Company: SUNE
Filing Date: 2025-08-18
Form Type: 424B5
Source: 0001213900-25-078001
Chunk: 16

Company: SUNation Energy, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-08-18
Form: 424B5
Chunk 16
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 indebtedness in the near future. Failure to do so could adversely affect our ability to continue or successfully grow our operations.

If capital is not available or we are not able
to agree on reasonable terms with our lenders or creditors, we may then need to scale back or postpone our organic growth plans, reduce
expenses, and/or curtail future acquisition plans to manage our liquidity and capital resources. From time to time, we receive claims
for significant monetary damages, penalties, or seeking additional securities. Such claims, if material, and if accurate, can place significant
pressure on our financials, cashflow, operations, we may not be able timely pay, finance, refinance or otherwise extend or repay our
past, current or future obligations, and it may place a strain on management’s time and focus, each of which could result in a
material adverse event in relation to our operations and future prospects, and/or such matters could materially impact our ability to
continue to operate as a going concern.

We need to obtain substantial additional financing arrangements to provide working capital and growth capital. If financing is not available to us on acceptable terms when needed, our ability to continue to fund our operations and grow our business would be materially adversely impacted.

Distributed solar power is a capital-intensive
business that relies heavily on the availability of debt and equity financing sources to fund solar energy system purchase, design, engineering
and other capital and operational expenditures. Our future success depends in part on our ability to raise capital from third-party investors
and commercial sources, such as banks and other lenders, on competitive terms to help finance the deployment of our solar energy systems.
We seek to minimize our cost of capital in order to improve profitability and maintain the price competitiveness of the electricity produced
by the payments for and the cost of our solar energy systems; however, as a result of the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act,
which was passed in congress and signed into law in July 2025, we will be required to seek new sources of funding and financing, the
affects and results of which are too early to fully ascertain, adding additional complexity to our operating and finance costs, in addition
to the loss of certain tax credits to our residential customers, the latter of which is not yet in effect, and therefore, not fully determinable,
adding further uncertainty to certain of our operational costs. These changes could materially impact our finance costs, timing and ultimately
our future operational results. These changes could materially impact our finance costs, timing and ultimately our operations