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Wind Energy: Republicans Offer Support From Breezy States

Posted: 02/27/2012 12:09 pm

From EarthTechling's Pete Danko:

The production tax credit (PTC) for renewable energy didn’t shrivel up and blow away when Congress failed to include an extension with tax legislation passed earlier this month. The wind industry, which says development will grind to a halt without the PTC, is continuing to push for an extension, and is doing so with what appears to honest-to-goodness bipartisan support.

In fact, most of the noise for this green-energy subsidy seems to be coming from wind-state Republicans, who could end up playing a sort of savior role.

One of the most persistent voices calling for the PTC to live on past its Dec. 31 expiration is Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), a fierce critic of the Obama agenda -- except when it comes to wind. Iowa is a leading wind power state, and King’s 5th Congressional District is home to several large plants.

“Iowa was the first state to generate 20 percent of its electricity from wind,” King wrote in an op-ed supporting the PTC extension. “Now, wind supports as many as 5,000 Iowa jobs, and $11 million in annual land lease payments to Iowa farmers. Iowa wind has prompted $300 million in private investment in Iowa manufacturing facilities.”

In deeply red Kansas, support for the PTC comes from Republican Gov. Sam Brownback -- joining Republican governors from Iowa [PDF] and Oklahoma [PDF] in backing the extension -- and from Rep. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.). Moran’s district includes the Hutchinson Wind Energy plant, where Siemens employs more than 350 people to make turbine nacelles.

During a recent visit to the plant, Moran told a local newspaper, “There’s no doubt in my mind if we extend it that this is a job creator. More people will be working and paying taxes and helping get our financial house in order.”

After the failure to get the extension through earlier this month, the American Wind Energy Association said there was still time to take action, but added that due to the long lead times for wind projects, an extension really needed to happen in the first quarter of the year in order to avoid big job losses.

Moran and Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) said they would try to get the PTC extension into a big transportation bill now making its way through Congress. Their challenge in that effort -- and in any other effort that might emerge, should this one fail -- is to convince Republicans from states where the wind industry isn’t a big player to risk supporting the PTC. And the risk is real, as Moran would no doubt attest; he was attacked in a piece on the conservative site Red State for “supporting Obama’s policy of picking losers in the energy sector.”

Moran has tried to deflect that criticism by supporting just a one-year extension of the PTC, instead of the four-year extension that has been under consideration.

King, for his part, has attempted to cast the continuation of the tax credit as a move to not increase taxes on wind power production. “Wind industry leaders know how to expand this business and provide more U.S. jobs,” he wrote in his op-ed. “They just need Washington to provide stable, low tax rates. The PTC means keeping investment dollars in the market place -- not in the hands of government.”

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rodjard
I Update my brain frequently
03:05 AM on 02/28/2012
I have all cfl light bulbs, 2 Awsom Dell PC'S 2 Large flatscreen tv's
Highspeed internet and over 200 awsom channels on the tv's.
I never even immagined that 5 yrs ago.
I predict home solar energy will hit with even greater impact.
While American Manufacturers are still trying to build a better
mousetrap all the mice will be caught. Way to go China!!
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rodjard
I Update my brain frequently
02:40 AM on 02/28/2012
The argument that energy independence is a national defense issue
ought to be one that conservatives can embrace and support. The
climate change argument is a moot point when it is put in that context.
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rodjard
I Update my brain frequently
02:28 AM on 02/28/2012
The same old ploy won't work anymore.
Talk about it, promise it, get the votes and then let it die.
If we don't do it so what. Too many other countries already are.
We have had our chance to take the lead in this for too long.
Now we will follow, however it is finally geting done.
How many of you were watching flat screen TV'S 5 YRS ago?
How many of you are watching them now?
The same thing is about to happen to solar and wind power.
When the optimal solar panel is decided on the production and
distribution of them will be shocking to the naysayers and deniers.
The Internet adancement still has old fogies shocked and awed.
Clean, renewable energy will be no different.
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FTracy3
My micro-bio is as empty as the rest of my life.
09:05 PM on 02/27/2012
Republicans will supply all the wind we need if only scientists will harness it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Fanney
Scribbler
07:42 PM on 02/27/2012
So what happens when the few wind republicans run into the vast majority of oil, gas and coal republicans.
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view from the veranda
jus' trying to make sense of it all...
08:15 PM on 02/27/2012
"Meet us after the elections to talk about the cuts."
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view from the veranda
jus' trying to make sense of it all...
06:44 PM on 02/27/2012
Is Renewable Energy the new "War Chest"
Don't Republicans call global warming a 'hoax'? Is this the new way to make it to the 1%? Jump on a crisis, find a solution, give me a grant and I'll fix it.
Wind Turbines have been put up close by. Very impressive to look at. My concern is the complaint of "Noise Annoyance"sound frequency amplification. I believe they've given it the term Wind Turbine Syndrome in Iowa, Wis., Ontario.
05:36 PM on 02/28/2012
Hi View . . .

Wind Turbine Syndrome is a myth. The concerns about annoyance due to noise are overstated as well. A small subset of people near wind turbines are annoyed by the noise and are also experiencing stress reactions. There isn't any definitive link between the two. The worst impacted could just buy a cheap white-noise generator or learn to deal with stress, but don't.

For more on this, consider this summary of the findings of several major independent studies into wind energy health impacts by Medical Health Officers of Ontario, by an independent body set up by Massachusetts and a body of very well qualified professionals in multiple fields set up by the wind industry itself. Links and references are embedded should you wish to read further.

http://www.quora.com/Wind-Power/What-might-cause-people-who-live-near-wind-turbines-to-get-sick
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view from the veranda
jus' trying to make sense of it all...
10:57 PM on 02/28/2012
Itʻs the new freeway white noise, eh? Theyʻll soon be energizing micro-neighborhoods downtown from just off-shore. Appreciate the perusal sir.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vetxcl
03:05 PM on 02/27/2012
There are right now, this day, subsidies for all forms of energy given by our government. It's simply a matter of how much.

Thank AOLpo for another manipulatively misleading headline.