From IRA to OBBBA: Navigating US Energy Policy with Keith Martin (Norton Rose Fullbright)
By Modo Energy
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Policy Whiplash Creates Headwinds**: US energy policy under different administrations has created a volatile environment for clean energy projects, akin to a 'hurricane force headwind,' demanding greater effort from developers and financiers. [00:05], [04:30] - **Electricity Shortage Drives Activity**: Despite policy shifts, the US faces an electricity shortage, with demand from data centers and grid congestion driving continued activity in renewable project development. [05:35], [06:35] - **OBBBA Tightens Timelines and Equipment Rules**: The OBBBA has accelerated deadlines for starting construction and imposed restrictions on Chinese equipment, creating urgency for developers to secure tax credits. [07:49] - **Tax Credit Sales Market Thriving**: The market for selling tax credits remains robust, with new structures like hybrid partnerships and preferred equity emerging, and banks offering bridge loans against future sale proceeds. [20:08], [21:31] - **Consolidation and Bankruptcies Emerge**: The increased pace of deals and capital constraints are leading to market consolidation, with smaller developers struggling and some notable bankruptcies occurring in the renewable sector. [11:51], [12:30] - **Battery Projects Face FEOC Hurdles**: Battery projects are particularly challenged by Foreign Entity of Concern (FEOC) rules and tariffs on imported equipment, requiring careful contract structuring to avoid losing tax credits. [14:18], [15:13]
Topics Covered
- Political Volatility Accelerates Renewable Energy Deals
- US Electricity Shortage Drives Renewable Growth
- New Financing Models Fuel Renewable Energy Growth
- Federal Agencies Impede Renewable Project Approvals
- Economics, Not Policy, Drives Global Renewable Growth
Full Transcript
Every time the US changes president, the
rules around clean energy finance
change, too. One administration steps on
the gas, the next one slams the brakes.
Under Biden, the Inflation Reduction
Act, or IRA, turned tax credits into the
main engine of the energy transition.
Hundreds of billions of dollars worth of
incentives for wind farms, solar parks
energy storage systems, and more. Under
Trump, the conversation has flipped with
the one big beautiful bill act or OBBBA.
The Trump administration is trying to
roll back some of the Biden era
policies. For the people actually
building this stuff, developers, owners
financeers, it's a bit like being
halfway through construction on a
skyscraper and then being told
"Actually, you've got to finish this by
next summer or you will lose your
permit." That's what the one big
beautiful bill act has done for many
renewable projects in the US. It hasn't
wiped out the incentives from the Biden
era inflation reduction act. What it has
actually done is shortening runways and
also raising the bar for compliance. And
with so much uncertainty, it's harder
and harder to build confidence in your
business case. And yet somehow the deals
keep getting done. And that's partly
thanks to people like Keith Martin.
Keith runs the US project finance
practice of Northern Rose Fulbright, one
of the biggest law firms in the world.
He has been the steady hand behind
hundred of billions of dollars of
projects in renewable energy and energy
storage over the last few decades. If
you have ever wondered who translate a
300page long tax bill into the clause
that decides whether solar farm gets
built or not, that's people like Keith.
He sits where policy meets money
turning government rules and incentives
into language that investors can
actually trust. So today on
Transmission, Keith Martin, the lawyer
who has quietly shaped more clean energy
projects than almost anyone else in
America, helps us unpack how Washington
policy has had an impact on real world
projects. And before we dive in, a quick
plug. The transmission team, including
myself, will be at Raiders Energy Live
2025 in Houston this December, recording
new episodes and soaking up all of the
insights from some of the industry's
former doers and thinkers. If you're
also attending, drop us a line. Anyway
that's enough of me. Let's hear from
Keith Martin.
Keith, thank you so much for joining me
today. It's great to have you here.
Thank you for having me, Alex.
>> And, before, we, dive, in,, uh,, could, you
please introduce yourself and tell us a
bit about Norton Rose Fulbright's work
in the energy space?
>> I'm, Keith, Martin., I'm, in, the, Washington
office of Norton Rose Fulbright. Norton
Rose is a old British law firm. Goes
back to 1794. It has 12 offices in the
US, six in Canada. It's in 31 countries.
I head the project finance group in the
United States. I've headed that group
for more than 25 years.
The group came from a New York firm
called Chadbborne, Chadbornne Park. We
merged with Nordon Rose in 2017. There
are 138 lawyers in the group. We see a
lot of the market. Uh most of what we do
in the US is renewables. About 85% of
the work of the group the last four
years, each of the last four years was
renewables and 60% at each of the 12
years before that. Uh we did 288 billion
in transactions. in the last five years
more than 600 significant deals.
>> So, you, have, a, lot, of, coverage, and
exposure to the renewables and storage
space in the US. I can imagine.
>> Yes.
>> You, have, lived, through, the, transition
from the Biden era inflation reduction
act to the recently passed one big
beautiful act for people just catching
up uh with the latest announcements. How
would you describe what's really changed
under the new bill for wind solar and
storage projects specifically?
>> Well,, two, things., Let, me, start, from, the
law firm perspective. The last two years
have been like a treadmill turned up to
warp speed to switch mot metaphors. The
inflation reduction act provided a very
strong tailwind for the renewable sector
and lawyers, bankers, everybody working
in this sector has been working flat
out. Most of us thought once Trump took
office things would slow down a bit for
renewables. in in fact the the pace has
doubled and instead of a a strong
tailwind there's now almost a hurricane
force headwind as a consequence people
have to work that much harder I agree
and this you are seeing keeping for the
short term also midterm long-term what
is the difference
>> I, think, that, this, will, remain, a, very
busy industry
most of the large renewable energy
developers
started construction of pipelines of
projects by the end of last year that
insulates them from the roll back that
occurred in federal tax credits for
these projects in the OOT tripba the one
big beautiful bill act. So they're
working they're just head down executing
business plans. They have a four-year
pipeline of projects that will take them
past the current Trump administration.
The reason I think that even for others
uh who will start to feel the loss of
tax credits
that things will remain busy is that we
have an electricity shortage in the
United States. It's only getting worse.
electricity prices, wholesale prices
increased 41% in the first seven months
of this year in PJM, which is the
regional grid that serves the
Mid-Atlantic states all the way out west
to Illinois.
>> Retail, electricity, prices, have, been
increasing at double the rate of
inflation. In locations where there are
concentrations of data centers, the
electricity prices on average are
increasing 267%
in the last year. So this is a sign of
increasing shortages of electricity. The
government will need every source it
can. It will need storage. It will need
wind and solar to try to make up the
gap.
>> What, do, you, think, are, the, main, drivers
behind these price increases? Are we
talking about the lack of future tax
credits, the future demand, the current
demand? What are the main drivers from
your point of view?
>> Two, things., Demand., It's, coming, from
data centers. data centers right now are
about 4% of US demand but the US
government is projecting that by 2028
will be somewhere between uh 8 and 12%.
And then the second thing is our crowded
electricity grid. It's like a congested
interstate highway. So it's difficult to
get the electricity even if we have it
to the places where people need it.
>> Okay., Yeah,, we, are, seeing, the, same., But
just to give a step back because we're
going very fast in the final results and
impacts of of the latest changes in in
the electricity prices. But what have
been the main changes for developers uh
after the OBBA the one big beautiful
bill act was passed in terms of
timelines in in tax credits as well as
start of construction requirements or
the recently announced part of of the
same announcement for entity of concern
rules. Well, the one big beautiful bill
act
rolled back or moved in very distant
phase out dates for federal tax credits.
Federal tax credits pay anywhere from 30
to 70% of the cost of renewable energy
projects.
They were not expected to start phasing
out until sometime in the mid 2040s
according to projections before that
bill passed. So now those deadlines are
upon us shortly. And then second, it
made it impossible to claim tax credits
on projects to start construction this
year or in the future that have too much
Chinese equipment or rely on Chinese
intellectual property rights. The
deadlines, there are four deadlines that
the industry has been racing against.
One was to try to start construction by
September one. the uh Treasury
Department under pressure from President
Trump made it tougher for wind and solar
projects to be considered under
construction to lock in entitlement tax
credits. Those rules became tougher for
solar and wind, but nobody else starting
after September 1 this year. Second
deadline is the end of this year for all
projects, not just solar and wind, all
renewables, including batteries, to
start construction to be exempted from
the limits on Chinese equipment under
the fiak rules, FEOC, foreign entity of
concern.
The third deadline is July 4 next year
which is a deadline for solar and wind
projects to be under construction to
have four years to finish and claim tax
credits. If they don't get under
construction by July 4 next year, they
must finish by the end of 2027.
And then the last deadline is the end of
2033
for everything other than solar and wind
to start construction and lock in
entitlement to full tax credits.
>> And, we, have, seen, uh, new, guidance, coming
out of the department of treasury
talking specifically about the start of
construction new requirements but we are
still waiting for that guidance to come
out for the foreign entity of concern
rules. Do you have any light on when we
can expect those uh guidance to arrive
to to the public and how it will look
like at the end?
>> The, fiak, guidance, will, take, the, form, of
proposed regulations and those are not
expected until the spring next year. The
Treasury has suggested it will issue
what the lawyers call subregulatory
guidance. That is a notice perhaps a
list of frequently asked questions and
answers. The Treasury had been saying
that will be out by year end but the
government shutdown uh could affect the
timing of that. Uh Ken Keys the uh top
tax person at the Treasury uh said
yesterday he they are calling back 45
lawyers who are working on guidance and
label them essential so that there's no
slowdown. However, uh the government is
focused on guidance in the near term
that affects individuals like tip taxes
on tip income, overtime pay, the Trump I
don't know what you call them, Trump
accounts where the federal government
wants to give $1,000 to each newborn
baby to invest in an account. They're
trying to get guidance out on that first
before they turn to things of interest
to companies.
>> Okay,, I, see., And, all, of, this, noise,, this
uncertainty surrounding developers in
the energy space, what does it translate
to? What are you seeing about how teams
of developers are adapting on the
ground? Because you have been involved
in so many projects throughout the last
years. What have been the main changes
and the real world implications on
ground?
>> Well,, it, raises, questions, about, what, and
2028 will look like the last two years
of the Trump term. Yet there is no
scenario where gas, natural gas and coal
fill in the need for power. First of
all, if you order a gas turbine today
for a combined cycle plant, you will not
get it before 2030. That's two years
beyond the Trump term.
So the effects we're seeing in the
market are a increased pace of activity
this year.
Uh we are overwhelmed as are other law
firms with companies trying to sign
contracts with construction contractors
and equipment suppliers to start
construction of projects.
We are also working on more financing
simultaneously than I think we have ever
worked on. I've been at this for more
than 40 years. I've never seen so many
simultaneous deals and it in the past
people used to send a term sheet and
want it back a week from now. Now they
want it back the same day. There's a
there's a a mania about it. We're seeing
signs of consolidation.
The smaller developers are having
trouble raising the capital they need to
hold their positions in line to connect
to the grid. They're called
interconnection queue positions.
They also face penalties under uh power
contracts if they don't come online on
time. So, we're seeing consolidation of
people without capital. Our M&A lawyers
are busier this year than they have been
any time in the last two years. We're
seeing bankruptcies. Uh there have been
three notable bankruptcies in the US
renewable sector. Senova, Powen, and
Mosaic. all three in June. There are
rumors that others are likely to follow
this fall. This is again due to
constraints on capital. We are not
seeing cost of capital increase. It's
been pretty level. Uh not much changed
this year. So I think those are the main
effects.
>> I, see., And, it, might, be, a, little, bit
counterintuitive. I would say people
would have expected for developers to
slow down their development, but we are
seeing the opposite as you mentioned.
And you said that you're seeing as many
simultaneous deals as you have ever seen
in your career. Do these deals focus on
specific regions in the US or in
specific technologies?
>> Uh, batteries, are, there, the, I, saw, some
numbers this morning on new capacity
additions for batteries. They're
astounding.
Most deals we are seeing though are
solar. Wind has been more challenged
just because of the obstacles that the
Trump administration is placing in in
front of wind projects. So there's an
awful lot of solar this year. There
there is an awful lot of battery
activity. The batteries though face a
challenge because they rely on Chinese
technology
and so they will run a foul of the fiak
restrictions very quickly. We're going
to start to see that happening next year
on wind. We are seeing a lot of
repowerings of existing wind farms where
people try to uh rebuild the projects in
order to to renew the 10 years of tax
credits on the electricity output that
are offered to wind farms before they go
away.
That's that's where most of the activity
is. Uh in terms of regional
there hasn't been much change as far as
we can see in where most of it is. Texas
is still
attracting a lot uh mainly because there
isn't much regulation down there. Not
many obstacles to build. Uh PJM clearly
needs electricity.
California, Iowa, you know, the the the
normal hotspots remain. Though
>> the, fact, that, you, pointed, out, to, battery
projects suffering the most from FEC
rules leads to the next question for
battery developers which is how can you
ensure that your procure that your
supplier complies with the future rules.
How can you make sure that you are on
the safe side rather than on the gray
area when looking at the future guidance
that is coming out. One other thing
before I forget on batteries, they're
also since so much of the equipment in
battery projects is imported, they're
also facing these unpredictable tariffs
which are wreaking havoc. How do you
protect yourself as a battery developer?
Two ways. One is avoid any rights to use
of intellectual property in contracts
with suppliers.
If you sign or modify such a right on or
after July 4 this year, uh the contract
is automatically considered to give the
supplier effective control over your
project and you will not be able to
claim tax credits.
So that's number one. Number two, in the
uh tariff provisions
uh you'll just you'll have to address
tariffs. The way the market is doing it
is all known tariffs are included in the
equipment price.
Any tariffs that are imposed that in the
future are usually split in some ratio
5050 2080 something like that up to a
cap after which the customer can just
walk away without having to pay a
penalty.
>> That, is, very, interesting., I, also, read, in
some of your latest articles uh
regarding the the latest guidance
the possibility of some of these rules
being retroactive for a short amount of
time, maybe the last year when they were
drafting them. What problems does this
cause in developers nowadays? What have
you been seeing in developers reacting
to this potential outlook?
>> When, you, say, some, of, these, rules, being
retracted, are you referring to fiak
tariffs? Uh
>> start, construction.
Okay. I don't think the starter
construction changes have been a great
problem because
the Treasury managed to find a middle
ground. Trump wanted it to take a
tougher position on when wind and solar
projects are under construction, but it
ended up threading a needle trying to uh
satisfy conservative members of the
House who don't want to see any solar or
wind projects and more uh renewables
focused senators who were appalled at
the uh suggestions that wind and solar
would be cancelled.
So they they found a middle ground and
both sides seemed happy with it which
was astounding.
So that's that was construction start
on fiak.
The main problem with fiak well I I
expect Treasury will find a way to make
fiak work.
There was a lot of fear among renewables
advocates when the fiak proposals were
moving through Congress that they were
so
complicated that they were like a maze
out of which no one would emerge alive.
And I think the treasury I think the law
firms like ours as we have worked more
with the language are getting more and
more comfortable with it. But there are
unanswered questions and I think the
Treasury will try to make it work
and the evidence of that is the fact
that it it found a way to make the
construction start revisions work.
>> Quick, break., If, you, listen, to, this, show,
then you probably work in energy. And at
Moto Energy, we're not just talking
about the energy transition. We help our
users to actually make it happen. All
energy storage, solar and wind assets on
the global balance sheet need to be
valued and benchmarked. And that's where
Moto Energy comes in. Our benchmarks and
forecasts are transparent, bankable, and
trusted by the world's leading banks
asset managers, utilities, and
developers. So, if you want to learn
more, go to modoenergy.com.
And if you want more content like this
sign up to our weekly dispatch
newsletter. Enjoy the conversation.
Going back to uh some of the previous
topics that we covered, you talked about
a lot of deals being closed right now.
How are these large deals being
structured from a financing point of
view? Uh what different types of
contract structures are you seeing and
how have they changed in the past
decade, especially with a recently
passed bill?
>> Well,, there's, been, a, lot, of, change, in
the last decade, but uh let me just
start with this year. Most renewable
projects are financed in something
called the tax equity market because the
government pays so much of the cost
through tax credits that the developers
cannot use. So they find a way to barter
the tax credits to banks and insurance
companies. They can use them in exchange
for cash.
So that that market is healthy. It has
been setting records. Uh it's about a$20
billion a year market. The inflation
reduction act authorized another tool
which is called just tax credit sales.
That market has also been uh healthy and
the tax credits where companies choose
to sell them instead of doing
complicated tax equity deals are getting
generally 91 92 up to 94 or 95 cents per
dollar of tax credit.
And there are lots of transactions. We
ourselves have done 10.7 billion in tax
credit sales in the last 27 months. So
that's about a quarter to 31% of the
market depending on the year. Uh that
new tool, the ability to sell tax
credits has opened up another structure
two other structures. First the the
typical tax equity transaction is a
partnership.
But now these are being structured as
hybrid partnerships where a bank or
insurance company forms a partnership
with the developer. The two of them own
the project. The tax benefits are
allocated largely to the the so-called
tax equity investor, but now these
partnerships are leaving the
depreciation with the tax equity
investor, but they're selling the tax
credits to another company for cash.
That's called a hybrid partnership flip
deal. And then there are preferred
equity structures which have appeared in
the last year or so. There are about a
dozen companies offering this where a
company plans to sell tax credits
but before doing so it sells the project
into a partnership with a cash investor
and then that partnership sells the tax
credits. And the reason this is done is
to allow the tax credits to be
calculated on the fair market value of
the project at the end of construction
rather than the bare cost. Uh we're also
seeing on the debt side banks are making
bridge loans against future tax credit
sale proceeds.
They're both uncovered and covered
bridge loans. Covered bridge loans are a
loan for 95 to 98% of the expected tax
credit sale proceeds. uh in a case where
you know who the buyer is, you've
already locked that in. Uncovered are
about 70 to 75% of the projected sale
proceeds, assuming 90 cents on the
dollar,
and those are where you don't know yet
who will buy. So, that's opened up a new
line of business. We're seeing banks
also do uh construction and development
revolvers.
They're called borrowing based
facilities where they will make a loan
to a developer that it can draw down
but it draws down the amount it can draw
is a function of how large uh how the
value of its assets its borrowing base
and then we're seeing pre-NTTP loans in
the past the lenders have been unwilling
to lend before construction starts
they'll take construction risk but not
development risk but because of the
number of lenders in the market. There
are, at least, 80, um, competing, with, each
other. They have been taking more risk
called they'll take some development
risk called pre-NTTP before notice to
proceed with construction. And then
finally, the private equity funds have
been uh lending. They're called private
credit lenders. They've been competing
with the banks. The banks are
complaining that the capital uh they
need to hold back tier one capital to
provide a buffer in case they have bad
loans is holding them back and the the
private credit lenders are not
constrained by that. They're getting a a
favorable hearing from the Trump
administration which uh looks like it's
about to relax the tier one capital
requirements perhaps by about 14%. All
of the different deals and structures
are very interesting. And one more point
that we've been listening a lot is that
everyone loved the simplicity of selling
tax credits under the inflation
reduction act. But now post OBBA, what's
happening in the in the transfers
market? Is it still thriving? Is it
getting more complicated to do those
transfers? What is your perspective? And
what have you been seeing?
>> It, is, still, thriving., There's, been, no
change in volume. Uh there were two
deadlines we just passed. September 15
for partnerships to sell tax credits
from last year and October 15 for
corporations to sell from last year. So
2024 credits and there was a lot of
activity ahead of those deadlines.
Uh what we're seeing is that the market
will buy any tax credit that has
insurance behind it. So there was also
the uh inflation reduction act helped
the tax insurance industry. These
insurers, there, are, at least, 17, or, 18, of
them who will write insurance on the tax
benefits. Lately though in the last few
weeks we've been hearing from tax
insurers that they're having a harder
time filling out the excess layers. When
you buy tax insurance, you buy from a
primary insurer and then it pulls in
others to join along. Those are called
the excess layers. For some reason, the
break brokers are reporting it's harder
to fill out those. And we've uh been
hearing from some developers that they
just can't find insurance. Uh but that's
a very new development. Say in the last
two weeks, uh people are watching the US
claims court for a decision that's
expected in November, perhaps December
at the latest in a case called Ulta Wend
Alta Wend.
That case may have something to say
about the amount of the tax credits. Uh
where tax credits are claimed on the
fair market value. It's called a basis
step up from cost. May have something to
say there. The insurers may be pulling
back a little bit to wait to hear uh to
see what the court says.
>> And, you, mentioned, something, uh, that
surprised me. Tax credit insurance uh
companies. What exactly is that? because
I guess that many people in our audience
won't know about them yet as well. What
is exactly a tax credit insurance
company?
>> These, are, insurance, companies, uh, that
AON uh is an example. Um various Lloyd
syndicates. There are at least 17 of
them that that have been writing tax for
a long time. When I first started, I I
started on Capitol Hill in the in the US
Senate as a tax staffer. But when I
moved to private law practice, the first
thing I did, all I did for the first 18
months was representing Lloyd syndicates
writing insurance on tax benefits. At
that time, it was the airlines who had
been given a one-year window by Congress
to sell tax benefits they could not use
on their airline fleets. And so the
Lloyd syndicates were writing insurance
on those tax benefits to the the buyers
of them. Uh we've had it a long time.
It's picked up in the last five, six
seven years. The brokers have been at
all the renewable energy conferences
educating the market. But uh in the last
year or two since tax credit sales uh
became possible again uh many
transactions require tax insurance to
close.
>> Understood., Thank, you, for, explaining, the
concept of a tax credit insurer. And
then picking up another point that you
mentioned before about different states
and senators talking about the new act.
I wanted to get your perspective on how
those states and regional market
operators re have responded to the new
federal rules. Are they helping smooth
things out or are are they adding more
layers for the pelibers to navigate?
>> They're, not, adding, more, obstacles., They
are during the George W. Bush
administration when the uh Republican
administration pulled back from
renewables, the Democratic le states
stepped up and provided incentives at
the state level. The most common one
were renewable portfolio standards that
we have in at least 29 states that
require utilities to supply a certain
percentage of electricity for
renewables.
This time uh the states have not
as a a group done anything like that but
they certainly aren't creating
obstacles.
What everybody is watching is agency
pylon
where the interior department for a
start said that it will not approve any
easements
uh uses of federal land for renewable
energy projects solar or wind. uh unless
the secretary of the interior personally
approves the it and so far he has not
been interested in advancing solar and
wind. There are other agencies have now
gotten into the act. The department of
agriculture has pulled back to uh
incentive programs for for solar. Uh the
department of transportation is imposing
uh larger setbacks for wind turbines
from highways and railroads. Uh there
have been fears that determinations of
no hazard by the Federal Aviation
Administration that wind towers need to
uh to be erected, no hazard to aviation
commercial aviation will be harder to
get. We have not seen any problems there
yet. Uh the Environmental Protection
Agency, the US Army Corps of Engineers
all of them are making it harder for
solar and wind to advance. The governor
of Nevada sent a letter to the interior
secretary. He's a The governor is a
Republican. He said, "I realize the
administration wants to promote fossil
fuels. We do not have them in Nevada.
What we have are wind and sunlight, and
there has to be some way for these
projects to get built. So there there
will be more and more friction from
Republicans who are worried about rising
electricity prices. At some point, lack
of electricity will place a break on
economic growth.
>> Mhm., I, think, it, was, today, that, I, read
and, you knew, about, the, governor, or
senator for Rhode Island also pushing
for wind, trying to get some federal
support again or trying to stop the
complete fight against wind. What
exactly happened? What is your view on
that?
>> Uh, his, name, is, Sheldon, White, House., He
is the ranking Democrat on the
environment and public works committee
and the uh Congress has been uh talking
for the last three years at least
probably longer about permitting reform.
There's a there are books out uh both
about the difference between China and
the US and also abundance theory um
Esther Klein who writes for the New York
Times about how the US is making it too
hard for people to build things. And so
there's a general sense that uh we need
to do something about permitting.
But what White House
and his counterpart on the energy
committee uh Martin Heinrich from New
Mexico uh have said is they're not
interested in permitting reform as long
as the administration doesn't follow the
law.
White House in particular was
complaining about administration's
revocation of permits for offshore wind
projects, some of which are far under
construction. There is a battle that's
interesting to watch right now about the
CV project, the central Virginia
offshore wind project that Dominion
Energy has almost completed. It's over
2,000 megawws. the governor Glenn Yncan
and who's a Republican from Virginia and
um the local congresswoman have been
trying to prevent the Interior
Department from revoking the permit for
that project but there's a lot more
noise around it uh lately that the
Republican administration Trump
administration will pull back that
permit these revocations of permits for
Empire win for revolution
have felt a little like ransom notes
The administration wants something in
return. Uh that's they got something in
return for Empire off New York to get it
going again. But Doug Bergen, the
interior secretary, says they're not
looking for any ransom. They just don't
like offshore wind, period. So that
that's the battleground. I don't think
on permitting reform, there's so much
ill will between the Democrats and
Republicans in Congress at the moment.
There's a general recognition something
needs to be done, but there's too much
ill will. I'm it's a little hard to see
how it goes forward although people have
not given up.
>> And, then, coming, back
to the overall uncertainty created by
the FEC rules and the start of
construction guidelines. We here at
Motor Energy focus mostly on on
batteries plus solar and then wind as
well. And from your perspective, are
there any key actionable takeaways or
insights that you would give to the
developers to confront the finish of of
the projects for the next three years?
>> Well,, here's, my, advice., Number, one, is
start construction for tax purposes if
you haven't already by the end of this
year to avoid part of the fiak
restrictions that limits the amount of
Chinese equipment that can be used. You
will not escape all of fiak, but at
least you escape that part. If you can't
start by then and your solar or wind
start by July 4 next year, so that you
have four years to finish. If you're a
battery, you have plenty of time until
end of 2033.
Uh that's part one. Part two, we have
been getting lots of requests from
manufacturers
of batteries and other products, solar
panels, cells, so on to do analyses for
them so they can assure their customers
they are not foreignities of concern.
That requires looking at their
shareholding, their debt, uh who can
appoint their officers and and board
members.
and we have been working through that
with them. That's where the activity is
right now. Construction start ahead of
these deadlines and and trying to assess
what entities or foreign entities of
concern and also scrubbing contracts
with Chinese counterparties
or counterparties you suspect have are
majority Chinese-owned but a lot of
people don't have enough visibility.
scrubbing them of provisions that give
the counterparties effective control
over some aspect of your project. If you
have such contracts that will also
prevent tax credits from being claimed.
That is very interesting as well. From a
general point of view, I would say
stepping back from developers but
overall developers, investors, lenders
what do you think are the biggest
opportunities and the biggest risks for
sponsors and investors trying to
navigate all of this in the upcoming
years?
>> Interesting, question., And, I, was, just
thinking this morning about what keeps
my group busy.
There are so many opportunities right
now. Number one is acquiring assets from
developers who don't have the capital.
Another is
uh we're we're extremely busy financing
LNG terminals as other countries uh
shift to gas partly under the pressure
of the Trump administration. uh we are
very busy with financings of data
centers. We are hearing from lots of uh
real estate developers who want to
prepare sites for data centers by by
developing their own power supplies.
It's so hard for data centers to find
electricity at the moment. Nobody with
electricity has trouble finding a buyer
for it. Uh this has been a huge change
in most of my career. I've been working
in an industry where people don't want
more of the product. They're happy with
just the the same amount every year. But
all, of a, sudden,, we're, seeing, rapid
growth. And that creates opportunities.
We're seeing people start to anticipate
a much greater demand for small modular
reactors, small nuclear reactors. We've
been working with a number of small
companies, some developers who are
anticipating that they'll switch from
solar batteries to this type of asset.
Those though aren't really expected to
appear in great numbers until sometime
between 2032 and 2035. Another thing
fuel cells are are making an end because
they can be deployed quickly. they can
use natural gas and therefore they can
be a source of electricity.
Another thing micro grids uh the
utilities many of them just don't have
the capacity to to provide electricity
to new factories or subdivision
developments or data centers that want
to build in their service territories.
There's an opportunity for others to
come in and be the the power supply, be
the local utility. Mhm. And we talked
about technologies
about geographies. Have you seen a
concentration in opportunities for
example data centers in PM or in Texas
or for other technologies in other
regions where investors and Londers
could be very interested in entering?
>> Well,, data, centers, tend, to, be
concentrated in certain parts of the
country., Virginia,, for example,, Northern
Virginia, uh Richmond is fighting back.
Uh Georgia has a lot of them. Uh
California certainly. We're we're
starting to see a turn though in that
the local committees are fighting back.
I noticed Josh Holly, who's a Republican
senator from Missouri conservative, is
complaining to Amaran, the big utility
that serves Missouri, that uh the lo the
local homeowners are are having to pay
the cost of new data centers. It's not
fair.
And I think you're starting to see push
back not only electricity hogging all
the electricity and pushing up rates for
everybody but also water which is in
scarce supply.
>> Okay., Thank, you., One, more, question, on
the personal sides. I honestly
personally admire you. You have been so
many years working in the energy
industry. You could be considered a
superhero of this energy transition.
What keeps you motivated after so many
years working in the in the space?
>> I, like, the, intellectual, challenge., If
this is a good field for anybody who is
interested in ideas
there is no shortage of things one could
learn about and master. And as soon as
you've mastered one, two, three, four
five of them, there are another five
that appear. So, uh, that that's that's
what keeps me going. I also like to
write. So it's it's a challenge to take
difficult technical subjects and explain
them to a CEO for example or a US
senator who's not interested in the
details but wants the main points.
>> That's, fascinating, on, my, side, as, well.
It's on the earlier side of my career
but still I'm very passionate about the
energy industry and looking forward to
working many more years in this space.
Uh now
>> you, have, quite, a, few, interview.
>> Yes., Before, we, wrap, up,, is, there
anything you're working on that you
would like to plug or highlight? This is
the moment.
>> We, are, working, on, so, many, things, that
I've been, you know, I think my group
we're working seven days a week this
this year. It's a pace I think it's hard
to keep up. I tell the younger lawyers
you've got to find a pace like a
long-distance runner that you can
maintain. Don't burn yourself out in a
bunch of wind sprints. Mhm. And to end
finally, what's a contrarian view you
hold about the US energy market right
now that most people might disagree
with? This is the question that we ask
always to all our guests. So open to
your perspective.
>> I, think, the, US, went, overboard, on, 100%
renewables, just pushing renewables to
the exclusion of everything else.
But at the same time, I don't think
renewables are are down and out. If you
look at a the latest data the inter
international energy agency released it
had shows two trend lines. The trend
line from 2005 through 2024 of new
capacity additions for renewables is a
steeply rising curve. The trend line for
fossil fuels is a slowly falling curve.
This has nothing to do with US
incentives, nothing to do with the Trump
administration. It's pure economics.
>> Well,, Keith,, thank, you., so, much, for
sharing such an honest perspective
throughout the whole podcast. It was a
pleasure to have you here with us and
I'm sure that our audience will get a
lot of insights from the conversation.
Thank you again for for joining us.
>> My, pleasure,, Alex.
[Music]
Loading video analysis...