 |
|
Green Power or Green Jobs
By Geoffrey Styles
Posted on Nov. 16, 2009
Ed. Note: This article first appeared on Geoffrey Styles' blog, Energy Outlook.
A wind farm is under construction in West Texas. Until now I've avoided the debate over a proposed wind project in Texas involving Chinese investors, federal renewable energy stimulus grants and wind turbines from China, mainly because I didn't think I had anything salient to add to the unpleasant mix of protectionism and second-guessing that was unfolding. This morning I read a posting on the subject from the Breakthrough Institute that, while offering a coherent explanation of how we got to this point, convinced me that the real problem still hasn't been addressed. Although the inconsistency of past and present US energy policy is readily apparent, the current concerns arise from general confusion over the benefits of renewable energy, exacerbated by the recent effort to spin these projects and technologies in terms of "green jobs." When we don't really understand why we are doing something, it's easy to make any outcome look like a failure--and there is no shortage of elements from which to craft such a view in the situation at hand. The chief complaint about the project in question is that it might be eligible to take advantage of a key energy provision of the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act of 2009--this year's stimulus bill--that allows the developers of a qualifying renewable energy project to collect an up-front cash grant from the US Treasury equal to 30% of the cost of the project. In this case much of that money, along with the funds provided by the US and Chinese partners, would go to pay for wind turbines imported from China. As a result, most of the jobs this project would create would be in China, not the US. On the face of it, this looks like a colossal loophole that some high-profile legislators--who incidentally voted for the stimulus bill including this feature--are rushing to plug. However, this only looks like a nasty unintended consequence of a hastily-crafted law if you misunderstand the mechanics and purpose of the Treasury renewable energy grant program. You have to begin with the renewable energy tax credits that were in place prior to the passage of the stimulus bill. Qualifying wind projects normally received a federal tax credit of 2 cents per kWh generated for ten years after start-up, adjusted for inflation. Along with similar tax benefits for solar and geothermal power and other renewable energy technologies, the wind Production Tax Credit (PTC) was due to expire at the end of last year. Last fall's TARP bill extended this benefit through the end of 2012*. So it's important to note that the West Texas project would have collected a similar amount of money from the government in the form of tax credits over the next decade, even without the option provided by the stimulus bill to convert those credits into an up-front cash grant. The latter merely made the cost of providing this benefit much more transparent. As noted in a report by the Investigative Reporting Workshop at American University, well over 80% of these grants to date have gone to non-US firms. I can appreciate the outrage this has caused, particularly when this program was so heavily hyped as a way to create new jobs in the US during a recession, and in an industry that many see as holding the key to future US competitiveness in a carbon-constrained world. However, that outrage ought to be tempered by a clear understanding of the principal purpose for establishing the grants. Prior to the failure of Lehman Bros. last year and the subsequent seizing-up of the so-called "tax equity" market, it was customary for project developers to enter into agreements with banks and other parties to exchange the rights to their future PTC benefit stream for up-front cash to invest in the projects generating these credits. When that market became illiquid, new wind project development came to a virtual standstill. With financial markets in turmoil at the beginning of 2009, the Treasury grant program was conceived as a way to jump-start renewable energy project development, until the tax-equity market revived. In that regard it has been fairly successful, as evidenced not least by the sums issued under this program so far. I can't tell whether the architects of this program failed to work through the consequences of their efforts sufficiently to see that, with domestic turbine makers such as GE Energy accounting for less than half of the US market, a large portion of the grants would end up benefiting foreign manufacturers. Perhaps they saw that potential but didn't appreciate the firestorm of controversy it would create, when someone figured out where the money was actually going. Or perhaps at that moment they were merely hyper-focused on getting legislation passed in order to arrest the apparent free-fall of the US economy. I'll leave that to others to sort out. There's a deeper issue here, as well. The whole episode evokes memories of the endless debates over "industrial policy" in the 1980s. The US wind industry lags its European competition in market share because European countries chose to subsidize the sector through much more generous and consistent tax benefits and a hidden tax on electricity consumers (a.k.a. the "feed-in tariff".) But while that created an advantage for the European companies involved, it didn't make them self-sustaining or overcome the inherent shortcomings of wind power's intermittent output. In that light it's hard for me to regret that the US didn't invest more money in wind over the last 20 years. Another way to look at this is that European taxpayers and consumers have borne much of the pain of driving down the costs of wind power to a point at which it can begin to compete with power generated from natural gas (and to a much lesser extent from coal) with only the modest subsidies US taxpayers have been willing to provide. That gets to the essence of the choice we need to clarify if we are to judge fairly outcomes such as the one presented in the proposed West Texas wind farm. Are we investing in these projects and these technologies mainly to create jobs in the US, or are we investing in them to generate low-emission electricity at the cheapest cost possible, in order to run the 90+% of the economy that is not devoted to producing energy? Selling green energy as a jobs initiative has led directly to the confusion and consternation apparent in the reaction to Chinese investors and Chinese wind turbines in this West Texas wind project. The wind industry has already developed a globalized supply chain, similar to many other industries, and no one should be stunned if wind turbines from China show up in Texas, any more than China should be surprised that its nuclear power plant construction projects are creating jobs in the US. Our assessment of the value of renewable energy sources such as wind power should hinge on their efficacy at providing reliable and cost-effective energy supplies and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, not on domestic jobs creation--even in a recession. *Correction: A reader reminded me that the TARP bill only extended the wind PTC by one year; the longer extension occurred in the stimulus.
|
|
|
Back Home
Back to Top
|
 |
|
|
Refinery Closures Lead to Rising Gas Pri...
By Robert Rapier
Feb. 3 2012, 12:40 EST
|
In The Head Of U.S. Energy Secretary Chu
By Professor Ferdinand E. Banks
Feb. 2 2012, 12:41 EST
|
The Volt: What Happens When Ideology Get...
By Marita Noon
Feb. 1 2012, 3:04 EST
|
Ninety Seven Percent Is Not What You Thi...
By Art Horn
Jan. 31 2012, 1:07 EST
|
State of the Union: "All Out, All o...
By Geoffrey Styles
Jan. 30 2012, 1:04 EST
|
Iran Sanctions
By Andrés Cala
Jan. 27 2012, 5:30 EST
|
Time, Newsweek Bury Keystone
By Michael J. Economides & Peter C Glover
Jan. 26 2012, 11:08 EST
|
Super Fracking & the Next Shale Gale
By Peter C Glover
Jan. 24 2012, 11:55 EST
|
The Falklands and Other Dangerous Disput...
By Steve H. Hanke
Jan. 23 2012, 12:42 EST
|
Venture Socialism?
By Robert Rapier
Jan. 19 2012, 3:41 EST
|
The Covert ‘War’ In Iran
By Peter C Glover and Michael J. Economides
Jan. 17 2012, 11:49 EST
|
Beware the Next Oil Choke: Iranian Lesso...
By Andrés Cala
Jan. 13 2012, 11:05 EST
|
|
|
|
DIY Solar Panels Made of Grass That Anyo...
By Tafline Laylin
Feb. 3 2012, 5:17 EST
|
UK Gas Curve Signals U.S. LNG Imports
By Oleg Vukmanovic
Feb. 3 2012, 2:25 EST
|
S. Korea Faces 18-Percent Iranian Oil Cu...
By Lee Chi-dong
Feb. 3 2012, 2:21 EST
|
Exxon Still Biggest Oil Stock, But No Lo...
By Forbes
Feb. 3 2012, 2:03 EST
|
Once, Men Abused Slaves. Now We Abuse Fo...
By Jean-François Mouhot
Feb. 3 2012, 1:35 EST
|
Rosneft, Gazprom Pump Russian Oil Output...
By Vladimir Soldatkin
Feb. 2 2012, 12:33 EST
|
China Reinforces Energy Supplies
By Yvonne Lee and Aaron Back
Feb. 2 2012, 12:26 EST
|
EPA Won''t Take It -- Nor Should They
By Ken Silverstein
Feb. 1 2012, 5:04 EST
|
Falling Solar Prices Good For Climate, B...
By Erik Kirschbaum
Feb. 1 2012, 3:42 EST
|
Oil Industry Sees No Threat From Electri...
By Tom Bergin
Feb. 1 2012, 12:38 EST
|
New State Law Targets Fracking Industry
By KSAT
Feb. 1 2012, 12:21 EST
|
Exxon to Keep Its Foot On Gas Pedal
By Tom Fowler
Feb. 1 2012, 12:14 EST
|
|
|
|
Pemex Seeks To Add Conoco, Shell Subsidi...
By Laurence Iliff
Feb. 3 2012, 1:55 EST
|
Petrobras Shuts Fifth Most Productive We...
By Lucia Kassai and Peter Millard
Feb. 1 2012, 12:41 EST
|
US Refiners, Union Prepare For Possible ...
By Fox Business News
Feb. 1 2012, 12:12 EST
|
Marathon Weighs Pipeline Option
By Gina Chon and Ryan Dezember
Feb. 1 2012, 11:45 EST
|
Obama: Meeting US Energy Needs Will Requ...
By EV Wind
Jan. 31 2012, 2:24 EST
|
Union Tells US Refinery Workers To Prepa...
By CNBC
Jan. 30 2012, 5:55 EST
|
Oil Drilling Increased, API Says
By UPI
Jan. 30 2012, 4:32 EST
|
DOE Announces Grants To Study Concentrat...
By EV Wind
Jan. 27 2012, 5:01 EST
|
Anadarko Finds Oil Offshore Brazil
By Karen Eeuwens and Peter Millard
Jan. 27 2012, 3:27 EST
|
Cuba Oil Project Drilling To Start
By BBC News
Jan. 27 2012, 3:09 EST
|
Accusations Of Delay In Disclosing Volt ...
By Matthew L. Wald
Jan. 26 2012, 4:39 EST
|
FirstEnergy Closing 6 Coal-Fired Power P...
By Boston Globe
Jan. 26 2012, 2:58 EST
|
|
|
|
Italian Refineries To Shut Down Over Ira...
By Press TV
Feb. 3 2012, 2:00 EST
|
Bulgarian Coal Miners Call Off Strike
By Reuters
Jan. 23 2012, 11:59 EST
|
Chevron Gas Discovery Boosts LNG Plans
By News
Jan. 20 2012, 3:08 EST
|
Ukraine Seeks Compromise With IMF
By James Marson
Jan. 20 2012, 12:10 EST
|
Shell Joins Nova Scotia’s Offshore
By Daily Staff Biz
Jan. 20 2012, 11:29 EST
|
UAE To Set Up Clean Energy Project In Af...
By Haseeb Haider
Jan. 18 2012, 4:01 EST
|
Bulgaria Bans Chevron From Fracking For ...
By Carin Hall
Jan. 18 2012, 10:49 EST
|
Norway Awards 60 New Oil Production Lice...
By Kjetil Malkenes Hovland
Jan. 17 2012, 11:35 EST
|
Ukraine Says Won’t Sell Gas Pipelines To...
By Reuters
Jan. 13 2012, 12:58 EST
|
EU Iran Oil Embargo Timing Still In Ques...
By Frances Robinson
Jan. 13 2012, 11:30 EST
|
Vestas Cuts Over 2,000 Jobs After Profit...
By John Acher and Shida Chayesteh
Jan. 12 2012, 12:43 EST
|
Oil Companies Still Eye Norwegian Acreag...
By Kjetil Malkenes Hovland
Jan. 11 2012, 5:45 EST
|
|
|
|
Rosneft Gets License For Three Oil And G...
By Jake Rudnitsky
Jan. 31 2012, 12:28 EST
|
Russia Unveils Ambitious Coal Industry P...
By Svetlana Kalmykova
Jan. 25 2012, 5:23 EST
|
Russia Orders Oil Companies To Freeze Ga...
By Fox Business
Jan. 23 2012, 1:40 EST
|
3rd Reactor Shut Down In Czech Republic
By Voice of Russia
Jan. 23 2012, 12:06 EST
|
Miners Strike In Bulgaria Continues
By Sofia Echo
Jan. 18 2012, 3:18 EST
|
Russia Concerned About Iran’s Uranium En...
By CBS News
Jan. 10 2012, 2:38 EST
|
Putin Speaks Of Atomic Energy ‘Renaissan...
By Washington Post
Dec. 12 2011, 3:46 EST
|
Russia Rejects Iran Oil Ban
By Daniel Fineren
Dec. 7 2011, 12:15 EST
|
Floating Nuclear Power Station Helps Bal...
By RT
Dec. 6 2011, 4:21 EST
|
Japan And Korea Cooking On Russian Gas
By RT
Dec. 1 2011, 11:03 EST
|
Billionaire Awarded Controversial Energy...
By Brian Solomon
Nov. 9 2011, 12:47 EST
|
Russia Must Reduce Oil Dependence, Diver...
By VOA News
Nov. 9 2011, 11:29 EST
|
|
|
|
Iraq’s Oil Law May Be Pushed Till End Of...
By Kadhim Ajrash and Nayla Razzouk
Feb. 3 2012, 2:18 EST
|
Iran Pipeline To Supply Gas By End Of 20...
By Kalbe Ali
Feb. 1 2012, 1:00 EST
|
Explosion ‘Rocks Syrian Oil Pipeline’
By Eoin O’Cinneide
Feb. 1 2012, 12:36 EST
|
US Lawmakers Take Next Step On New Iran ...
By CNBC
Jan. 31 2012, 2:35 EST
|
BP To Start Jordan Gas Exploration Soon
By Mohammad Tayseer
Jan. 30 2012, 5:20 EST
|
Abu Dhabi To Tap Nat Gas To Meet Fuel De...
By Steel Guru
Jan. 27 2012, 4:48 EST
|
Iran Says It May Cut Off Its Oil Exports...
By Rick Gladstone and J. David Goodman
Jan. 27 2012, 3:24 EST
|
Iran To Provide Ethanol Fuel Soon
By ISNA
Jan. 26 2012, 4:00 EST
|
India Offers Pak Oil Pipeline
By Pawan Bali
Jan. 26 2012, 1:10 EST
|
Iran Mulls Pre-empting EU Oil Embargo
BY Benoit Faucon
Jan. 26 2012, 12:09 EST
|
India, Pakistan Say Strategy Soon For Ga...
By Economic Times
Jan. 25 2012, 4:03 EST
|
EU Imposes Iran Oil Embargo
By Henry Chu and Paul Richter
Jan. 25 2012, 12:57 EST
|
|
|
|
Chinese Move On Uranium Explorer
By NZ Herald
Jan. 25 2012, 5:38 EST
|
Chinese Company Sinopec Ready To Boost L...
By Neil Wilson
Jan. 23 2012, 12:46 EST
|
China’s Shenhua To Open Coal Mine In Aus...
By Reuters
Jan. 19 2012, 1:43 EST
|
China To Retrieve More Natural Gas
By Zhou Yan
Jan. 12 2012, 12:01 EST
|
Japan Asks Qatar To Ensure Stable LNG
By Mainichi News
Jan. 10 2012, 12:41 EST
|
Indonesia To Begin Renegotiating With CN...
By Platts
Jan. 9 2012, 12:38 EST
|
CNNC Unit Gets Regulatory Approval For I...
By Economic Times
Jan. 6 2012, 1:30 EST
|
PetroChina Buys Full Stake In Oil Sands ...
By AP
Jan. 4 2012, 11:46 EST
|
China Buys Russia, Vietnam Oil As Iran S...
By Florence Tan
Jan. 3 2012, 4:38 EST
|
Cnooc, Sinopec Vie Over Fracking
By Dinny McMahon
Dec. 15 2011, 3:54 EST
|
China Gas Rejects 2.2 Bln Sinopec/ENN Bi...
By Donny Kwok and Denny Thomas
Dec. 14 2011, 4:04 EST
|
China Refines Overseas Oil Grab Strategy
By Tom Bergin
Dec. 12 2011, 3:18 EST
|
|
|
|
North Korean Leader Kim Backs Natural-Ga...
By Henry Meyer
Feb. 3 2012, 5:04 EST
|
Japan Protests China’s Possible East Chi...
By Mainichi Daily News
Feb. 1 2012, 2:00 EST
|
Japan Finds Water Leaks At Stricken Nucl...
By Reuters
Jan. 30 2012, 5:52 EST
|
Rio Tinto Denies Australian Coal Force M...
By Platts
Jan. 30 2012, 5:45 EST
|
Asians Resist Notion Of Iran Oil Cuts
By RFERL
Jan. 30 2012, 4:36 EST
|
Another Japanese Nuclear Reactor Suspend...
By Times Live
Jan. 25 2012, 5:27 EST
|
IAEA Begins Review Of Japan’s Nuclear St...
By Reuters
Jan. 23 2012, 12:03 EST
|
Edano: Japan Bracing For Nuclear-Free Su...
By Mitsuru Obe
Jan. 19 2012, 11:42 EST
|
Petronas And Shell Sign Oil Recovery Dea...
By Today Online
Jan. 18 2012, 3:26 EST
|
U.S. Presses South Korea To Reduce Oil
By Choe Sang-Hun
Jan. 17 2012, 10:48 EST
|
Japan Wants To Keep Importing Iranian Cr...
By Mari Iwata
Jan. 12 2012, 10:56 EST
|
Cyclone Toward Australia Intensifies
By Robb M. Stewart
Jan. 11 2012, 10:52 EST
|
|
|
|
South Sudan, Kenya Sign Agreement To Bui...
By Jared Ferrie
Jan. 25 2012, 3:56 EST
|
Explosion Rocks Chevron’s Oil Rig In Bay...
By Osa Okhomina
Jan. 17 2012, 10:51 EST
|
Mozambique Protest Blocks Coal Train Lin...
By AFP
Jan. 13 2012, 12:46 EST
|
Pengassan To Shut Gas, Oil Production On...
By Taiwo Ogunmola
Jan. 13 2012, 12:22 EST
|
Nigeria Oil Union Threatens Oil And Gas ...
By Washington Post
Jan. 12 2012, 10:58 EST
|
Shell Restarts Production At Bonga Oil F...
By Sarah Kent
Jan. 5 2012, 3:05 EST
|
Violence Erupts In Nigeria Over Petrol P...
By Independent
Jan. 4 2012, 12:27 EST
|
Nigeria Gas Price Protest Turns Violent
By CBS
Jan. 3 2012, 4:49 EST
|
Shell Offshore Spill Affecting 115 Miles...
By Washington Post
Dec. 22 2011, 11:46 EST
|
Petrobras To Expand Pre-Salt Oil Drillin...
By Rodrigo Orihuela
Dec. 21 2011, 10:44 EST
|
French Nuclear Group To Monitor Health I...
By Monica Mark
Dec. 12 2011, 4:00 EST
|
Nigeria Joins Egypt, S’Africa In Solar P...
By John Ofikhenua
Dec. 9 2011, 4:05 EST
|
|
|
|
Nuclear Approvals To Be Resumed At Slowe...
By Liu Yiyu
Feb. 1 2012, 4:48 EST
|
Unusual Event At U.S. Nuclear Plant Not ...
By People Daily
Jan. 31 2012, 2:29 EST
|
S. Korea President Lee To Visit Turkey
By CRI
Jan. 30 2012, 5:49 EST
|
Indo-Pak Civil Nuclear Cooperation Possi...
By Daily Times
Jan. 27 2012, 4:53 EST
|
Turkey, Iran Calls On Quick Resumption O...
By Xinhua News
Jan. 20 2012, 5:39 EST
|
Italian Minister Says Reject Nuclear Pow...
By EurActiv
Jan. 19 2012, 4:10 EST
|
Vietnam Joins World In Peaceful Use Of N...
By People Daily
Jan. 18 2012, 3:43 EST
|
Russia Warns Attack On Iran Could Unleas...
By Washington Post
Jan. 18 2012, 11:26 EST
|
Niger To Pursue Nuclear Plans Despite Fu...
By Reuters
Jan. 17 2012, 11:25 EST
|
India To Talk To France, US For Nuclear ...
By MSN
Jan. 12 2012, 12:30 EST
|
Doomsday Clock Moved Closer To Midnight
By Doyle Rice
Jan. 11 2012, 5:50 EST
|
Iran, West Say Ready To Resume Talks
By Tehran Times
Jan. 6 2012, 1:43 EST
|
|
|
|
Solar Energy Industry Expects Boom
Feb. 2 2012, 1:00 EST
|
Russian Nuclear Giant to be Privatized
Feb. 2 2012, 1:00 EST
|
Venezuela Oil Exports to US Decline
Feb. 2 2012, 1:00 EST
|
Obama Expedites Wind Energy Off Atlantic...
Feb. 2 2012, 1:00 EST
|
Poland OKs Massive Fracking Efforts
Feb. 2 2012, 1:00 EST
|
N. Gas Gets Cheaper as Exxon Keeps Drill...
Feb. 2 2012, 1:00 EST
|
US Domestic Oil Production Rising
Feb. 2 2012, 1:00 EST
|
Chevy Volt Sales Fall After Fed Probe
Feb. 2 2012, 1:00 EST
|
Shell Sees Large Oil Refining Surplus
Feb. 2 2012, 1:00 EST
|
Fracking Disclosures Required in Texas
Feb. 1 2012, 1:00 EST
|
How Alt. Energy Could Threaten the Plane...
Feb. 1 2012, 1:00 EST
|
Cyprus May Get a N. Gas Terminal
Feb. 1 2012, 1:00 EST
|
|
|
|
|
|
|