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Check the appropriate box:
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| ¨ | Preliminary Proxy Statement | ||||
| ¨ | Confidential, for use of the Commission only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) | ||||
| ☑ | Definitive Proxy Statement | ||||
| ¨ | Definitive Additional Materials | ||||
| ¨ | Soliciting Material Pursuant to §240.14a-12 | ||||
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Payment of Filing Fee (Check all boxes that apply):
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| ☑ | No fee required | ||||
| ¨ | Fee paid previously with preliminary materials | ||||
| ¨ | Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11 | ||||
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When
June 4, 2025
9:30 a.m. Eastern Time
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Where
The meeting will be held via a live webcast at
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/HASI2025
(password: enter your 16 digit control number)
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Record Date
Close of business on April 7, 2025
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| How to Vote | |||||
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ONLINE
(During the Annual Meeting) Access
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/HASI2025
(password: your 16 digit control number) and follow the on-screen instructions.
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(Before the Annual Meeting) Go to
www.proxyvote.com
to transmit your voting instructions and for electronic delivery of information up until 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time the day before the cut-off date or meeting date.
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MAIL
Mark, sign and date your proxy card and return it to Vote Processing, c/o
Broadridge,
51 Mercedes Way,
Edgewood, NY 11717.
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TELEPHONE
1-800-690-6903
. Use any touch-tone telephone to transmit your voting instructions up until 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time the day before the cut-off date or meeting date. Have your proxy card in hand when you call and then follow the instructions.
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| 1 |
Elect the twelve director nominees named in the accompanying proxy statement to serve on our board of directors
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| 2 |
Ratify the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2025
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| 3 | Provide non-binding advisory approval of our executive compensation | |||||||
| 4 | Such other business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting or any postponements or adjournments thereof | |||||||
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The attached proxy statement describes these items.
Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Annual Meeting to be held June 4, 2025
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Our notice of annual meeting, proxy statement and 2024 Annual Report on Form 10-K are available at: www.proxyvote.com and www.investors.HASI.com.
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HASI Proxy Statement 2025
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1
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2
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HASI Proxy Statement 2025
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When
June 4, 2025
9:30 a.m. Eastern Time
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Where
The meeting will be held via a live webcast at
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/HASI2025
(password: enter your 16 digit control number)
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Record Date
Close of business on April 7, 2025
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| PROPOSAL |
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
RECOMMENDATION
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MORE INFORMATION
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Elect the twelve director nominees named in this proxy statement to serve on our board of directors until the Company’s 2025 annual meeting of stockholders and until their respective successors are duly elected and qualify
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FOR
all nominees listed below
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Page
5
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Ratify the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2025
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FOR
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Page
34
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Approve, on a non-binding, advisory basis, the compensation of our named executive officers
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FOR
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Page
37
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| Name | Age | Independent | Principal occupation | Committees |
Other
public
boards
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Director since | ||||||||||||||
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Jeffrey W. Eckel
Chair
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66
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Former Chief Executive Officer & President, HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc.
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0 |
Chair since March 2025; Executive Chair from
March 2023 to March 2025; Chair from 2013 to February 2023
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Jeffrey A. Lipson
Chief Executive Officer
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57
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Chief Executive Officer & President, HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc.
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0 | 2023 | ||||||||||||||||
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Teresa M. Brenner
Lead Independent Director
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61
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Former Managing Director & Associate General Counsel, Bank of America Corporation
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Compensation,
NGCR (Chair)
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0 |
Lead Independent
Director since 2019;
Director since 2016
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| Lizabeth A. Ardisana |
72
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Chief Executive Officer & Principal Owner, ASG Renaissance, LLC
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Audit, Compensation
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2 | 2022 | ||||||||||||||
| Clarence D. Armbrister |
67
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Former President, Johnson C. Smith University
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NGCR, Finance and Risk | 0 | 2021 | ||||||||||||||
| Nancy C. Floyd |
70
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Former Managing Director, Nth Power LLC | Audit, Finance and Risk |
0
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2021 | ||||||||||||||
| Charles M. O’Neil |
72
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Former Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board, ING Capital, LLC
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Finance and Risk (Chair),
NGCR
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0 | 2013 | ||||||||||||||
| Richard J. Osborne |
74
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Former Chief Financial Officer, Duke Energy Corporation
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Audit, Compensation (Chair) | 0 | 2013 | ||||||||||||||
| Steven G. Osgood |
68
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Chief Executive Officer, Square Foot Companies, LLC | Audit (Chair), Compensation | 1 | 2015 | ||||||||||||||
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Kimberly A. Reed
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54
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Former Chairman of the Board of Directors, President, and Chief Executive Officer, Export-Import Bank of the United States
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NGCR, Finance and Risk
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2
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2023
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Laura A. Schulte
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65
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Former Executive Vice President and Head of Eastern Community Banking, Wells Fargo & Company
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Audit, Compensation
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0
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2025
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Barry E. Welch
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67
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Former Chief Executive Officer, Atlantic Power Corporation
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Audit, Finance and Risk
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0
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2025
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HASI Proxy Statement 2025
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3
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Separate Chair and CEO
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On March 1, 2023, we separated the roles of chair and chief executive officer
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Sustainability and Impact Governance
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Robust oversight structure covering our strategies, activities, and policies, including our Sustainability Investment Policy, environmental policies, and Human Rights and Human Capital Management Policies
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Commitment to Board Independence
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>80% of the members of our board of directors are independent
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| Pay for Performance Philosophy |
Executive compensation encourages and rewards strong financial and operational performance
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Implicit Link to Sustainability and Impact Performance
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Executive compensation is implicitly linked to Sustainability and Impact (as defined below) performance due to our focus on investments in climate solutions, which drive growth in key compensation-linked financial metrics
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CEO Pay Ratio
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For 2024, the compensation for our chief executive officer was 33x the compensation of our median employee
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4
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HASI Proxy Statement 2025
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Our board of directors recommends a
vote FOR
the election of each of the director nominees.
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HASI Proxy Statement 2025
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5
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| JEFFREY W. ECKEL | |||||
Age 66
Chair – Board of Directors since March 2025
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Mr. Eckel has served as chair since March 2025 and served as executive chair from March 2023 to March 2025. Mr. Eckel previously served as chief executive officer, president and chair from 2013 through February 2023, and was with the predecessor of the Company as president and chief executive officer since 2000 and prior to that from 1985 to 1989 as a senior vice president. Mr. Eckel serves on the board of trustees of The Nature Conservancy of Maryland and DC. Mr. Eckel was appointed by the governor of Maryland to the board of the Maryland Clean Energy Center in 2011 where Mr. Eckel served until 2016 while also serving as its chairman from 2012 to 2014. Mr. Eckel has over 35 years of experience in financing, owning and operating infrastructure and energy assets. Mr. Eckel received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Miami University in 1980 and a Master of Public Administration degree from Syracuse University, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, in 1981. We believe Mr. Eckel’s extensive experience in managing companies operating in the energy sector and expertise in energy investments make him qualified to serve as chair.
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JEFFREY A. LIPSON
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Age 57
Director since 2023
Chief Executive Officer and President
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Mr. Lipson has served as chief executive officer and president since March 2023. He served as executive vice president and our chief operating officer from 2021 to February 2023, and as our chief financial officer from 2019 to February 2023. Previously, Mr. Lipson was president and chief executive officer and director of Congressional Bancshares and its subsidiary Congressional Bank (now Forbright Bank). He also previously served in various roles for CapitalSource Inc., as well as Bank of America and its predecessor, FleetBoston Financial. Mr. Lipson received a Bachelor of Science degree in Economics from Pennsylvania State University in 1989 and a Master of Business Administration degree in Finance from New York University’s Leonard N. Stern School of Business in 1993. We believe Mr. Lipson’s significant prior experience as a chief executive officer and his extensive financial expertise make him qualified to serve as president and chief executive officer and as a member of our board of directors.
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TERESA M. BRENNER
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Age 61
Independent Director since 2016
Lead Independent Director since 2019
Committee:
•
NGCR Committee (Chair)
•
Compensation Committee
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Ms. Brenner retired from Bank of America Corporation in 2012, where she served in a variety of roles for approximately 20 years, including most recently as a managing director and associate general counsel. Ms. Brenner served on the board of directors of Residential Capital, LLC from March 2013 to December 2013 during its restructuring and through the confirmation of its bankruptcy proceeding. Ms. Brenner is a member of the National Association of Corporate Directors, the Society of Corporate Governance, and the American Corporate Counsel Association, and is a member in good standing of the North Carolina State Bar. Ms. Brenner has also held a variety of philanthropic and civic roles, including serving as president of Temple Israel and chairperson of Right Moves for Youth. Ms. Brenner received a Bachelor of Arts degree magna cum laude and with honors in history from Alma College in 1984 where she was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa and a Juris Doctorate cum laude from Wake Forest University School of Law in 1987 where she was a Carswell Scholar and an editor of its Law Review. We believe Ms. Brenner’s extensive experience in corporate governance and corporate strategy, law and compliance, and finance and capital markets gives her valuable insight and enables her to make significant contributions as a member of our board of directors.
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6
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HASI Proxy Statement 2025
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LIZABETH A. ARDISANA
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Age 72
Independent Director since 2022
Committee:
•
Audit Committee
•
Compensation Committee
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Ms. Ardisana is chief executive officer and the principal owner of ASG Renaissance LLC, which she founded in 1987. ASG Renaissance is a technical and communication services firm with more than three decades of experience providing services to a wide range of clients in the automotive, environmental, defense, construction, healthcare, banking and education sectors. She is also chief executive officer of Performance Driven Workforce LLC, a scheduling and staffing firm that was founded in 2015 and has since expanded into five states. Prior to founding ASG Renaissance LLC, Ms. Ardisana worked at Ford Motor Company for 14 years, holding various management positions in vehicle development, product planning and marketing. As a Hispanic and female business owner, Ms. Ardisana is an active business and civic leader in Michigan. She has served on the boards of publicly held Clean Energy Fuels Corp. (Nasdaq: CLNE) since 2019 and Huntington Bancshares Inc. (Nasdaq: HBAN) since 2016. She also serves on the board of the privately held U.S. Sugar Corporation. She was a member of the board of Citizens Republic Bancorp, Inc. from 2004 to 2013, and a member of the board of FirstMerit Corporation from 2013 to 2016. She has held numerous leadership positions in a variety of nonprofit organizations, including The Skillman Foundation, Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, Kettering University, Metropolitan Affairs Coalition, Focus: HOPE, and NextEnergy. Ms. Ardisana was appointed by the governor of Michigan to the executive board of the Michigan Economic Development Corporation and chairs its finance committee. She is the vice chair of the board of Wayne Health, where she serves on the audit committee and compensation committee. Ms. Ardisana holds a Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics and computer science from the University of Texas, a Master of Science degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Michigan, and a Master of Business Administration degree from the University of Detroit. We believe Ms. Ardisana’s considerable experience and relationships in the automotive and environmental industries, as well as skills acquired through serving as a chief executive officer and as a member of multiple public and private company boards, give her valuable insights and enable her to make significant contributions as a member of the Board.
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CLARENCE D. ARMBRISTER
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Age 67
Independent Director since 2021
Committee:
•
Finance and Risk
Committee
•
NGCR Committee
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Mr. Armbrister served as president of Johnson C. Smith University from January 2018 through June 2023. Previously, Mr. Armbrister served as president of Girard College from 2012 to 2017. Mr. Armbrister has served as chair of the audit committee and a member of the compensation committee of Health Partners Plans Inc. since 2016. From 2008 to 2011, Mr. Armbrister served as chief of staff to the former Mayor of Philadelphia, Michael A. Nutter. Mr. Armbrister also served as senior vice president for administration and subsequently executive vice president and chief operating officer of Temple University from 2003 to 2007. Prior to that Mr. Armbrister served as vice president and director in the Municipal Securities Group and in other positions at PaineWebber & Co. (subsequently UBS PaineWebber Incorporated) from 1999 to 2003 and also served as an adjunct faculty member of the Beasley School of Law at Temple University from 1997 to 1998. From 1996 to 1998, Mr. Armbrister served as managing director of the Philadelphia School District and prior to that, in 1994, he was appointed Philadelphia City treasurer. From 1982 to 1994, Mr. Armbrister was an associate and then partner at Saul, Ewing, Remick & Saul (currently known as Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr LLP). Mr. Armbrister also serves on the boards of various organizations, including the board of directors for Health Partners Plan and the board of trustees of Devereux Advanced Behavioral Health, of which he was elected chair in November 2023. Mr. Armbrister is also a former member of the board of directors of the Charlotte Regional Business Alliance, the board of directors of the National Adoption Center and the Community College of Philadelphia’s board of trustees. Mr. Armbrister received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science and Economics from the University of Pennsylvania in 1979 and a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Michigan Law School in 1982. We believe Mr. Armbrister’s over 35 years of experience in education, law, government and finance gives him valuable insight and enables him to make significant contributions as a member of our board of directors.
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HASI Proxy Statement 2025
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7
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| NANCY C. FLOYD | |||||
Age 70
Independent Director since 2021
Committee:
•
Audit Committee
•
Finance and Risk Committee
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Ms. Floyd served as managing director of Nth Power LLC, a venture capital firm she founded that specialized in clean energy technology, from 1993 to 2022. From 1989 to 1993, Ms. Floyd joined and started the technology practice for the utility consulting firm, Barakat and Chamberlain. From 1985 to 1988, Ms. Floyd was on the founding team and worked at PacTel Spectrum Services, a provider of network management services that was sold to IBM. In 1982, Ms. Floyd founded and served as chief executive officer of NFC Energy Corporation, one of the first wind development companies in the United States, which she successfully sold. From 1977 to 1980, Ms. Floyd served as director of special projects of the Vermont Public Service Board (currently known as Vermont Public Utility Commission). Ms. Floyd has also served on the boards of 14 private, high growth, clean tech companies and was chair of the board for 4 of them. From 2020 to 2023, Ms. Floyd was a board member, chair of the audit committee and member of the compensation committee and nominating and corporate governance committee of Beam Global (Nasdaq: BEEM, BEEMW). She also served as a member of the board and chair of the audit committee of AltaGas Services and AltaGas Power Holdings (U.S.) Inc. (TSX: ALA) from 2018 to 2019, and board member of WGL Holdings, Inc. and Washington Gas (NYSE: WGL) from 2011 to 2018, where she sat on the audit committee and governance committee. Also, Ms. Floyd has served as fund advisor to Activate Capital from 2018 to 2021 and served on the investment committee for The Christensen Fund from 2017 to 2021. Ms. Floyd received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Government from Franklin & Marshall College in 1976 and a Master of Arts degree in Political Science from Rutgers University in 1977. We believe Ms. Floyd’s extensive experience in clean energy technology and utilities makes her qualified to serve as a member of our board of directors.
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| CHARLES M. O’NEIL | |||||
Age 72
Independent Director since 2013
Committee:
•
Finance and Risk Committee
(Chair)
•
NGCR Committee
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Mr. O’Neil retired from ING Capital, LLC, at the end of 2015, where he served in a variety of executive and management roles for over 20 years, including as president, chief executive officer and chairman of the board of ING Capital, LLC and head of Structured Finance, Americas, the largest operating unit of ING Capital. Mr. O’Neil received a Bachelor of Science degree in Finance from The Pennsylvania State University in 1974 and a Master of Business Administration degree in International Finance from Fordham University in 1978. We believe Mr. O’Neil’s experience of over 40 years in structured and project finance focusing on energy related projects, combined with his senior management role with a large international bank’s wholesale banking activities in the Americas, makes him qualified to serve as a member of our board of directors.
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| RICHARD J. OSBORNE | |||||
Age 74
Independent Director since 2013
Committee:
•
Compensation Committee
(Chair)
•
Audit Committee
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Mr. Osborne retired from Duke Energy Corporation in 2006, having served in a variety of executive roles including chief financial officer, chief risk officer, treasurer and group vice president for Public & Regulatory Affairs during his 31 years with the organization. Mr. Osborne also served as a director of Duke Energy Field Services, a joint venture between Duke Energy Corporation and ConocoPhillips, and as a director of TEPPCO Partners, LP, a master limited partnership managing mid-stream energy assets. He also chaired the Finance Divisions of the Southeastern Electric Exchange and Edison Electric Institute, and was a founding board member of the Committee of Chief Risk Officers. Subsequent to leaving Duke Energy, Mr. Osborne executed consulting assignments for clients in, or serving, the energy industry. Mr. Osborne presently serves on the boards of Chautauqua Institution and the Chautauqua Foundation. Mr. Osborne received a Bachelor of Arts degree in History and Economics from Tufts University in 1973 and a Master of Business Administration degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1975. We believe that Mr. Osborne’s over 35 years of experience in energy sector finance makes him qualified to serve as a member of our board of directors.
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8
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HASI Proxy Statement 2025
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STEVEN G. OSGOOD
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Age 68
Independent Director since 2015
Committee:
•
Audit Committee (Chair)
•
Compensation Committee
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Mr. Osgood has served as the chief executive officer of Square Foot Companies, LLC, a Cleveland, Ohio-based private real estate company focused on self-storage and single-tenant properties, since 2008. Mr. Osgood is also a trustee for National Storage Affiliates Trust, a real estate investment trust (“REIT”) focused on the ownership of self-storage properties, since its public offering in April 2015. Mr. Osgood serves as chair of the finance committee for the company and on its audit committee. Prior to his current position, Mr. Osgood served as president and chief financial officer of U-Store-It Trust (now named CubeSmart), a self-storage REIT from the company’s initial public offering in 2004 to 2006. He also served as chief financial officer of several other REITs. Mr. Osgood is a former Certified Public Accountant. He graduated from Miami University with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1978 and graduated from the University of San Diego with a Master of Business Administration degree in 1987. We believe that Mr. Osgood’s experience as a chief executive officer and over 20 years of experience in corporate finance make him qualified to serve as a member of our board of directors.
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| KIMBERLY A. REED | |||||
Age 54
Independent Director since 2023
Committee:
•
NGCR
Committee
•
Finance and Risk Committee
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Ms. Reed has served as an external director of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited since June 2022 and an independent director of Momentus Inc. since August 2021. From May 2019 to January 2021— after being confirmed by the U.S. Senate on a strong bipartisan basis — Ms. Reed served as the first woman chairman of the board of directors, president and chief executive officer of the Export-Import Bank of the United States (EXIM), the nation’s official $135 billion export credit agency, where she worked to help U.S. companies, including those focused on energy and infrastructure, succeed in the competitive global marketplace. She previously served as president of the International Food Information Council Foundation where she focused on agriculture, nutrition, health, and sustainability issues; senior advisor to U.S. Treasury Secretaries Henry Paulson and John Snow; chief executive officers of the Community Development Financial Institutions Fund (CDFI Fund); and counsel to three committees of the U.S. Congress where she conducted oversight and investigations. Ms. Reed also currently serves on the American Swiss Foundation board of directors, and is a Distinguished Fellow with the Council on Competitiveness and the Atlantic Council Freedom and Prosperity Center. Additionally, she is involved with a variety of initiatives, including the Hudson Institute’s Alexander Hamilton Commission on Securing America’s National Security Innovation Base, Krach Institute for Tech Diplomacy at Purdue Advisory Council and Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington Dean’s Alliance. Recognized as one of the “100 Women Leaders in STEM,” she received the U.S. Department of Defense’s highest civilian award — the Medal for Distinguished Public Service — and is a Council on Foreign Relations life member and a National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) Certified Director. She holds a Juris Doctor degree from West Virginia University College of Law and a Bachelor of Science in Biology and a Bachelor of Arts in Government from West Virginia Wesleyan College. We believe Ms. Reed’s experience in government and international finance, as well as her service on U.S. and non-U.S. public company boards, make her qualified to serve as a member of our board of directors.
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HASI Proxy Statement 2025
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9
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LAURA A. SCHULTE
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Age 65
Independent Director since 2025
Committee:
•
Audit Committee
•
Compensation Committee
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Ms. Schulte has served as chair of the board of directors of Transportation Alliance Bank, Inc. since June 2023, where she also serves as the chair of the compensation committee and a member of the technology committee and previously served as a member of the audit committee. She has been a member of the board of directors of Novant Health Inc. since 2016, where she is a member of the executive committee and previously served as chair of the board of directors, the strategic growth committee and the audit committee. Since 2016, she has also served as a member of the board of directors of Grubb Properties, LLC, where she is chair of the human capital committee and compensation committee, as well as a member of the audit committee. From 2015 through 2021, she served as a board director and a member of the audit, credit and asset-liability committees of State Farm Bank, a U.S. bank and subsidiary of State Farm Insurance sold to U.S. Bank in 2021. From 1999 until her retirement in 2014, Ms. Schulte held various executive roles Wells Fargo & Company, culminating in her service as Executive Vice President and Head of Eastern Community Banking, where she led one of Wells Fargo’s banking businesses and spearheaded the merger with and integration of Wachovia into Wells Fargo. Prior to her time at Wells Fargo, from 1982 through 1999, she was employed by Norwest Corporation. Ms. Schulte has served on the nonprofit boards of industry, education, and healthcare institutions across the United States, including the American Bankers Association, the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, the National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) Carolinas chapter and the Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles. Notably, Ms. Welch served as the first woman board chair for the United Way of Los Angeles. Currently, she is a member of the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra Board of Trustees and the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art advisory board in Charlotte, North Carolina. She received her Bachelor of Science in Accounting from the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, where she is a Distinguished Alumni Awardee, and she is a graduate of the Stonier Graduate School of Banking at the University of Pennsylvania. We believe Ms. Schulte’s experience as a banking industry executive, as well as her service on multiple corporate boards, make her qualified to serve as a member of our board of directors.
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BARRY E. WELCH
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Age 67
Independent Director since 2025
Committee:
•
Audit Committee
•
Finance and Risk Committee
|
Since January 2023, Mr. Welch has served on the board of directors of Onward Energy, a renewables portfolio company in the JP Morgan-managed Infrastructure Investments Fund (IIF), assuming the role of chair in January 2024. Onward Energy was formed in January 2023 through the merger of Novatus Energy, where he served as chair of the audit committee from 2016 until the merger, and Southwest Generation, where he served as chair of the board of directors from 2018 until the merger. Since March 2023, he has also served on the board and audit committee of Aspen Power, a distributed generation solar company that develops, constructs, owns and operates projects throughout the United States From 2016 through 2019, Mr. Welch served on the board of TransMontaigne Partners (NYSE: TLP), an oil storage master limited partnership, where he was chair of the conflicts committee and a member of the audit committee. From 2004 through 2014, he was the chief executive officer of Atlantic Power Corporation (NYSE: AT), an independent power company with fossil and renewable power generation facilities in the United States and Canada, and served on its board of directors from 2006 through 2014. From 1989 through 2004, he served in a variety of roles in John Hancock’s Bond & Corporate Finance Group, culminating in his service from 2001 through 2004 as Senior Vice President and Head of Bond & Corporate Finance. Mr. Welch received a Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering from Princeton University, and a Master of Business Administration degree with a concentration in Finance from Boston College. We believe Mr. Welch's experience as a renewable energy chief executive officer and investment finance executive, as well as his service on multiple public and private boards of directors, make him qualified to serve on our board of directors.
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||||
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10
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
| SKILLS & EXPERTISE | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Experience | Eckel | Brenner | Ardisana | Armbrister | Floyd | Lipson | O’Neil | Osborne | Osgood | Reed |
Schulte
|
Welch
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Risk Management |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Capital Markets |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| CPA or Financial |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Power / Utility / Natural Resources Industries
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Financial Services |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Strategic Planning |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Technology / Cybersecurity
|
ò
|
ò
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| CEO/Senior Leadership Experience |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Mergers & Acquisitions |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Corporate Governance |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Human Capital Management |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Commercial Lending |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| BACKGROUND | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Years on Board |
12
|
9
|
2
|
4
|
4
|
2
|
12
|
12
|
10
|
2
|
0
|
0
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Age |
66
|
61
|
74
|
67
|
70
|
57
|
72
|
74
|
68
|
54
|
65
|
67
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Gender Identification
|
M | F | F | M | F | M | M | M | M | F |
F
|
M
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| African American / Black |
ò
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Asian / South Asian
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| White / Caucasian |
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
ò
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Hispanic / Latino |
ò
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Indigenous
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
LGBTQ+
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Veteran
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Disabled
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
11
|
|||||||
|
12
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
13
|
|||||||
| Our Board of Directors |
Our Charter, Bylaws and Policies
|
Our Stockholder Engagement
|
||||||
|
•
We separated the roles of chair and chief executive officer.
•
We have a majority vote policy for the election of directors.
•
Our board of directors is not staggered.
•
Ten of our twelve current directors are independent.
•
We have a Lead Independent Director.
•
Four directors qualify as an “audit committee financial experts” as defined by the SEC.
•
We have established a target retirement age of 75 for our directors.
•
The NGCR Committee oversees and directs our environmental, social and governance (“Sustainability and Impact”) strategies, activities, policies, and communications.
|
•
Our stockholders have the concurrent right to amend our Bylaws.
•
Our directors and NEOs (as defined herein) are required to maintain certain levels of stock ownership in the Company ranging between three and six times their base salary or retainer, depending on position.
•
Our Statement of Corporate Policy Regarding Equity Transactions prohibits our directors and officers from hedging our equity securities, holding such securities in a margin account or pledging such securities as collateral for a loan.
•
Our Clawback Policy provides for the possible recoupment of performance or incentive-based compensation in the event of an accounting restatement due to material noncompliance by us with any financial reporting requirements under the securities laws (other than due to a change in applicable accounting methods, rules or interpretations).
|
•
We have an active stockholder outreach program, including annually providing our stockholders the opportunity to vote on an advisory basis on the compensation of NEOs.
|
||||||
|
14
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
ROLE OF THE LEAD INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR
|
|||||
TERESA M. BRENNER
|
•
Collaborate with the chair, chief executive officer and secretary to schedule meetings of our board of directors and to set meeting agenda
•
Ensure that matters of concern or interest to the independent directors are appropriately scheduled for discussion at board of directors meetings
•
Chair meetings in the absence of the chair
•
Organize and preside over meetings and executive sessions of the independent directors
•
Serve as the principal liaison between the independent directors and the chair or chief executive officer on matters where either person may be conflicted
•
Together with the full board of directors, evaluate the performances of the chief executive officer and chair and meet with each of the chief executive officer and chair to discuss such evaluations
•
Authorize the retention of outside advisors and consultants who report directly to our board of directors
•
Meet regularly with the chair as well as each director
•
Along with management, periodically meet with institutional and other investors
|
||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
15
|
|||||||
|
16
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
Primary Responsibilities
•
Engaging our independent registered public accounting firm.
•
Reviewing with the independent registered public accounting firm the plans and results of the audit engagement.
•
Approving professional services provided by the independent registered public accounting firm.
•
Reviewing the independence of the independent registered public accounting firm.
•
Considering the range of audit and non-audit fees and reviewing the adequacy of our internal accounting controls.
•
Overseeing:
•
our and our subsidiaries’ corporate accounting and reporting practices,
•
the quality and integrity of our consolidated financial statements,
•
our compliance with applicable legal and regulatory requirements,
•
the performance, qualifications, and independence of our external auditors, and
•
the staffing, scope of work, performance, budget, responsibilities and qualifications of our internal audit function, including the engagement of outside advisors to assist our internal audit function.
•
Reviewing our policies with respect to risk assessment and risk management, which responsibility is shared with the Finance and Risk Committee.
•
Reviewing, with management and external auditors, our unaudited interim and audited annual financial statements as well as approving the filing of our financial statements.
•
Meeting with officers responsible for certifying our annual report on Form 10-K or any quarterly report on Form 10-Q prior to any such certification and reviewing with such officers any disclosures related to any significant deficiencies or material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal controls.
•
Periodically discussing with our external auditors such auditors’ judgments about the quality, not just the acceptability, of our accounting principles as applied in our consolidated financial statements.
The specific responsibilities of the Audit Committee are set forth in its written charter, which is available for viewing on our website at www.hasi.com.
Independence
Our board of directors has determined that all of the members of the Audit Committee are independent as required by the NYSE listing standards, SEC rules governing the qualifications of Audit Committee members, the Guidelines, the Independence Standards and the written charter of the Audit Committee.
Financial Expertise and Literacy
Our board of directors has also determined, based upon its qualitative assessment of their relevant levels of knowledge and business experience, that Mr. Osgood, Ms. Floyd and Mr. Osborne each qualify as an “audit committee financial expert” for purposes of, and as defined by, the SEC rules and each has the requisite accounting or related financial management expertise required by NYSE listing standards. In addition, our board of directors has determined that all of the members of the Audit Committee are financially literate as required by the NYSE listing standards.
Report
The Audit Committee Report is set forth beginning on page
35
of this proxy statement.
|
|||||||||||||
|
Audit Committee
Current Members
Steven G. Osgood (Chair)
Lizabeth A. Ardisana
Nancy C. Floyd
Richard J. Osborne
Laura A. Schulte
Barry E. Welch
|
||||||||||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
17
|
|||||||
|
Primary Responsibilities
•
Overseeing the approval, administration and evaluation of our compensation plans, policies and programs.
•
Reviewing the compensation of our directors and executive officers.
•
Overseeing regulatory compliance with respect to compensation matters.
•
Reviewing and approving and, when appropriate, recommending to our board of directors for approval, any employment agreements and any severance arrangements or plans for our executive officers.
•
Evaluating its relationship with any compensation consultant for any conflicts of interest and assessing the independence of any compensation consultant, legal counsel or other advisors.
•
Coordinating with the NGCR Committee to assist our board of directors in its oversight of the Company’s practices as they relate to the Company’s human capital management with respect to the Company’s compensation plans (e.g., retention, talent management, and pay equity practices).
•
Adopting, amending and overseeing the Company’s policies regarding the recoupment of compensation paid to executives or employees, if an as the Compensation Committee deems appropriate or as required by law or the rules of the New York Stock Exchange (the “NYSE”).
The specific responsibilities of the Compensation Committee are set forth in its written charter, which is available for viewing on our website at www.hasi.com.
Independence
Our board of directors has determined that each of the members of the Compensation Committee is independent as required by the NYSE listing standards, SEC rules, the Guidelines, the Independence Standards and the written charter of the Compensation Committee.
Compensation Consultant
Since 2018, the Compensation Committee has engaged Pay Governance LLC (“Pay Governance”), a compensation consulting firm, to assist the Compensation Committee on the setting of certain annual bonus targets for our NEOs. In July 2019, the Compensation Committee also engaged Pay Governance to provide analysis and recommendations regarding (1) base salaries, annual bonuses and long-term incentive compensation for our executive management team, and (2) the director compensation program for non-employee members of our board of directors. Pay Governance reports directly to the Compensation Committee and the Compensation Committee has determined that Pay Governance is independent pursuant to the Compensation Committee charter.
Compensation
Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation
The Compensation Committee is comprised solely of independent directors. No member of the Compensation Committee is a current or former officer or employee of ours or any of our subsidiaries. Other than Mr. Lipson’s service both as an executive officer and as a member of our board of directors, none of our executive officers serves as a member of the board of directors or compensation committee of any company that has one or more of its executive officers serving as a member of our board of directors or the Compensation Committee.
Report
The Compensation Committee Report is set forth beginning on page
55
of this Proxy Statement.
|
|||||||||||||
|
Compensation
Committee
Current Members
Richard J. Osborne (Chair)
Lizabeth A. Ardisana
Teresa M. Brenner
Steven G. Osgood
Laura A. Schulte
|
||||||||||||||
|
18
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
Primary Responsibilities
•
Reviewing periodically and making recommendations to our board of directors on the range of qualifications that should be represented on our board of directors and eligibility criteria for individual board membership.
•
Seeking, considering and recommending to our board qualified candidates for election as directors and approving and recommending to the full board of directors the election of each of our officers and, if necessary, a lead independent director.
•
Reviewing and making recommendations on matters involving the general operation of our board of directors and our corporate governance and annually recommending nominees for each committee of our board of directors.
•
Reviewing the Company’s strategies, activities, policies, and communications regarding sustainability and other Sustainability and Impact related matters, including our CarbonCount
®
and WaterCount
TM
score, and making recommendations to our board of directors with respect thereto.
•
Annually facilitating the assessment of our board of directors’ performance as a whole and that of the individual directors and reports thereon to our board of directors.
•
Advising management regarding strategic human capital initiatives, including leadership succession, talent development and progression, recruiting, retention and culture
•
Reviewing and monitoring the development, implementation, and effectiveness of the Company’s practices, policies, and strategies relating to human capital management as they relate to the Company’s workforce generally including, but not limited to, policies and strategies regarding recruiting, engagement, retention, employee learning, career development and progression, succession planning, corporate culture, and employment practices.
•
Coordinating with the Compensation Committee to assist our board of directors in its oversight of the Company’s practices as they relate to the Company’s human capital management with respect to the Company’s compensation plans (e.g., retention, talent management, and pay equity practices).
•
Reviewing and discussing with management the human capital management disclosures, as required, for the Company's annual proxy statement or annual report on Form 10-K and determining whether to recommend to our board of directors that such human capital management disclosures, be included in our annual proxy statement or annual report on Form 10-K.
The specific responsibilities of the NGCR Committee are set forth in its written charter, which is available for viewing on our website at www.hasi.com.
Independence
Our board of directors has determined that each of the members of the NGCR Committee is independent as required by the NYSE listing standards, the Guidelines, the Independence Standards and the written charter of the NGCR Committee.
|
|||||||||||||
|
NGCR
Committee
Current Members
Teresa M. Brenner (Chair)
Clarence D. Armbrister
Charles M. O’Neil
Kimberly A. Reed
|
||||||||||||||
|
Primary Responsibilities
•
Assessing, monitoring and overseeing matters relating to the Company’s financings.
•
Discussing and reviewing policies and guidelines with respect to our risk assessment and risk management for various risks, including, but not limited to, our interest rate, counterparty, credit, capital availability, refinancing and certain environmental risks.
•
Reviewing and assessing the adequacy of our insurance coverage.
•
Reviewing and assessing the adequacy of our cybersecurity policies and programs.
The specific responsibilities of the Finance and Risk Committee are set forth in its written charter, which is available for viewing on our website at www.hasi.com.
Independence
Our board of directors has determined that all of the members of the Finance and Risk Committee are independent under the NYSE listing standards, the Guidelines, the Independence Standards and the written charter of the Finance and Risk Committee.
|
|||||||||||||
|
Finance and Risk
Committee
Current Members
Charles M. O’Neil (Chair)
Clarence D. Armbrister
Nancy C. Floyd
Kimberly A. Reed
Barry E. Welch
|
||||||||||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
19
|
|||||||
HASI Board of Directors
NGCR Committee
President and CEO
Cross-Functional Sustainability and Impact Leadership Team
|
||||||||||||||
|
For Your Reference
|
|||||
| For additional information on our sustainability and impact strategy, policies, and initiatives (including the below documents), please visit investors.hasi.com and hasi.com/sustainability. | |||||
|
•
Annual Report
•
Proxy Statement
•
Sustainability Investment Policy
•
Environmental Policies
•
Human Rights Statement
|
•
Human Capital Management Policies
•
Code of Business Conduct and Ethics
•
Business Partner Code of Conduct
•
Environmental Metrics
•
Sustainability Report Card
|
||||
|
20
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
Number of
Meetings |
Attendance
(1)
|
|||||||
| Board of Directors | 8 | 95 | % | |||||
| Audit Committee | 9 | 100 | % | |||||
| Compensation Committee | 8 | 100 | % | |||||
| Finance & Risk Committee | 5 | 100 | % | |||||
| NGCR Committee | 5 | 90 | % | |||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
21
|
|||||||
|
22
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
23
|
|||||||
|
>8 million
Cumulative metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO
2
) avoided annually through our investments, the equivalent to eliminating emissions from over 1.7 million typical passenger vehicles
|
~7 billion
Cumulative gallons of water saved annually from our investments, the equivalent to eliminating the annual water consumption of nearly 171,000 U.S. homes every year
|
|||||||
|
~400,000
Quality jobs created by our investments across the United States
|
~300,000
School children supported by our energy efficiency upgrades to educational facilities and transportation funded by our investments
|
~2 million
Veterans served by hospitals and other facilities that received energy efficiency upgrades funded by our investments
|
||||||
|
24
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
Carbon Avoided
Cumulative metric tons of CO
2
avoided annually
|
Water Savings
Cumulative gallons of water saved annually
|
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
|
2024:
0.38
|
2024:
170
|
||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
25
|
|||||||
| GHG PROTOCOL | DEFINITION |
TARGET
3
|
STATUS
3
(2024)
|
VERIFICATION
4
|
||||||||||
|
SCOPE 1
Direct Emissions
|
Emissions from operations that are owned or controlled by a reporting company. |
Commitment to reduce absolute emissions 100% by 2030 from a 2019 base year
|
0 MT CO
2
e
|
Apex | ||||||||||
|
SCOPE 2
Indirect Emissions
(Market-based Method)
|
Emissions from the generation of purchased or acquired energy such as electricity, steam, and heating and cooling, consumed by a reporting company, but excluding the impact of the purchase of renewable energy credits.
|
Commitment to reduce absolute emissions 100% by 2030 from a 2019 base year
|
0 MT CO
2
e
|
Apex | ||||||||||
|
SCOPE 3
5
Indirect Emissions
|
All other indirect emissions that occur in the value chain of a reporting company, including both upstream and downstream emissions, but excluding the emissions avoided as a result of our investments. (>850k MTs of CO
2
in 2024)
|
Plan to set target for Category 1-14 emissions
|
<1000 MT CO
2
e
|
Apex | ||||||||||
| Net Zero Target for Category 15 financed emissions set in 2023 for GC Renewables, Residential, Community and C&I Solar assets |
<200k MT CO
2
e
|
Apex | ||||||||||||
|
26
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
27
|
|||||||
|
Board of Directors
|
Managers
|
Non-Managers
|
Total Workforce
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
12/31/24
|
12/31/23
|
12/31/24
|
12/31/23
|
12/31/24
|
12/31/23
|
12/31/24
|
12/31/23
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Female | 40% | 36% | 39% | 41% | 35% | 31% | 36% | 35% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Male
|
60% | 64% | 61% | 59% | 65% | 69% | 64% | 65% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Racial or Ethnic Minority | 20% | 18% | 33% | 42% | 45% | 39% | 41% | 38% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
White
|
80% | 82% | 67% | 58% | 55% | 61% | 59% | 62% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
LGBTQ+
1
|
0% | 0% | 2% | 2% | 3% | 3% | 3% | 3% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
28
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
| AGE |
2024
|
2023
|
||||||
| 18-24 | 4% | 2% | ||||||
| 25-34 | 34% | 33% | ||||||
| 35-44 | 36% | 39% | ||||||
| 45-54 | 20% | 16% | ||||||
| 55-64 | 5% | 7% | ||||||
| 65+ | 1% | 3% | ||||||
96%
|
retention of our female employees in 2024
|
||||||||||
158
|
100%
|
4.5 years
|
||||||
|
Full-time
employees |
Employees eligible for
Employee Stock Ownership Plan |
Average
employee tenure |
||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
29
|
|||||||
35
|
5,010
|
$2,425
|
||||||
|
Average number of training
hours per employee
|
Cumulative number
of training hours
|
Average number of
training dollars invested
per employee
|
||||||
|
30
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
|
|
||||||
|
Book Club
Quarterly meetings where we gather to share insights on selected books that relate to our investment thesis and the economics, politics, physics and impacts of climate change and the energy transition
|
Business Resource Groups
Inclusive BRGs at HASI further our shared goal to represent and support the communities in which we live and work. These groups offer their members opportunities to actively create a workplace that reflects our organizational values
|
Lunch and Learns
We host monthly workshops led by our smart staff or outside partners on a variety of topics, such as energy storage trends, the land business, energy efficiency policy and anything that is relevant to our business
|
||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
31
|
|||||||
|
32
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
| Name |
Fees Paid or
Earned in Cash ($)
(1)
|
Stock
Awards ($)
(2)
|
Total ($) | ||||||||
|
Lizabeth A. Ardisana
|
110,000 | 194,746 | 304,746 | ||||||||
| Clarence D. Armbrister | 110,000 | 194,746 | 304,746 | ||||||||
| Teresa M. Brenner | 155,000 | 194,746 | 349,746 | ||||||||
|
Michael T. Eckhart
(3)
|
47,747 | — | 47,747 | ||||||||
| Nancy C. Floyd | 110,000 | 194,746 | 304,746 | ||||||||
| Charles M. O’Neil | 125,000 | 194,746 | 319,746 | ||||||||
| Richard J. Osborne | 135,000 | 194,746 | 329,746 | ||||||||
| Steven G. Osgood | 135,000 | 241,044 | 376,044 | ||||||||
|
Kimberly A. Reed
|
110,000 | 194,746 | 304,746 | ||||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
33
|
|||||||
| (in thousands) |
For the Year Ended
December 31, 2024
|
For the Year Ended
December 31, 2023
|
|||||||||
|
Audit fees
(1)
|
3,141 | 2,998 | |||||||||
|
Audit-related fees
(2)
|
90 | 87 | |||||||||
|
Tax fees
(3)
|
290 | 778 | |||||||||
| All other fees | — | 402 | |||||||||
|
TOTAL
(4)
|
3,521 | 4,265 | |||||||||
|
34
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
Our board of directors recommends a
vote FOR
the ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for our fiscal year ending December 31, 202
5
.
|
||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
35
|
|||||||
|
36
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
37
|
|||||||
|
¢
|
GAAP EPS | ¢ |
Adjusted EPS
|
||||||||
|
¢
|
GAAP ROE
|
¢ |
Adjusted ROE
|
||||||||
|
38
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
39
|
|||||||
|
Our board of directors recommends a
vote FOR
approval of the non-binding advisory resolution approving the compensation of our Named Executive Officers as described in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, the compensation tables and other narrative disclosures in this proxy statement.
|
||||
|
40
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
| Name | Age | ||||
| Jeffrey A. Lipson | 57 | ||||
|
Marc T. Pangburn
(1)
|
39 | ||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
(1)
|
66 | ||||
| Susan D. Nickey | 64 | ||||
|
Nathaniel J. Rose
(1)
|
47 | ||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
41
|
|||||||
|
42
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
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43
|
|||||||
|
Percentage of 2024 Targeted Compensation
|
|||||||||||
| Compensation Element | Type of Compensation | Mr. Lipson |
Other Named
Executive Officers |
||||||||
| Annual base salary | Fixed | 11 | % |
9% to 20%
|
|||||||
| Annual cash or equity incentive | Variable / Equity-based | 20 | % |
21% to 29%
|
|||||||
| Long-term equity incentive program | Variable / Equity-based | 69 | % |
51% to 70%
|
|||||||
|
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|||||||
| WHAT WE DO: | WHAT WE DO NOT DO: | |||||||
Structure compensation with a target that is predominantly variable based on company and stock performance
|
Provide Section 280G gross-up payments
|
|||||||
Align short-term and long-term executive incentive plan targets with business goals and stockholder interests
|
Reward executives for taking excessive, inappropriate, or unnecessary risks
|
|||||||
Retain an independent compensation consultant to advise the Compensation Committee
|
Utilize an equity incentive plan that allows repricing of stock options without prior stockholder approval
|
|||||||
Maintain a comprehensive “clawback” policy that applies to our NEOs
|
Provide multi-year guaranteed salary increases or non-performance-based bonus arrangements
|
|||||||
Use multi-year performance metrics that compare our performance to external benchmarks
|
Rely exclusively on any single metric such as total stockholder return as our only performance metric
|
|||||||
Maintain a best-practices insider trading policy
|
Provide incentive awards for below-threshold performance
|
|||||||
Review and consider total compensation for each NEO against a peer group (as defined below)
|
Provide excessive executive perquisites
|
|||||||
Maintain a best-practices stock ownership guidelines for NEOs and Directors
|
Utilize an equity incentive plan that provides for equity awards subject to a minimum vesting period of less than one year
|
|||||||
Re-evaluate and update the composition of our peer group periodically, particularly in light of our significant growth and recent change in business structure
|
Permit hedging, and pledging and margin accounts related to our Common Stock
|
|||||||
Provide minimum thresholds for vesting of performance-based equity awards
|
Incorporate single trigger vesting for cash compensation under our NEO employment agreements
|
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|
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|
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|
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|
|||||||
|
July 2022
Peer Group
|
||||||||
| Arbor Realty Trust, Inc. | ||||||||
| First Solar, Inc. | ||||||||
| Hercules Capital, Inc. | ||||||||
|
Iron Mountain, Incorporated
|
||||||||
| Ladder Capital Corp. | ||||||||
| Main Street Capital Corporation | ||||||||
|
New York Mortgage Trust, Inc
|
||||||||
| Plug Power Inc. | ||||||||
|
Redwood Trust, Inc.
|
||||||||
| Safehold, Inc. | ||||||||
| SunPower Corporation | ||||||||
| Sunrun Inc. | ||||||||
| TPI Composites, Inc. | ||||||||
|
Uniti Group Inc.
|
||||||||
| Walker & Dunlop, Inc. | ||||||||
|
Primary Selection Criteria
|
||||||||
|
Implied market capitalization generally similar to that of HASI
|
||||||||
|
Total assets under management generally similar to that of HASI
|
||||||||
|
Revenue generally similar to that of HASI
|
||||||||
|
Companies that help to position HASI closer to median on key size metrics
|
||||||||
| U.S. publicly-traded companies | ||||||||
|
Secondary
Selection Criteria
|
||||||||
|
Reverse Peers
|
||||||||
|
Peers of current and suggested peers
|
||||||||
|
Companies that our investors consider as peers
|
||||||||
|
July 2023 and
July 2024
Peer Group
|
||||||||
| Arbor Realty Trust, Inc. | ||||||||
|
Affiliated Managers
Group, Inc.
|
||||||||
|
Ameresco, Inc.
|
||||||||
|
Array Technologies, Inc.
|
||||||||
|
Artisan Partners Asset
Management Inc.
|
||||||||
|
Enphase Energy, Inc.
|
||||||||
| First Solar, Inc. | ||||||||
| Hercules Capital, Inc. | ||||||||
| Ladder Capital Corp | ||||||||
|
Main Street
Capital Corporation
|
||||||||
| Plug Power Inc. | ||||||||
| Safehold Inc. | ||||||||
|
Shoals Technologies
Group, Inc.
|
||||||||
| Sunrun Inc. | ||||||||
|
Sunnova Energy
International Inc.
|
||||||||
| SunPower Corporation | ||||||||
| TPI Composites, Inc. | ||||||||
| Walker & Dunlop, Inc. | ||||||||
|
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|
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|
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|
|||||||
| Compensation Element | Objective | Key Features | |||||||||
| Base Salary (Cash) |
•
Provides a fixed element of compensation commensurate with each NEO’s position and responsibility.
|
•
Adjustments are generally considered annually based on individual performance, level of pay relative to the market and our peer group, internal pay equity, and retention.
|
|||||||||
| Annual Incentive Compensation (Cash and Equity) |
•
Provides an annual incentive or bonus based upon our overall corporate and individual performance as well as objective and subjective performance criteria that are aligned with the strategic direction of the Company.
|
•
Compensation Committee approves the overall corporate and individual performance measures as well as objective and subjective performance criteria on an annual basis.
•
Compensation Committee determines allocation between cash and equity on an annual basis, as well as the vesting criteria of the annual equity awards.
|
|||||||||
|
Long-term Incentive
Program (Equity)
|
•
Provides equity-based incentives that contain multi-year vesting and/or performance criteria in order to further our retention objectives and align the interests of our NEOs with those of our stockholders over a longer time period.
|
•
Compensation Committee determines allocation between time-based and performance-based awards.
•
Compensation Committee determines the performance targets and vesting criteria.
|
|||||||||
|
Health, Welfare, and
Other Benefits
|
•
Offers all eligible employees a competitive benefits package, which includes health and welfare benefits such as 401(k), medical, dental, disability insurance, and life insurance benefits.
|
•
The plans under which these benefits are offered do not discriminate in scope, terms or operation in favor of officers and are available to all eligible employees.
|
|||||||||
| Perquisites and Other Benefits |
•
Other than life insurance and disability benefits provided to Mr. Eckel as described below and, beginning in 2023, Mr. Lipson, we do not provide any perquisites and do not intend to provide perquisites exceeding $15,000 in the aggregate to our NEOs because we believe that we can provide better incentives for desired performance with compensation in the forms described above.
|
•
N/A
|
|||||||||
|
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|
|||||||
| Name |
2023 Annual Salary ($)
|
2024 Annual Salary ($)
|
2025 Annual Salary ($)
|
||||||||
|
Jeffrey A. Lipson
|
775,000 | 775,000 | 815,000 | ||||||||
|
Marc T. Pangburn
|
425,000 | 450,000 | 475,000 | ||||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
|
412,500 | 412,500 | Not applicable | ||||||||
| Susan D. Nickey | 420,000 | 440,000 | 440,000 | ||||||||
| Nathaniel J. Rose | 420,000 | 420,000 |
Not applicable
|
||||||||
| Name |
2024 Target Bonus (%)
|
2024 Actual Bonus (%)
|
||||||
| Jeffrey A. Lipson | 175 | 333 | ||||||
| Marc T. Pangburn | 150 | 293 | ||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
|
237 | 450 | ||||||
| Susan D. Nickey | 140 | 266 | ||||||
| Nathaniel J. Rose | 150 | 285 | ||||||
|
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|
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|
|||||||
| Corporate Performance Objectives | Weighting |
Quantitative Company
Performance Hurdle
(1)
|
Payout as a % of Target
Upon Achievement of
Hurdle
(1)
|
Actual
Performance |
||||||||||
|
2024 Adjusted Earnings / share
|
75 | % |
$2.23 - $2.34
|
50 | % | |||||||||
|
$2.34
|
100 | % | $2.45 | |||||||||||
|
$2.34 - $2.45
|
200 | % | ||||||||||||
|
2024 Adjusted ROE
|
25 | % | 9.5% – 10.0% | 50 | % | |||||||||
| 10.0% | 100 | % | 12.5 | % | ||||||||||
|
10.0% – 11.0%
|
200 | % | ||||||||||||
| Name |
Total Incentive
Compensation
Earned in
2024 ($)
|
% of
Incentive Compensation Paid in Cash |
% of Incentive
Compensation Paid in LTIP Units or Restricted Stock |
||||||||
| Jeffrey A. Lipson | 2,576,875 | 100 | — | ||||||||
| Marc T. Pangburn | 1,316,250 | 100 | — | ||||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
|
1,857,497 | 13 | 87 | ||||||||
| Susan D. Nickey | 1,170,400 | 100 | — | ||||||||
| Nathaniel J. Rose | 1,197,000 | 100 | — | ||||||||
|
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|
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|||||||
| Name |
2024 Performance
Based Award LTIP
Units
(1)
|
2024 Time
Based Award LTIP
Units
(2)
|
Total Value of
2024 Award ($)
(3)
|
||||||||
| Jeffrey A. Lipson | 172,000 | 86,000 | 5,030,570 | ||||||||
| Marc T. Pangburn | 49,000 | 24,500 | 1,433,128 | ||||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
|
60,000 | 30,000 | 1,754,850 | ||||||||
| Susan D. Nickey | 40,000 | 20,000 | 1,169,900 | ||||||||
| Nathaniel J. Rose | 42,000 | 21,000 | 1,228,395 | ||||||||
| Total Stockholder Return Metrics |
Threshold
50% |
Target
100% |
Outperform
200% |
||||||||
|
Cumulative Adjusted EPS
|
$6.69 | $7.38 | $8.12 | ||||||||
| Relative TSR | 30.0 | % | 55.0 | % | 80.0 | % | |||||
|
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|
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|
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|
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|
|||||||
|
Name and Principal Position
(1)
|
Year |
Salary ($)
(1)
|
Stock
Awards
($)
(2)
|
Non-equity
incentive plan
compensation
($)
(3)
|
All other
compensation
($)
(4)
|
Total ($) | ||||||||||||||
|
Jeffrey A. Lipson
Director, President and Chief Executive Officer
|
2024 | 775,001 | 5,030,570 | 2,576,875 | 17,250 | 8,399,696 | ||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 762,180 | 5,394,398 | 2,076,419 | 16,500 | 8,249,497 | |||||||||||||||
| 2022 | 525,000 | 1,298,388 | 1,496,250 | 15,250 | 3,334,888 | |||||||||||||||
|
Marc T. Pangburn
Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
|
2024 | 446,154 | 1,433,128 | 1,316,250 | 17,250 | 3,212,782 | ||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 445,994 | 1,410,300 | 976,013 | 16,500 | 2,848,807 | |||||||||||||||
| 2022 | 390,000 | 932,724 | 957,500 | 15,250 | 2,295,474 | |||||||||||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
Executive Chair |
2024 | 412,500 | 1,754,850 | 250,000 | 17,250 | 2,434,600 | ||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 542,067 | 4,073,401 | 1,496,744 | 16,500 | 6,128,712 | |||||||||||||||
| 2022 | 825,000 | 4,430,369 | 2,743,125 | 15,250 | 8,013,744 | |||||||||||||||
|
Susan D. Nickey
Executive Vice President and Chief Client Officer |
2024 | 436,923 | 1,169,900 | 1,170,400 | 17,250 | 2,794,473 | ||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 441,923 | 1,304,528 | 900,228 | 16,500 | 2,663,179 | |||||||||||||||
| 2022 | 390,000 | 932,724 | 957,500 | 15,250 | 2,295,474 | |||||||||||||||
|
Nathaniel J. Rose
Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer |
2024 | 420,000 | 1,228,395 | 1,197,000 | 17,250 | 2,862,645 | ||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 445,673 | 1,692,360 | 964,530 | 16,500 | 3,119,063 | |||||||||||||||
| 2022 | 415,000 | 1,284,967 | 1,182,750 | 15,250 | 2,897,967 | |||||||||||||||
|
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|||||||
|
Estimated future payouts
under non-equity
incentive plan awards
(1)
|
Estimated future payouts
under equity incentive
plan awards
|
All other
stock
awards:
number of
shares of
stock or
units (#)
(3)
|
Grant date
fair value of
stock and
option
awards
($)
(4)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Name and Principal Position |
Grant
Date
|
Threshold
($) |
Target
($) |
Maximum
($) |
Threshold
(#)
(2)
|
Target
(#)
(2)
|
Maximum
(#)
(2)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Jeffrey A. Lipson
Director, President and Chief Executive Officer |
3/1/24 | — | — | — | — | — | — | 86,000 | 2,232,560 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3/1/24 | — | — | — | 43,000 | 86,000 | 172,000 | — | 2,798,010 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | 2,576,875 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Marc T. Pangburn
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer |
3/1/24 | — | — | — | — | — | — | 24,500 | 636,020 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3/1/24 | — | — | — | 12,250 | 24,500 | 49,000 | — | 797,108 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | 1,316,250 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
Executive Chair |
3/1/24 | — | — | — | — | — | — | 30,000 | 778,800 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3/1/24 | — | — | — | 15,000 | 30,000 | 60,000 | — | 976,050 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | 250,000 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Susan D. Nickey
Executive Vice President and Chief Client Officer |
3/1/24 | — | — | — | — | — | — | 20,000 | 519,200 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3/1/24 | — | — | — | 10,000 | 20,000 | 40,000 | — | 650,700 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | 1,170,400 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Nathaniel J. Rose
Executive Vice President and Co-Chief Investment Officer |
3/1/24 | — | — | — | — | — | — | 21,000 | 545,160 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3/1/24 | — | — | — | 10,500 | 21,000 | 42,000 | — | 683,235 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| — | — | — | 1,197,000 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
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|
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|
58
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|
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|
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|
60
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|
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|
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|
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|
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|
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|
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| Stock Awards | ||||||||
| Name |
Number of Shares or Units of
Common Stock That Have
Not Vested (#)
(1)
|
Market Value of Shares or
Units of Common Stock That
Have Not Vested ($)
(2)
|
||||||
| Jeffrey A. Lipson | 312,605 | 8,387,179 | ||||||
| Marc T. Pangburn | 91,168 | 2,446,037 | ||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
|
185,948 | 4,988,985 | ||||||
| Susan D. Nickey | 78,918 | 2,117,370 | ||||||
| Nathaniel J. Rose | 91,870 | 2,464,872 | ||||||
| Name and Principal Position | Shares or Units | Vesting | |||||||||
|
Jeffrey A. Lipson
Director, President and Chief Executive Officer |
4,292 | 3/5/25 | |||||||||
| 51,000 | See Note 3 | ||||||||||
| 6,438 | See Note 4 | ||||||||||
| 86,000 | See Note 5 | ||||||||||
| 57,375 | See Note 6 | ||||||||||
| 107,500 | See Note 7 | ||||||||||
|
Marc T. Pangburn
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer |
3,083 | 3/5/25 | |||||||||
| 13,334 | See Note 3 | ||||||||||
| 4,626 | See Note 4 | ||||||||||
| 24,500 | See Note 5 | ||||||||||
| 15,000 | See Note 6 | ||||||||||
| 30,625 | See Note 7 | ||||||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
Executive Chair |
14,645 | 3/5/25 | |||||||||
| 38,512 | See Note 3 | ||||||||||
| 21,966 | See Note 4 | ||||||||||
| 30,000 | See Note 5 | ||||||||||
| 43,325 | See Note 6 | ||||||||||
| 37,500 | See Note 7 | ||||||||||
|
Susan D. Nickey
Executive Vice President and Chief Client Officer |
3,083 | 3/5/25 | |||||||||
| 12,334 | See Note 3 | ||||||||||
| 4,626 | See Note 4 | ||||||||||
| 20,000 | See Note 5 | ||||||||||
| 13,875 | See Note 6 | ||||||||||
| 25,000 | See Note 7 | ||||||||||
|
Nathaniel J. Rose
Executive Vice President and Co-Chief Investment Officer |
4,248 | 3/5/25 | |||||||||
| 16,000 | See Note 3 | ||||||||||
| 6,372 | See Note 4 | ||||||||||
| 21,000 | See Note 5 | ||||||||||
| 18,000 | See Note 6 | ||||||||||
| 26,250 | See Note 7 | ||||||||||
|
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|
|||||||
| Stock Awards | ||||||||
| Name |
Number of
Securities Acquired on Vesting (#) |
Value
Realized
on Vesting ($)
|
||||||
| Jeffrey A. Lipson | 33,125 | 1,016,510 | ||||||
| Marc T. Pangburn | 11,416 | 335,638 | ||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
(1)
|
45,566 | 1,288,798 | ||||||
| Susan D. Nickey | 10,916 | 319,498 | ||||||
| Nathaniel J. Rose | 15,581 | 450,494 | ||||||
|
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|||||||
| Name | Benefit |
Without Cause/For Good
Reason / Non-renewal by
Company ($)
(1)
|
Death ($) |
Disability
($)
(2)
|
Change in
Control ($)
(3)
|
Retirement
($)
(5)
|
||||||||||||||
| Jeffrey A. Lipson | Cash | 8,671,419 | 6,356,250 | 3,681,250 | 8,671,419 | — | ||||||||||||||
| Continued Health Benefits | 60,121 | — | — | 60,121 | — | |||||||||||||||
|
Equity
(4)
|
8,496,189 | 8,496,189 | 8,496,189 | 8,314,362 | — | |||||||||||||||
| Marc T. Pangburn | Cash | 2,058,007 | 1,282,500 | 1,282,500 | 2,058,007 | — | ||||||||||||||
| Continued Health Benefits | 45,091 | — | — | 45,091 | — | |||||||||||||||
|
Equity
(4)
|
2,539,916 | 2,539,916 | 2,539,916 | 2,399,863 | — | |||||||||||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
|
Cash | 3,669,665 | 5,977,625 | 2,215,125 | 3,669,665 | — | ||||||||||||||
| Continued Health Benefits | 44,462 | 44,462 | 44,462 | 44,462 | — | |||||||||||||||
|
Equity
(4)
|
5,764,560 | 5,764,560 | 5,764,560 | 4,490,564 | 2,231,102 | |||||||||||||||
| Susan D. Nickey | Cash | 896,743 | 1,170,400 | 1,170,400 | 896,743 | — | ||||||||||||||
| Continued Health Benefits | 9,754 | — | — | 9,754 | — | |||||||||||||||
|
Equity
(4)
|
2,231,371 | 2,231,371 | 2,231,371 | 2,053,702 | 950,238 | |||||||||||||||
| Nathaniel J. Rose | Cash | 2,263,890 | 1,197,000 | 1,197,000 | 2,263,890 | — | ||||||||||||||
| Continued Health Benefits | 60,121 | 60,121 | 60,121 | 60,121 | — | |||||||||||||||
|
Equity
(4)
|
2,655,902 | 2,655,902 | 2,655,902 | 2,347,008 | — | |||||||||||||||
|
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67
|
|||||||
|
HASI (2024)
|
|||||
| CEO Compensation | $ | 8,399,696 | |||
| Median Employee Compensation | $ | 252,645 | |||
| CEO to Worker Ratio | 33:1 | ||||
|
Summary
compensation
table total for
PEO-Eckel
($)
(1)
|
Summary
compensation
table total for
PEO-Lipson
($)
(1)
|
Compensation
actually paid to
PEO - Eckel
($)
(1, 2, 3)
|
Compensation
actually paid to
PEO - Lipson
($)
(1, 2, 3)
|
Average summary
compensation
table total for non-
PEO NEOs
($)
(1)
|
Average
compensation
actually paid to
non-PEO NEOs
($)
(1, 2, 3)
|
Value of initial fixed $100
investment based on
(4)
:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Year |
Total
shareholder return |
Peer group
total shareholder return |
Net Income
(thousand $) |
Adjusted
Earnings
per share
($)
(5)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2022 |
|
— |
(
|
— |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 |
|
— |
|
— |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
2020
|
|
— |
|
— |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
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| 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 |
2024
|
||||||||||
| Jeffrey A. Lipson | Jeffrey A. Lipson | Jeffrey A. Lipson | Marc T. Pangburn |
Marc T. Pangburn
|
||||||||||
| J. Brendan Herron | J. Brendan Herron | Susan D. Nickey | Susan D. Nickey |
Jeffrey W. Eckel
|
||||||||||
| Steven L. Chuslo | Steven L. Chuslo | Marc T. Pangburn | Nathaniel J. Rose |
Susan D. Nickey
|
||||||||||
| Daniel K. McMahon | Daniel K. McMahon | Nathaniel J. Rose | Richard R. Santoroski |
Nathaniel J. Rose
|
||||||||||
| Nathaniel J. Rose | Susan D. Nickey | |||||||||||||
| Marc T. Pangburn | ||||||||||||||
| Nathaniel J. Rose | ||||||||||||||
| Year |
Summary
Compensation Table
Total for PEO
Lipson
($)
|
Exclusion of
Change in Pension Value for PEO Lipson ($) |
Exclusion
of Stock Awards for PEO Lipson ($) |
Inclusion of
Pension Service Cost for PEO Lipson ($) |
Inclusion of
Equity
Values for PEO
Lipson
($)
|
Compensation
Actually
Paid to PEO
Lipson
($)
|
||||||||||||||
|
2024
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
| 2023 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
| 2022 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
| 2021 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
| 2020 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
| Year |
Summary
Compensation Table Total for PEO Eckel ($) |
Exclusion of
Change in Pension Value for PEO Eckel ($) |
Exclusion
of Stock Awards for PEO Eckel ($) |
Inclusion of
Pension Service Cost for PEO Eckel ($) |
Inclusion of Equity
Values for PEO Eckel ($) |
Compensation Actually
Paid to PEO Eckel ($) |
||||||||||||||
|
2023
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
| 2022 |
|
|
(
|
|
(
|
(
|
||||||||||||||
| 2021 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
|
2020
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
| Year |
Average Summary
Compensation Table Total for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
Average Exclusion of
Change in Pension Value for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
Average Exclusion
of Stock Awards for Non-PEO NEOs
($)
|
Average Inclusion
of Pension Service
Cost for Non-PEO
NEOs
($)
|
Average Inclusion of
Equity Values for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
Average
Compensation Actually Paid to Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
||||||||||||||
|
2024
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
|
2023
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
| 2022 |
|
|
(
|
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||
| 2021 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
|
2020
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
69
|
|||||||
| Year |
Year-End Fair
Value of Equity Awards Granted During Year That Remained Unvested as of Last Day of Year for PEO Lipson ($) |
Change in Fair
Value from Last Day of Prior Year to Last Day of Year of Unvested Equity Awards for PEO Lipson ($) |
Vesting-
Date Fair Value of Equity Awards Granted During Year that Vested During Year for PEO Lipson ($) |
Change in Fair Value
from Last Day of Prior Year to Vesting Date of Unvested Equity Awards that Vested During Year for PEO Lipson ($) |
Fair Value at Last
Day of Prior Year of Equity Awards Forfeited During Year for PEO Lipson ($) |
Value of
Dividends or Other Earnings Paid on Equity Awards Not Otherwise Included for PEO Lipson ($) |
Total -
Inclusion of Equity Values for PEO Lipson ($) |
||||||||||||||||
|
2024
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
2023
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
| 2022 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
| 2021 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
| 2020 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
| Year |
Year-End Fair
Value of Equity Awards Granted During Year That Remained Unvested as of Last Day of Year for PEO Eckel ($) |
Change in Fair
Value from Last Day of Prior Year to Last Day of Year of Unvested Equity Awards for PEO Eckel ($) |
Vesting-
Date Fair Value of Equity Awards Granted During Year that Vested During Year for PEO Eckel ($) |
Change in Fair Value
from Last Day of Prior Year to Vesting Date of Unvested Equity Awards that Vested During Year for PEO Eckel ($) |
Fair Value at Last
Day of Prior Year of Equity Awards Forfeited During Year for PEO Eckel ($) |
Value of
Dividends or Other Earnings Paid on Equity Awards Not Otherwise Included for PEO Eckel ($) |
Total -
Inclusion of Equity Values for PEO Eckel ($) |
||||||||||||||||
|
2023
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
| 2022 |
|
(
|
|
(
|
|
|
(
|
||||||||||||||||
| 2021 |
|
(
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
2020
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
| Year |
Average Year-End
Fair Value of Equity Awards Granted During Year That Remained Unvested as of Last Day of Year for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
Average Change
in Fair Value from Last Day of Prior Year to Last Day of Year of Unvested Equity Awards for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
Average Vesting-
Date Fair Value of Equity Awards Granted During Year that Vested During Year for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
Average Change
in Fair Value from Last Day of Prior Year to Vesting Date of Unvested Equity Awards that Vested During Year for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
Average Fair
Value at Last Day of Prior Year of Equity Awards Forfeited During Year for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
Average Value
of Dividends or Other Earnings Paid on Equity Awards Not Otherwise Included for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
Total - Average
Inclusion of Equity Values for Non-PEO NEOs ($) |
||||||||||||||||
|
2024
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
2023
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
| 2022 |
|
(
|
|
(
|
|
|
(
|
||||||||||||||||
| 2021 |
|
(
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
2020
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
70
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
| Fiscal Year | |||||
|
PEO Compensation Actually Paid - Eckel
|
||||
|
PEO Compensation Actually Paid - Lipson
|
||||
|
Average Non-PEO NEO Compensation Actually Paid | ||||
|
HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc. TSR
|
||||
| Fiscal Year | |||||
|
PEO Compensation Actually Paid - Eckel
|
||||
|
PEO Compensation Actually Paid - Lipson
|
||||
|
Average Non-PEO NEO Compensation Actually Paid | ||||
|
HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc. Net Income
|
||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
71
|
|||||||
| Fiscal Year | ||||||||||||||
|
PEO Compensation Actually Paid - Eckel
|
|
PEO Compensation Actually Paid - Lipson
|
|||||||||||
|
Average Non-PEO NEO Compensation Actually Paid
|
|
Adjusted EPS
|
|||||||||||
|
HA Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc. TSR
|
|
ALPS Clean Energy ETF
|
||||||||
|
72
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
|
||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
73
|
|||||||
|
Shares of Common Stock
Beneficially Owned
As Of April 7, 2025
|
||||||||
|
Name
(1)
|
Number |
Percent
(2)
|
||||||
| Named Executive Officers and Directors: | ||||||||
|
Jeffrey A. Lipson
(3)
|
365,654 |
*
|
||||||
|
Marc T. Pangburn
(4)
|
165,415 |
*
|
||||||
|
Jeffrey W. Eckel
(5)
|
1,069,597 |
*
|
||||||
|
Charles Melko
(6)
|
66,332 |
*
|
||||||
|
Susan D. Nickey
(7)
|
151,664 |
*
|
||||||
|
Nathaniel J. Rose
(8)
|
345,633 |
*
|
||||||
|
Lizabeth A. Ardisana
|
13,273 |
*
|
||||||
|
Clarence D. Armbrister
|
16,586 |
*
|
||||||
|
Teresa M. Brenner
|
32,428 |
*
|
||||||
|
Nancy C. Floyd
|
17,343 |
*
|
||||||
|
Charles M. O’Neil
|
44,981 |
*
|
||||||
|
Richard J. Osborne
|
58,713 |
*
|
||||||
|
Steven G. Osgood
|
68,407 |
*
|
||||||
|
Kimberly A. Reed
|
9,567 |
*
|
||||||
|
Laura A. Schulte
(9)
|
— |
*
|
||||||
|
Barry E. Welch
(9)
|
— |
*
|
||||||
|
All directors and executive officers as a group (16 persons)
|
2,425,594 | 2.0 | % | |||||
|
5% or Greater Beneficial Owners:
|
||||||||
|
Blackrock, Inc.
(10)
|
18,602,071 | 15.2 | % | |||||
|
The Vanguard Group
(11)
|
12,618,157 | 10.3 | % | |||||
|
Wellington Management Group LLP
(12)
|
13,487,986 | 11.0 | % | |||||
|
74
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
75
|
|||||||
|
76
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
77
|
|||||||
|
78
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
79
|
|||||||
|
Annapolis, Maryland
April 22, 2025
|
By Order of our Board of Directors,
/s/ Steven L. Chuslo
Steven L. Chuslo
Secretary
|
||||
|
80
|
HASI Proxy Statement 2025
|
|||||||
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
| FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
|---|
| DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
|---|
No information found
No Customers Found
No Suppliers Found
Price
Yield
| Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
|---|