Nice to see a voice dissenting from the “financiers are evil” crowd. Sure there are cowboys out there (and the big banks have been up to tricks too) but at its best, finance enables business, and solar lease (fully managed operating lease) and PPA’s are both ways in which businesses can get solar working for them with zero cash down, and use their money where they will get their best return, by investing in their business. There are other advantages to these products – for example shifting all the equipment risk, performance risk, insurance risk etc from the business to the supplier, and the tax and other benefits of shifting expense from capex to opex.
Hi Jeff,
it’s nice of you to notice my article.
To reply to your questions and assertions:
– if house prices are rising faster than the cost of debt, than clearly debt finance works for the home buyer. But as everyone knows, when assets are leveraged and their value falls, investments go bad. So where do I stand? Use debt to buy a house or to buy solar, for sure, but use it sensibly and understand what your are buying.
– did I say or assert that 8% returns for SME’s is acceptable? Nope. I said that companies selling PPA’s and leases will often assume an opportunity cost of capital of 8-10%, but fail to recognise that avoided energy savings can also be invested to achieve those returns. This distorts the value proposition for financed solar products and misleads customers. My assertion was that if you are looking for secure, low risk returns of 8-10%, solar is looking pretty good.
– Could my time be better spent helping the industry understand when and where PPA’s make sense? Happy to help Jeff, and I hope the article helped a few companies out there sharpen up their sales pitch. It’s all part of the service.
“if I wanted 8% returns I would simply invest in a portfolio of blue-chip stocks and would regain a) my sleep, b) my weekends, and c) my sanity”
– Yep, couldn’t agree more, and I’d add d) invest in solar with my spare cash.
– I’m sorry if I made any companies out there feel like greedy capitalists. I hope you all continue to thrive as the solar industry matures, and that you share the benefits of our thriving industry with the customers and communities you depend on
I fully agree with the view that a Solar PPA model is best suited for customers. I have had clients insist that their money is best spent back into the business in which they specialize rather than buying expensive solar equipment with upfront capex. In India, this Solar PPA is sure to catch on big time as it offers such customers great relief to stay tuned in their core business and at best part with only say 20%-30% capex upfront, get set into a PPA model and have the option to buyback Solar plant at end of say 5-6 years at a fraction! At this stage we are in an expansion mode and for us (solar integrator), this is generating huge interest and returns whereas for the financier presenting a great opportunity to expand their portfolio