Energy Efficient Commercial Buildings Tax Deduction
OVERVIEW
On August 8, 2005, President Bush signed H.R. 6, The Energy Policy
Act of 2005 (Public Law 109-58) into law. This legislation created
a new tax incentive for constructing energy efficient commercial
buildings. Specifically, Section 1331, the Commercial Building Tax
Deduction, establishes a
tax deduction for expenses related to the design and installation
of energy-efficient commercial building systems. The AIA strongly
supported this provision and played a major role in its legislative
development. AIA National also helped form a partnership with other concerned
stakeholders and through this partnership, developed
implementation recommendations for building owners to obtain this
tax deduction. Please note that the tax deduction is not a tax
credit (an amount directly subtracted from the tax owed), but a
deduction an amount subtracted from gross taxable income. Tax
deductions result in benefits to the taxpayer; thus this newly
created program can be used as an incentive to urge clients to
choose energy efficient building systems. However the deduction is
only applicable to building systems installed before January 1,
2009 so it is important to take advantage of this deduction before
its expiration.
WHAT IS THE BUILDING TAX
DEDUCTION?
Section 1331 provides that a building owner may claim a tax
deduction for expenditures made as part of a building designed to
reduce the total annual energy used in the operation of the
building. Building owners can claim a tax deduction of up to $1.80
per square foot of building area for the installation of systems
that reduce the total energy and power costs by 50 percent or more
when compared with a reference building. The building systems
eligible to secure the tax deduction include:
1.) Interior lighting systems;
2.) Heating, cooling, ventilation, hot water systems; and
3.) Building envelope systems.
A reference building is defined as a building that is located
in the same climate zone as the taxpayers building and is
otherwise comparable to the taxpayers building except that
its interior lighting systems, heating, cooling, ventilation, and
hot water systems, and building envelope meet the minimum
requirements of ASHRAE standard 90.1-2001.
The required 50 percent reduction must be accomplished solely
through energy and power consumption reductions for the heating,
cooling, ventilation, hot water, and interior lighting systems.
Reductions in any other energy uses are not taken into account in
determining whether the 50 percent reduction is achieved. The
method to compute the percentage reduction is discussed further
below.
CAN I GET PARTIAL
CREDIT?
Yes, because 50 percent energy savings may not be possible in all
eligible building systems, partial credit may be attained for
efficiency improvements in each of the 3 eligible building systems.
The deduction can be obtained by an owner depending on whether one
wishes to achieve energy reduction targets for the entire building
(i.e. the scenario mentioned above) through interior lighting,
HVAC/water heating, and building envelope systems, or one or two of
these systems individually. If a 50 percent overall energy
reduction is achieved independently in lighting systems, HVAC/water
heating systems, or building envelope systems, each qualify for up
to a $0.60 per square foot deduction for that particular
systems energy savings. Thus a tax deduction may be claimed
if a 16 2/3 percent energy reduction can be achieved through
installing lighting, HVAC/heating, or building envelope systems, or
through a combination of the three systems.
HOW DO I COMPUTE SAVINGS FOR EACH
SYSTEM?
The Internal Revenue Service has issued interim guidance on the Commercial Buildings
Deduction. For efficiency improvements to interior lighting
systems, the IRS has issued very detailed guidance relating to the
applicable tax deduction. Essentially, the tax deduction is the
lesser value of the complete cost of installing energy-efficient
lighting or $0.30 to $0.60 per square foot proportional lighting
power to achieve density savings of 25 40 percent below the
standards established by ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2001. For more
information on this and to see a table computing the tax deduction
values proportionate percentage of energy savings, please click here.
With regard to HVAC, hot water, and building envelope systems, if
the installation of one of these systems results in 16 2/3 percent
energy reduction, a building owner may claim a deduction of $0.60
per square foot. However, if the building owner has claimed
deductions in prior years for the installation of energy efficient
HVAC, hot water, or building envelope systems for the same
building, the maximum deduction would be $0.60 per square foot
divided by the aggregate amount of tax deductions claimed in
previous years.
HOW IS THE DEDUCTION APPLIED FOR
PUBLIC BUILDINGS?
The legislation also allows for a tax deduction on energy
savings systems installed in new or existing public buildings. In
the case of energy efficiency improvements in a building owned by a
federal, state, or local government, the legislation states that
the allocation of the deduction (will be) to the person
primarily responsible for designing the property in lieu of the
owner of such property. The legislation requires the
Secretary of the Treasury to issue a regulation defining who would
qualify as the person primarily responsible for designing the
property. The AIA has been working to ensure that architects
are included under this definition though at the time of writing,
the IRS is yet to issue further guidance. The AIA drafted a letter to the IRS explaining our
position and are awaiting response. If the IRS utilizes this
advice, architects will be eligible to receive a federal tax
deduction for designing energy efficient public buildings that meet
the energy reduction criteria established within this
legislation.
HOW DO THEY CALCULATE ENERGY
SAVINGS?
The legislation illustrates a clear method for calculating power
savings. In order to determine power savings achieved by installing
energy efficient systems in a Proposed Building (the
building where energy efficient improvements will be made), one
would first calculate the total energy and power costs for interior
lighting, heating, cooling, ventilation, and hot water in a
reference building. Then, one would calculate the equivalent energy
and power costs from the Proposed Building (with energy efficient
systems installed) and then subtract Proposed Building energy and
power costs from reference building energy and power costs. The
resulting number is then expressed as a percentage of reference
building energy and power costs.
It is important to explain this computation method to a building
owner as they will then have to provide the specific energy savings
statistics to their tax-professional in order to correctly file for
the deduction. To claim the deduction, the tax preparer will
need a certified document signed by an engineer or contractor who
is licensed in the jurisdiction in which the building is
located. The certification must contain information
stipulated in the IRS guidance document (please see
page 34 of the document). The National Electrical
Manufacturers Association has also developed a guidance document
which offers detailed, step-by-step instructions to compose a
certification document. This document can be viewed by clicking
here.
WHATS NEXT?
This tax deduction is applicable only to building property
installed before January 1, 2009. Thus one of the AIAs major
priorities is to urge Congress to make the deduction permanent or
at least extend it beyond its sunset. A number of bills have been introduced to
extend this tax deduction and AIA National has weighed in with the
appropriate officials on each of these pieces of legislation. AIA
National is also awaiting further regulations from the IRS
regarding the public buildings stipulation. AIA National will
continue to work to ensure this important tax deduction will be
extended beyond its expiration and can be used by architects to
promote the development of energy efficient buildings.
MORE INFORMATION
The AIA has joined a coalition with other
major stakeholders to ensure that this tax deduction is
correctly applied and extended beyond its expiration. The
coalition has developed a webpage which provides more information
on this tax deduction. To view the website, please click here.





