Pennsylvania’s Compressed Air Incentives and Rebates for Manufacturers

If you are running compressed air in a Pennsylvania facility, there is a good chance you can reduce operating cost and capture utility incentives at the same time. Many Pennsylvania programs are delivered through Act 129, which is overseen by the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission and implemented by the electric distribution companies in their service territories.

This page is designed to help medium to large industrial and manufacturing facilities understand:

  • What incentive programs exist in Pennsylvania

  • What types of compressed air projects often qualify

  • How to get started and avoid common pitfalls

  • Where to find official program resources by utility territory

If you want help confirming eligibility and building a clean justification package for leadership, start with a quick eligibility screen tied to your facility ZIP and electric account territory.

What is Act 129 in Pennsylvania

Act 129 is Pennsylvania’s statewide energy efficiency requirement for major electric distribution companies. The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission implements Act 129, and utilities run programs that drive reduced energy consumption and peak demand through rebates and incentives.

In practice, that means many Pennsylvania facilities can access incentives for projects that reduce energy use and demand, including compressed air improvements, depending on the utility territory and program rules.

Why compressed air rebates matter for plants

Compressed air is often a top energy user in manufacturing. The fastest savings usually come from reducing wasted demand, then right sizing and optimizing. Incentives can make projects easier to get approved internally because they can:

  • Improve payback

  • Reduce out of pocket project cost

  • Help offset capital cost for upgrades

  • Support measured and documented savings

Programs and eligibility vary by utility territory, but the opportunity is common across Pennsylvania.

What compressed air projects may qualify

Eligibility depends on the specific utility program, but these are typical categories where incentives are often available through custom or prescriptive pathways:

  • Leak detection and repair initiatives that produce measurable reductions

  • Pressure optimization when the system can operate reliably at lower setpoints

  • Controls, sequencing, and automation improvements that reduce run time

  • System right sizing to reduce unnecessary capacity and nonproductive load

  • High efficiency compressor upgrades where energy reduction can be verified

The cleanest way to determine fit is a quick eligibility screen tied to your facility ZIP and electric account territory.

Maryland utility programs to check

Pennsylvania is served by multiple electric utilities. Your incentive path depends on where the meter is.

PPL Electric Business Energy Efficiency Program

PPL has a dedicated Compressed Air incentive page that highlights incentives for energy efficient upgrades, optimization, leak tag programs, VFDs, and other custom projects.

PPL also offers multiple participation paths, including Instant Discounts that can include compressed air equipment discounts through participating distributors.

PPL publishes a program overview that describes incentive structure and also notes that pre approval is recommended, and that pre approval may be waived for some custom projects if savings can still be accurately captured.

Learn more about PPL’s Compressed Air Incentives & Download Helpful Guides

PECO Business Solutions

PECO’s business equipment incentives page lists Compressed Air Systems among its incentive categories and provides a link to download the full list of incentives.

Duquesne Light Company

Duquesne Light’s Custom Incentives page lists compressed air systems as an example of custom projects and states custom projects are incentivized at a kWh savings rate.

FirstEnergy Pennsylvania electric companies

If your facility is served by FirstEnergy’s Pennsylvania utilities (Met Ed, Penelec, Penn Power, West Penn Power), the Energy Save PA Business Solutions program includes a dedicated Commercial Compressed Air Program page. It requires a completed compressed air calculator spreadsheet as part of the application documentation.

Their Resources page also lists a Compressed Air Calculator along with other calculators, rebate forms, and fact sheets, including a compressed air sell sheet.

How incentives are typically awarded

Most programs fall into two common buckets.

Prescriptive incentives

These are set incentive amounts for common measures. You choose from a list, follow program rules, and submit required documentation. PECO’s equipment incentives structure is a good example of a catalog style approach.

Custom incentives

Custom incentives apply when the measure is not on a standard list or needs a site specific savings calculation. Duquesne Light explicitly supports custom incentives and lists compressed air systems as a common custom project type.

For compressed air, custom is often the path because savings can be highly site dependent.

How incentives are typically awarded

Step 1: Confirm your utility territory and eligibility

  • Start with the facility ZIP and electric account utility. This determines which program applies.

Step 2: Identify the project category

  • Leak repair initiative, pressure optimization, controls, or equipment upgrade. The category drives whether the path is prescriptive or custom.

Step 3: Confirm pre-approval requirements

Many programs recommend or require pre-approval for accurate savings and incentive calculation. PPL notes pre-approval is recommended and describes when it may be waived for certain custom projects.

Step 4: Implement and document

Track what changed, capture baseline versus post conditions where required, and keep invoices and equipment specs organized. FirstEnergy’s PA compressed air program outlines required documents including the compressed air calculator, spec sheets, utility bill, and cost estimate.

Step 5: Submit and verify

Most programs require defined documentation and may include an offer letter or approval step before final payment, depending on the territory and measure type

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Purchasing equipment before program approval when pre approval is required or strongly recommended
  • Treating rebates as guaranteed without confirming the utility territory
  • Skipping baseline documentation, which can weaken a custom incentive application
  • Focusing only on equipment upgrades and missing the demand reduction wins that improve the savings story

Need help confirming what applies to your plant?

If you share your facility ZIP and a quick snapshot of your compressed air setup, we can help you identify:

  • Which Pennsylvania program you fall under

  • The best path, prescriptive or custom

  • The fastest first step, often a leak assessment or targeted system review

  • What documentation you should gather to support an incentive application

Official programs & their resources

LIKE WHAT YOU READ? GIVE US A SHARE

LinkedIn
Email

GET IN TOUCH

We’re looking forward to working with you. Whether you have questions about products or services, our team is ready to help.

We promise not to spam you and will only be sending information worth your valuable time.
en_USEnglish