It’s A Big Week In DC. It was the corona stimulus and spending bills and now Trump’s attempt to kill section 230 has added the defense spending bill to the to-do list. Most of the work is being done in the Senate and with the NDAA addition, you could expect a continuing resolution instead of an omnibus. A lot will happen every day and the key for me that I’m watching for is any talk about tax extenders, which has been absent thus far (at least publicly).

The STEM SPAC. Stem, a decade removed from an old furniture showroom near SFO, is going public via a reverse merger. Crunchbase shows the company with 20 investors and having raised $371million through their series E. Press releases covering the SPAC announcement has the total value at $1.35billion for the company. In the early days, Stem installed 50kWh batteries at Walgreens as a method to avoid peak demand charges. More recently it appears that the company is more involved in demand aggregation relationships with power markets and utilities though that’s not entirely clear. We will get more public data on the company soon, a real-world check on what virtual power plants are worth.

Biden’s Climate Team. Nominations and staffing rumors are the highlight of a transition. Biden has previously announced former Secretary of State John Kerry as the presidential envoy and permanent member of the NSC for climate. This highlights how Biden will take on the issue in foreign policy and international relations. On the economic front, Biden named Brian Deese as to the National Economic Council putting a climate spin on economic policy. This leaves us with the EPA, Energy and the domestic climate coordinator. Axios has Senator Schumer pushing for Mary Nichols from California for the top of the EPA, we’ve been talking about this for several months and everyone reading this should be rooting for that to happen. Though Biden also picked Xavier Becerra (current CA AG) for HHS and cleaning out Newsom’s staff may be an issue. That leaves us with the domestic climate coordinator role, the floating executive that will ensure agencies are on the same page. Governor’s Granholm and Inslee have both been floated as well as Governor Cuomo’s lead on climate, Ali Zaidi. Granholm brings an interesting background to this, she used to brag about the solar manufacturing center her administration was building in Michigan back in 2007, something that could be used to keep on track with domestic manufacturing.

No Freaking Way. Georgia installed a solar roadway, better believe it. This may push the solar buttons all over again.

Still Essential. As parts of the Country go into lockdown including California, this is a reminder that solar installers are largely considered essential services. Your state chapter may have a memo, like this one from CALSSA, that helps your business stay in operation.

Worthy Of Considerations. Not enough time today but the new Moody’s carbon addition to bond ratings has the possibility of monetizing utilities’ efforts in renewables. Few things have the ability to change a utility CEO’s focus more than the corporate credit rating. The other thing to watch is Google’s efforts to reform RTOs. We’ve been tracking the desire by the tech giant to colocate and time-align their renewable energy purchasing with their own consumption.

Supply Chains Choke Up. If you are a buyer of products, now is the time to expand your time horizons to ensure continuity of supply. Manufacturers and research companies are underestimating the size of the market over the next two quarters and likely most of 2021. That means that there will be a limited amount of product to go around and if you’re not allocated, you may get hung out to dry. SolarWakeup Buyer’s Group is here to help, ensuring allocations for our members now. 

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Yann


Happy Friday. In some ways this week was the quiet before the storm, the storm being the last few weeks of 2020. Developers will rush to get to PTO, installers building out the homes for the promised 26% ITC and Congress needs to make sure the government has the money to operate heading into the holidays. I have enjoyed this week because the incoming President keeps talking about climate change and solar, something that I’ve never experienced in the past. Have a great weekend!

Solar For Clubs. My friends at Sustainable Capital Finance (SCF) have seen an uptick in interest for solar PPAs from schools, country clubs, and golf courses, as these off-takers have been impacted differently than other C&I energy consumers during the COVID-19 crisis. Golf & Country Clubs have seen increased revenue from golf and other outdoor activities, while schools would install solar while students aren’t on school grounds. In both scenarios, savings from a solar PPA are extremely attractive.Click here to learn more about how their subscription-free, proprietary software, the SCF suite, can help to speed up your PPA pricing and transaction process.

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Yann


Solar Is Female. Nasdaq announced a progressive and common sense requirement this week requiring companies to include at least one woman and person of color on their boards. Axios’ report from yesterday shows that boards with women are more prone to innovate on climate. When it comes to solar, I still believe it to be a women’s economy even though many of our trade shows don’t look like it. Women make a majority if not an almost decisive majority of decisions when it comes to home purchasing including home improvement. Polling this year showed that women and parents were a big increase in the demand from the consumer side. Solar doesn’t do it enough and maybe COVID creates the opportunity for women in solar to do more of the sales to consumers and explain why we’re on the path to put solar on every home in America.

The Orange Badge. Sungevity has been the household name since the inception of the iPad. On an iPad 1 is where I saw the concept of Google earth driving residential solar builds for the first time. In many ways, Sungevity is as alive as ever, building tens of thousands of solar homes in Europe and more importantly the orange backdrop on LinkedIn profile pictures across the solar landscape. The company may be gone but the people that created and built that business power many solar teams across the industry today.

Oil’s New Power Grab. Two things that oil majors will absolutely be doing aside from investing every possible dollar into renewable energy projects. One, every gas station will add fast charging for EVs. With prime real estate that has always outperformed inside the store, EV charging is better because it takes longer. It’s confusing me an oil major hasn’t acquired Blink/evGo/Chargepoint yet. Two, oil majors will continue to acquire energy retail companies. Many already provide trading platforms for them to acquire the electricity for the consumer, the customer-facing funnel will prove invaluable going forward.

Solar For Clubs. My friends at Sustainable Capital Finance (SCF) have seen an uptick in interest for solar PPAs from schools, country clubs, and golf courses, as these off-takers have been impacted differently than other C&I energy consumers during the COVID-19 crisis. Golf & Country Clubs have seen increased revenue from golf and other outdoor activities, while schools would install solar while students aren’t on school grounds. In both scenarios, savings from a solar PPA are extremely attractive. Click here to learn more about how their subscription-free, proprietary software, the SCF suite, can help to speed up your PPA pricing and transaction process.

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Yann


Two Bills Become One. Senator McConnell is laying the path for the covid stimulus to be rolled into the omnibus spending bill which is needed to fund the government beyond December 11th. Romney had earlier stated that there’s a covid path at a $900billion mark including the reuse of the unused treasury slush fund. McConnell is signaling the pathway towards something I find rather positive, the spending bill will get bigger and more important. In DC, the bigger the price tag the better especially if it does things voters require of legislators like save the economy from a recession, send them money and fund the military. The most important part is that voters do not distinguish between $3 or $4trillion dollars, it’s a lot of money any way you look at it. What nobody has said yet is talk of tax extenders or continuing resolution. It seems to me that McConnell isn’t interested in pushing this to the new Congress (Georgia runoffs pending and new members with agendas) and a Biden White House. Watch this space for the next week, some action alerts may be coming your way.

A New FERC. Allison Clements and Mark Christie have been confirmed as new FERC commissioners. Ms. Clements is well regarded from inside the clean tech sector and is touted on Twitter having been active on the wonky #energytwitter prior to her nomination. Mr. Christie is also seen as a solid interpreter of the rules and regulations governing the energy markets and this is coming from a former regulator. This may setup a decent starting point for the Biden administration especially, as one would assume, a review of the MOPR is brought back to the docket amongst other things.

Climate Investing Tool. BlackRock is showing some professional chops today. On Monday, Brian Deese was announced as a Biden appointee who comes from BlackRock as the Global Head of Sustainable Investments and is under some, albeit tempered, fire from the progressives. Yesterday, BlackRock is enhancing its ESG credibility with a investment tool that will analyze companies based on internal and external sources on how able to withstand climate change. Aladdin Climate will rank companies on how well they do against climate goals set forth. The head of the tool is Mary-Catherine Lader, her (former) boss is Brian Deese.

Dealflow For Investors. Third Derivative is a venture/incubator spun out by RMI and New Energy Nexus which launched with almost 50 invested companies this week. Their LPs are many of the corporates that like the space but don’t get the deal flow and ability to invest at the lower dollar amounts that many of these companies need at the early stages. A $5million check for an oil major doesn’t pay the legal fees so a platform like Third Derivative makes sense.

Polluters Must Fund. Abandoned and capped wells across the Country are polluting the environment around them and that’s a problem. While some see an opportunity to clean it up, the Department of Justice, EPA and Interior need to be finding those that have commitments to those wells and landowners and ensure that they pay for the entirety of an investment gone back.

Solar For Clubs. My friends at Sustainable Capital Finance (SCF) have seen an uptick in interest for solar PPAs from schools, country clubs, and golf courses, as these off-takers have been impacted differently than other C&I energy consumers during the COVID-19 crisis. Golf & Country Clubs have seen increased revenue from golf and other outdoor activities, while schools would install solar while students aren’t on school grounds. In both scenarios, savings from a solar PPA are extremely attractive.Click here to learn more about how their subscription-free, proprietary software, the SCF suite, can help to speed up your PPA pricing and transaction process.

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Have a great day!
Yann