
[the regulations have changed, in the process of updating]
Part III - Administrative,
Procedural, and Miscellaneous
Clean Renewable Energy Bonds
Notice 2005-98
SECTION 1. PURPOSE
This Notice solicits applications for
allocations of the clean renewable energy
bond limitation under section 54(f) of the
Internal Revenue Code (the Code). This
Notice also provides guidance on: (1) the
requirements a project must meet in order to
be eligible to obtain an allocation of the
limitation; (2) the methodology the Treasury
Department will use to allocate the
limitation; and (3) the credit rate, maximum term and
information reporting requirements
applicable to clean renewable energy bonds. In
addition, this Notice announces that
temporary and proposed regulations will be issued
under section 54, and describes certain
remedial action provisions and arbitrage
restrictions that will be contained in
those regulations. Applications for allocations of the
clean renewable energy bond limitation
must be filed by April 26, 2006, in accordance
with this Notice.
SECTION 2. INTRODUCTION
Section 1303 of the Energy Tax Incentives
Act of 2005, Pub. L. No. 109-58 (the
Act), added section 54 to the Code. In
general, section 54 authorizes up to
$800,000,000 of tax credit bonds to be
issued by qualified issuers to finance certain
renewable energy projects described in
section 45(d) of the Code. Section 54 applies
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to bonds issued after December 31, 2005,
and before January 1, 2008.
SECTION 3. BACKGROUND
Section 54(a) provides that a taxpayer
that holds a “clean renewable energy
bond” on one or more credit allowance
dates of the bond occurring during any taxable
year is allowed as a nonrefundable credit
against Federal income tax for the taxable
year an amount equal to the sum of the
credits determined under section 54(b) with
respect to such dates.
Section 54(b)(1) provides that the amount
of the credit with respect to any credit
allowance date is 25 percent of the annual
credit. Section 54(b)(2) provides that the
annual credit is the product of (1) the
credit rate determined by the Secretary, multiplied
by (2) the outstanding face amount of the
bond.
Section 54(b)(3) provides that the
Secretary shall determine daily a credit rate
that shall apply to the first day on which
there is a binding, written contract for the sale
or exchange of a clean renewable energy
bond. The credit rate for any day is the
credit rate the Secretary estimates will
permit the issuance of clean renewable energy
bonds with a specified maturity or
redemption date without discount and without interest
cost to the issuer.
Section 54(b)(4) provides that the term
“credit allowance date” means March 15,
June 15, September 15, December 15, and
the last day on which the bond is
outstanding. Section 54(b)(5) generally
provides that if a bond is issued or redeemed,
or matures, during the 3-month period
ending on a credit allowance date, then the
amount of the credit for that credit
allowance date is a ratable portion of the credit
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otherwise determined for that 3-month
period.
Section 54(g) provides that gross income
includes the amount of the credit
allowed to the taxpayer under section 54
(without regard to section 54(c)) and the
amount so included is treated as interest
income.
Section 54(d) provides that a “clean
renewable energy bond” means any bond
issued as part of an issue if: (1) the
bond is issued by a qualified issuer pursuant to an
allocation by the Secretary to the issuer
of a portion of the national clean renewable
energy bond limitation under section
54(f)(2); (2) 95 percent or more of the proceeds of
the issue are to be used for capital
expenditures incurred by qualified borrowers for one
or more qualified projects; (3) the
qualified issuer designates the bond for purposes of
section 54 and the bond is in registered
form; and (4) the issue meets certain
requirements described in section 54(h)
with respect to the expenditure of bond
proceeds, including a requirement that the
issuer reasonably expects, as of the issue
date, that at least 95 percent of the net
proceeds will be expended within 5 years.
Section 54(j)(4) defines a “qualified
issuer” as: (1) a clean renewable energy
bond lender; (2) a cooperative electric
company; or (3) a governmental body. Section
54(j)(2) provides that a “clean renewable
energy bond lender” is a lender that is: (1) a
cooperative that is owned by, or has
outstanding loans to, 100 or more cooperative
electric companies and was in existence on
February 1, 2002; or (2) any affiliated entity
controlled by such a lender. Section
54(j)(1) defines the term “cooperative electric
company” as a mutual or cooperative
electric company described in section 501(c)(12)
or section 1381(a)(2)(C), or a
not-for-profit electric utility that has received a loan or loan
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guarantee under the Rural Electrification
Act. Section 54(j)(3) defines the term
“governmental body” as any State,
territory, possession of the United States, the District
of Columbia, Indian tribal government, or
any political subdivision thereof.
Section 54(j)(5) provides that a
“qualified borrower” is: (1) a mutual or
cooperative electric company described in
section 501(c)(12) or 1381(a)(2)(C); or (2) a
governmental body.
Section 54(d)(2) defines the term
“qualified project” as any of the following
qualified facilities (as determined under
section 45(d) without regard to any placed in
service date) owned by a qualified
borrower: (1) a wind facility under section 45(d)(1);
(2) a closed-loop biomass facility under
section 45(d)(2); (3) an open-loop biomass
facility under section 45(d)(3); (4) a
geothermal or solar energy facility under section
45(d)(4); (5) a small irrigation power
facility under section 45(d)(5); (6) a landfill gas
facility under section 45(d)(6); (7) a
trash combustion facility under section 45(d)(7); (8)
a refined coal production facility under
section 45(d)(8); and (9) a qualified hydropower
facility under section 45(d)(9).
Section 54(f)(1) provides that the
national clean renewable energy bond limitation
is $800,000,000. Section 54(f)(2) provides
that the Secretary shall allocate the national
clean renewable energy bond limitation
among qualified projects in such manner as the
Secretary determines appropriate, except
that the Secretary may not allocate more than
$500,000,000 of the national clean
renewable energy bond limitation to finance qualified
projects of qualified borrowers that are
governmental bodies.
Section 54(d)(2)(D) provides that, for
purposes of the requirement of section
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54(d)(1)(B) that at least 95 percent of
the proceeds of an issue be used for capital
expenditures incurred by a qualified
borrower for a qualified project, proceeds of an
issue are not treated as used for a
qualified project to the extent that a qualified
borrower or qualified issuer takes any
action within its control that causes such
proceeds not to be used for a qualified
project. Section 54(d)(2)(D) further provides that
the Secretary shall prescribe regulations
specifying remedial actions that may be taken
(including conditions to taking such
remedial actions) to prevent an action described in
the preceding sentence from causing a bond
to fail to be a clean renewable energy
bond.
Section 54(k) generally requires that any
borrower of proceeds of a clean
renewable energy bond that is a pooled
financing bond (within the meaning of section
149(f)(4)(A)) enter into a written loan
commitment before the issue date of the bond.
Section 54(l)(6) provides that a bond
shall not be treated as a clean renewable
energy bond unless it is part of an issue
that provides for an equal amount of principal
to be paid by the qualified issuer during
each calendar year that the issue is
outstanding.
Section 54(e)(1) provides that a bond
shall not be treated as a clean renewable
energy bond if the maturity of the bond
exceeds the maximum term determined by the
Secretary under section 54(e)(2) with
respect to the bond. Section 54(e)(2) provides
that, during each calendar month, the
Secretary shall determine the maximum term for
clean renewable energy bonds issued in the
following calendar month. The maximum
term is the term the Secretary estimates
will result in the present value of the obligation
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to repay the principal on the bond being
equal to 50 percent of the face amount of the
bond. Section 54(e)(2) further provides
that such present value shall be determined (1)
without regard to the requirement of
section 54(l)(6) that the principal of clean
renewable energy bonds be amortized
ratably each year and (2) using a discount rate
equal to the average annual interest rate
of tax-exempt obligations having a term of 10
years or more that are issued during the
month. If the term as so determined is not a
multiple of a whole year, such term shall
be rounded to the next highest whole year.
Section 54(i) generally provides that the
arbitrage requirements of section 148
applicable to tax-exempt State or local
bonds apply to clean renewable energy bonds.
Section 54(l)(7) requires issuers of clean
renewable energy bonds to submit
reports similar to the reports required
under section 149(e) for tax-exempt State or local
bonds.
SECTION 4. TEMPORARY REGULATIONS
The Treasury Department and the Internal
Revenue Service intend to issue
temporary and proposed regulations (the
“Temporary Regulations”) under section 54 to
provide guidance to holders and issuers of
clean renewable energy bonds. The
Temporary Regulations will address, among
other matters, remedial actions and
arbitrage restrictions applicable to clean
renewable energy bonds.
SECTION 5. APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS
Each application for an allocation of the
clean renewable energy bond limitation
must be prepared and submitted in
accordance with this section. By submitting an
application for an allocation of the clean
renewable energy bond limitation, pursuant to
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section 54(f) and this Notice, the
applicant agrees to comply with the requirements of
this Notice.
a. Qualified issuer. The application must
be submitted by a qualified issuer
within the meaning of section 54(j)(4). A
“qualified issuer” is: (1) a clean renewable
energy bond lender (as defined in section
54(j)(2)); (2) a cooperative electric company
(as defined in section 54(j)(1)); or (3) a
governmental body (as defined in section
54(j)(3)). Applications must identify the
qualified issuer and must demonstrate that the
entity constitutes a qualified issuer
within the meaning of section 54(j)(4).
b. Signatures. An application must be
signed by an authorized employee of the
qualified issuer.
c. Addresses. Applications must be
submitted in duplicate to the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS), Attention
CC:TEGE:EOEG:TEB, 1111 Constitution Avenue,
NW, Room 4306, Washington, D.C. 20224.
Applications may be hand delivered
Monday through Friday between the hours of
8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to the Courier’s Desk,
Internal Revenue Service, 1111
Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C., attention
CC:TEGE:EOEG:TEB.
d. Due date. Applications must be filed
with the IRS on or before April 26, 2006.
e. Project description. Each application
must contain the information required by
this subsection e.
(i) Qualified borrower. Each application
must identify the qualified borrower
expected to own the qualified project. A
“qualified borrower” is: (1) a mutual or
cooperative electric company described in
section 501(c)(12) or 1381(a)(2)(C); or (2) a
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governmental body (as defined in section
54(j)(3)). The application must demonstrate
that the entity constitutes a qualified
borrower within the meaning of section 54(j)(5). If
any bond is expected to be a pooled
financing bond (within the meaning of section
149(f)(4)(A)), the application must
demonstrate that the qualified issuer will enter into a
written loan commitment with each
qualified borrower prior to the issue date of the bond
issue.
(ii) Qualified project. Each application
must describe in detail the project to be
financed with the proceeds of the clean
renewable energy bonds. The application must
demonstrate that the project will
constitute a “qualified project” within the meaning of
section 54(d)(2)(A), and must indicate the
expected date the project will be placed in
service. The application also must contain
a certification by an independent, licensed
engineer that the project will meet the
requirements to be a qualified facility (as
determined under section 45(d) without
regard to section 45(d)(10) and to any placed in
service date) and that the project is
technically viable.
(iii) Location of project. The application
must indicate the location of the project.
(iv) Regulatory approvals. The application
must describe a plan to obtain all
necessary Federal, state and local
regulatory approvals for the project.
f. Plan of financing. The application must
contain a detailed description of the
plan of financing for the project,
including all private and public sources of financing and
the status of the applicants’ efforts to
secure all such financing. The application must
also describe the anticipated date of bond
issuance, the sources of security and
repayment for the bonds, the aggregate
face amount of bonds expected to be issued for
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the project, and the issuer’s reasonably
expected schedule for spending proceeds of
clean renewable energy bonds.
g. Dollar amount of allocation requested.
The application must specify the dollar
amount of the clean renewable energy bond
limitation requested.
SECTION 6. ALLOCATION OF CLEAN RENEWABLE
ENERGY BOND LIMITATION
The clean renewable energy bond limitation
will be allocated, in accordance
with this section, to qualified projects
for which applications meeting the requirements of
this Notice have been filed with the IRS
on or before April 26, 2006. Projects for
governmental bodies and mutual or
cooperative electric companies described in section
501(c)(12) or 1381(a)(2)(C) will be
allocated the full amount of clean renewable energy
bond limitation requested beginning with
the project(s) for which the smallest dollar
amount of clean renewable energy bond
limitation has been requested and continuing
with the project(s) for which the
next-smallest dollar amount of such limitation has been
requested until the total amount of clean
renewable energy bond limitation has been
exhausted. However, in the event that
$500,000,000 has been allocated to qualified
projects of qualified borrowers that are
governmental bodies, the remaining clean
renewable energy bond limitation will be
allocated, under the methodology described in
the previous sentence, only to qualified
projects of qualified borrowers that are not
governmental bodies. For purposes of this
section, all qualified projects located at the
same site and owned by the same qualified
borrower are treated as a single project.
SECTION 7. REQUIRED DECLARATIONS
Each application, certification, report or
other document submitted under this
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Notice must include the following
declaration signed by an authorized employee of the
qualified issuer who has personal
knowledge of the relevant facts and circumstances:
“Under penalties of perjury, I declare
that I have examined this document and, to the
best of my knowledge and belief, all of
the facts contained herein are true, correct, and
complete.”
SECTION 8. MAXIMUM TERM
The maximum term for a clean renewable
energy bond is determined under
section 54(e)(2) by using a discount rate
equal to 110 percent of the long-term adjusted
AFR, compounded semi-annually, for the
month in which the bond is sold. For
purposes of this Notice, a bond is “sold”
on the first day on which there is a binding
contract in writing for the sale or
exchange of the bond. The maximum term for a clean
renewable energy bond will be published
daily by the Bureau of Public Debt on its
Internet site for State and Local
Government Series securities at: http://
www.publicdebt.treas.gov
SECTION 9. CREDIT RATE
For each issue of clean renewable energy
bonds, a separate credit rate will apply
to each of the level annual repayments of
principal of the issue (each, a “principal
maturity”). The credit rate for a
principal maturity of an issue of clean renewable energy
bonds is the applicable clean renewable
energy bond credit rate published each
business day by the Bureau of Public Debt
on its Internet site for State and Local
Government Series securities at: http://
renewable energy bond credit rate shall be
applied to a principal maturity of an issue of
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clean renewable energy bonds on the day
the issue is sold. The credit rates will be
determined by the Treasury Department
based on its estimate of the yield on
outstanding AA rated corporate bonds of a
similar maturity for the business day
immediately prior to the date on which the
issue is sold.
SECTION 10. INFORMATION REPORTING
Section 54(l)(7) requires issuers of clean
renewable energy bonds to submit
reports similar to the reports required
under section 149(e) for tax-exempt State or local
bonds. To satisfy this requirement, an
issuer of clean renewable energy bonds must
submit for each issue, at the same time
and in the same manner as required under
section 149(e), Form 8038-G,
Information Return for Tax-Exempt Governmental
Obligations.
Issuers of clean renewable energy bonds should complete Part II of Form
8038-G by checking the box on Line 18
(Other), writing “clean renewable energy bonds”
in the space provided for the bond
description, and entering the amount of the bonds in
the Issue Price column. For purposes of
this Notice, an “issue” means one or more
bonds that are sold on the same day by the
same qualified issuer with respect to the
same qualified borrower.
SECTION 11. REMEDIAL ACTIONS
It is anticipated that the Temporary
Regulations will provide that, for purposes of
the requirement of section 54(d)(1)(B)
that at least 95 percent of the proceeds of an
issue be used for capital expenditures
incurred by a qualified borrower for a qualified
project, proceeds of an issue will not be
treated as used for a qualified project to the
extent that a qualified issuer or
qualified borrower takes a deliberate action that causes
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such proceeds not to be used for a
qualified project. For this purpose, the term
“deliberate action” will have the same
meaning as in § 1.141-2(d)(3) of the Income Tax
Regulations, except that “section 54” will
be substituted for “section 141” in § 1.141-
2(d)(3)(i). It is further anticipated that
the Temporary Regulations will provide that an
action that causes an issue to fail to
meet the requirements of section 54(d)(1)(B) is not
treated as a deliberate action if (1) the
issuer takes a remedial action described in the
Temporary Regulations and (2) certain
other requirements specified in the Temporary
Regulations are met. Finally, it is
anticipated that the Temporary Regulations will
contain a “redemption or defeasance”
remedial action and an “alternative use of
disposition proceeds” remedial action
similar but not identical to the remedial actions
contained in § 1.141-12(d) and §
1.141-12(e).
SECTION 12. ARBITRAGE REQUIREMENTS
Section 54(i) generally provides that a
bond shall not be treated as a clean
renewable energy bond unless, with respect
to the issue of which the bond is a part, the
qualified issuer satisfies the arbitrage
requirements of section 148 with respect to
proceeds of the issue. It is anticipated
that the Temporary Regulations will provide that,
for purposes of applying the arbitrage
requirements of section 148 to bonds issued
under section 54--
(1) If an issue meets the requirements of
section 54(h)(1) (including the
requirement that the issuer reasonably
expects, as of the issue date, that at least 95
percent of the net proceeds will be
expended within 5 years), then the proceeds of the
issue qualify for a temporary period of 5
years beginning on the date of issuance of the
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issue, and any unspent proceeds after the
end of such 5-year period are eligible for
yield reduction payments under the
principles of § 1.148-5(c);
(2) The credit allowed under section 54(a)
shall be disregarded for purposes of
computing the yield on the issue under §
1.148-4;
(3) Section 148(b)(3) (relating to
exception to the definition of “investment
property” for certain tax-exempt bonds)
shall not apply;
(4) The bonds shall not be treated as
private activity bonds for purposes of
section 148(f)(4)(A) (relating to rebate
exception for amounts in a bona fide debt service
fund);
(5) Section 148(f)(4)(C) (relating to
exception from rebate for certain proceeds to
be used to finance construction
expenditures) shall apply to the available construction
proceeds of an issue; and
(6) Section 148(f)(4)(D) (relating to
exception from rebate for certain small
issuers) shall not apply.
SECTION 13. DRAFTING INFORMATION
The principal authors of this Notice are
Timothy L. Jones and Aviva M. Roth of
the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Tax
Exempt & Government Entities). However,
other personnel from the IRS and the
Treasury Department participated in its
development.