Climate Tech Executive Director Ashley Lowe and grant administrator Ryan updated the council on a proposed citywide energy modernization and utility-savings program covering HVAC upgrades, LED lighting, building automation, solar at four facilities and EV chargers.
Lowe said the preliminary program cost is about $11,000,000; after an anticipated 40% combined federal rebate the net investment to the city would be roughly $7.5 million, and the project’s lifetime savings were estimated at about $17.5 million. The proposal calls for a turnkey design-build approach and staff indicated several sites and five HVAC modernizations as initial targets.
Ryan described federal incentive deadlines under the Inflation Reduction Act and said meeting the 5% safe-harbor (showing 5% of the project under construction or committed by July 4, 2026) is important to qualify for multi-year implementation windows; if the safe-harbor is missed, systems must be fully operational by the end of 2027 to qualify for incentives. “If you meet that window, you have four years to implement the project,” he said.
Council members asked about funding risk if grants or rebates do not materialize; Climate Tech said historically projects have received funds after systems come online and emphasized the need to finalize a scope and funding plan. The consultants asked whether the council wanted a return engagement with a final scope and funding plan in time to meet grant registration deadlines; staff indicated potential action could return as early as June 17 to meet the July safe-harbor.