Despite millions in tax credits, wind energy firms
aren't hiring
Feb 08 - McClatchy Washington Bureau
Despite the Obama administration's efforts to create jobs making wind
turbines in America, some companies say that sluggish demand for wind
energy is holding them back.
The U.S. installed more wind power last year - 9,900 megawatts, or
enough to power 2.4 million homes - than in any other year.
The growth in wind farm installations in the U.S. was a product of
federal stimulus spending. Nonetheless, wind equipment manufacturers cut
as many as 2,000 jobs last year. According to the American Wind Energy
Association, a trade group, the drop in U.S. jobs is due, in part, to
the lack of a long-term national policy that would require a certain
percentage of American electricity to come from renewable sources.
About half the wind turbines installed in the U.S. were made overseas.
A check with some of the companies that want to get into the
wind manufacturing business found that even some that qualified for
clean-energy manufacturing tax credits aren't able to create jobs
quickly because they don't see enough demand for wind energy.
Basset Mechanical of Kaukauna, Wis., qualified for a $868,500 tax credit
to manufacture wind turbine towers and foundation parts. Chris Linn, the
vice president for marketing and business development, said the company
won't purchase the new equipment needed to receive the tax credit until
it has enough sales volume to justify it.
"We're going forward aggressively with a sales plan, and we have every
possible hope of achieving that plan," he said.
Some customers have had trouble getting business loans because banks
have restricted lending in recent years, and some wind farm developers
were thrown off by delays in the extension of production tax credits,
Linn said. The economic recession also slowed business down.
Hexcel Corp., which makes material for wind turbine blades for the
Danish maker Vestas, used $3 million in tax credits for work on a plant
in Windsor, Colo. The facility is open, but it's operating at relatively
low capacity because of the sparse demand, Hexcel spokesman Michael
Bacal said.
Hexcel qualified for $8.1 million in tax credits, but it's unlikely that
it will complete more of its facility or take the rest of the credits
this year. It might use them in 2011 or 2012, however, depending on
demand, Bacal said. When fully operational, the plant will hire about 80
to 90 people.
Hexcel is across the street from Vestas' first U.S. factory, which
opened in 2008. Two other Vestas factories for wind turbine parts in
Brighton and a tower factory in Pueblo, Colo., are under construction.
The three new factories qualified for a combined tax credit of $51.8
million.
Vestas recently stopped production at its first factory, however,
because of the tight credit market and low demand, said spokesman Andrew
Longeteig. About 500 workers still get paychecks, and the company
doesn't expect the hiatus will last long. Still, its other three plants
mostly haven't begun hiring yet.
"As far as we know, for now" production will begin later this year,
Longeteig said. "That's the plan, once the market picks up."
Craig Giffi, the head of the consumer and industrial products group at
the accounting and consulting firm Deloitte, said he isn't surprised
that some of the wind-manufacturing credits aren't being used
immediately.
Giffi said the credits were helpful for manufacturers, but other
obstacles had to be overcome, including declining energy use, lack of
credit, and the absence of a national policy that assures investors that
wind energy will remain a solid investment.
"There's no question there's an opportunity out there for green
manufacturing jobs, but I think the data over the last year would point
to probably there are some struggles in the area of creating those green
manufacturing jobs, certainly at a level that would make a big dent in
unemployment," he said.
Giffi said he expects clean-energy manufacturing jobs to increase as the
economy improves and as the White House sets standards that make
investors comfortable.
Some of the factories that qualified for the tax credits plan say it
already helped them grow.
Enertech, Inc., a small company with 10 employees just north of Wichita,
Kan., for example, got a tax credit of $157,500 to expand its plant to
make small turbines. It plans to install the equipment next month.
"Right now the market is slower than what we'd like but I don't think
it's as bad as some other sectors of the economy," said Dylan Jones,
who's in charge of sales.
John Grabner, the president of Cardinal Fastener & Specialty Co. in
Bedford Heights, Ohio, another recipient of the tax credits, said his
company's business was increasing quickly due to strong demand for the
fasteners it makes for wind turbines. The company, soon to run out of
capacity, has purchased new equipment and plans to double employment to
100 this year, Grabner said.
"Demand is exceeding our original expectations, so we have to figure how
we're going to cope with that," he said. Grabner added that Cardinal has
displaced suppliers of wind parts from Europe and Asia to the U.S.
market.
The German company Nordex qualified for $22 million in tax credits for
its first U.S. factory for wind turbines in Jonesboro, Ark. Spokesman
Ralf Peters said the factory is expected to begin operating in September
and to employ 700 people.
Schuff Steel Co., however, which also qualified for a tax credit, said
it is waiting to see if it will build the new wind tower factory it
planned for Bismarck, N.D., that would hire 300 people.
The company said in a statement that the $7 million tax credit "is a key
factor in our decision-making regarding the large capital investment
required" for the new plant. It added that it's trying to secure
financing and finalize orders from potential customers.
Dennis Randall, the executive vice president and general manager at
Schuff Steel's Midwest Division, said that current demand for towers
already is satisfied with existing capacity. "That's the biggest
obstacle at the moment."
"We've very bullish on the wind industry in general," he said. "We see
it as an emerging industry. There's certainly strong evidence of that,
especially with the mood of the country and the move toward green
energy." He added, however, that government support would be needed "for
a number of years" to make wind economically viable.
The total installed generating capacity from wind in the U.S. is now
more than 35,000 megawatts - compared with about 330,000 megawatts from
coal. The wind trade group estimates that U.S. wind power will eliminate
62 million tons of heat-trapping carbon dioxide annually, the equivalent
of taking 10.5 million cars off the road.
(c) 2010, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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