by Kevon Martis
May 30, 2014
May 30, 2014
“But the
truth is that Ohio’s renewable energy mandates have largely benefited
only one group: entrenched monopoly fossil utilities like AEP,
Iberdrola, and corporate behemoths like GE.
But what should we expect? It was their idea in the first place.”
Senate Bill 310’s attempt to freeze Ohio’s renewable energy mandate
has elicited the typical partisan howls from Ohio’s green energy
profiteers. They have been quick to paint the supporters of SB310 as
slavish supporters of the much maligned Koch Brothers, FirstEnergy or
other “dark fossil corporate profiteers”.
Curiously, these environmental group’s normally exquisitely tuned
“corporate conspiracy radar” appears to have developed a massive
wind-turbine-sized blind spot.
Consider:
- In 1998 it was Enron’s Ken Lay who implored George W. Bush to extend subsidies for wind energy. A quick scan of his letter reveals talking points that today could easily be mistaken for the Ohio Sierra Club: “Wind is the fastest growing new electrical generation technology in the world today and has rapidly decreased its production costs until it is close to being competitive with conventional generation technologies.”
- But as shown by Sierra’s willingness to take $26 million from gas driller Chesapeake Energy to fight coal, their policy positions can be very nimble indeed-for a price.
- After Enron’s epic fail their wind business was scooped up by General Electric. GE’s power generation unit saw great opportunity in the growing alarm over global warming.
Traditional coal plants last a very
long time, 60 years or more. It is hard to sell new plants when they
obsolesce so slowly. But if new CO2 regulations could begin to force
premature retirement of still-serviceable coal plants, GE could fill
that generation void with new gas generation. Every megawatt of retired
coal generation could then be replaced with new (GE) gas generation.
That is a fine start but what if there were a way to sell two or
three or four megawatts (MW) of new capacity to replace one MW of
prematurely retired coal generation?
Intermittent wind energy that is wholly reliant
upon gas generators for grid integration was the key. But how to create
a market share for expensive wind energy which typically arrives at times of low demand and low price?
Enter state renewable energy mandates like Ohio’s SB221.
GE’s business is generators. As board members
of the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) they have been at the
vanguard of promoting and protecting renewable energy mandates. Since
wind energy is variable and intermittent in output due to the vagaries
of weather, one cannot simply replace 1,000MW of baseload coal
generation with 1,000MW of wind generation.
Replacing such a coal plant with wind generation requires one to
construct approximately 1,000MW of gas-fired generation to balance and
backup wind’s erratic output. For GE that is win-win. They get to sell
2MW of new generation to replace 1MW of perfectly serviceable coal
generation being prematurely retired by EPA regulations.
But even better for GE is the fact that wind turbines last 20 years- at best.
Thus, over the 60 year life of a typical coal plant, not only do
ratepayers need to pay for a new 1,000MW (GE) gas generator, they are
also compelled to buy 1,000 MW of GE wind turbines AND replace them at
least two more times over 60 years.
Thus, through the magic of EPA regulation, coupled with high level PR
air support from willing accomplices like Sierra Club and furthered by
renewable energy mandates like the one SB310 hopes to freeze, corporate
giant GE has struck a largely tax free green bonanza.
Our “corporate conspiracy” search does not end there. A quick review
of the AWEA’s board of directors reveals an interesting cast of fossil
fuel characters indeed.
Iberdrola Renewables’ corporate parent is among the largest fossil
utilities in Europe. An aggressive opponent of SB310, Ohio wind operator
Iberdrola also owns significant fossil fuel generation in the US. Wind
works well for Iberdrola: in just one year their US wind investments
allowed them to strip mine $1 billion from the US tax code and export it to Spain.
Along with German utility E. On Energy and FPL/NextEra, Ohio’s
fossil giant AEP also enjoys a place on the AWEA board. Could it be that
wind subsidies are really just more fossil subsidies?
There are many solid reasons for Ohioans to support freezing renewable energy mandates.
SB221’s instate renewable energy generation mandate violates the Commerce Clause
of the U.S. Constitution. Worse, Ohio’s wind resource is anemic
relative to its western peers. This means OH wind is roughly twice the
price of Iowa’s or Minnesota’s.
Still worse for Ohio’s environment, the center/left Brookings Institute, deeply concerned about climate change, now reports
that wind and solar energy mandates like SB221 are the most costly and
least effective means of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Anyone can play “find the (Koch) bogeyman”.
But the truth is that Ohio’s renewable energy mandates have largely
benefited only one group: entrenched monopoly fossil utilities like AEP,
Iberdrola, and corporate behemoths like GE.
But what should we expect? It was their idea in the first place.
The good news appears to be that Ohio will stop the renewable
charade. Tom Stacy, an “Ohioan for Affordable Electricity,” offers his
plaudits for Substitute SB 310 that passed the Ohio House and Senate
and now awaits gubernatorial approval to become law.
Appendix: Tom Stacy on Ohio Win
“This is a win for ratepayers, Ohio’s economy and its environment,” he said. “Ratepayers can rest assured that rates won’t rise due to ‘self inflicted measures’ at the state level even while their federal government’s EPA has us in a head lock.”
Ohio’s bread and butter industries and
employers are energy intensive, some consuming as much as $200,000 worth
of electricity per employee per year. Escalating costs could have
catastrophic effects on wages, benefits, expansion plans and even
employment if any one of those manufacturers ‘pulls the plug’ on Ohio
operations due to escalating energy costs and projections.”
“From the environmental side, it is
unfortunate groups such as Sierra Club, Greenpeace, Union of Concerned
Scientists, Natural Resource Defense Council and others whose stated
mission and public image is environmental improvement often have agendas
that prevent pursuing such laudable goals in the most cost effective
ways. Some appear to despise wealth in general – even earned and well
deserved wealth.
How Un-American! Some hate cronyism – so
do tea parties – but fail to admit that renewables like wind are some
of the worst offenders in that department. And some just hate the idea
that man benefits from fire, something cavemen discovered and we’ve been
better off ever since.”
“The study committee will hopefully add a
so-far-woefully-absent dimension to energy and environment policy:
evaluating both the direct and indirect costs and benefits of various
electricity source options, while recognizing that per unit cost of
intermittent sources of electricity cannot and should not ever be
directly compared to the cost of dispatchable sources.”
“It would be really meaningful for the
study committee to propose an end goal measured in PPM and cents per KWh
instead of just mandating large percentages of somebody’s favorite
technology and then taking their word that it will magically cure all
ails.
The study committee may move us in that
direction. We are confident it will balance everyone’s desire for
standard of living improvement, high employment, low rates and less
wasted taxes. Maybe these are even as important as ever cleaner air and
water and ever less changing climates, considering the US is already a
global leader in emissions standards.”
“This bill has the potential to raise
political and public awareness of not just electricity choices, but the
very closely related choices between socialism and capitalism. The idea
of ‘all of the above’ translates to ‘some of the ridiculous.’ What we
need is an ‘all of the competitive’ energy policy, and Ohio has taken a
small step in that direction through the passage of Am. Sub. SB 310.”
Read the entire article: Ohio SB 310: Energy Users Best the Cronies (GE, AWEA, etc) at:
http://www.masterresource.org/2014/05/ohio-senate-bill-310-why-is-good-news-for-energy-users-bad-are-journalists-as-crony-as-crony-capitalists/
http://www.masterresource.org/2014/05/ohio-senate-bill-310-why-is-good-news-for-energy-users-bad-are-journalists-as-crony-as-crony-capitalists/
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