A new type of financing will pay for a solar array at this California development. Photo: Peter DaSilva for The New York Times
Excerpt from the article:
By JUSTIN GILLIS
Published: September 19, 2011
"A business consortium that includes Lockheed Martin and Barclays bank plans to invest as much as $650 million over the next few years to slash the energy consumption of buildings in the Miami and Sacramento areas. It is the most ambitious effort yet to jump-start a national market for energy upgrades that many people believe could eventually be worth billions.
Focusing mainly on commercial property at first, the group plans to exploit a new tax arrangement that allows property owners to upgrade their buildings at no upfront cost, typically cutting their energy use and their utility bills by a third. The building owners would pay for the upgrades over five to 20 years through surcharges on their property-tax bills, but that would be less than the savings.
The consortium is led by a company called Ygrene Energy Fund of Santa Rosa, Calif., which has already won an exclusive contract to manage a retrofit program for a half-dozen communities in the Miami area, with the city expected to join in a few weeks. It is in the late stages of completing a contract with Sacramento, and is seeking deals in other cities."
Click here to read the full article on www.nytimes.com
Green Design by hanrahan Meyers architects : hMa's Digital Water Pavilion (Battery Park City Community Center) will acheive a Platinum LEED rating click here to see more of DWiP on www.hanrahanmeyers.com