Analysi: U.S. renewables investors see Senate bill sparking gold rush
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[August 10, 2022]
By Nichola Groom, Cole Horton and Simon Jessop
LOS ANGELES/NEW YORK (Reuters) - For the
first time, investors seeking to pour cash into U.S. clean energy
projects can count on at least a decade of generous federal subsidies,
offering them long-sought confidence in the staying power of the world’s
third biggest renewables market.
Tax credits for wind and solar projects have underpinned explosive
growth in U.S. installations over the last decade. But they have often
had short time horizons, leaving project developers scrambling to meet
looming deadlines and spooking risk-averse investors.
The long-term tax credit commitments for wind and solar, wrapped up in a
$430 billion bill passed by the U.S. Senate on Sunday, were joined by
new credits for energy storage, biogas and hydrogen. Developers of wind
and solar projects will also be able to get more support if they use
U.S.-made equipment or build their projects in poorer areas.
"This is going to be a golden period of 10 years, at least," said Keith
Martin, an attorney with Norton Rose Fulbright who works on financing
renewable energy projects. "That is a long horizon for people to plan
and really get this transition to clean energy into high gear."
The U.S. House of Representatives is expected to pass The Inflation
Reduction Act soon, and President Joe Biden should sign it into law
shortly after that.
Shares of renewable energy companies have soared since Senate Democrats
announced a deal to pass the bill on July 27. The WilderHill Clean
Energy Index is up 15% during that time. The index includes U.S. market
players like solar panel maker First Solar, residential solar company
SunPower Corp, renewable asset owner Brookfield Renewable and battery
storage company Fluence Energy, among others.
Wind and solar accounted for just 12% of U.S. electricity generation
last year. But decarbonizing the nation's electricity sector by 2035, as
the Biden administration has pledged to do, will require far more.
Renewable energy investment hit $215 billion in the United States in
2021, according to the International Energy Agency, lagging China and
Europe. Investors, project developers, bankers and lawyers said the
Inflation Reduction Act will drive a step-change in demand from a broad
range of investors.
'OUR TACTICS HAVE CHANGED'
Shawn Kravetz, president of Esplanade Capital, which manages a
solar-focused hedge fund, said his firm this year has focused mainly on
the renewables boom in Europe. U.S. developers have struggled with
pandemic-related supply chain disruptions, import tariff threats and
concerns about links to forced labor in China. The legislation, with its
decade of policy stability, is changing that approach.
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A wind farm is shown in Movave, California, U.S., November 8, 2019.
REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo/File Photo
"Our tactics have changed because we're seeing more opportunity in the U.S.,"
Kravetz said. "The magnitude and scope of the opportunity have just grown."
The top U.S. utility trade group said the bill would help speed up plans by many
members to eliminate carbon emissions from their systems by 2050 because it
creates subsidies for technologies beyond just wind and solar, which have
intermittent supply.
"The expansion of those credits truly gives us more tools that we can use, not
only to execute the plan, but we believe we will be able to accelerate it,"
Warner Baxter, chair of the Edison Electric Institute, said in an interview.
For instance Edward Lees, co-head of the environmental strategies group at BNP
Paribas Asset Management, said he expected hydrogen would be "much more
attractive," with a tax credit of up to $3 a kilogram.
Lees said he had increased positions in hydrogen and solar ahead of the vote,
betting on the bill's passage.
To date, most renewable projects have been bankrolled by investors who take a
stake in developments in exchange for the associated tax breaks, so-called
tax-equity financing.
Going forward, developers will be able to sell certain credits without entering
these "cumbersome, high-friction partnerships," said Ted Brandt, chief executive
of investment bank Marathon Capital. "That opens up the market and will go a
long way towards alleviating the supply-demand imbalances we've had for years,"
he said.
Some investors have hesitated to back projects due to uncertain returns, even as
the effects of climate change have grown more apparent, from floods in Kentucky
to wildfires in California. Longer-term tax breaks would "open the floodgates"
for more financing, said Tom Buttgenbach, chief executive of U.S. solar
developer 8minute Solar Energy.
"Before this bill, we were looking at one- and two-year extensions on the tax
credit while trying to finance projects that take three to five years to build.
For the first time, this gives the industry and investors certainty for what the
financing environment will look through 2034."
(Reporting by Nichola Groom in Los Angeles, Cole Horton in New York and Simon
Jessop in London; Editing by David Gregorio)
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