According to www.energytaxincentives.org the following tax incentives are available for 2011.
· Residential insulation, windows, heating and cooling systems and water heaters
· New homes that use half the energy of a home building to model codes
· High-efficiency refrigerators, clothes washers and dishwashers
· New and retrofitted commercial buildings that use half the energy of a building built to model codes
· On-site renewable energy systems including ground-source heat pumps
· Fuel cells and microturbines
Click here for Federal Tax Incentives.
Click here for StateTax Incentives. If you are a business, non profit organization, religious institution, government entity, school, or industry looking for comericial progressive tax incentives you may want to consider North Carolina. North Carolina offers many tax incentives for both business and residential.
Check out this link for some renewable energy tax credits currently available. http://thrivenc.com/incentives/financial/tax-credits/renewable-energy-tax-credits some of which include:
- A maximum of $3,500 for non-business solar energy equipment for active space heating, combined active space and domestic water-heating systems, and passive space heating;
- A maximum of $1,400 for non-business solar water-heating systems, including solar pool-heating systems;
- A maximum of $10,500 for renewable-energy systems for non-business use;
- A maximum of $8,400 for geothermal equipment installation;
- A maximum of $2,500,000 for solar, wind, hydro, geothermal and biomass applications on commercial and industrial facilities, including photovoltaic (PV), daylighting, solar water-heating and space-heating technologies.