green bank standardization & collaboration

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Introduction to Standardization & Collaboration Alfred Griffin, President, New York Green Bank February 7, 2014

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Page 1: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Introduction to Standardization & Collaboration

Alfred Griffin, President, New York Green Bank

February 7, 2014

Page 2: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Multiple phases of market support

1 • Government Subsidies

2 • Green Bank Financing with Reduced Subsidies

3 • Green Bank Financing with No Subsidies

4 • Private Sector Financing Only – FINAL GOAL

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Page 3: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Private capital inadequate today to reach goal of sustainable clean energy markets

• Private capital markets not supplying enough capital to make significant market penetration

• Clean energy projects cannot access cheaper and larger pools of investors in the public capital markets

• Green banks provide bridge to self-sustaining markets by facilitating financial market development

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Page 4: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Green banks animate capital markets to reduce cost of capital, need for government support

• Green bank investments directly leverage private sector investments

– Each transaction draws more private capital, increases private sector familiarity, comfort with clean energy investing

• Can also attract private capital by facilitating financial market development

– Standardization and collaboration are path to bringing mature financial mechanisms to clean energy

– Green banks show private investors the way

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Page 5: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Green banks address barriers to development of clean energy financial markets

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Private capital seeks scale

• Large private investors not interested in small investments

Inconsistent documents, methods, structures

• Inability to easily pool and assess investments hinders private investment, development of mature secondary markets

Low transparency on loan and project performance

• Lack of consistent and large pools of data on loan and project performance make it difficult to assess risks, increase capital cost

Page 6: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Green banks can be hubs of standardization, coordination

Green banks create scale

• Aggregate demand, increase portfolio size for private investors

• Programs administered across states create even larger markets

Green banks can create, implement standardized processes

• Develop standard legal docs, financial docs, processes, structures

• Market position gives path to actually implement

Data can be pooled and shared by green banks

• Gather critical project and loan performance data

• Share across states to dramatically increase data

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Page 7: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Can take direct action to access cheaper capital, broaden pool of available capital

For example:

• Standardized contracts make bank underwriting simpler and cheaper

• More and consistent data makes it easier to assess risks, reduces cost of capital

• Common payment structures (on-bill, PACE) across states reduce perceived deal complexity

• Shared program structures lead to larger loan warehouses, reduced barriers to securitization or private placement

• Joint RFP’s create scale efficiencies to draw in larger private capital pools at lower cost

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Page 8: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Standardization opens up access to public markets

• Largest and cheapest pools of capital are in publicly traded markets – specifically bond markets

• Today public market investors cannot access clean energy

• Standardization by green banks will create mechanisms and practices necessary to create bridge

• Goal is market where typical investor can buy clean energy bonds, support by pool of underlying projects

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Page 9: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Working groups will consider real opportunities for standardization and multi-state collaboration

• What should green bank underwriting guidelines be?

• What quality standards will green banks enforce for

underlying technology?

• How should shared warehouses be structured?

• What laws must be the same across states to facilitate

consistent program structure?

• How can states work together to access cheaper capital?

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Page 10: Green Bank Standardization & Collaboration

Green Bank Academy

Washington, DC February 6-7, 2014

www.greenbankacademy.com