By Ken LaRoe, CEO and Founder of Climate First Bank
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) signed into law by President Biden on August 16, 2022, dedicates $369 billion to combat climate change. This landmark legislation aims to build a clean energy economy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by approximately 40% by 2030, according to the federal government. One of the most significant provisions of the law financially incentivizes nonprofit organizations to go solar. The IRA allows nonprofits to access the solar investment tax credit (ITC) through a direct pay option.
As nonprofit organizations take advantage of IRA incentives to move to solar energy, mission-driven community-based lenders focused on accelerating the transition to a clean energy future will help these organizations secure low-cost capital to finance these projects.
The U.S. Department of the Treasury noted that the “Inflation Reduction Act recognizes that state, local and Tribal governments, as well as nonprofit organizations and other tax-exempt entities, have played and will continue to play a central role in making investments to build a clean energy economy. To further promote broad-based investment across the country, the Inflation Reduction Act allows these actors to receive certain tax credits as direct payments from the Internal Revenue Service, streamlining these entities’ access to key incentives and supporting their investments in local communities.”
This means schools, hospitals, charities, faith-based organizations, rural electric cooperatives and other tax-exempt entities are now eligible to receive a lump-sum payment — in lieu of a tax credit from the federal government — of at least 30% for eligible energy projects such as installing a solar PV system. That’s good news for nonprofit organizations aiming to lower electricity costs and reduce carbon footprints.
Making clean energy more accessible to nonprofits is also good news for the solar industry. Research firm Rystad Energy projects that the IRA will boost installed solar capacity which will deliver an estimated $110 billion of capital expenditure.
Analyst firm Wood Mackenzie noted that the IRA will bring some much-needed long-term certainty to the renewables sector with total investment in renewables reaching $1.2 trillion through 2035. According to the firm, solar will be a major beneficiary. Solar incentives in the legislation are projected to result in a “67% increase in solar additions between 2022 and 2032 compared to what would have happened without the IRA incentives.”
Prior to the IRA, nonprofit organizations lacked the tax liability to take advantage of ITCs for installing solar systems. With the IRA making solar tax credits more accessible, nonprofit organizations can more easily finance and purchase their own solar systems. Banks focused on environmental sustainability are ready to help fund these projects.
In fact, renewable energy is becoming a key priority for many lenders. To support the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals of affordable and clean energy, sustainable cities and communities, climate action and partnerships, many banks are developing specialized commercial loan products designed to encourage the use of solar energy. These loan products include loans for rooftop solar systems, loans for energy efficiency improvements, sustainably certified commercial real estate financing, and sustainably certified construction loans.
Banks focused on accelerating the transition to clean energy are best positioned to help nonprofits secure advantageous funding for their solar installations. Specialist lenders like Climate First Bank and others have the institutional knowledge and technical know-how to develop innovative funding structures with favorable rates and terms designed to help nonprofits finance these installations.
There is no doubt that the IRA coupled with financing tools that provide funding support for clean energy projects will catalyze nonprofit organizations to deploy solar energy and speed their transition to a net-zero emissions future. Going solar will offer these organizations long-term cost savings while providing the benefits of combatting climate change, creating jobs and bringing new investment into their communities.
Summing up the bottom-line benefits of the IRA, a blog post by Candace Vahlsing, associate director for climate, energy, environment, and science with the White Houses’s Office of Management and Budget, said “the Inflation Reduction Act will help ease the burden that climate change imposes on the American public, strengthen our economy, and reduce future financial risks to the Federal Government and to taxpayers.”
Ken LaRoe is a leader in the field of ethical banking and believes that finance industry is responsible for driving positive change for the planet and its peoples. Three years after the sale of his first bank, Florida Choice Bank, LaRoe was able to put this approach into action with the founding of First GREEN Bank in 2009. Under LaRoe’s leadership, First GREEN Bank expanded across Florida and his values-based business model demonstrated that financial excellence can occur without ethical compromise. He then created Climate First Bank in 2021, an FDIC-approved commercial bank with a mission to drawdown atmospheric CO2 by accelerating the clean energy transition.
Paul Taylor says
Does Cimate First Bank only loan to Florida businesses?
William McCray says
Thank you for this article. I am interested in financing for Non-Profits and Business/Commercial
projects. The problem is they normally want the project to be very large or they want to do a PPA
so they can take the tax benefit as well as the depreciation. Recently here in San Diego Ygrene
is not taking new applications. They are essentially discontinuing business. I am looking for finance
alternatives. Also is the direct pay available to Non-Profits who have gone solar and have not used the tax credit (because the could not) nor have they assigned this tax credit to anyone. In other words is it retroactive. Who is charing the directive committee in congress ? I am a solar installer
Scott Ameduri says
William,
I don’t believe the direct pay is retroactive – generally it is for projects that are deployed 1/1/2023 or later.
ward riggins says
William,
I am a solar broker and attempting to find ways to help non-profit organizations convert to solar with out cost (PPA). If you find sources that help with this please send me that info. I am in South East USA where solar has been slow to prosper.
Ward Riggins
http://www.essentialaltenergy.com
Clay Sikes says
Treasury direction will potentially unlock a flood of funding – We, at Lattice Energy Solutions, are prepared to address the demand at scale.
Peter Greenberg says
Any idea of when the Treasury will issue guidance on how to apply for the funds for non profits/govt. agencies for solar projects?
Amy says
I would like to know the timeline on this as well.
Ward McCartney says
The IRA is a great step forward, I’m a trustee on a rural electric co-op board and so far have been unable to even get the board to consider buying out 50% of our G&T contract so that we can self generate at economies of scale with battery storage backup. It’s still really discouraging. We need some co-ops like Kit Carson to show CV the cost savings. Ward