Energy Efficiency (EE) Financing Strategies and Considerations in Commercial Real Estate

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Energy Efficiency (EE) Financing Strategies and Considerations in Commercial Real Estate Ioannis Orfanos Director, Green Value Associates Head of ULI Greece & Cyprus Sustainability Council 25 OCTOBER 2018

Overview Understanding Energy Efficiency (EE) Finance Complexities and Barriers Financing Strategies and Commercial Aspects Underwriting and Strategies Buy-Fix-Sell: Green Alpha and Health&Wellbeing 1

Understanding Energy Efficiency (EE) Finance

The complexity of business case development A proper business case to: Focus on financial structuring, optimum financing solution Focus on internal rate of return and to a lesser extent to payback periods Highlight the additional corporate benefits (risks mitigation, compliance, CSR, investment) Gain senior-management buy in Hypothesis case Variables identification Retrofit measures Price Risk allocation Energy consumption Interviews Financial model Benefits Energy, Carbon Economic Financial Corporate CSR 3

The general market barriers to EE finance uptake Misaligned financial incentives Tenants vs landlords, >60% of business properties leased Maintenance vs procurement department Energy managers vs financial directors Business case development Procurement & contracting Measurement & verification No standardisation, benchmarking Access to corporate finance Complexity of financing Lack of necessary confidence to invest Available financing products do not reflect the EE fundamentals 4

Aggregation barriers in EE financing EE loans market Fragmentation & multiplicity No standardisation, benchmarking Small size (< 0.5m), varied terms Credit score, guarantees Aggregation barriers Disconnect Standardisation, measurement & verification Large scale, consistent terms Investment grade credit rating Securitisation requirements Loan Pool Secondary market finance for energy efficiency projects Private finance at scale 5

Financing Strategies and Commercial Aspects

Energy efficiency finance underwriting process UNDERWRITING PROCESS 7

Return on investment guarantee Financing based on energy efficiency strategy Energy Strategy Technical solutions Cash (balance sheet) Debt (extended balance sheet) 3 rd party (off balance sheet) Renewables CapEx budget Dedicated credit lines Renewable energy funds Generation Income Biomass CHP Solar (rooftops) Battery/Storage District heating Cash reserves Direct equity Vendor lease ( % PPA income) Project finance loan (based on PPA and equipment guarantees) Green bonds EPC ESCo finance Cleantech funds Risk sharing facilities M&E Equipment Working capital Dedicated credit lines ESA - ESCO finance BEMS CapEx budget Vendor lease (% savings) Energy efficiency funds Reduction Saving Boilers HVAC Transmission Lighting Cash reserves New equity Corporate loan Project finance Green bonds Risk sharing facilities On-bill financing Fabric Glass Insulation Shading CapEx budget (part of refurbishment) New equity Corporate loan (balance sheet guarantee) Govt subsidized instruments On-bill financing Cost of capital 0-20% ~ 3-8% ~ 6-8+% depending on WACC/ Alternatives credit rating on type of fund 8

Major investment strategies in non-domestic Real Estate Strategies Main financiers Type of Assets/Projects 1 Additional sources of finance Capital Expenditure (Own finance) Public sector Property investors Landlords / REICs Corporate owneroccupiers Government estates Public infrastructure Core commercial real estate (e.g. office, hotel, retail etc) Asset with long residual commercial life Equipment vendor leases Grants, subsidies, tax incentives Development banks (risk sharing facilities) Commercial banks (dedicated credit lines) Green bonds 3 rd party finance (ESA or EPC) ESCo financing Public funds (e.g. UK Salix) Energy efficiency funds Government estates Public infrastructure M.U.S.H. 2 Equipment vendor leases Grants, subsidies, tax incentives Development banks (risk sharing facilities) Utilities (on-bill financing) Corporate owned real estate Commercial banks (dedicated credit lines) Public Private Partnerships Green bonds Buy-Fix-Sell Added-value funds Opportunistic funds Distress funds Commercial real estate with owners in distress Semi-completed developments Aged commercial real estate Discounted acquisition price (indirect) Commercial banks (incl. acquisition credit) Green bonds Specialized mezzanine funds Notes: 1 It does not include stand alone off-site renewable energy projects 2 Municipalities, Universities, Schools and Hospitals 9

Facility owner energy cost A CapEx investment A typical business case 100% 30-40% Energy Savings Repayment of funds % Tier A: Debt Tier B: Invested capital 60-70% 60-70% 0 5-10 After Time (years) Other potential sources of income/savings Renewable energy generation (e.g. PPA wit grid) Benefiting from carbon rights or avoiding future liabilities from carbon taxation Project parameters Typical variables Comments Initial annual energy cost (IAEC) > 100 000 Requires considerable energy consumption Energy efficiency savings > 20% Ideally 30%+ CapEx investment 2 times IAEC Need of an efficient project scale Leverage ratio 70%, Depending on guarantees Loan duration 3-10 yrs Depending on liquidity priorities Interest rate charge X 500 bps Depending on risk profile, balance sheet Targeted payback period 2-5 yrs Less always better 10

Facility owner energy cost Aggregation barriers in EE financing 100% 5-15% 15-30% Immediate reduction to occupier energy costs Energy Savings Repayment of investment % Tier A: Debt (incl. any dedicated credit line) Tier B: 3 rd party investors based on ESA Tier C: ESCo through EPC 60-70% 60-70% 0 5-15 Time (years) After Fixed term contract Potential income from on site renewable generation Savings shared during the contract Total occupier benefit at the end of the contract Project parameters Typical assumptions Comments Initial annual energy cost (IAEC) > 500 000 Require significant energy bills Energy efficiency savings > 30% The more the better Project investment 1,5-2 times IAEC Need of a bankable project scale Energy performance contract term 5-15 yrs Depending on repayment terms and share savings agreement Expected IRR (3 rd party investor) 5% < X < 15% Depending on risk profile, guarantees and cost of capital % of savings for 3 rd party repayment ~ 50-90% After any loan principal and interest repayment 11

Total Occupancy Costs Aggregation barriers in EE financing Ordinary Building Sustainable Building Operating occupancy expenses Other Facility management Maintenance Cost Energy Cost Other (tax, insurance) Facility management (cleaning, catering, security) Maintenance Cost Energy Cost Savings Potential higher rental rates / Operating expense saving to tenant Higher productivity, retention for tenants Better image Reduced tenant churn Rent Rent Value 12

(Buy-)Fix-Sell: Value add strategy

Investment opportunity Increasing regulation, changing tenant demand and shortage of suitable stock has created an opportunity to generate attractive risk adjusted returns through a resilient value add strategy 1 Increasing 2 Significant regulation driving tenants to consider the energy efficiency of their occupational estate tenant and investor demand EU Energy Efficiency (EED) and Energy Performance in Buildings (EPBD) Directives KENAK - Greek Regulation for the Energy Efficiency of Buildings The Paris Global Climate Agreement (2015) Occupiers are increasingly demanding more resilient, efficient and healthy buildings Demonstrably resilient properties are being sought by major investors Occupier focussed strategy provides value generation opportunities 3 Limited supply of energy efficient buildings Deep pool of non compliant assets that need repositioning Viable opportunities to fully reposition existing buildings Resilient assets are attracting occupiers and higher values 14

Investment strategy: Buy, Fix, Sell The Real Estate Investors target assets that offer value-add upside potential through sustainability led active asset management STOCK SELECTION VALUE CREATION EXIT STRATEGY Invest in knowledge driven economically vibrant cities Acquire EPC ratings G/F/E, improve to C/B/A Locations that benefit from access to robust infrastructure Target well located mainly office assets with value-add upside potential Core locations, core cities Seeking Ticket size 10-50m Active asset management: Lease vacant space Rent reviews and lease re-gears Asset repositioning JVs with Green Developers or Occupiers Generate Green Alpha additional asset value through improved energy efficiency Focused on creating future proofed office assets increasing attractiveness to occupiers and investors Emphasis on the risk of asset obsolescence / downside risk protection Emphasis on the energy efficiency benefits during asset marketing Robust institutional appetite for de-risked assets expected to drive improved returns 15

Investment strategy: Energy efficiency Energy efficiency initiatives are integrated into value-add asset management to generate attractive risk adjusted returns for investors Energy Efficiency (40%*) Fabric (50%*) Renewables (10%*) Heating, cooling and controls Lighting systems and controls All building Metering (AMR) and data logging Thermal heat loss insulation Windows and glazing External shading Flat roof insulation Solar thermal Solar PV Biomass boilers Geothermal * Anticipated % contribution to Energy/Cost Savings leading to the delivery of Green Alpha 16

Investment strategy: Green Alpha methodology Proving the Value Add 1 Input Data Background to the property and its local market Capex in energy efficiency measures Calculation of energy savings and paybacks Benchmarking sustainability KPIs over hold period Investment performance analysis, in terms of total return, against comparable transactions IPD benchmarking 2 DCF model Statistical analysis of 10-20 years of historic movements in yield and rental growth Application of probability distribution curves onto forecasts over hold period Controlling for inflation by use of real rental growth figures, rather than nominal Isolation of outperformance over and above the market that indicate externalities attribution 3 Green Alpha Total Return Attribution NPV of energy savings and apportionment to total return Isolation of outperformance from Monte Carlo analysis External valuation opinion regarding additional externalities notably letting risk & enhanced yield Source: Green Value Associates 17

Investment strategy: Health & Wellbeing in Buildings The trends all point in a single direction Wellness is the next trillion dollar industry McKinsey & Co First tenant, then office indoor design The importance of the physical office space Business tenant operating costs and productivity Employees spend 90% of their time indoors. Tenants value therefore indoor air quality, temperature comfort and physical lighting to improve their staff physical health and thus perceived productivity. The physical office influence the health of occupiers and can be measured or evaluated 90% of employees admitted that their attitude to work is adversely affected by the quality of their workplace Staff accounts for 90% of operating costs, doubling the health level of an office can double productivity Source: International WELL Building Institute Source: US Center for Disease Control & Protection Source: World GBC Health& Wellbeing & Productivity in Office Report 2014 18

Investment strategy: Health & Wellbeing in Buildings Focus on the elements that can be certified 19

Investment strategy: Health & Wellbeing in Buildings Measured and evaluated outcomes ADDITIONAL COSTS OUTCOMES FOR TENANT INVESTMENT BENEFITS Design: 0%, human-focused design does not cost more Additional construction or retrofit: 0% - 5% as long as the principles are established from the start Materials: c.10% increase. Less toxic materials are more expensive at present The corporate office health & wellbeing environment can have a direct impact on occupants productivity. The outcome for the corporate tenant can be measured or evaluated in the following ways: o o o o o Absenteeism/Presenteeism Staff turnover and retention Medical complaints and related insurance costs Physical complaints Task efficiency and revenue Leasing: Reduced vacancy, potential higher rental values Turnover: Reduced, higher retention of blue chip tenants Marketability: Faster and easier lease up or sell Transactability: More attractive asset proposition for institutional buyers Value: Green alpha yields 20

Contact details 21

Disclaimer This presentation document is prepared only for the purposes of the Sustainable Energy Investment Forum 25/10 roundtable discussion in Athens. It contains data and views on financing energy efficiency in commercial real estate. It should not be construed as advice and no action should be taken based upon any information contained in this document. You should seek independent professional advice from a person or a firm who is licensed and/or knowledgeable in the applicable area before acting upon any information contained in this document. No other party is entitled to gain access to or rely on this document for any other purpose than the one described above and thus we accept no liability to any other party who gains access to this document. You should not disclose or refer to this document in any prospectus or other document without my prior written consent. 22

Thank You Strategies and Considerations in Commercial Real Estate Ioannis Orfanos Director, Green Value Associates Head of ULI Greece & Cyprus Sustainability Council 25 OCTOBER 2018