Use the new solar tax credits coming out in
2006 to become an energy producer in your community.
New Solar Tax Credits
"Are
You Ready to start tapping into the Free Energy from the sun?"
You need the New Solar Tax Credits to reduce
your investment cost for a solar hot water heating system by up to $2000.
Passed into Law on Friday July 29th,
2005!
Well it’s time for you to...
Learn exactly what you will need to do in order to take advantage of
this limited time offer and start planning for next year.
Why is the
US Government offering these incredible incentives?
For the first time in two decades solar technologies were granted a
federal investment tax credit that will promote all forms of solar energy.
This includes solar thermal systems that provide for a home's hot water,
photovoltaic systems that provide electric power, solar-hybrid lighting
technologies and even to the commercial developers of industrial-scale
Concentrating Solar Power plants of the likes that were constructed
in the California Desert in the late '70s and early '80s.
Specifically, the bill increases the existing 10 percent investment
tax credit for commercial solar installations to 30 percent for two
years with no cap on the amount of the credit. This applies to all property
placed in service after December 31, 2005 and before January 1, 2008;
credit reverts to the permanent 10 percent credit thereafter.
What could have the most impact for typical Americans, the bill also
creates a new 30 percent tax credit for residential solar installations
for two years; capped at $2000; applied to all property placed in service
after December 31, 2005 and before January 1, 2008. Likewise, all solar
technologies will be eligible but solar thermal, and solar PV are expected
to make the most gains.
"If consumers have been waiting for a tax credit for solar, now
is the time to do it," Resch said. "It coincides perfectly
with electricity and natural gas prices skyrocketing, and if you think
prices will do down, you're mistaken."
A number of other provisions included in the final bill that will greatly
benefit solar, including federal loan guarantees for large-scale "innovative
technologies," government solar purchase authorizations and energy
service performance contracts.
Other items that can have an immediate and tangible impact for consumers
across the U.S. are tax breaks for investments in energy efficiency
appliances and an extension of a $2000 hybrid vehicle tax break.
The solar tax credit may appear small in relation to the majority of
the bill's focus on the traditional fossil and nuclear industries but
it's a major victory for solar and possibly a sign of shifting attitudes
towards solar.
"I can't emphasize how much this is a huge precedent for the solar
industry," said Resch who added that fuel cells were the only other
non-traditional energy technology to gain a 30 percent investment tax
credit.
"I had folks from Exxon coming up and saying 'how did you do this'
and 'you came out of left field,'" Resch said.
And how they did it was to intensely focus the solar lobbying effort
like it's rarely, if ever, been done before. Resch said the solar industry
has traditionally been a fractured industry, unable to agree on a specific
and focused set of policy goals. He took lessons and experience he learned
in his time prior to SEIA when he was Senior Vice President of the Natural
Gas Supply Association. He knew if solar was to gain anything out of
this energy bill they would all have to agree on one policy goal.
"People sometimes expect for us in the solar industry to come
out with that fractured face," Resch said. "It was a massive
team effort where the entire solar industry pulled together to make
this happen. It was the singular massage, that's why we got the 30 percent."
Solar provisions that would benifit all forms of solar were not included
in any of the previous congressional efforts to enact an energy bill.
Resch said the inclusion of this credit shows recognition that Congress
feels that solar is an important part of the energy mix and that they
want to see it grow.
At least one Congressman aggress.
"The 30 percent solar credit for consumers is great news for this
nation's future energy independence," said Congressman Charles
Bass (R-NH), a key negotiator of the final energy bill. "This provision
will one day be viewed as the most significant renewable energy policy
shift in more than two decades. Consumers driving the industry to meet
high expectations and pushing the nation toward self-reliance will produce
far greater results than other incentives aimed at producers and utilities."
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