Mainstreaming energy efficiency finance

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(LC-SC3-EE-10-2018-2019-2020) - MAINSTREAMING ENERGY EFFICIENCY FINANCE

Programme: Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Call: BUILDING A LOW-CARBON, CLIMATE RESILIENT FUTURE: SECURE, CLEAN AND EFFICIENT ENERGY EU

Topic description

Specific Challenge:

Energy efficiency is not yet considered as an attractive investment by the financial sector which limits the possibility to use external private finance on top of equity of project owners and available public funding. The lack of statistical data on the actual energy and costs savings achieved by energy efficiency investment projects, as well as on payment default rates, results in financial institutions attributing high risk premiums to energy efficiency investments.

Energy efficiency represents high transaction costs for rather small investments, which is not financially very attractive. Technical and legal standardisation is highly needed at all steps of the investment value chain in order to simplify transactions and increase the confidence of financial institutions. The lack of standardisation of projects also prevents securitisation of energy efficiency assets (loans or equity) so that financial institutions are not able to refinance their debt on the capital markets[1].

Whereas energy efficiency investments are usually expected to be paid back exclusively through the reduction of the energy bill, there is increasing evidence that non-energy benefits play a key role in the decision to invest in energy efficiency. This includes for instance increased building value, lower tenant turnover or vacancy rates etc. These benefits need to be quantified through data collection and monetised in order to evolve the parameters used by financiers to assess an energy efficiency investment.

Scope:

Proposals should address at least one of the following issues:

  • Development, demonstration and promotion of frameworks for the standardisation and benchmarking of sustainable energy investments. This could include for example, but not exclusively, labelling schemes, project rating methodologies and risk assessment tools, standardised legal and financial structures of assets (loans, guarantees, energy performance contracts etc.) in order to develop securitisation for energy efficiency based financial products. Proposals integrated in a broader approach such as socially responsible investment should focus on the energy component;
  • Capacity building for banks and investors at the national and local level, in particular on underwriting sustainable energy investments;
  • Gathering, processing and disclosing large-scale data on actual financial performance of energy efficiency investments, in order to create a track record for energy efficiency in different sectors (buildings, industry, transport, etc.) Proposals should build upon or complement the work of the Energy Efficiency Financial Institutions Group (EEFIG) e.g. the De-risking Energy Efficiency Platform[2];
  • Further integration of non-energy benefits in project valuation, in particular in the building sector, leading to evolution of existing financial products or creation of new targeted products;
  • Targeting institutional investors (e.g. public pension schemes) in order to increase the share of their funds invested in energy efficiency, or to develop specific funds or investment products. Supporting the integration of energy efficiency in portfolio management strategies for institutional investors and/or fund managers, including through re-definition of fiduciary duties;
  • Exploring the impact of revised risk ratings and requirements for energy efficiency on financial regulations (Basel III, Solvency II).

The Commission considers that proposals requesting a contribution from the EU of between EUR 1 million and EUR 1.5 million would allow this specific challenge to be addressed appropriately. Nonetheless, this does not preclude submission and selection of proposals requesting other amounts.

Expected Impact:

Proposals are expected to demonstrate, depending on the scope addressed, the impacts listed below, using quantified indicators and targets wherever possible:

  • Number of financial institutions and other stakeholders reached as well as their potential volume of investment concerned;
  • Frameworks, standardisation, benchmarking, standardised descriptions and data evidence of financial returns of energy efficiency investments agreed and accepted by the market;
  • Higher allocation of institutional investments to energy efficiency; standardisation of assets enabling securitisation; development of a secondary market for energy efficiency assets (in million Euro of investment within 5 years after the end of the project);
  • Primary energy savings triggered by the project (in GWh/year);
  • Investments in sustainable energy triggered by the project (million Euro).

Additional positive effects can be quantified and reported when relevant and wherever possible:

  • Reduction of the greenhouse gases emissions (in tCO2-eq/year) and/or air pollutants (in kg/year) triggered by the project.
Delegation Exception Footnote:

This topic will not be continued in 2020. A corresponding topic is included in section "Buildings in energy transition (B4E)" of this call, specifically topic LC-SC3-B4E-11-2020.

[1]A successful example of standardisation enabling securitisation is the PACE market in the USA

[2] https://deep.eefig.eu/

Keywords

Financial mechanisms

Tags

insurance green bonds de-risking Basel III multiple benefits forfeiting Finance for energy efficiency return on investment risk premium refinancing guarantees DEEP project rating energy efficiency finance capital requirements financing financial returns of energy efficiency benchmarking payment default standardisation data collection financial products asset allocation divestment socially responsible investment secondary market ISR energy efficiency investments capital markets risk assessment track record probability of default Solvency II loans institutional investors banks insurers rating discounted cash flows green value property valuation financial institutions fiduciary duties risk EEFIG investors FSB divesting sustainable energy investments associated benefits portfolio management equity fund manager TCFD pension funds mortgages underwriting securitisation non energy benefits transaction costs bonds finance

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