How PACE Affects the Future Financing of Energy-Saving Projects

[Editor’s Note: This is the second installment of a three-part series about Property Assessed Clean Energy financing. Part 1, “How the Fate of PACE Could Influence the Clean Energy Economy,” is available on GreenBiz.com.]

Property Assessed Clean Energy, and similar financing programs, have the potential to significantly impact a multitude of stakeholders — ranging from federal and local governments to lending institutions, bond markets, electric utilities, homeowners and individual contractors.

Although the growing momentum of PACE programs has been stifled by the FHFA, and the future of PACE is more uncertain than ever, the business implications of PACE are worth examining. Whether or not PACE survives the political mess it is currently in, understanding the implications of policy-enabled private financing programs on the ecosystem of stakeholders will inform future financing efforts.

This article examines the high-level implications of PACE on the following key stakeholders:

  • Federal Government
  • Municipal and City Governments
  • Electric Utilities
  • Mortgage Lenders
  • Banks and Financiers
  • Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Contractors
  • Commercial Business and Home Owners

Federal Government

The administration needs to get some wins on the board with regard to spurring the uptake of clean energy adoption on a wide scale — and they can’t all depend on pouring stimulus dollars into R&D and traditional state incentive programs (though that is helpful). With climate legislation stalled, PACE programs represent a type of nationally applicable win-win policy ideas that are low risk, but have the potential to spur significant private sector activity.  With the concerns being voiced by the mortgage industry, the federal government’s involvement in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mean that federal agencies should be incented to push for tightly regulated, well-structured, PACE programs that both achieve the clean energy goals, but also contain their scope so as to not negatively impact the mortgage giants in government conservatorship.

Read the complete article at GreenBiz

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