SF4142

Minnesota Climate Innovation Financing Authority additional financing mechanisms to support activities provision
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)

Related bill: HF4059

AI Generated Summary

Purpose

  • This bill aims to create and empower a Minnesota Climate Innovation Financing Authority (referred to as “the authority”) to provide and coordinate financing for climate-related projects. It seeks to reduce the upfront and total costs of projects, ensure those financed projects cut greenhouse gas emissions, and leverage private investment alongside public funding.

Main powers and activities of the authority

  • The authority can hire staff, sue and be sued, and manage its own property.
  • It may enter into agreements with Tribal governments, federal/state agencies, counties, local governments, utilities, and private entities.
  • It can borrow money, issue notes or other financing instruments, insure or guarantee loan payments, and accept gifts or grants.
  • It may contract with legal and financial professionals to support its activities.
  • It can promote research and development, conduct market analyses to find underserved markets, and analyze financing needs for emission-reduction projects.

Core duties and objectives

  • Act as a financial resource to lower the upfront and total costs of qualifying projects.
  • Ensure financed projects reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Offer financing terms that fit the needs of qualifying projects.
  • Prioritize using its funds to attract private investment (high private-to-public funding ratios).
  • Coordinate with federal, state, and local programs to maximize effectiveness.
  • Stimulate project activity in underserved communities by partnering with departments, contractors, and community groups, and by developing targeted marketing.
  • Develop eligibility standards, fees for services, and risk management policies.
  • Establish consumer protection standards to ensure responsible and transparent use of funds.
  • Develop methods to measure the impact of the authority’s work, especially on low-income communities and emission reductions.
  • Hire leadership and staff from or aligned with the communities served.
  • Seek and apply for Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund grants under federal law, and, until the authority is established, accept related funding through existing federal mechanisms (e.g., IRA funding).
  • Coordinate with the U.S. Department of Energy’s programs to maximize benefits for Minnesotans.

Transitional provisions and collaboration with federal programs

  • Until the Climate Innovation Finance Authority is established, the Minnesota Commissioner may apply for and receive funding on the authority’s behalf and coordinate with the U.S. DOE Loan Programs Office to maximize IRA-related benefits.
  • The bill requires contracts with third-party administrators to include covenants and warranties that they are acting as agents of the authority.

Financing mechanisms and investment strategies

  • The authority may use credit enhancement tools to reduce risk (e.g., loan loss reserves, loan guarantees).
  • It may coinvest in projects, providing senior or subordinated debt, equity, or other financing to attract additional private investment.
  • It may aggregate small, dispersed projects to diversify risk or enable securitization or similar resale of the authority’s interest.
  • Up to 25% of funds may be spent for startup purposes before a formal strategic plan is adopted.
  • It may require a project to implement a project labor agreement as a condition of financing.

Fees, oversight, and measurement

  • The authority will develop policies to charge reasonable fees for its services.
  • It will implement risk management practices to support ongoing activity.
  • It will adopt consumer protection standards to ensure financing is responsible and transparent.
  • It will measure and report the impact of its activities, focusing on low-income communities and emission reductions.

Accessibility and equity focus

  • A deliberate effort will be made to recruit and hire staff from or who share the interests of Minnesota communities the authority serves, particularly underserved communities.

Related funding and eligibility

  • The authority can apply for federal grants (Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund) and leverage state investment.
  • If needed, it can coordinate with other Minnesota applicants to optimize funding opportunities.
  • The bill emphasizes collaboration with the federal Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) funding opportunities and requires that contracts with third parties make clear they are acting for the authority.

Significant changes to existing law

  • Expands the broad authority of Minnesota’s climate financing framework by creating and enabling the Climate Innovation Financing Authority to:
    • Borrow money, issue securities, and enter financing arrangements; and
    • Engage in credit enhancement, co-investment, and potential securitization of projects.
  • Mandates a strong emphasis on reducing greenhouse gas emissions and leveraging private investment.
  • Introduces structured outreach to underserved communities, consumer protections, and measurable impact requirements.
  • Establishes transitional authority and coordination with federal programs (IRA, DOE LPO) before the authority is fully established.

Relevant terms - Minnesota Climate Innovation Financing Authority - greenhouse gas emissions reductions - qualified projects - financing mechanisms - private investment leverage - credit enhancement mechanisms - loan loss reserve - loan guarantees - co-investment - securitization - Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund - Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) - U.S. Department of Energy Loan Programs Office (DOE LPO) - Public Law 117-169 - strategic plan - project labor agreement - community navigators - underserved communities - consumer protection standards - eligibility standards - risk management - impact measurement - contractor partnerships - third-party administrators (TPAs)

Bill text versions

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Past committee meetings

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Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
March 04, 2026SenateActionIntroduction and first reading
March 04, 2026SenateActionReferred toEnergy, Utilities, Environment, and Climate
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Citations

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Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee

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