Healthcare organizations may be missing opportunities to align tax planning with business strategy.
Growth and evolution are at the heart of healthcare and life sciences companies. That’s why many organizations in these industries are also pursuing alternative energy sources as part of their overall business goals or net-zero strategy. But as these organizations grow and change, their approach to tax planning often does not, which could lead to missed opportunities. From life sciences organizations considering real estate options that prioritize renewables to healthcare systems pursuing battery storage and beyond — the investments that your company is making in clean energy infrastructure could be eligible for credits and incentives to help offset the cost of these projects.
Monetization Opportunities
While traditional tax equity investing will still be preferable for some organizations, the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA) offers two new options for credit monetization: Direct payments and transferability provisions.
IRA implications for developing and investing in energy transition opportunities
Before the IRA was enacted, healthcare and life sciences organizations had to enter into structured investment vehicles with project developers to have the ability to monetize energy credits. This provided developers with an influx of cash, while investors received allocations of credits and other tax benefits. The process was adopted by many organizations but created a significant and expensive administrative burden that tied parties together for several years.
Production & Investment Tax Credits
The IRA created new credits and incentives and restructured previously available credits to enhance the benefits they provide. As a result, both production tax credits (PTCs) and investment tax credits (ITCs) were restored to full rates and extended for certain projects.
What’s an energy community?
Energy communities are three types of geographies defined by the IRS that face challenges in reducing or ceasing fossil fuels. These include brownfields, coal communities and metropolitan or non-metropolitan statistical areas where, “0.17 percent or greater direct employment or 25 percent or greater local tax revenues related to the extraction, processing, transport, or storage of coal, oil, or natural gas and has an unemployment rate at or above the national average unemployment rate for the previous year.”
How a solar project benefits from the IRA
A healthcare system is creating infrastructure and building a solar farm to power some of its facilities. This solar project has $5 million of costs eligible for the ITC and meets prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements. The organization is eligible for direct pay.
The ITC is for 30% of eligible project costs, or approximately $1.5 million, which will be returned to the healthcare system.
The organization has also asked its developers to source and use domestic materials for the project and the healthcare system plans to put its solar farm at the site of a former brownfield, which qualifies as an energy community.* Potential benefit bonus credits that can be stacked with the ITC include 10% for using domestic content and another 10% for locating the project in an energy community.
In total, the healthcare system can claim a 50% ITC for a total of $2.5 million, which will return half of the total project cost back to the organization.
Clean Energy Production Credits
New technology-neutral credits are available for qualified zero-emission facilities that either generate or store clean electricity and begin construction after December 31, 2024. The credits are available for 10 years and carry opportunities to stack on bonuses.
While research and development (R&D) and research and experimentation (R&E) credits are not new, organizations should continually review their eligibility for these credits and determine how credits may impact their overall business strategies and planning.
R&D Credits
Any organization working to develop a new or improved product, process or software platform might be eligible for federal and state R&D tax credits equaling up to 25% of qualified spend. A variety of activities in healthcare and life sciences meet the criteria.
R&E Capitalization
The 2022 changes to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) modified Internal Revenue Code Section 174 rules for expenditures related to R&E. The new rules require taxpayers to capitalize and amortize specific R&E expenditures over a period of five years for domestic research and 15 years for foreign research. The rules apply for 2022 taxes.
Healthcare and life sciences organizations have ample opportunities to benefit from new tax reform: don’t leave cash on the table.
The IRA represents the most significant recent opportunity for healthcare and life sciences organizations to update their tax structuring, credits and incentives — but they should also make sure not to overlook R&D and R&E credits. While the industry is, by nature, continually involved in research and development and experimentation, it’s easy to forget that investments in new, alternative sources of energy or storage for energy may also qualify for tax credits. Organizations seeking opportunities to lower their carbon footprint or mitigate risk to their power systems and operations may benefit from the new provisions in the IRA.