Commentary by Marita Noon April 21, 2014
With the growing story coming out of Ukraine, the ongoing search for the missing Malaysian jet, the intensifying Nevada cattle battle, and the new announcement about the additional Keystone pipeline delay, little attention is being paid to the Production Tax Credit (PTC) for wind energy—or any of the other fifty lapsed tax breaks the Senate Finance Committee approved earlier this month. But, despite the low news profile, the gears of government continue to grind up taxpayer dollars.
The
Expiring Provisions Improvement Reform and Efficiency Act (EXPIRE) did not
originally include the PTC, however, prior to the committee markup hearing on
April 3, Senators Charles Grassley (R-IA), Michael Bennet (D-CO), and Maria
Cantwell (D-WA) pushed for an amendment to add a two-year PTC extension. The tax
extender package passed out of committee and has been sent to the senate floor
for debate. There, its future is uncertain.
“If
the bill becomes law,” reports the Energy Collective, “it will allow wind energy
developers to qualify for tax credits if they begin construction by the end of
2015.” The American Wind Energy Association’s (AWEA) website calls on Congress
to: “act quickly to retroactively extend the PTC.”
The
PTC is often the deciding factor in determining whether or not to build a wind
farm. According to Bloomberg, wind power advocates fear: “Without the
restoration of the subsidies, worth $23 per megawatt hour to turbine owners, the
industry might not recover, and the U.S. may lose ground in its race to reduce
dependence on fossil fuels driving global warming.” The National Renewable
Energy Laboratory released a report earlier this month affirming the importance
of the subsidies to the wind industry. It showed that the PTC has been critical
to the development of the U.S. wind power industry. The report also found: PTC
“extension options that would ramp down by the end of 2022 appear to be
insufficient to support recent levels of deployment. …extending the production
tax credit at its historical level could provide the best opportunity to sustain
strong U.S. wind energy installation and domestic manufacturing.”
The
PTC was originally part of the Energy Policy Act of 1992. It has expired many
times— most recently at the close of 2013. The last-minute 2012 extension, as a
part of the American Tax Relief Act, included an eligibility criteria adjustment
that allows projects that began construction in 2013, and maintain construction
through as long as 2016, to qualify for the ten-year tax credit designed to
establish a production incentive. Previously, projects would have had to be
producing electricity at the time the PTC expired to qualify.
Thomas Pyle, the president of the American Energy Alliance,
which represents the interests of oil, coal, and natural gas companies, called the 2013 expiration of
the wind PTC “a victory for taxpayers.” He explained: “The notion that the wind
industry is an infant that needs the PTC to get on its feet is simply not true.
The PTC has overstayed its welcome and any attempt to extend it would do a great
disservice to the American people.”
As
recently as 2006-2007, “the wind PTC had no natural enemies,” states a new report on the PTC’s future.
The Declining Appetite for the Wind PTC report points to the assumption that
“all extenders are extended eventually, and that enacting the extension is
purely a matter of routine, in which gridlock on unrelated topics is the only
source of uncertainty and delay.” The report then concludes: “That has been a
correct view in past years.”
The
report predicts that the PTC will follow “the same political trajectory as the
ethanol mandate and the ethanol blenders’ tax credit before it.” The mandate
remains—albeit in a slightly weakened state—and the tax credit is gone: “ethanol
no longer needed the blenders’ tax credit because it had the strong support of a
mandate (an implicit subsidy) behind it.”
The
PTC once enjoyed support from some in the utility industry that needed it to
bolster wind power development to meet the mandates. Today, utilities have met
their state mandates—or come close enough, the report points out: “their state
utility commissioners will not allow them to build more.” It is important to
realize that the commissioners are appointed or elected to protect the
ratepayers and insure that the rates charged by the utilities are fair and as
low as possible. Because of the increased cost of wind energy over conventional
sources, commissioners won’t allow any more than is necessary to meet the
mandates passed by the legislatures.
The
abundance of natural gas and subsequent low price has also hurt wind energy’s
predicted price parity. South Dakota’s Governor Dennis Daugaard (R), in
Bloomberg, said: “If gas prices weren’t
so cheap, then wind might be able to compete on its own.” David Crane, chief
executive officer of NRG Energy Inc.—which builds both gas and renewable power
plants—agrees: “Cheap gas has definitely made it harder to compete.” With the
subsidy, companies were able to propose wind projects “below the price of gas.”
Without the PTC, Stephen Munro, an analyst at New Energy Finance, confirms: “we
don’t expect wind to be at cost parity with gas.”
The
changing conditions combined with “wide agreement that the majority of extenders
are special interest handouts, the pet political projects of a few influential
members of Congress,” mean that “the wind PTC is not a sure bet for extension.”
Bloomberg declares: “Wind power in the U.S. is on a respirator.” Mike Krancer,
who previously served as secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of
Environmental Protection, in an article in Roll Call, states: “Washington’s usual
handout to keep the turbines spinning may be harder to win this time
around.”
Despite the claim of “Loud support for
the PTC” from North American Windpower (NAW), the report predicts “political
resistance.” NAW points to letters from 144 members of Congress urging
colleagues to “act quickly to revive the incentives.” Twenty-six Senate members
signed the letter to Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-OR) and 118
signed a similar letter to Speaker John Boehner (R-OH). However, of the 118
House members, only six were Republicans—which, even if the PTC extension makes
it out of the Senate, points to the difficulty of getting it extended in the
Republican-controlled House.
Bloomberg cites AWEA as saying: “the Republican-led House of
Representatives may not support efforts to extend the tax credits before the
November election.” This supports the view stated in the report. House Ways
& Means Committee Chairman David Camp (R-MI) held his first hearing on tax
extenders on April 8. He only wants two of the 55 tax breaks continued: small
business depreciation and the R & D tax credit. The report states: “Camp
says that he will probably hold hearings on which extenders should be permanent
through the spring and into the summer. He hasn’t said when he would do an
extenders proposal himself, but our guess is that he will wait until after the
fall elections. …We think the PTC is most endangered if Republicans win a Senate
Majority in the fall.”
So,
even if the PTC survives the current Senate’s floor debate (Senator Pat Toomey
[R-PA] offered an amendment that would have entirely done away with the PTC), it
is only the “first step in a long journey” and, according to David Burton, a
partner at law firm Akin Gump Hauer and Feld, is “unlikely on its own to create
enough confidence to spur investment in the development of new projects.” Plus,
the House will likely hold up its resurrection.
Not
to mention the growing opposition to wind energy due to the slaughter of birds
and bats—including the protected bald and golden eagles. Or, growing fears about
health impacts, maintenance costs and abandoned turbines.
(Editior's Note - We should remember these are the exact human and animal health 'fears' brought up by the activists causing whole categories of pesticides to be removed from the market, yet apparently all human and animal health'fears' aren't equal to the activists, even when they're the same fears.)
All
of these factors have likely led Jeff Imelt, chief executive officer of General
Electric Co.—the biggest U.S. turbine supplier—to recently state: “We’re
planning for a world that’s unsubsidized. Renewables have to find a way to get
to the grid unsubsidized.”
Perhaps this time, the PTC is really dead, leaving smaller
manufacturers desperately seeking subsidies.
The author
of Energy Freedom, Marita Noon serves as the executive
director for Energy
Makes America Great Inc. and the companion educational organization, the
Citizens’ Alliance for
Responsible Energy (CARE). Together they work to educate the public and influence
policy makers regarding energy, its role in freedom, and the American way of
life. Combining energy, news, politics, and, the environment through public
events, speaking engagements, and media, the organizations’ combined efforts
serve as America’s voice for energy.
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