| Tax Breaks Turn Solar Power into Cold Cash   Mar 18 - The Oregonian
 Tax breaks and cash rebates have done what the most gung-ho green talk has 
    not: ignited a solar power boom in Oregon.
 
 Oregon officials expect the amount of solar power in the state to jump more 
    than eightfold this year as businesses, nonprofits and government agencies 
    install rooftop and ground-mounted photovoltaic systems at record rates.
 
 The surge is courtesy of the taxpayer, who foots the bill in this effort to 
    go green.
 
 Beefed-up state and federal incentives make building solar almost 
    irresistible. A business can recoup an investment in a million-dollar array 
    in five years, then post thousands of dollars annually in electricity 
    savings. A little extra icing: The installations are exempt from property 
    taxes through 2012.
 
 Nonprofits and government entities are equally enthusiastic. They're allowed 
    to transfer the incentives to investors on the hunt for tax breaks, then put 
    up a solar array for little if any out-of-pocket expense.
 
 "It's not just for do-gooders," said Christopher Dymond, a senior energy 
    analyst with the Oregon Department of Energy. "There's actually a financial 
    reward, and that's what drives industry."
 
 The red-hot response underscores Gov. Ted Kulongoski's claims that he can 
    strengthen the economy as he does battle with climate-warming carbon dioxide 
    emissions. More solar installers, engineers, designers and investors, the 
    thinking goes, fatten company payrolls just as other parts of the economy 
    are weakening.
 
 But the solar push highlights how crucial subsidies have become to the 
    clean-energy calculation. Solar systems are expensive, three times the cost 
    of wind energy, for example. A business, no matter how green its rhetoric, 
    isn't likely to invest seriously in solar unless it can find assistance, 
    state officials and industry leaders say.
 
 Skeptics don't like the size of the subsidies, which are expected to reduce 
    the state budget by almost $96 million annually by 2013 -- money that 
    otherwise would be available for schools, health care and other 
    government-funded services.
 
 Besides, they note, even such furious development isn't going to make solar 
    energy a significant part of the state's overall power supplies anytime 
    soon.
 
 "It's window dressing," said Jeff King, a senior resource analyst with the 
    Northwest Power and Conservation Council who tracks the region's power 
    supplies and finds solar just a blip -- well under 1 percent -- in the 
    accounting. "If the objective is to reduce CO2 , there are better ways to do 
    it."
 
 A south-facing rooftop in Northeast Portland stretches as big as two 
    football fields. It's a perfect setup for solar, and soon it's going to get 
    it -- 4,800 solar modules with an 870-kilowatt capacity.
 
 Once the power starts flowing, the solar array will be the largest in the 
    state -- almost double the size of the current record-holder. It will 
    increase the state's solar capacity by 35 percent.
 
 The modules will produce an estimated 870,000 kilowatt hours of electricity 
    annually, despite Portland's cloudy weather. That's enough to meet all the 
    electricity demands of the 110,000-square-foot manufacturing building or 
    enough to light up 72 average Portland homes.
 
 That's a lot of light bulbs. It's also a lot of intricate financing.
 
 Portland Habilitation Center, which trains and employs individuals with 
    disabilities, is a nonprofit that doesn't pay taxes and is hardly flush with 
    cash. John Murphy, the organization's president, knew he wanted to go solar 
    when he began planning for a new manufacturing facility 18 months ago. But 
    he quickly realized that a $7 million price tag and restrictive utility 
    rules blocked his way.
 
 "A whole lot of laws and regulations had to change to make it happen," 
    Murphy said.
 
 By this year, an expanded state tax credit -- 50 percent of eligible costs 
    spread over five years -- had settled into place. So had utility regulations 
    that allowed projects as big as 2 megawatts to hook into the main grid.
 
 Energy Trust of Oregon Inc., funded by payments from Portland General 
    Electric and Pacific Power customers, offered custom grants -- more than $1 
    million for the habilitation center.
 
 A 30 percent federal tax credit -- taken entirely in the first year -- and 
    accelerated depreciation schedules topped off the available incentives.
 
 To tap the rich pool of tax credits, the center began looking for an outside 
    investor, a corporate taxpayer eager to reduce its payment to the IRS. 
    Eventually, a deal with U.S. Bank Community Development Corp., one of the 
    largest tax credit investors in the country, began to take shape.
 
 The nonprofit will end up putting about $556,000 into the deal. The investor 
    will take care of the rest. It will own the project and, therefore, be able 
    to use all the tax breaks. It expects to make 7 percent to 10 percent 
    annually on its money.
 
 U.S. Bank Community Development will sell the power to the habilitation 
    center for about 7 cents a kilowatt hour, but the tax breaks are what make 
    the deal a moneymaker.
 
 In six years, after the incentives have played out, the nonprofit can regain 
    ownership in what has become known as the "flip" financial model. From then 
    on, the Portland Habilitation Center gets its solar power for free, saving 
    about $75,000 annually in electricity costs.
 
 "We wanted to own it," Murphy said. "This is the way to make it financially 
    viable."
 
 Oregon is considered a testing ground for this financing technique for solar 
    projects.
 
 But the "flip" is not the only way for nonprofits or government agencies to 
    get a solar deal done. They can contract with companies that specialize in 
    financing and selling renewable energy, agreeing to buy the power on a 
    long-term, 20-year contract. Here, too, the company gets the tax credits and 
    the tax-exempt entity gets the solar energy. Unlike the flip model, 
    ownership remains with the energy provider.
 
 Public officials praise this arrangement. They don't have to come up with 
    any cash for construction; their only obligation is to buy the power at a 
    set rate with an annual increase of between 2 percent and 4 percent. The 
    best part, they say, is the ability to rely on OPM -- other people's money.
 
 Honeywell Energy Services has jumped into this niche, sealing deals with 
    Hillsboro, Medford, Pendleton and Lewis & Clark College.
 
 The solar surge has been a boon to a wide variety of companies, from the 
    developers and consultants who package the deals to the installers who erect 
    the modules.
 
 "I've never seen anything like it," said Len Ralston, renewable energy 
    project manager for Dynalectric Oregon, which will install the Portland 
    Habilitation Center's panels.
 
 Clean energy advocates applaud the growth, arguing that the state is on 
    track to become a national leader in the advancement of solar energy. 
    "Green-collar" jobs will add thousands of workers to the employment ranks, 
    they say, and that means more taxpayers, who will more than make up for 
    losses tied to the tax credits.
 
 Critics counter that businesses and the industries they strengthen shouldn't 
    have to rely on government largesse to survive, especially at the expense of 
    state services.
 
 State revenue officials expect the annual cost of the renewable energy 
    credits to plateau at $95.6 million in 2013. That's about 1 percent of the 
    total general fund projection for that year. Put another way, it means about 
    $50 per tax-filer will be used to pay for those tax credits.
 
 The debate has yet another wrinkle. The federal tax credit will drop from 30 
    percent to 10 percent at the end of the year unless Congress passes an 
    extension. Advocates are confident of eventual revival, but acknowledge that 
    delays could mean the solar boom goes bust for a while.
 
 "We've cut back to projects we know we can absolutely finish by the end of 
    the year," said Sandra Walden, director of Commercial Solar Ventures, which 
    specializes in matching up tax-exempt entities and tax-paying corporations. 
    "Everything else is on hold or has been dropped."
 
 In short, she said, "We need government support that's consistent."
 
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