Renewable energy projects: US law change complicates financing

Author: Ryan Bolger | Published: 3 Jul 2012
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The expiration of the US Treasury Department’s 1603 programme last year has complicated renewable energy companies’ abilities to cash in on tax equities as a source of project finance and prompted a search for new financing tools.

Renewable energy projects are largely financed by companies wanting returns on investment at favourable tax rates.

The 1603 programme enabled renewable energy companies to receive a grant for unused construction-related tax credits. An investment tax credit for renewable energy companies remains until 2016, but only taxpaying investors qualify.

Michael Whalen, CFO at SolarReserve, told IFLR there continued to be concern and frustration on the complexity of structuring projects to tap into the providers of tax capacity. “Most power projects in the US are frequently developed and initially owned by parties who may not be current tax payers,” he said.

That leaves partnerships and leveraged leases as the tax efficient structures available for solar energy projects, Whalen said.

Data presented by John Eber, managing director of energy investments at JP Morgan, during a Renewable Energy Finance Forum panel discussion earlier this month, showed inverted leases were the most popular financing structure followed by investor leases and leveraged partnerships.

Tax equities remain but it is not as easy to take advantage of them with 1603 now a memory. A combination of bank loans and bond sales could help the transition. The need for more capital markets driven financing came up again and again during the discussion on June 20.

Whalen said it would be presumptuous to say bank lenders are completely phasing out. “I think bank lenders still see themselves as the principal resource in construction financing, but not in long-term financing,” he said.

Thomas Emmons, managing director of Rabobank, said one popular option for the financing of these types of projects was to take out a ten-year bank loan and then refinance the loan or issue bonds to institutional buyers.  

Channel correspondents