January 22, 2008
Renewable Energy Leaders Urge Congress, Bush to Extend Tax
Credits Quickly
by Jim Pierobon, Contributing Writer
Citing the possibility of job losses by the hundreds of thousands and the
impact on a weakening economy, leaders of four major U.S. renewable energy
trade associations Tuesday called on Congress and President Bush to extend
production and investment tax credits that renewable energy developers,
their financiers, and local and state governments are counting on to
generate tax revenues and cleaner electricity.
"Congress will be raising taxes on clean, domestic, renewable energy sources
and will undercut one of the fastest growing segments of the U.S. economy.
With the nation facing a possible recession, it is difficult to imagine a
worse time to destabilize America's rapidly growing renewable energy
sector."
--Joint AWEA, SEIA, NHA, and GEA statement
"Already, we are seeing sales and new project announcements drop off," the
associations declared in a rare joint statement at a news conference. The
associations include the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), Solar
Energy Industries Association (SEIA), National Hydropower Association (NHA)
and the Geothermal Energy Association (GEA).
"In the absence of immediate legislative action," the statement continued,
"Congress will be raising taxes on clean, domestic, renewable energy sources
and will undercut one of the fastest growing segments of the U.S. economy.
With the nation facing a possible recession, it is difficult to imagine a
worse time to destabilize America's rapidly growing renewable energy
sector."
Coming on the heels of Tuesday's 0.75% reduction of the discount rate by the
Federal Reserve's and a declaration by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulsen that
an economic stimulus package needs to be simple and short-term, the call for
long-term extensions may be a tough sell for renewable energy advocates. But
Linda Church Ciocci, Executive Director of the National Hydropower
Association, said "if there is a better way or another way of doing it
quickly, we're certainly open to that."
Rhone Resch, President of the Solar Energy Industries Association, tried
simplifying it for lawmakers: "Do you want to write them (consumers) a
check, or do you want to give them a job?"
Resch highlighted 80 utility-scale solar projects on the drawing boards
collectively representing about 56,000 megawatts (MW) of electricity
generating capacity, more than 20,000 permanent jobs and hundreds of
thousands of construction jobs. "None of these projects will be built unless
the investment tax credit is extended," he said.
For workers in Michigan where the automobile industry continues to unravel,
the risks are in sharp focus for solar companies such as Hemlock
Semiconductor, which Resch said has invested one billion dollars to expand
plant capacity in Midland; ditto for Unisolar, a thin-film manufacturer that
is creating hundreds of new jobs for six plants planned in Greenfield.
Randall Swisher, Executive Director of the American Wind Energy Association,
said "major wind farm development companies are telling us that investment
is drying up and they are being forced to put large projects in the pipeline
for construction next year on hold."
Swisher told reporters that AWEA estimates about 75,000 jobs are now at
risk, including more than 32,000 in the direct manufacture, construction and
operation of wind energy facilities.
In 2007, the wind industry shattered previous record additions of wind
capacity by installing more than 5,200 MW, an increase of 45% and
representing an investment of more than $9 billion in the U.S. economy.
The production tax credit for wind facilities has expired three previous
times over the past ten years: after 1999, 2001 and 2003. In each instance,
capacity additions the ensuing year dropped at least 73%. (See chart above.)
Under the provision due to expire at year-end 2008, an income tax credit of
1.5 cents/kilowatt-hour is allowed for the production of electricity from
qualified wind energy facilities and other sources of renewable energy.
Adjusted for inflation, the current value of the credit is 2
cents/kilowatt-hour of electricity produced. It is useful only for
utility-scale wind turbines. It does not apply to small turbines used to
power individual homes or businesses.
The solar industry is seeking an eight-year extension of the 30% business
investment tax credit and a six-year extension of the 30% residential
investment tax credit, along with the elimination of an existing $2,000
limit on the residential credit. The industry also wants to eliminate the
public utility exception to the investment tax credit and allow corporate
and individual taxpayers to claim it against the alternative minimum tax,
which is affecting more and more taxpayers each year.
During the buildup to passage of the new energy bill last summer, it once
appeared that production tax credit for wind and investment tax credit for
solar would find a way into a compromise. But both ended up on the cutting
room floor in December. How might this year be different?
"The reason we were not in the energy bill at the end of the day had nothing
to do with any lack of support for solar, or for wind, geothermal or hydro.
It had to do with how that tax title was structured," Resch said. "When you
go and survey Congress," he continued, "there are very few people who would
stand up and say, ‘I don't support these industries.' 85% of the public
supports the federal government extending these tax credits."
"When you start to look at how is this going to get done, the answer really
becomes, it's a matter of politics and making sure that the bills that are
put forth are going to get through this year. We're very hopeful that as
leadership starts to structure both an economic stimulus bill or perhaps an
energy tax title, they'll do it in a way that passes these tax credits early
in the first quarter and not wait until late in the year," Resch said.
Karl Gawell, Executive Director of the Geothermal Energy Association,
explained, "the biggest problem with federal energy policy is that it's
roller coaster. They like you one day, they don't like you the next."
Gawell said geothermal plants take between three years and five years to
develop. "The guy who's deciding today whether to start construction in
February or March is looking at the deadline (expiration) looming at the end
of the year because it's going to take him two years or two and one-half
years to finally get that project online."
He counted 86 geothermal projects under development that are at risk in more
than 12 states, representing 3,300 MW of electricity. That would more than
double the industry's current electric generating capacity.
Jim Pierobon is a communications consultant based in the Washington area
with an emphasis on energy and climate issues.
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