Solar & Battery Regulation & Incentive Programs
In July 2010 Missouri enacted the Property Assessed Clean Energy Act, which led to the creation of the statewide Missouri Clean Energy District (MCED) in January 2011.
Membership
Any county, city, or incorporated town or village in Missouri may join MCED at no membership cost, allowing residents to benefit from PACE financing without requiring the local government to take on additional work load, budget impact, or liability. The Board provides the necessary administrative functions so that communities have access to funding while avoiding the burden of running another new program. A unique feature among PACE program providers nationally, MCED members have the PACE program design, administration, marketing, and financing administration provided at no cost.
MCED has engaged municipal counsel to produce specimen ordinances for the use—at no cost—of cities, towns, and counties wishing to join as a member of MCED. Current members include the following communities and counties: Belton, Branson, Cassville, Charlack, Cole County, Cooper County, Doniphan, Ferguson, Galena, Gentry County, Hartville, Hazelwood, Hollister, Independence, Jefferson City, Jackson County, Kansas City, Kirksville, Lamar, Mercer County, Mississippi County, Nixa, North Kansas City, O’Fallon, Olivette, Otterville, Ozark, Ozark County, Peculiar, Pilot Grove, Reeds Spring Sullivan County, Taney County, Town And Country, Warrensburg, West Plains.
Administration
The MCED operates as a political subdivision, with District Board members elected by member municipalities annually. To ensure local representation, each member municipality of the District designates an advisory board member. The Missouri Clean Energy Funding, LLC was selected as Missouri’s first PACE administrator.
Eligible Projects and Terms
Applications for qualifying commercial, industrial, agricultural, multi-family, not-for-profit, and public facility properties will be accepted for energy efficiency and renewable energy projects proposing any acquisition, installation, or modification on public or private property designed to reduce the energy consumption of the property. Nearly any project which can show an energy saving with a reasonable payback qualifies.
MCED PACE financing is currently suspended for residential projects.
Property owners repay PACE financing over a period up to 20 years through additional payments on their property tax bills.