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Lighting
Conservation Tax Incentives
$.60
Federal Tax Deduction per Square Foot!
My Mission
- Bring a 75% Energy Savings and a $.60 per sq. ft, Federal Tax deduction
to American businesses, conserving more & improving quality of our
workplaces and Natural Environment, with SMD LED Tube Lighting!
Our LED Tubes save a combined total of 75% or more, with a
savings for both the Tube and the Ballast. An equivalent of
45% is saved, compared to standard Fluorescent lighting, with the SMD LED
Tubes alone.
The Energy
Policy Act of 2005 included a new tax incentive, to improve the energy
efficiency of commercial buildings. The "Commercial Building Tax
Deduction" establishes a tax deduction for expenses incurred for energy
efficient building expenditures made by a building owner.
* Buildings
that save at least 50 percent of projected annual energy costs across all
three system components are eligible for a tax deduction of $1.80 per
square foot.
** Buildings
that save a specified percentage of projected annual energy costs for one
of the three components – building envelope (10 percent whole building
energy savings), lighting (20 percent), or heating and cooling (20
percent) – are eligible for a $0.60 per square foot deduction.
*** For lighting
improvements that reduce lighting use by 25-40 percent and also employ
dual switching (ability to switch roughly half the lights off and still
have fairly uniform light distribution), the $0.60 per square foot may be
prorated, ranging from $0.30 per square foot for 25 percent lighting
energy savings to $0.60 per square foot for 40 percent savings.
The Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008 (HR-1424), approved and signed on October 3,
2008, extends the benefits of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 through
December 31, 2013.
Improve Lighting Systems:
Improving your lighting systems is one of the first steps EPA recommends
to increase the efficiency of your buildings whether you are retrofitting
existing buildings or designing new buildings. This is not only because
lighting upgrades are so cost effective, but also because less heat is
generated from efficient lighting systems, affecting the proper sizing of
more capital-intensive heating and cooling systems. As outlined in the
ENERGY STAR Building
Upgrade Manual, a strategy that combines efficient lighting
technologies, controls, and appropriate light levels is the most effective
approach to meeting energy efficiency goals, including those required to
qualify for the partial tax deduction. Read the
Lighting Section, helpful information for
lighting, don't forget to jump ahead of the curve, be a forward leaning,
lean and mean energy machine, update to our state-of-the-art
SMD
LED Tubes and save 75% over standard Fluorescent Tubes.
You may
qualify for a deduction of $0.60 per square foot if the lighting system
employs dual switching (ability to switch roughly half the lights off and
still have fairly uniform light distribution) and reduces installed
lighting power by at least 25% from values specified in specific cited
tables in ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2001. As lighting power reductions climb
from 25% to 40%, the deduction is increased proportionally, up to $0.60
for a 40% power reduction (plus the dual switching).
For a typical building, a lighting power reduction of 40% increases the
building’s ENERGY STAR rating by about 10 points.
Lighting consumes close to 35 percent of the electricity used in
commercial buildings in the United States and affects other building
systems through its electrical requirements and the waste heat that it
produces. Upgrading lighting systems with efficient light sources,
fixtures, and controls can reduce lighting energy use, improve the visual
environment, and affect the
sizing of HVAC and electrical systems.
CONSULT A TAX PROFESSIONAL
Confirm with your Tax Professional and take a $.60 per square foot
deduction for improved lighting efficiency of 40% (with at switch that can
turn off one/half of the lighting on command). Only
a tax attorney or other related professional can provide tax advice.
Q. What if my project cost
exceeds the cap of $0.60/sq. ft.? How is the remaining cost treated
tax-wise?
A. The remaining costs can be
depreciated and claimed normally. So a qualifying project in a
100,000-sq.ft. building with a cost of $100,000 and 40% lighting power
density savings could be eligible to deduct $60,000 in the taxable year
the lighting is placed in service. The remaining $40,000 could then be
claimed normally (i.e., capitalized and depreciated).
Q. What if a commercial
building tenant performs a retrofit that would meet the energy savings,
would they get the deduction?
A. Unfortunately, as in many matters of tax law, the answer is not
necessarily clear. The person who gets the Commercial Buildings Deduction
is the person who owns the property for tax purposes.
Although in many, if not most instances, a tenant improvement will revert
to the landlord at the end of a lease, the property is not necessarily
owned by the landlord for tax purposes. It is a question of fact, and the
determination depends on the arrangements between the parties. If the
tenant pays for the investment, constructs it according to its own
specifications, and there are no concessions in the lease or from the
landlord, it is likely that the tenant will be the owner of the
improvements for tax purposes and eligible to claim the Commercial
Buildings Deduction.
Fortunately, this is a question that arose under the tax law before the
enactment of the Commercial Buildings Deduction provision. In the case of
tenant improvements, the tenant and landlord would have to determine who
the tax owner is for purposes of claiming depreciation deductions in any
event. The Commercial Buildings Deduction does not change that
determination. The Commercial Buildings Deduction simply provides a more
beneficial deduction that that normally provided by depreciation.
Perhaps a tenant should come to an agreement, in advance, with the
landlord about who get the deduction, or how it is to be shared, consult
your tax professional.
The analysis is the same
regarding improvements in government buildings. If the contractor is the
owner for tax purposes, it can claim the Commercial Buildings Deduction.
Whether a private person can be an owner of property with respect to a
government building under the applicable local law is a factor that would
have to be taken into account in determining who the owner is for tax
purposes.
Sources -
Commercial Tax Incentives -
http://www.energystar.gov/ia/business/comm_bldg_tax_incentives.pdf
Lighting and People -
http://www.energystar.gov/ia/business/EPA_BUM_CH6_Lighting.pdf
Commercial Lighting Tax
Deductions -
http://www.lightingtaxdeduction.org/
IRS Deduction for Energy
Efficient Commercial Buildings -
http://www.efficientbuildings.org/PDFs/n-08-40.pdf
Qualified Software to Calc. Comm. Building Tax Deductions
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/buildings/qualified_software.html
Tax Incentives for Commercial
Buildings
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/buildings/tax_commercial.html
Federal Tax Incentives. Home
and Business
http://www.mi.gov/documents/dleg/FAQs_Federal_Tax_Credits_256153_7.pdf
Business Tax Incentives
http://energytaxincentives.org/business/commercial_buildings.php
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