract and deploy private...
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