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The Role Of Energy Audits And Tax Incentives In Fostering Energy Efficiency: A Winning Combination . Hope Ashiabor Associate Professor Macquarie University Larry Kreiser Professor Emeritus Cleveland State University. Energy Efficiency. “We Must Become the Change We Want to See”
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The Role Of Energy Audits And Tax Incentives In Fostering Energy Efficiency:A Winning Combination Hope Ashiabor Associate Professor Macquarie University Larry Kreiser Professor Emeritus Cleveland State University
Energy Efficiency “We Must Become the Change We Want to See” Gandhi
Clean Energy Resources • Supply Side • Wind power • Solar power • Water power • Biomass power • Demand Side • Energy efficiency
Energy Efficiency Resource • Definition – produce more with less energy. • Energy efficiency is an energy resource • Energy efficiency is a zero emissions energy resource
Two Themes of Paper • Energy Audits – the review of any operation or activity within a business or personal activity with the purpose of improving its energy efficiency • Tax Incentives – tax credits or other economic incentives to lessen the cost of installing energy efficiency improvements
PART 1 - Background Information on Climate Change • Climate change mitigation versus adaptation • Carbon 350 • Consumer education
Climate Change Mitigation versus Adaptation • Mitigation – slow or stop climate change • Adaptation – adjust to a changing climate
Carbon 350 • Pre-Industrial Revolution – Carbon 280ppmv • Current – Carbon 380ppmv • Tipping Point – Carbon 450ppmv • 2100 – Carbon 490ppmv to 1,260ppmv • Goal – Carbon 350ppmv
Consumer Education on Energy Efficiency Resource • Millions of individual units making decisions • Fragmented market • Limited government education programs
PART 2 - Energy Audits and Investment Analysis of Energy Projects • What is an energy audit? • Value of energy audit • Example of energy audit • Investment analysis of energy projects
What is an Energy Audit? • Energy Audit – the review of any operation or activity within a business or personal activity with the purpose of improving its energy efficiency. • Energy efficiency is measured on a per unit of output basis.
Three E’s of Operational Consulting • Energy economy– least cost • Energy efficiency– best way • Energy effectiveness– accomplish intended purpose
Value of Energy Audit • Access to special expertise • Identify potential energy cost savings • Benchmarking data available • Compliance with various environmental regulations • Compliance with workplace requirements
Available Sources of Energy Audits • Government Audits (Example: Regional Energy Efficiency Program-Western Australia) • On-line Audits (Certification program available for walk-through audits) • Utility Company Audits • Self-Assessment Audits (Energy efficiency training courses available)
Available Sources of Energy Audits • Paid Consultant Audits (Walk-through energy audits) • Supply-Chain Audits (Wal-Mart) • Proposed “Cash for Caulkers” Program in U.S. (energy audits/jobs/energy efficiency)
Example of Self-Assessment Energy Audit – Subaru of Indiana • Result – 14% reduction in energy consumption per car produced since 2000 • Increase efficiency, reduce waste, increase profits • Management leadership is vital • Engage front line in process • Involve supply-chain in process
Example of Self-Assessment Energy Audit – Subaru of Indiana • Waste is a potential product (Henry Ford) • Process may create competitive advantage (Wall Street Journal, 3/23/2009, p. R4)
Investment Analysis of Energy Efficiency Resource Projects • Payback Period – Initial investment divided by annual energy savings after tax effect • Present Value Analysis – inflows and outflows take place in different periods • Internal Rate of Return – Rate of return on capital investment
PART 3 - Other Information on Energy Efficiency Resource • McKinsey & Co. report on unlocking energy efficiency in U. S. Economy • Energy efficiency resource and economic growth
McKinsey & Co. Report on Unlocking Energy Efficiency in U. S. Economy (2009) • Conclusion – A coordinated energy efficiency program in the U.S. can reduce non-transportation energy consumption by 23 percent of 2020 projected demand • Since 1980, energy usage per unit of measure has been decreasing steadily • Upfront funding of energy efficiency projects is a significant barrier
Energy Efficiency Resource and Economic Growth • U. S. Goal– Cut greenhouse gas emissions by 80% below 2005 levels by 2050 • Can this goal be reached without affecting economic growth? • 1990-2007 – world emissions rose 38%, world economic growth rose 75%, emissions per unit of economic activity fell by 20% (WSJ, 12/21/09, p. R3)
PART 4 - Current Tax Incentives for Energy Efficiency Projects in the United States • Homeowner tax credit for energy efficiency improvements • Contractor tax credit for energy efficient new homes • Manufacturer tax credit for energy efficient household appliances • Tax deduction for energy efficiency investments in commercial buildings
Other Cash Grants for Energy Efficiency Projects in the United States • Energy efficiency improvements for low-income households • Energy efficiency improvements for public housing • Appliance rebate program
Homeowner Tax Credit for Energy Efficiency Improvements • Residential Units –21% of energy use in U.S. • Insulation, replacement windows, external doors, heating, cooling, fans, water heaters, biomass stoves • 30% tax credit, $1,500 cap, must be primary residence • Criticism – Low cap, higher amounts available for on-site renewable energy investments
Contractor Tax Credit for New Homes • $2,000 tax credit for constructing energy efficient new home • $1,000 tax credit for producing a new energy efficient manufactured home • Home must be acquired as residence by December 31, 2009 • Criticism – Credit should be given to final consumer to stimulate home sales
Manufacturer Tax Credit for Energy Efficient Household Appliances • $45-$200 tax credit to manufacturer for energy efficient clothes washers, dishwashers, and refrigerators for increases in production over two year rolling cycle. • $75 million limit for each manufacturer • Criticism – Credit should be given to final consumer to stimulate appliance sales
Deductions for Energy Efficient Investments in Commercial Buildings • Tax deduction of up to $1.80 per square foot • Available to owner or tenant • New or reconstructed commercial building • Must save at least 50% of heating, cooling, ventilation, water heater, and interior lighting energy cost • Comment – No significant tax cost to government
Energy Efficiency Opportunities Act 2006 (Cth) • Energy Efficiency Opportunities Act 2006 (Cth) • Came into effect on 1 July 2006 • Requires large energy users to assess and report opportunities for promoting energy efficiency in their operations • Applies to “controlling corporations” (similar to reporting legislation)
Energy Efficiency Opportunities Act 2006 (Cth) • Must register if energy use in corporate group exceeds 0.5 petajoules for year • Roughly equal to 139,000 MWh; 13 ML diesel; 9000 tonnes LNG or 10,000 tonnes LPG • Or energy bill of: • $1.5 to $2.5 million for gas • $5 to $10 million for electricity • $11 million for diesel • $13 million for unleaded petrol
Energy Efficiency Opportunities Act 2006 (Cth) • Must register within nine months of first financial year the group exceeds threshold (“trigger year”) • Electricity generators and operators of electricity or gas transmission or distribution networks were exempt until July 2009 (as long as energy use from other activities was below the threshold) • Can apply for exemption if unlikely to stay above threshold in subsequent years • Can apply for deregistration if unlikely to meet threshold for next three years
PART 6 - Current Tax Incentives for Household Energy Efficiency Projects in Australia • Home Insulation Rebate Scheme • Solar Hot Water Rebate Scheme • Green Loans Scheme
Home Insulation Rebate Scheme • Installation of ceiling insulation in 420,000 homes • Program currently suspended • New program starts June 1, 2010 • Rebate reduced from $1,200 to $1,000 • Household will claim rebate, not the installer • Increased training and compliance for installers
Solar Hot Water Rebate Scheme • By end of January 2010 $850m blow out in the cost of this program • Old program eliminated on 20 February, 2010 • New program starts immediately • Rebate cut from $1,200 to $1,000 • Rebate for heat pumps cut from $1,000 to $600
Green Loans Scheme • $175m earmarked for the program • free energy audits; • Program increased from 360,000 assessments to 960,000 assessments • Number of assessors limited to 5,000 • green loans of up to $10k each to individuals for efficiency upgrades to homes • Subsidised funding for up to 75k interest-free green loans • Program was eliminated in March 2010
PART 7 – Summary and Conclusions • Tax Incentives- more meaningful tax incentives for energy efficiency resource • Energy Efficiency Audits – start program of government subsidized energy efficiency audits • Industrial/Commercial Tax Incentives – could result in increased tax revenues • Consumer Education Programs – increase knowledge of potential energy savings