By Timothy Gardner and Nichola Groom
- Sunnova no longer using Project Hestia loan guarantee
- Sunnova has $371 mln in bonds outstanding backed by cancelled guarantee, source says
- DOE Loan Programs Office faces uncertain future amid budget cuts
WASHINGTON, May 28 (Reuters) – President Donald Trump’s administration has canceled a partial loan guarantee of $2.92 billion that had been awarded to residential solar panel installer Sunnova Energy (NOVA.N), opens new tab, the company said on Wednesday.
A source familiar with the matter said the Department of Energy had “de-obligated” the loan guarantee, meaning the federal government is not responsible for the financing. Bloomberg News first reported the move.
Sunnova, which is restructuring its debt and has warned that it may not be able to continue as a going concern, said in a regulatory filing in March that it did not intend to use the DOE facility, known as Project Hestia, for the foreseeable future.
In April 2023, former President Joe Biden’s administration announced the partial loan guarantee of up to $3 billion to back financing for about 100,000 rooftop solar installations, primarily for lower-income homeowners. At the time, the Energy Department billed the facility as the largest ever U.S. government commitment to solar power.
But residential solar has struggled since then as higher interest rates have pushed up financing costs.
Sunnova, one of the biggest U.S. residential solar companies, has sold $371 million in bonds that are backed by the Project Hestia loan guarantee, according to a source, but those notes are not included in the debt that the company is seeking to restructure.
The program became less attractive to Sunnova because the company could market cheaper, leased systems to homeowners using tax credits created by former President Joe Biden’s 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, a company source said. The credit for loans, which was Project Hestia’s focus, is less lucrative.