Sunday, May 26, 2013

Compound Returns from Renewable Energy

There are many ways to look at our energy conundrum, and to understand why we're so dysfunctional, and not getting the job done with renewable energy. As argued here repeatedly, one of the primary obstacles is putting the cart before the horse with honorable sounding secondary objectives, which obfuscate sound financial decisions. Energy efficiency, energy savings and clean air standards are examples that cause such distortions, and lead to policy failure. They are secondary objectives, not primary ones. The worst policy failures are resulting from confusing energy efficiency with renewable energy, and treating them as if they were interchangeable, or worse yet, additive, when they are often mutually exclusive in practice.
The effect of majoring in a minor by putting these secondary objectives first, is to postpone the switch to renewable energy indefinitely, and to subsidize the fossil fuel industry at the expense of property appreciation. Therefore it produces the opposite of energy independence and undermines any attempts to ever meet Clean Air standards, such as New York City pretends to want to do. Energy Star, NYSERDA MPP, NYC Clean Heat, PlaNYC, various tax incentives, are all examples where false priorities foul up sound financial decision-making about renewable energy. Collectively they have more to do with why we are not making the progress that we claim to want than anything else. They are examples of policy failures. Their ally is the fallacious financial practice of property owners making energy decisions based on payback of equipment, instead of net present value add to property values.
In short, government incentives have assisted property owners in making more bad decisions about energy faster, by rewarding them to ensure they keep making the wrong decisions, and the beneficiaries are the fossil fuel industry primarily, and to a lesser degree the manufacturers of energy efficiency equipment. It all comes at the expense of property values, so owners of real estate are destroying their capital asset base, to the extent that there are renewable alternatives that make economic sense, and in many, if not most cases, there are. False priorities supported with government incentives amount to government sponsored capital destruction in our economy, and serve to prevent the switch to sustainability. In NY State there is even an Energize New York Finance Handbook, and an exam to make sure you learn how to destroy your property values even quicker, using other people's money (but you're still liable). There is even an entire not for profit industry to help you manage your property into the toilet, such as "Energize New York, comfort and savings for your home."

Sustainability is only sustainable if it is also profitable

Adam Smith's invisible hand arguably does not always work, but sometimes it does. And here we have a capitalist society, embracing soviet style 20-year plans to make sure we prevent the invisible hand from working... But the good news is, there is a way to sort it out on an individual level, though eventually the whole structure of false incentives will have to be revised.
Every property owner can, with a simple spreadsheet make a 30 year energy plan for their property. And if you are lazy, you can make it a thesis project for your kid. It does not matter if you're going to sell it sooner than that or not, for if you invest wisely, it will come back to you when you sell it. After all, real estate simply has a long economic life, but if your analysis shows that your property is a wreck, and incapable of being made somewhat energy independent, sell it quickly while the going is good. The energy companies and the government will keep you in the poor house by confusing your decision-making and keeping you a slave to the energy companies longer than you have to be. Proper financial modeling is the way out, he process is a simple 30-year NPV analysis of all energy decisions about your property. Do not ever give in to the energy efficiency argument, it will keep you in bonds to carbon energy forever. Salesmen of energy efficiency and Solar PPAs are stealing appreciation of your property from you.
If you do that 30-year CAPM model, you will not easily make wrong energy decisions again. Never allow yourself to be seduced by the sellers of energy efficiency, and any government incentives, or subsidized finance from your energy company (talk about the fox watching the chicken coop). Remember always: Good financing or incentives can NEVER make a bad project good, it can ONLY make a good project better.  Hang that on your kitchen wall before you start talking about anything to do with energy in your property. Now for the good news: Renewable energy pays, because of compound returns.

Compound Returns from Renewable Energy Make Sustainability So

Payback of a piece of equipment may be useful as a quick and dirty calculation to see if it could have promise, but you need to have a coherent, holistic energy plan first, or else you will be cheated out of your money, and squandering it. The obvious mistake is if you start using equipment payback for your actual energy plan, such as models from NYSERDA and similar organizations elsewhere tend to do. Incentives are then added to the mix to make other objectives more attractive to property owners, either from a societal standpoint (and most often indirectly benefiting the energy companies and/or the manufacturers), or for the energy companies directly, and then if you add up all these wrong decisions and you score enough points in their system, you are rewarded with subsidized finance to help you destroy the value of your property faster. The shareholders of the energy companies thank you.
But now you know. And armed with your 30-year energy plan for your property, here is what you do: You do your model first. You focus on selecting the technologies that make the most long-term sense for your property. And next you figure it out with the NYSERDA MPP model, or your Energize New York application, or whatever is appropriate in your case, and you now figure out backwards how to maximize your use of incentives, and how to exceed their standards so that you do qualify for the subsidized financing, including PACE bonds. But never follow the methodology of these institutions, for it will destroy your property value. Your own economic energy plan must be king, meeting their objectives is a secondary criterion that gets you the financing you want, but you must take ownership of the plan.
Here's the payoff: on your list of potential things to do you might have a geothermal heat pump and a wind turbine, with paybacks of 8 and 7 years respectively, and they are kind of at the bottom of your list. But then you find out, when you integrate it in your model, that the heat pump allows you to store output from your wind energy in the form of pre-heated hot water. By doing so, you no longer have to sell excess energy back to the grid at wholesale rates, so you are now improving the payback on your wind turbine. Put together, they might have a 6 year payback, but again, the 30-year projection tells all.
Or, you were evaluating a tankless hot water heater with a 3-year payback and a solar thermal system with an 8 year payback, but your thirty year model reveals that the solar thermal system works out better in the long run, in part because with solar thermal you can harvest process heat, and if you take that effect into consideration, it may turn out that it's a better investment than tankless hot water heaters. Thirty years of no energy bills beats 30% energy 'savings' hands down. And of course solar thermal beats out solar PV because it produces 5x more energy per square foot, and on top of that allows storing process heat. All of which you would never see in a payback analysis, but you will see it in your 30-year model.
Or, you were evaluating a geothermal hot water against solar thermal hot water, and it turns out that on a payback basis solar thermal won, but then you started to look at your integrated model, and you could put your geothermal heat pump on a time of use meter, and integrated it with self dimming LEDs (100% dimmable!) for premises/common area lighting, and suddenly the geothermal hot water system won, and now you could look if you could drive your HVAC from geothermal also.
Sustainability from synergy
Sustainability through compound returns
Examples abound where the thirty year model shows you synergies of two (or more) technologies that you would not otherwise figure out, but most importantly it is the time value of money that allows you to see that 30 years of no energy bills beats 30% reduction in energy consumption most of the time, and a bigger capital outlay is warranted, and feasible if you can access subsidized financing. Such compound returns through synergy are worth gold.

Conclusion:

Renewable Energy done right produces compound returns through integrating several Clean Energy technologies at once. Energy Efficiency of a fossil fuel system produces strongly diminishing returns after you hit about 30% 'savings,' which is literally fool's gold. Only energy-efficient renewable energy gives you financial sustainability.

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