Posted on 01/04/2012 10:50:23 AM PST by Recon Dad
The Institute for Energy Research (IER) is committed to free-market policy solutions for Americas energy needs. IER has repeatedly argued that reducing the federal governments intervention in the energy sector would reduce prices for consumers and, especially in our current recession, would create thousands of good jobs for unemployed workers.
In this context, a recent opinion piece on FoxNews by Steve LockardCEO of a company making wind turbines and a board member of the American Wind Energy Associationwas quite ironic. Lockard was trying to appeal to conservative readers by claiming that the Congress was threatening to destroy American jobs through tax hikes, and that even Ron Paul agreed this was a violation of the free market. Lets go through Lockards claims to get the real scoop on the inefficiency of wind power.
Lockard on Wind Power and the Market
To set the stage, well quote extensively from Lockards piece:
Our wind energy manufacturing company has created 700 new jobs in Newton, and a second wind energy company now employs over 100 people.
Our industry can do the same in hard-hit towns all across the U.S., if Congress will let us and doesnt increase taxes on wind power in the New Year.
What is happening in Newton is happening all across the country, although many people dont realize it. Wind energy is a market that the U.S. is winning.
These economics are driving a surge in wind manufacturing. Over the last six years, U.S. domestic production of wind turbine components has grown 12-fold, to more than 400 facilities in 43 states. This has helped shift manufacturing jobs from overseas back to the U.S.
All that is needed is Congressional action to keep the tax rate stable and low on this homegrown American energy source. That is why extending winds federal Production Tax Credit (PTC) is so important. If Congress raises taxes on wind energy by letting this tax rate expire in 2012, many of the good U.S. manufacturing jobs weve been able to create will evaporate.
Presidential candidate Ron Paul visited our factory himself in October. He told reporters in our conference room that, As a believer in the free market, I dont look at a tax credit as a subsidy.
Now if Congress will let us finish the job, wind energy can do for America what we have already done for Newton, Iowa: Create U.S. manufacturing jobs right here at home.
Lockards piece is a great PR effort, making three basic claims that would appeal to Fox readers: (1) Wind power can fuel job growth out of the recession. (2) Congress is threatening to abort this recovery by raising taxes on wind power. (3) If Congress would just mind its own business, the free market would support a massive expansion of wind power.
Unfortunately for Lockard, these claims are either very misleading or downright false.
Wind Power Is a Tiny Fraction of the Energy Sector
Lockards talking points make it sound as if wind power is poised to take over the energy scene. But like Paul Krugmans similar remarks about solar power, these too are unsubstantiated.
According to the Energy Information Administration, in 2010, wind power accounted for 0.9 percent of the energy used in the United States.
Yes, its easy to achieve large rates of growth in the wind sector, when starting from such a low baseline. The EIA projects that wind will only produce 3.1 percent of electricity by 2035, up from 2.3 percent in 2010. Because of higher costs and the tremendous problem of intermittencythe wind doesnt always blowwind power is nowhere near a position to fuel an economic recovery.
Wind Power Dependent on Tilted Playing Field Established by the Government
When Lockard speaks of raising taxes on wind power, its not the same thing (say) as proposals to raise marginal income tax rates on the rich. Rather, he refers to the expiration of the federal production tax credit (PTC) that wind currently enjoys.
The PTC for wind was first introduced as part of the Energy Policy Act of 1992. It was defined as a 1.5-cents-per-kilowatthour payment (adjusted annually for inflation), available for 10 years to investors for facilities placed in service between 1994 and June 30, 1999. The PTC for wind has expired and been reinstated several times since its origination. The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-343) signed on October 3, 2008 extended the PTC to 2.1-cents-per-kilowatt-hour through 2012. The $787 billion economic stimulus President Obama signed into law in February 2009 made a 30 percent investment tax credit available in lieu of the production credit.[1] The Obama Administration also instituted the section 1603 grant program where the 30 percent investment tax credit could be taken as an immediate rebate rather than used against taxes, but that program expired in 2011.
Now it is true that other forms of energy receive federal tax preferences. However, when calculating the implicit subsidy in terms of dollars per unit of energy delivered, the relative advantage isnt even close. For example, total federal subsidies in fiscal year 2007 were $23.37 per megawatt hour for wind, compared with $0.44 for conventional coal and $0.25 for natural gas and petroleum liquids.[2] In fiscal year 2010, they were even higher. Winds subsidies amounted to $56.29 per megawatt hour, while the figures for coal, and natural gas and petroleum liquids, were tied at a mere $0.64.[3]
In addition to the federal tax advantages, wind power also enjoys mandated usage in various states Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) frameworks. What happens here is that a given state will mandate that utilities must generate a certain percentage of electricity from renewable sources, and it is often cheapest to comply with the mandate by using wind power. (However, we note that many states are not in compliance with their own RPS.)
Tax Credits and the Free Market
By citing Ron Pauls views on tax credits, Lockard tries to equate a blossoming wind sector with the free market. However, this is quite misleading. Ron Paul was making a principled distinction, based on libertarian views of property rights, between an actual government spending subsidy versus a tax credit (which simply subtracts from a companys tax payment owed to the government). Pauls point was that any revenues a wind company gets from its customers are the property of the company, and so it shouldnt be considered a government subsidy if that company is allowed to retain more of its own money through a tax credit. (In contrast, a bona fide subsidy would involve a person or company receiving a net transfer of tax dollars to achieve some goal that the government wanted to promote.) This is what Ron Paul meant by saying that he supports the free market and therefore doesnt consider a tax credit to be an actual government subsidy.
Yet Lockard shouldnt leap to the conclusion that wind power is therefore a creature of the free market. Really what were seeing is that if the government mandates the use of wind power, and keeps taxes relatively low on wind power, while heaping much larger taxes on conventional energy sources, then wind power can survive, albeit still being confined to a small niche.
Lockard implicitly gives away the game when he says that removal of the tax credit would devastate the wind industry. By the same token, if the government kept the wind PTC, but extended the same credit to every other energy source, then the wind sector would also collapse. This is becausewith current technologies and the state of our energy infrastructureit is more efficient to have the vast bulk of US energy produced by conventional sources, rather than wind.
Conclusion
Although he made a clever effort to appeal to conservative readers through rhetoric of job creation and tax hikes, Steve Lockard hides the plain fact that in a level playing fieldi.e. a true free marketwind power will only constitute a small niche for the foreseeable future. It is only growing at its current rate because of a massively unfair playing field of federal tax advantages, subsidies, and state mandates.
Ping.
So far they can only make it via government mandates and subsidies.
This is 2007 data but I've seen newer charts and the relative subsidy amounts have not changed much.
Here are some interesting points.
It was designed in --GERMANY.
It was built in -----CHINA.
It will come from China by ship and be offloaded in Providence RI, and in sections be trucked to Scituate,MA
I guess Americans can't competitively design or make wind turbines. - tom
Wind and solar have never truly been a genuine source for feeding the grid, and they can't unless an inexpensive way to store power is developed.
I wonder how much money the commie ‘RAT elitists have made by outlawing oil and coal and investing their money in wind and solar. I think that I smell corruption here but I can’t be sure.
Considering wind represents less than 1% of energy produced in this country this chart is a joke. You have to base subsidies on a megawatt hour basis so everything is equal.
For example, total federal subsidies in fiscal year 2007 were $23.37 per megawatt hour for wind, compared with $0.44 for conventional coal and $0.25 for natural gas and petroleum liquids.[2] In fiscal year 2010, they were even higher. Winds subsidies amounted to $56.29 per megawatt hour, while the figures for coal, and natural gas and petroleum liquids, were tied at a mere $0.64.[3]
Didn’t I read that over 4,000 windmill have been abandoned in place, since the subsidies for them stopped?
Are you aware that States and Municipalities have “legislated” the % of “renewable” power some utilities MUST provide?
Here’s how they do it.
XCEL must provide 10% of its power from “renewable sources”.
When the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine, coal and gas fired plants make up the difference......BUT!!!
...they bookkeep and allocate that power to the “renewable” column....
How pitiful and corrupt is that?
Do the same chart in $/kWH
This data is meaningless with correlating dollars per kwh!!!
14,000 abandoned wind turbines
Minnesotans for Global Warming report that in the last 30 years, the United States has had 14,000 wind turbines abandoned. Apparently, once the subsidies and the wind run out, these 20-story high Cuisinarts are de-bladed and retired. This means more bats and migratory birds will live.
From Minnesotans for Global Warming: The symbol of Green renewable energy, our savior from the non existent problem of Global Warming, abandoned wind farms are starting to litter the planet as globally governments cut the taxes that consumers pay for the privilege of having a very expensive power source that does not work every day for various reasons like its too cold or the wind speed is too high.
Andrew Walden of American Thinker explored nearly 2 years ago the demise of the 37-turbine wind farm at Kamaoa Wind Farm in Hawaii: Built in 1985, at the end of the boom, Kamaoa soon suffered from lack of maintenance. In 1994, the site lease was purchased by Redwood City, CA-based Apollo Energy. Cannibalizing parts from the original 37 turbines, Apollo personnel kept the declining facility going with outdated equipment. But even in a place where wind-shaped trees grow sideways, maintenance issues were overwhelming. By 2004 Kamaoa accounts began to show up on a Hawaii State Department of Finance list of unclaimed properties. In 2006, transmission was finally cut off by Hawaii Electric Company.Californias wind farms then comprising about 80% of the worlds wind generation capacity ceased to generate much more quickly than Kamaoa. In the best wind spots on earth, over 14,000 turbines were simply abandoned. Spinning, post-industrial junk which generates nothing but bird kills.
When an honest history of this period in the United States is written, it will no be kind to the corporate cronyism that preyed upon public ignorance of earth science to create a crisis global warming to exploit and loot the Treasury.
The costs per KWH were in the article I don’t think they fit Big Bob’s take on wind.
“ALL forms of energy receive government subsidies”
Yes, but only some of them would still exist as industries without them.
“Wind and solar receive less than some others”
Well, yeah, but that’s apples and oranges. Of course coal and nukes will get more Big Mother’s milk. Wind and solar are baby industries, and a baby can only suckle so much.
“Wind and solar are baby industries”
Oh, and in case this was unclear, they are baby industries because as energy producers they are losers and as investments they are sinkholes.
I also wish I could find one that didn't consider normal tax breaks applied to all domestic manuafacturing listed as a subsidy for oil and gas.
And while I'm wishing, I would like to find one that also credited in the taxes paid for the net.
Now, not only a per energy unit basis is wind larger but even measured in dollars it is more than oil, gas and coal combined.
Subsidies for Energy Production in FY 2010
Source |
Total Federal Expenditures ($ bn) |
Energy Output (Qbtu) |
Subsidy in $/mmbtu |
Coal |
1.358 |
23.940 |
0.057 |
Oil and gas |
2.820 |
38.730 |
0.073 |
Solar |
1.134 |
0.004 |
274.180 |
Wind |
4.986 |
0.323 |
15.439 |
Hydro |
0.216 |
2.920 |
0.074 |
Nuclear |
2.499 |
8.770 |
0.285 |
Biofuels |
7.761 |
4.700 |
1.651 |
Geothermal |
0.273 |
0.052 |
5.260 |
All Renewables (except hydro) |
14.154 |
5.079 |
2.787 |
Total |
21.047 |
79.354 |
0.265 |
Here in Fairbanks Alaska, we are building a wind farm. The ONLY reason we can do it is because the cost of oil is so freaking high, wind is actually cheaper. Also the state and federal government has given money for the project. If it were not for government “free” money, and the high price of oil, this would be an idiotic investment.
As it is, it will actually produce power at a lesser cost that oil fired power plants. Sad, sad, sad.
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