flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

2021 Solar Investment Tax Credit will remain at 26%

Codes and Standards

2021 Solar Investment Tax Credit will remain at 26%

Incentive was scheduled to be reduced to 22%.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | January 19, 2021

Courtesy Pixabay

The 2021 Solar Investment Tax Credit (ITC) was scheduled to step down to 22% this year, but will stay at 26% after Congress struck a last-minute bipartisan deal on a major energy bill within an omnibus package to fund the federal government.

The legislation provides a two-year extension of the solar Investment Tax Credit (ITC) and additional funding for research and development, including on soft costs critical to distributed energy deployment. It also includes support for more access to federal lands for renewable energy projects.

Under the legislation, the solar ITC will remain at 26% for projects that begin construction in 2021 and 2022, step down to 22% in 2023, and will be further reduced to 10% in 2024 for commercial projects. The residential credit will end in 2024.

The bill also provides loan guarantees for projects that deploy innovative emission-reducing technologies, and establishes new programs to accelerate the transition to clean energy. The legislation includes fossil fuel and nuclear research and development funding, but it shifts funding parity toward renewables.

Related Stories

| Jan 30, 2012

ZigBee and ISO 50001: Two new standards to make buildings greener

These developments demonstrate the dynamic nature of the market and the continued need for development of program standards of many different types that help builders and owners translate high performance and sustainable buildings goals into practical measures on the ground.

| Jan 30, 2012

New firm-fixed-price rules on federal contracts impact construction industry

Contractors will need to be on the lookout for policies such as the Contractor Accountability for Quality clause.

| Jan 30, 2012

Roofer’s fatal plunge demonstrates need for fall-prevention regulations

“The biggest problem is getting our workers to use the equipment,” says Michael J. Florio, executive director of the organization.

| Jan 26, 2012

Tampa moves to streamlined online permitting system

The system will replace an inefficient patchwork of old software and is designed to provide businesses, homeowners, and contractors with online access to permitting and licensing information.

| Jan 26, 2012

EPA to collect more data, seek comments before finalizing mud rule

The EPA says it will seek more data and is accepting comments until March 5.

| Jan 26, 2012

Industry challenges Connecticut's suit over defective construction work

The dispute arose over multimillion-dollar leaks at the University of Connecticut's law library.

| Jan 26, 2012

Earthquake 'fuse' could save buildings during temblors

The idea is to use an earthquake "fuse" that can prevent the tiny fractures and warps that make structures unsafe after a quake and very expensive to repair.

| Jan 26, 2012

HPD open materials standard for green building materials gains momentum

GreenWizard, provider of a cloud-based product management and project collaboration software, is the latest industry participant to sign on

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Green

Tool helps construction and renovation projects with CalGreen compliance

One Click LCA recently launched a new software tool to help building teams comply with Part 11, Title 24, of the California Code of Regulations—CALGreen. The regulation is the nation’s first state-mandated green building code to include embodied carbon emission control as a mandatory component, effective from July 1, 2024.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021