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| Mike Murphy
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After murking around the muck, mostly in a quandary, a few of us have come to the conclusion that the tax credits provided for in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) are very confusing.
Unless you are promoting geothermal or other renewable energy products, as is contractor Alan Givens (“Contractor Rep Meets with President,”
The NEWS, May 11, 2009, page 1), you may be having a hard time finding tidy little system matches for your customers. The geothermal tax credits are even larger and longer-lasting than the $1,500 offered for traditional HVAC systems during 2009 and 2010, and they easily meet the Consortium for Energy Efficiency (CEE) requirements of 16 SEER and 13 EER.
However, geo installations, though a niche that is growing tremendously fast, have something in common with the other high-efficiency systems that qualify for the ARRA tax credit program — there are not that many of them being sold to consumers; ergo, the objective of the tax credits programs may not be completely realized.
One would think that the government’s objective is to incent owners to purchase equipment that will help reduce energy consumption in the country, and make our world a bit greener. Sounds cool, so why shouldn’t it be working?
A tip of the hat to Paul Wadsworth of P.K. Wadsworth-fame — a friendly Cleveland-area contractor who is renowned for his attention to detail and fondness for Bob Evans restaurants. Wadsworth noted that many of the matches available (28,005) to meet the tax credit requirements are for blower coils with ECM motors or other relatively expensive condenser/evaporator combinations. More about that later.
A representative from the Air-Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigerating Institute (AHRI) put it a different way; that the new program incents people to buy a Cadillac when a Chevy Cavalier would do the job. Several HVACR associations are now lobbying on Capitol Hill quite vigorously for a change to the ARRA tax credits before they have run their two-year course.
CHECKING THE NUMBERS
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A bit more digging uncovered an interesting factoid: Active system matches on the AHRI online directory total more than 355,000 possible indoor/outdoor system matches. 28,005 systems that meet the tax credit 16 SEER/13 EER requirements may sound like a lot of options, but that is only about 8 percent of the total. History tells us that the majority of consumer purchases of residential HVAC split systems always hover somewhere near the baseline efficiency.
Since Jan. 23, 2006, that has been 13 SEER. Two and half years later, more than 90 percent of everything sold today is still 13 SEER, which happens to be a very good energy-efficiency solution for a huge number of customers in the United States.
Hearkening back to the automobile analogy, more people can afford to own Chevy Cavaliers than Cadillacs, and by the way, the Cavalier gets pretty good gas mileage.