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U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander seeks end to wind power tax credit 

Credit:  By Elijah Herington / Scripps Howard News Service, www.commercialappeal.com 7 March 2012 ~~

WASHINGTON – Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander said it’s finally time to deflate the 20-year-old program that provides federal money to develop wind energy.

The Republican member of the Environment and Public Works Committee wants the temporary Production Tax Credit for renewable energies – a provision from the Energy Policy Act of 1992 – to expire.

Alexander has opposed the subsidy for a long time, but today, during a speech to the conservative Heritage Foundation, said he will introduce a bill to end it.

He said wind as an energy source can provide only “puny amounts of expensive, unreliable electricity.”

As the provision is set to expire at the end of the year, he said that now may be his opportune moment to strike down the subsidies.

“My major legislative goal in the Senate is to let the tax credit for wind developers to go the way of Exxon oil tax credit and expire at the end of the year,” Alexander said.

As a Washington veteran, Alexander knows he is fighting an uphill battle. The credit has been extended on four previous occasions.

“There’s likely to be an amendment on the Highway Bill in the U.S. Senate this week or next week to extend the tax credit for another year,” he said.

“That would mean that this temporary tax subsidy that, together with these other subsidies, cost taxpayers $14 billion over five years could be extended yet one more year.”

On top of the history of extensions, Alexander said, “There are more lobbyists per square foot on this issue than I’ve seen in a long time.”

He said this is an indication that billions of taxpayer dollars are going into the pockets of individuals and companies involved in the development of wind energy.

Alexander said funding should be cut because wind energy provides little power for the cost.

“The message today is for Congress to stop the ‘Big Wind’ gravy train,” Alexander said. From 2009 to 2013, subsidies provided to developers of wind energy will cost the American taxpayer $14 billion. This is more than the tax break oil companies receive, he said.

To Alexander, it’s quite clear that this is too much money.

“We can’t afford it,” he said. “The federal government borrows 40 cents of every dollar it spends. It cannot justify such a subsidy, especially for what the U.S. energy secretary calls ‘a mature technology.’”

Not only is the government borrowing this money, but the small amount of electricity that wind does produce is also unreliable.

Nuclear energy can be tapped 90 percent of the time, Alexander said, while wind energy is available one-third of the time because it requires the wind to be blowing.

To proponents of wind energy, however, the exact opposite is true.

Jon Goldstein, director of public affairs for the American Wind Energy Association, said wind energy has been a major success. He said this success has been largely driven by the tax credit.

Since 1980, the price of wind energy has dropped about 90 percent, Goldstein said, and in the past five years, nearly 35 percent of all new American electric generation has come from wind energy.

“It’s the kind of the main federal incentive that’s allowing the tremendous growth in wind manufacturing,” he said.

In Tennessee alone, wind energy has created nearly 1,000 jobs, Goldstein said.

Source:  By Elijah Herington / Scripps Howard News Service, www.commercialappeal.com 7 March 2012

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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