NEW INCENTIVE
FOR BUSINESS OWNERS AND LANDLORDS
Energy-Efficient
Commercial Buildings Deduction
he Energy
Policy Tax Act of 2005 included incentives for
taxpayers that make new or existing commercial
property more energy efficient. Under new IRC
section 179D, taxpayers that own or lease
commercial buildings and install certain
energy-efficient improvements therein after 2005
and before 2008 are eligible for an immediate
deduction for the cost of those improvements.
Notice 2006-52 set forth the process taxpayers
must follow to claim this deduction.
ENERGY-EFFICIENT PROPERTY
To be
eligible for the deduction, the commercial
property must be:
Installed
on or in any building located in the
United States.
Installed
as part of the:
Interior lighting systems.
Heating, cooling, ventilation
or hot water systems.
Building envelope (i.e., wall
and roof assemblies, insulation,
air/vapor retarders, windows,
weather-stripping and caulking).
Certified
as having reduced total annual energy and
power costs by at least 50%.
DEDUCTION
LIMITS
The maximum
deduction cannot exceed $1.80 multiplied by the
buildings square footage, less the total of
any prior-years energy deductions already
taken for the building. Square footage is
measured from the exterior faces of exterior
walls or from the centerline of walls separating
buildings.
Partial
deduction. Subject to certification (discussed
below), a partial deduction may be available if
one of the systems involved (i.e., interior
lighting, heating, cooling, ventilation, hot
water) reduces total annual energy and power
costs by 162/3%; the maximum partial deduction
available is 60 cents per square foot.
DETERMINING
THE ENERGY REDUCTION
To compute
the percentage reduction in total annual energy
and power costs, a performance rating method is
used. The reduction in costs attributable to
interior lighting, heating, cooling, ventilation
and hot water must be 50% below those of a
comparable building (in the same climate zone)
that meets certain minimum standards.
CERTIFICATION
A taxpayer
that wishes to claim the deduction must receive
certification from a qualified
individual. This is someone (not related to
the taxpayer) who is a properly licensed engineer
or contractor who provides, in writing, that he
or she has the requisite qualifications to
provide the required certification or to perform
the needed inspection and testing.
Taxpayers
are not required to attach the certification to
their returns. However, they must maintain
sufficient books and records to establish the
qualification and amount of the deduction
claimed, including the certifiers name,
address and phone number; the buildings
address; a statement that the installed
components meet the required reduction in energy
costs; and the qualified computer software used
to make the calculations.
For further
discussion, see Tax Clinic,
Energy-Efficient Commercial Buildings
Deduction Revisited, by Michelle Schuerman,
CPA, in the April 2007 issue of The Tax
Adviser. 
Lesli
S. Laffie, editor
The Tax Adviser
Notice
to Readers:
Members
of the AICPA tax section may subscribe to
The Tax Adviser at a reduced
price. Contact Judy Smith at 202-434-9270
for a subscription to the magazine or to
become a member of the tax section. |
|