Minnesota renewable-energy developers are welcoming the latest federal pandemic stimulus package, which will extend critical tax credits.
Signed into law at December's end, the $900 billion stimulus bill — meant to stem the economic effects of the coronavirus — extends by two years the terms of solar-energy investment tax credits available in 2020.
Now, new solar projects also will get a 26% investment tax credit in 2021 and 2022. That credit will decline to 23% and then 10% in the following two years.
The investment tax credit is "the most important" financial incentive for solar projects, said David Shaffer, executive director of the Minnesota Solar Energy Industries Association, a trade group. The extension "should be really beneficial."
Under the stimulus, the current federal wind-production tax credit will be extended by one year.
Federal tax credits have long existed to spur wind- and solar-energy development.
Renewable-power markets are large enough now that even without tax subsidies, new large-scale renewable projects are often cheaper than gas-fired power plants, according to an October report on electricity-generation costs from Lazard, an investment bank. (The report didn't cover new transmission costs, which can be significant).
Wind power tends to be cheapest in the Midwest — a major wind belt — whereas solar energy not surprisingly is cheapest in sunnier climes. Still, even in Minnesota, solar "prices are dropping so much we really don't need a lot of help in the future," Shaffer said.