Dagmar Burhop, Farm Credit Canada
Transcription
Dagmar Burhop, Farm Credit Canada
FCC financing for alternative energy projects A presentation to the German-Canadian Chamber of Commerce Dagmar Burhop, Senior Credit Manager, Guelph November 22, 2012 FCC is committed to Canadian agriculture Meeting customer needs Governance and mission How does FCC make lending decisions? The 4 M’s • Money • Management • Materials • Markets Credit checks FCC? FCC Energy Energy Loan Loan launch: March 1, 2010 Energy Loan features • Based on standard loan, five-year term • On first $500,000 – No loan processing fees • Must use proceeds for construction or installation of geothermal, wind, solar or biogas projects. • Variable or fixed rate Solar photovoltaics (PV) • Create electricity from sunlight • Best suited: – for off-grid farm applications – where feed-in tariff is available • With feed-in tariff payback ~ 10 years • Average-sized farm and farmhouse would require roughly a 10kW system • Approximate cost $75,000 Solar thermal Energy from the sun heats water Geothermal Wind Turns wind energy into electricity Biogas • Turns manure into gas to create heat or power • The solid byproduct is fertilizer, compost or bedding Energy planning • • Map out the current state of business work flow, and conduct your own energy audit . Address specific energy questions: - What are my biggest energy costs and opportunities? - Where am I most vulnerable? - Can I substitute or convert? At what cost? - Role of conservation in my operation? - Business location and model? Learnings from others • What have other Canadians done? • What’s happening in other countries? • Learnings from other like and non-like businesses? Working with others • What do the industry associations I belong to have to offer? • Is my business large enough to go it alone or would I benefit from a partner? • Are there opportunities to collaborate with other parties (government, educational institutions, etc.)? • Does sharing equipment and technology make sense? Security • All assets (real and personal property) – intellectual property, if patented equipment or process involved • Assignment of insurance – perils, environmental, business interruption and liability • Guarantees – unless company is publicly traded