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Mindy S. Lubber

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Hour of Power

Posted: 02/15/2012 1:03 pm

At any moment Congress will decide whether to extend the production tax credit, which gives wind power producers a 2.2 cent tax credit for every kilowatt hour of power they produce.

Among those urging extension are some of America's biggest brands and largest purchasers of wind and other renewably sourced energy. This week, 15 of them, including Starbucks, Staples, Nike, Levi Strauss & Co., Campbell Soup Co. and Yahoo!, wrote to Congressional leaders urging extension of the PTC. Some of these companies already get more than half their energy from renewables; Starbucks' goal is to source 100 percent of its energy from renewables in two years.

"The PTC has enabled the wind industry to slash wind energy costs -- 90 percent since 1980 -- a big reason why companies like ours are buying increasing amounts of wind energy," the letter states.

Made in America renewable energy, such as wind, is highly attractive to U.S. companies for whom managing energy costs is a high priority. Sources of foreign oil are unreliable, as is the price: With every international crisis, especially in the volatile Middle East, the cost of a barrel of oil soars. By making domestic renewables part of their energy portfolio, American companies help stabilize their marginal costs of energy which is good for their bottom line, for the economy, and for American jobs.

Unless Congress acts the PTC will expire at the end of the year and many wind turbines will stop spinning and many more will never be built. Development of this clean, renewable, domestic energy source has accelerated since the PTC was last put in place in 2005, adding 47,000 megawatts of new capacity and accounting for $60 billion in private investment and 35 percent of the new electrical generation capacity developed in the U.S. over the past four years.

With the country in desperate need of domestically produced affordable clean energy to reduce emissions that are causing climate change, wean us from our dependence on foreign oil and fuel our economy, you'd think renewing the PTC would be a no-brainer. But Washington being Washington, think again.

The PTC has strong support, even from many staunch Republicans such as Governors Terry Branstad of Iowa and Sam Brownback of Kansas, whose states are leaders in wind energy production and development. Even the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which has fought fiercely against any efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, backs the PTC. Yet, there is opposition, particularly from Tea Party-affiliated members of Congress, who oppose all federal investments in energy production. Passage of the PTC extension is not assured.

The economic fallout from failure to extend the PTC would be substantial. The wind power industry would lose an estimated 40,000 jobs and be stopped in its tracks, signaling U.S. readiness to cede the $6 trillion clean energy business opportunity to China and Europe. The United States heavily subsidizes oil, gas and coal production to the tune of tens of billions of dollars, even as oil companies rake in record profits. So, while others are investing heavily to build the 21st-century clean energy economy, the U.S. is still busy trying to sustain the 19th- and 20th-century fossil fuel economy. Guess how that will turn out.

To compete with the fossil fuel giants, wind producers need a more level playing field, and that's what the PTC does. It's time to keep the wind at our back by passing the extension of the PTC.

 

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WI Patriot
Defending the Constitution.
12:42 AM on 02/17/2012
So we are artificially inflating the demand for wind energy to reward the suppliers who will in turn require more subsidies to bring the cost of energy even higher.............Brilliant.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
B Wood
02:52 PM on 02/17/2012
We spend $50B annually in non war related defense spending to ensure access to foreign oil. Oil is our biggest component to our trade deficit too which results in a huge transfer in wealth and jobs. Add in tax subsidies, health and environmetal damage that is not paid for by energy companies and I guess one can conclude that all energy sources get some sort of subsidy.

By not having those costs reflected at the pump, we essentially inflated the demand for gasoline which led to an era of huge SUVs and other gas inefficient cars.

Brillant!
06:42 PM on 02/16/2012
Actually every dime spent on building current wind and solar tech is a waste of time and treasure in the battle to defeat the fast approaching civilization ending billion +death climate and peak only crisis. Despite $hundreds of billions in subsidy with all economies of scale exhausted the wind/solar/gas backup scam still gets almost all its energy from the filthy deadly ghg spewing gas,

That money could be far better spent on research looking for workable product and on new nuclear which we know is by far the best solution available.
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03:16 PM on 02/16/2012
Big Wind is a boondoggle that kills critical raptors and bats, destroys huge wilderness areas and remonpolizes our energy supply at the exact moment we should be decentralizing and democratizing it. It is unreliable, expensive, requires long, SF6-spewing, power-leaking transmission, dynamite, and millions of tons of super-high-emissions concrete and steel, usually shipped across the world.

Rather than greenwash Big Energy, Starbucks should switch to 100% organic, shade-grown fair trade coffee and Nike should stop using slave labor and petroleum products and start using recycled materials, Campbell Soup should immediately ban BPA and other poisons and go 100% organic fair trade, etc. Plus they should all have PV panels and efficiency upgrades at all their structures and parking lots, yes, even in Seattle, which gets 15% more sunlight than Germany, the world leader in solar...

The PTC is just more Big Energy welfare - you should be advocating for German style feed in tariffs for local solar projects
08:11 AM on 02/16/2012
As below - Are there tax credits for solar? Rather than handing out credits, the gov't should be taxing carbon-based and nuke fuels. Industry/people will not like paying those taxes and would look for alternative ways to generate the energy they need and conserve the energy that they have. Raising taxes would help pay down the nat'l debt. Less fossil fuel usage would also lead to a cleaner environment. Problems of all kinds solved. Taxing should be done at the source, Big Oil and Big Coal and Big Nuke get so many tax breaks....they should start paying for the mess they created.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
01:56 AM on 02/16/2012
Yet Nukes get 500M$ in breaks per reactor per year, coal even more, oil trillion dollar wars, and gas free water, land and exemption from pollution laws.

You need to find or create a petition to the white house and congress to stop giving nukes and fossil breaks, since we really don't want any of those, and they are supposed already super profitable, and put all the breaks on rooftop solar, wind, specially offshore wind, and waste bio char bio fuels.
06:40 PM on 02/16/2012
This is a lie. Nukes get no tax breaks. Genders gets called on it over and over again but like the broken record he is he spins.