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End of EPA solar program to affect thousands in Hawaii

The termination of Solar for All, a federal program designed to expand affordable solar energy for low-income communities, has abruptly eliminated that savings option for 2,000 low-to-­moderate income households in Hawaii, which officials say will make it harder for the state to achieve its aggressive renewable energy goals.

The Environmental Protection Agency announced its termination of the $7 billion Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund’s Solar for All program on Aug. 7, designed to enable 900,000 households in disadvantaged communities across the country to benefit from distributed solar energy.

Hawai‘i Green Infrastructure Authority was one of 60 grant recipients in the U.S. and was awarded $62.45 million to launch its SFA-HI program, reducing nonrenewable energy use and financial burden for residents by financing the installation of solar and storage systems on single-family homes and multifamily rental projects.

While the SFA program has ended, some solar installations continue, but state energy officials say that rapid financing is crucial for projects to move forward in order to remain eligible for 30% federal tax credits, which will end for residential systems not placed in service by the end of this year, under the Trump administration’s so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act on July 4.

Gwen S. Yamamoto Lau, executive director at Hawai‘i Green Infrastructure Authority, told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser that she knows that SFA termination and tax credit eliminations mean less financial accessibility to solar energy for residents in Hawaii. Reduced access poses a challenge for meeting the state’s aggressive clean-energy goals, detailed in Gov. Josh Green’s Executive Order 25-01, which was signed Jan. 27 and outlines the intention to “facilitate the addition of at least 50,000 new distributed renewable energy installations,” before 2030.

Lau said in an email that, “The SFA funds serve as a critical slice of the capital stack to help achieve the state’s goals.

“However, to me, it’s more than that — with the highest electricity rates in the nation, the Solar for All program is intended to provide our local families struggling with Hawaii’s affordability crisis, long-term relief with reduced energy bills.”

Lau added that the unexpected termination “is putting real projects intended to help our ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed) households and disadvantaged communities, in jeopardy.”

Bouvey Bradbury, 54, said he knows how beneficial solar power can be for low-income residents in Hawaii looking to lower household energy bills. Bradbury was one of the first people, out of six in Hawaii, to be awarded a loan through the SFA grant.

Bradbury said he has seen a noticeable difference in his family’s energy bills after the solar panels were installed.

“It’s more affordable. I can breathe a little. It makes life a little easier,” he said in a phone interview, calling his energy bill nearly “slashed in half.”

Bradbury has been a lifeguard since 1991 and lives with his wife, daughter, son and grandson in a house near Makaha Beach.

“It’s kind of a hit for the local families who maybe were lined up to get helped out like I was,” Bradbury said. “My story is probably similar to others, you know, struggling local families, hardworking good people can’t get it. It was an opportunity for us to come out ahead in some way.”

Bradbury said he will continue to benefit from the program, as he was awarded the Hawai‘i Green Infrastructure Authority-administered loan before the EPA terminated SFA. He is paying a fixed monthly amount of $339 — covering the loan repayment through his utility bill — for the next six years. After that, he expects his actual energy costs to drop to around $20 per month.

Mark B. Glick, chief energy officer for the state of Hawaii, said that the state is still working to meet Hawaii’s legislated renewable energy goals. Act 32, passed in 2017, enshrined the Paris Agreement goals — a legally binding international treaty on climate change — into state law. Hawaii aims to achieve 100% renewable energy and carbon neutrality by 2045.

“Hawaii is in control of its energy future,” Glick said in a July newsletter, which addressed federal budget cuts and rollbacks in environmental protections. “Current federal administration policies are making it less affordable in the near term. But make no mistake, nothing will block our long-term focus to fully implement the outstanding programs and strategies of Hawaii’s clean energy initiative under the Green Administration.”

Glick told the Star-­Advertiser that removing the SFA funds — $62.45 million — means “eliminating the possibility of reduced energy costs for over 2,000 low-to-moderate income households.”

“Based on the current cost of $5.60/watt for installed solar plus storage, our office estimates the proposed clawback of over $62 million in Solar for All funds will diminish distributed energy generation by 11 MW of power,” he said in an email.

Lau added that Hawai‘i Green Infrastructure Authority continues to pursue solar energy projects across the state.

“We have been working with applicants and developers on financing rooftop solar and storage installations on single family dwellings and multifamily projects,” Lau wrote. “We are also working on financing a number of community solar projects statewide.”
Source: The Garden Island

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