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Lenders Talk About Commercial PACE (Study Released)

12/18/2012

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PACENow is pleased to release the Lender Support Study, which surveyed national, regional and local mortgage lenders whose interests in buildings could be affected by PACE financings.  
 
Survey goals included gauging lenders’ awareness and understanding of PACE, educating them, addressing their concerns, and developing insights that will enhance efforts to gain their support for individual PACE projects.
Metrics interesting for lenders include anticipated vs. actual energy savings, anticipated vs. actual dollar savings, benefit to NOI, payback periods, financing costs, financing rates, default rates, and number of projects with PACE financings.  
Key findings and recommendations:
  • Surveyed lenders generally expressed no blanket opposition to PACE.  Their right to consent to projects is of paramount importance to them, but they appear open to approving projects that benefit their customers and improve the value of their collateral.  Lender partnership and education from the start is the key in improving probability of lender consent.   
  • Lenders support energy efficiency and renewable energy projects in concept, but have little firsthand experience financing them and are wary of underwriting the resulting projected savings and benefits.  Education based on standard industry data and results from comparable projects is necessary to increase ease of approvals and create streamlined the processes.
  • Lenders understand property taxes and assessments and factor them into underwriting models decisions.  There was broad acceptance of PACE as an assessment, which limits lien exposure only to unpaid assessments, distinguishing it from a loan.
  • Complexity in applications contributes to increased costs and may make some projects economically unfeasible.  The size and scope of a PACE assessment should determine the degree of supporting documentation.  A simple, streamlined approval process for small projects (representing less than 3% of building value) should be developed with the lender community.
  • Consistency of programs across states and the nation, standardization of data sources, and creation of project related insurance policies will improve the consent process as lenders (and PACE finance providers/investors) can create national approval platforms and review projects with fewer resources.
  • Existing commercial mortgage lenders have only an indirect revenue benefit from providing consent.  As such, applicants have the onus of making the approval process easier for lenders until revenue streams across banks are properly aligned or existing mortgage lenders begin to provide PACE financing.


Click here to download the study that summarizes the findings of interviews conducted with 35 individuals representing 25 different lending institutions.
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Risk Mitigation for New Energy Finance

10/9/2012

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Energi, a leading provider of performance and other forms of insurance for the energy production and energy efficiency industries has released a report that outlines key risk factors by project type.  

The intent of the Risk Mitigation Reference Guide for New Energy Financing is to help educate the lending community about green energy projects and associated risk exposures. Uncertainties exist for alternative energy and energy efficiency around the performance of technologies and the security of future energy savings or production, leading to a conservative lending environment Further education is necessary to overcome the barriers that prevent wide-scale lending and project development. The market has shown that for these technologies and industries to reach scale, banks require enhanced underwriting practices where future project performance can be analyzed. In order to fully capitalize on industry opportunities, lenders must develop standardized underwriting guidelines that incorporate the projected future energy savings or production. To do this they must understand risk exposures that may affect project economics.
Insurance and Risk Management


A key component of new and advanced underwriting is the value of insurance in mitigating project risks and inherent uncertainties. Insurance plays a critical role by providing financial protection to various project types throughout construction and operational phases. Similar to other construction or energy markets, adequate insurance protection is crucial to guard against risk exposures, ensure proper project performance and protect the financial interests of all parties involved. Application of adequate risk protections through insurance will further encourage the continued success and growth of the clean energy and energy efficiency markets.



Check out the Executive Summary at:
http://www.energi.com/docs/webinar/Green-Lending-Risk-Protection-Insurance-Executive-Breifing.pdf

Download the complete report at:
http://www.energi.com/alt_webinar.php


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