New GoldRush – Hawaii will pay individual renewable power producers! Go Solar and save!

Hawaii property owners who install solar power panels on their rooftops will get paid for their excess homegrown electricity under a ruling this week by state regulators.

The decision allows both homeowners and businesses to sell power to the electric utility and get paid nearly as much per kilowatt hour as residents pay to use retail energy.

Those who sign up for the program will get paid 21.8 cents per kilowatt hour of solar power fed into the electric grid, according to the ruling by the Hawaii Public Utilities Commission on Wednesday. That compares with an average of 25.3 cents per kilowatt hour paid last month by Oahu customers of Hawaiian Electric Co.

“This is an option for people who generate more energy than they use,” said Scott Seu, vice president for energy resources at Hawaiian Electric, which serves most of the state’s power needs along with its subsidiaries, Maui Electric Co. and Hawaii Electric Light Co. “It’s for anybody who has a fair amount of open space that’s not being used.”

Hawaii, the nation’s most fossil-fuel dependent state, is one of the first regions in the country to institute this policy, known as a feed-in tariff. It guarantees renewable energy producers a fixed price for their power for 20 years.

It’s part of the state’s goal of getting 70 percent of its power from clean sources by 2030 – 40 percent from renewables and 30 percent from efficiency improvements.

“You’re going to see a lot more renewable energy projects happen a lot quicker,” said Darren Kimura, chief executive for Sopogy, a Honolulu-based concentrated solar power company.

The ruling sets rates for small and midsized renewable energy producers to sell solar, wind and hydropower. Sign-up for the program starts Oct. 27 on Oahu, and Nov. 24 on the Big Island and Maui.

It allows for electric grids on Oahu, Maui and the Big Island to add up to 5 percent to their current power output – an additional 60 megawatts on Oahu and 10 megawatts on each of the other two islands. The decision doesn’t cover Kauai, whose grid is run by Kauai Island Utility Cooperative.

Currently, electric customers statewide may reduce their power bill by providing energy to the grid. But they aren’t paid for producing more energy than they use.

Hawaii may see its solar energy production triple from its current level of about 27 megawatts statewide, said Hawaii Energy Administrator Ted Peck.

“It’s a gold rush,” Peck said. “The intent is to add new systems and new renewables.”

The decision caps project size limits at 5 megawatts for the island of Oahu and 2.72 megawatts for Maui and the Big Island.

Similar feed-in tariff systems have been created in other parts of the country, including Vermont, Oregon, parts of Wisconsin and Gainesville, Fla.

Maui News, Haleakala Solar

*?www.hawaiicleanenergyinitiative.org

* Public Utilities Commission, Docket 2008-0273: http://dms.puc.hawaii.gov/dms

Hawaii has high rate of foreclosures

A national company that tracks foreclosures reports Hawaii had one of the highest foreclosure rates in the third quarter.

There were 1,617 foreclosure filings in Hawaii last month, a 67 percent increase from September 2009, according to the Irvine, Calif.-based real estate research firm RealtyTrac. Hawaii’s all-time high of 1,629 filings was recorded in August.

In September, Hawaii’s rate amounted to one foreclosure filing for every 317 households.

Nationally, the rate of foreclosures last month was one filing per 371 households, almost unchanged from the same month last year.

Maui County had the highest foreclosure rate in Hawaii in September with one filing per 191 households based on a total of 374 filings. Kihei had most of those with 123, followed by Lahaina with 71.

The Big Island was next at one filing per 194 households based on a total of 411, followed by Kauai with one per every 246 households based on a total of 121. Oahu had 738 filings, but that worked out to the state’s lowest rate at one per every 457 households.

Pagoda Hotel sold to developer for 15 Million

HTH Corp. has announced the sale of the Pagoda Hotel and Floating Restaurant in Honolulu.

According to a company news release, the 46-year-old, 359-room property was sold to developer Peter Savio, who has hired Pagoda Management Services LLC. to manage the property.

Savio said in the news release that he’s excited about the future of the hotel and the restaurant. He said the hotel is looking forward to continue hosting the thousands of Neighbor Islanders who call the Pagoda home when on Oahu.

Terms of the sale weren’t disclosed. HTH had listed the property for $15 million.

Maui News

Reverse mortgages can be good source of money for elderly homeowners

All of us who own stocks or stock funds are moaning and groaning about the 3-year-old bear market. But there’s another group of sufferers: fixed-income investors, many of them elderly.

True, falling interest rates did push bond prices up last year. But many investors who owned bonds that matured or were called early saw their incomes plummet after they reinvested.

Today, you’re lucky to make 2 or 3 percent on bank savings. If you’re replacing a 10-year Treasury bond that just matured, your yield is dropping from 6.3 percent to 3.7 percent.

Is there a way a senior can make up the income gap?

One alternative: a reverse mortgage, a way to pull money out of your home without saddling yourself with monthly payments, as you would with a home equity loan.

While reverse mortgages are not suitable for everyone, low interest rates and rising home prices make them particularly attractive right now for those who can stomach the high up-front fees and compounding interest charges.

A 75-year-old who owns a $150,000 home could get a reverse-mortgage loan for nearly $98,000 today, compared to $84,000 when rates were 1 percentage point higher a year ago, for example.

Like an ordinary mortgage, a reverse mortgage is a loan. Instead of requiring monthly payments, the loan, plus interest, is repaid when the owner chooses – or when the property is sold during the owner’s lifetime or after his or her death.

Since there are no payments, you don’t need a job or other income to qualify for a reverse mortgage. An applicant must use the property as a primary residence and must be at least 62 years old, though older homeowners can get larger loans.

If the home is sold after you die, your heirs will receive any money that’s left once the debt, including interest, is paid. (Contrary to popular belief, the lender does not get the home.) If your heirs prefer, they can pay off the loan rather than sell the property.

Homeowners can take their loans as a lump sum, a fixed monthly income or a line of credit they can draw against whenever they wish. There is no income tax, since the money is a loan rather than income.

The longer you have the loan, the more interest you would owe. But federal regulations limit the total amount owed to the value of the property. If the property value falls or if the homeowner lives to be very old, interest charges or money received on the monthly payment plan can exceed the property’s value.

That, of course, is a risk that worries lenders. To reduce this prospect, they limit the initial loan amount, considering factors such as interest rates and the homeowner’s life expectancy. (If you have a previous loan on the property, a portion of the reverse mortgage must be used to pay that off.)

Hence, the older you are, the more money you can get. A 62-year-old with a $150,000 home might get $83,000, while an 85-year-old could get $113,000.

In the same way, lower interest rates allow homeowners to lock in much larger loan amounts than they can get when rates are high. Once this loan amount is set, it is permanent, even if interest rates rise later. So it might pay to lock in now, while rates are low.

The interest charges applied to the loan float, changing either once a month or once a year. Typically, they are based on the rate paid by one-year Treasury notes, plus a “margin” of 1.5 percent or 2.1 percent, depending on whether the borrower chooses the monthly or annual adjustment. Currently, the combined rate on monthly adjustments, chosen by most borrowers, is 2.8 percent.

Although the homeowner doesn’t make payments on the loan, low interest rates mean interest charges don’t build up as much, so there’s more money left for the homeowner or heirs after the loan is paid off.

Maui News ; Khon2

Conde Naste Names Maui 2010 Top Tourist Destination

  

Maui named tourists’ top stop — again

Island finishes first 16 times out of 20

Thank you to the Maui News for the following article:  
October 14, 2010 – By HARRY EAGAR Staff Writer
As usual, Maui was named Best Island in the World by the readers of Conde Nast Traveler magazine.

And as sometimes happens, but not always, its score was the best of any tourist destination, island or not: 90.7.

Occasionally, the Maldives outscores Maui, but not in 2010. Maldives scored 86.4, good for third behind Kauai (88.8) among all islands.

Lanai scored 80.8, sixth among Best Pacific Islands.

Maui has finished first 16 times out of 20 in the magazine’s Readers’ Choice Awards for Best Island in the World and has never finished lower than first among Pacific islands in the 20 years the readers have ranked islands. (The awards are in their 23rd year.)

“After a successful summer season, this is simply more wonderful news for Maui,” said Terryl Vencl, executive director of the Maui Visitors Bureau. “We are blessed with stunning natural beauty, world-class service, top-notch activities, excellent restaurants and myriad accommodation options.”

Mayor Charmaine Tavares said: “Our cherished host culture and the gracious aloha of our residents continue to make such awards possible.”

Besides Maui, Kauai and Lanai, the Big Island (83.5) and Oahu (83.3) finished in the Pacific top 10.

Other well-regarded islands were Bermuda (83.7), Kiawah, S.C., (83.0), and Mykonos and the Cyclades (78.0).

“Best City” category winners all scored well under Maui’s total: Sydney (86.1), San Francisco (84.3), Florence (84.6), Bangkok (82.9), Capetown (83.7) and Vancouver (82.4).

Maui hotels also swept the “Top Hawaii Resorts” list.

The Four Seasons at Wailea was first, and Hotel Hana-Maui and Honua Spa was second.

Four Seasons Hualalai was third, followed by Four Seasons Resort Lanai at Manele Bay; and Four Seasons Resort Lanai, The Lodge at Koele.

Maui properties ranked in the Top 20 were Fairmont Kea Lani, ninth; the Grand Wailea, 11th; Ritz-Carlton, Kapalua, 15th; and Hyatt Regency Maui Resort & Spa and Westin Maui Resort & Spa, tied for 20th along with Kauai Marriott and Beach Club.

More than 25,000 readers participated this year, and complete results will be published in the November 2010 issue, which arrives on newsstands later this month.

* Harry Eagar can be reached at heagar@mauinews.com