

Going Green to Save Some Green
Lenders Push Mortgages
With Discounts and Credits
For Energy-Efficient Upgrades
By SARA SCHAEFER MUÑOZ
September 12, 2007
Environmentally conscious
homeowners can trick out their homes with a bevy of "green" products,
including carpets, windows -- even dog beds. Now, they
can pay for those homes with green mortgages.
Lenders
are the latest group to jump on the environmental-marketing
bandwagon by pitching mortgage products that offer
homebuyers bigger loans or discounts if they are making
energy-efficient improvements -- or if their new home
meets certain efficiency standards. Last month, Citigroup
Inc.'s mortgage division launched a program that offers
$1,000 off closing costs with its energy-efficient
mortgage through the end of the year. Also last month,
Bank of America Corp. launched an Energy Credit mortgage,
which offers a $1,000 credit toward closing fees for
mortgages on new homes that meet efficiency requirements
set by the government's Energy Star program. J.P. Morgan
Chase & Co.'s mortgage division recently began
offering Expanded Energy Conservation Mortgages in
some markets that give borrowers more credit, as well
as $500 off closing costs, if they find a builder who
will use a specific type of spray-foam insulation.
Smaller lenders, too, are promoting energy-efficient
mortgages. Indigo Financial Group, based in Lansing,
Mich., started selling such mortgages in Michigan,
Indiana, Illinois and Florida in 2005, and this year
expanded its services into Kentucky and Missouri.
While
energy-efficient mortgages have been available from
many lenders for some time, they are receiving renewed
attention. They allow borrowers to qualify for bigger
loans because lenders permit the estimated savings
on utility bills to be added to the borrower's qualifying
income. For example, energy-efficient improvements
could save a homeowner $50 a month. The $600 extra
a year could allow a person to borrow about $10,000
more on a 30-year mortgage, depending on the interest
rate, says Mark Wolfe, executive director of the Energy
Programs Consortium, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit
that helps coordinate state and federal energy policy.
The
new products and incentives are aimed at a market worried
about increasingly high energy prices. And amid the
turmoil in subprime lending, analysts say, energy-efficient
mortgages can be a more secure way to qualify marginal
borrowers, since these homeowners are saving money
on utility bills.
The energy-efficient
products are structured like traditional adjustable
or fixed-rate mortgages, yet they incorporate the cost
of energy-efficient improvements, such as insulation,
windows and cooling systems, into a mortgage so customers
can pay these costs over the life of the loan. When
customers wish to a buy a home, they have an energy
audit done by a certified third party, which evaluates
the home and creates a list of energy-efficient improvements
that can save the homeowner money on utility bills.
The lender -- which will identify a certified auditor
-- puts the money needed for the improvements in an
escrow account and the improvements are made after
the home is purchased.
The
products are also available for new construction. Homes
that are already energy-efficient can be audited and
the amount that is predicted to be saved on utility
bills is counted as extra income for the home buyer.
When
Gavin and Danielle Craig were looking for their first
home in Lansing, Mich., last year, they found a house
that dated to 1923 in a nice area. But they quickly
realized it would need a lot of improvements, including
a new furnace and better insulation. They got a $98,000
energy-efficient mortgage from Indigo, which included
$12,000 to make the home more energy efficient.
"We liked the house but wouldn't have been able
to afford to fix it up," Ms. Craig says. She says
the cost of improvements adds an extra $100 to their
monthly mortgage costs, but they save an estimated
$2,000 a year on energy bills.
Even though they can
save homeowners some money, the mortgages typically
haven't generated much interest for several reasons.
In the housing frenzy of recent years, the products
were rarely marketed, and many consumers didn't know
they were available. Meanwhile, an inspection of the
home can add several days and extra layers of paperwork
to the process. Also, some lenders say that the monthly
savings weren't enough to get buyers interested, which
is why some banks have been adding incentives such
as the $1,000 in closing-cost savings.
Environmental advocates say coaxing people
to make changes to their homes that trim energy consumption
is important. The residential sector accounts for about
20% of the nation's greenhouse-gas emissions, according
to government figures.
States are also subsidizing loans
for energy-efficient improvements. Pennsylvania last
year started a program that offers low-interest, unsecured
financing for energy-related home improvements such
as windows, doors, insulation and air-conditioning
systems that meet certain criteria. Kansas started
a similar program last year. New York state started
a loan program several years ago that allows families
to qualify for reduced interest-rate loans for up to
$20,000. The New York State Energy Research and Development
Authority says participation has grown by about 20%
this year, and is working on a state-subsidized mortgage
pilot program that will be launched as early as next
year, says Paul Tonko, the authority's president.
Mark Bartowski, a retired
firefighter in Syracuse, N.Y., recently qualified for
the New York state loan program. He used the money
to help fund the cost of new insulation, and more efficient
windows and back door. He says the low interest rate
he received through the program saved him about $50
a month, or more than $4,000. He also said he has saved
about $20 a month so far on cooling bills.
"I wish I had come across it sooner," he
says. "I could have been saving money years ago."
Such products also offer an incentive for builders
to build "green," or Energy Star certified
homes, if they know there are mortgage products that
encourage people to buy them. Some banks also offer
similar loans to builders.
Developer Roy Pachecano,
the owner of Portico Residential LLC, says such products
can help buyers afford his projects, which are speculative
homes with energy-efficient materials and retro-fitted
historic properties. When dealing with prospective
buyers, he makes them aware of the energy-efficient
mortgages that are offered.
"As a builder, I need everything that I can find
to promote my product, to make it stand out from your
average McMansion," he says.
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