Financing Energy Efficiency Upgrades in the Residential Market

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Mark Zimring Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) December 7, 2010 Financing Energy Efficiency Upgrades in the Residential Market

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Financing Energy Efficiency Upgrades in the Residential Market. Mark Zimring Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) December 7, 2010. Why address EE in buildings?.  Consume 20% of energy used in the U.S.  Emit 20% of U.S. greenhouse gas pollution. Just the residential market…. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Financing Energy Efficiency Upgrades in the Residential Market

Page 1: Financing Energy Efficiency Upgrades in the Residential Market

Mark ZimringLawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL)

December 7, 2010

Financing Energy Efficiency Upgrades in the Residential

Market

Page 2: Financing Energy Efficiency Upgrades in the Residential Market

Why address EE in buildings?

Just the residential market….• Over 110 million homes and

apartments in the U.S.• 70% owner occupied• Average home is 40 years old

and uses 40% more energy than new homes

Consume 20% of energy used in the U.S.

Emit 20% of U.S. greenhouse gas pollution

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Job Creation

Assume 12 jobs per $1M investment

8 from direct installation4 from manufacturing of parts & materials

360,000 jobs sustained over 10 years

Retrofitting 30 million homes

3.6 millionperson-years of employment

= =

Page 4: Financing Energy Efficiency Upgrades in the Residential Market

The Opportunity

~$240 BILLION spent on residential energy in 2008

Assume most homes can save ~20%

Savings potential of ~$48 BILLION

every year

Savings Potential Investment Needed

Assume 30 million homes (~30%) get retrofits in the next 10 years

$10,000 average per home

~$300 BILLION investment required (over $1 TRILLION

for all homes)

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State of the Market for EE Financing• Lending is constrained. National lenders are

reluctant to provide consumer financing. Local and regional lenders face increased collateral requirements from regulators.

• There is no “national model”. Local lenders have limited balance sheets, so developing secondary markets may be critical to scale and pricing. Stay tuned…

• Local lenders are increasingly active. Community banks, credit unions and community development financial institutions (CDFIs) are partnering with public programs. Many new privately-funded loan programs are being supported by credit enhancements such as loan loss reserves. 5

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Trends in Residential EE Finance

• Existing National Energy Efficiency Loans– Fannie Mae Energy Loans– EGIA GeoSmart Loans – Enerbank “Same as Cash” Loans

• Existing Local/Regional Energy Efficiency Financing Products– Local Loan Programs (Clean Energy Works

Portland, Community Energy Challenge)– Regional Loan Programs (Michigan Saves)

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Michigan Saves

• Michigan Saves Home Energy Loan Program. 5 credit unions are underwriting unsecured residential loans. Available in 36 Michigan counties.

• Basic Loan Details. $1,000-$12,000. 7% interest. 1-10 year term. Minimum FICO score 680. Uses a 5% loan loss reserve. Contractors pay a 1.9% transaction fee.

• Centralized loan origination. Over-the-phone approval.

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Community Energy Challenge

• Whatcom County, WA-Sponsored Loan Program. The County has partnered with a private lender, Banner Bank, to provide secured residential energy efficiency loans

• Basic Loan Details. Borrowers may choose 5, 10 or 15 year terms. Net interest rates vary from 3.5-6.5% depending on loan term and borrower credit (2-3% buy down) Minimum FICO score: 640. $1-20K. Uses a 5% loan loss reserve.

• Loans are Secured By a Deed of Trust on the property. There is no property equity check.

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Financing Residential Energy Efficiency—Product Comparison

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Financing Option

Security

Interest Rate to Borrow

er

Loan Term

Loan Size

Minimum FICO Score

Fannie Mae Energy Loans

(national)

Unsecured 5.99%-

13.99%+1-10 Years

$2,500-$25,00

0680

EGIA GeoSmart

Loans (national)

Unsecured 5.99%-

13.99%+5-10 Years

$1,000-$25,00

0N/A

Enerbank (national)

Unsecured

0% initially17-18% after 18 months

Up to 18

Months

$1,000-$45,00

0680

Community Energy

Challenge (Whatcom

County, WA)

Secured 3.5%-6.5%

5,10, or 15 Years

$1,000-$20,00

0640

Michigan Saves (State of Michigan)

Unsecured 7% 1-10

Years$1,000-$12,00

0680

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Questions?

Mark ZimringLawrence Berkeley National

[email protected]

510-495-2088

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FHA PowerSaver Pilot

• Basic Loan Details: Secured and unsecured loans up to $25,000 and 20 years for residential energy improvements.

• Additional Credit Requirements: Min. FICO 660, Max LTV 100%

• FHA is actively seeking lending partners and comment on the pilot proposal. E-mail [email protected] by December 27, 2010

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Fannie Mae Energy Loans

• Basic Loan Details. $2,500-$20,000. 1-10 year terms. Offered in all 50 states. Fixed-interest unsecured loans.

• Risk-Based Interest Rate Pricing. Interest rate is a function of customer risk profile. Starts at 13.99% before interest buy downs.

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EGIA GEO Smart Loans

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• Basic Loan Details. $1,000-$25,000. 5-10 year terms. Over-the-phone approval. Offered in all 50 states.

• Interest rates get bought down. Contractors or programs buy down interest rates from 26% to between 0% and 13.99%. Buy down cost is ~7-10% of loan principal amount.

• All qualified borrowers are charged the same base interest rate. This simplifies buy down cost calculations for programs and contractors.

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Enerbank “Same as Cash Loans”• The “Same as Cash” Concept. Short-term, 0%

interest unsecured loans. This is an alternate financing approach to long-term low monthly payment loans. Contractors pay ~4% of loan value in fees.

• How “Same as Cash” Works. Borrowers pay no interest for terms of 90 days to 18 months. After this initial period, they are charged 17-18% fees until the loan is paid off.

• Additional Loan Details. $1,000-$45,000. Minimum FICO score: 680. Over the phone approval.

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