Every now and then, the tax credit attacks go after the valuations of solar assets. Surely, the most reviewed tax credit available, the solar ITC may also hold the distinguished place as the only tax credit that has become more cost-effective for the taxpayer over time. Appraisals today take into account many estimates of valuation and investors take the most conservative basis in most cases. I’d love to see oil and gas tax credit forms and compare them to solar just to see how lobbying affects not only policy but implementation as well.
- Seeking Alpha: The Impact Of California PUC Proposal On Solar Deployment In California
- Grist: Who should profit from solar energy?
- Fortune: Solar power will soon make it possible to fly planes continuously—but is that a good thing?
- PV-Magazine: German official – Bids for ground-mounted installations at 9-10 eurocents
- RE World: Egypt’s Renewable FIT Program Gains Traction
- Huffington Post: Hawaii Wants To Be The First State To Run Completely On Renewable Energy
- Solar Power World: Is standardized solar permitting the next industry breakthrough?
- Oregonian: Price Check – Why SolarCity’s university solar projects cost Oregon taxpayers $12 million
Opinions
Have a great day!
Yann