Lawmakers in the U.S. Virgin Islands are pushing ahead with legislation that would allow commercial property owners to finance energy upgrades through their property tax bills, potentially unlocking millions in green building investments across St. Thomas, St. Croix and St. John.
The Committee on Disaster Recovery, Infrastructure and Planning, chaired by Senator Marise C. James, advanced the Commercial Property Assessed Clean Energy (C-PACE) Act on April 24 after a hearing on the proposal. If enacted, the measure would create a financing mechanism that lets business owners cover 100 percent of the costs for energy efficiency, renewable energy, water conservation and climate resilience upgrades.
The timing reflects growing pressure on island businesses to reduce operating expenses while bracing for more severe hurricanes and power outages. High electricity rates in the territory have long squeezed profit margins, particularly for hospitality, retail and manufacturing sectors.
Under the C-PACE model—already adopted in more than 30 states—property owners take out loans to pay for eligible improvements upfront. Rather than a separate monthly payment, the debt attaches to the property tax assessment, making it transferable if the building is sold. This structure removes the need for personal credit checks and spreads repayment over 10 to 25 years.
Eligible projects include solar panel installation, LED lighting retrofit, HVAC system upgrades, battery storage systems, water-saving fixtures and structural hardening against storms. The program does not require upfront cash from property owners, a critical advantage for businesses operating on thin margins in an economically fragile market.
Legislators introduced the bill on Feb. 10, 2026, with sponsorship from Senator James and co-sponsors Representatives Hubert L. Frederick, Novelle E. Francis Jr. and Avery L. Lewis. The measure now goes to the Committee on Rules and Judiciary for further vetting.
The proposal arrives as the territory grapples with infrastructure gaps exposed by recent hurricanes and shifting climate patterns. Federal disaster recovery funding has flowed in since 2017, but much of it is tied to specific projects rather than helping private owners strengthen their assets. C-PACE would fill that gap by leveraging private capital to upgrade the building stock.
The Virgin Islands Energy Office currently operates several related programs, including rebate initiatives for electric vehicles, weatherization assistance for low-income households, and battery storage incentives. C-PACE would complement those efforts by targeting larger commercial entities that have the means to invest but lack accessible financing.
For small-business owners in particular—restaurants, shops, and service providers that anchor neighborhood economies—reduced energy bills could translate directly to lower overhead and more money available for payroll or expansion. A 20 to 30 percent cut in monthly electricity costs is not uncommon after thorough efficiency upgrades, according to energy efficiency studies in comparable jurisdictions.
The legislation also addresses workforce capacity. The bill tracking documents reference testimony during the committee hearing about labor availability for installation and construction work. Deploying C-PACE financing could spur demand for skilled trades and create employment in electrical work, solar installation, and building systems maintenance.
Passage is not guaranteed. The bill must clear the Rules and Judiciary Committee before returning to the full 20-member legislature. It will then require a simple majority vote and the governor’s signature to become law. No timeline for a floor vote has been announced.
If approved, implementation would fall to the Department of Finance or a designated tax authority, which would need to establish underwriting standards, investor relations, and property-level tracking mechanisms. Some states have taken 18 to 24 months to operationalize their C-PACE programs after enactment.
The business community has shown cautious interest. Chamber of commerce officials on the islands have signaled support for tools that reduce operating costs without requiring immediate capital expenditure, though specifics on lending rates and contract terms remain unknown.
Legislative passage would position the Virgin Islands as one of the few Caribbean jurisdictions offering C-PACE financing, potentially attracting real estate investors and developers interested in green building projects. For residents, it signals that policymakers recognize the link between property efficiency, climate resilience, and economic survival on islands facing rising sea levels and extreme weather.
The Committee on Disaster Recovery, Infrastructure and Planning is expected to schedule its next hearing within weeks as the measure progresses through the legislative process.









