Energy Cornucopia
Perhaps as a result of the urgency surrounding its passage, the Congress's stimulus bill process was hardly a model of constituent transparency. As of this writing, neither of the sites upon which I usually rely for legislative text, www.govtrack.org and the Library of Congress's www.thomas.gov site, displays the final conference version of the stimulus bill. The White House website has links to the bill at the US Government Printing Office, split up into 5 separate downloadable files. It's not clear whether Members of Congress or their staffs had machine-readable versions of the final bill prior to the House vote on Friday. As it is, I was starting to worry about repetitive strain injury of my index finger, simply clicking through a document search on "energy" in these files.
The highlights include $16.8 billion under the heading of "Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy", which includes $3.2 B for energy efficiency & conservation Block Grants, $5 B for the Weatherization Assistance Program, $3.1 B for state energy programs, $2 B for grants to advanced battery manufacturers in the US, $2.5 B for applied research, development and deployment, along with another billion split among alternative fuel vehicle pilot projects, transportation electrification, and energy efficient appliance rebates and Energy Star. And this is only a fraction of the money for energy. There's $4.5 B for Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability, $3.4 B for Fossil Energy R&D (including clean coal and carbon capture and sequestration), $6 B for loan guarantees for renewable and transmission technologies, and another $1.6 B for energy-related "science"--not further described. I also saw money for the federal government to buy energy efficient motor vehicles, for energy efficiency and renewable energy career training, and more references to "energy and green retrofits" of buildings and facilities than I could count, with significant dollars attached.
As I noted in a recent posting on wind power, the Production Tax Credit (PTC) for wind and other renewable energy was extended by three years beyond its slated expiration at the end of 2009. By itself this provision guarantees that "stimulus" spending--or in this case revenue reduction--will continue through at least 2023. As expected, developers of projects eligible for the PTC were also given two other valuable options. They can either make a one-time election to receive a 30% energy investment tax credit (ITC) in lieu of the PTC, shifting the tax benefit from future actual generation once a project is up and running to the year of construction, or they can apply to the Treasury Department for a tax-free "Section 1603" grant equivalent to either the PTC or the ITC amounts, during 2009 or 2010. There's also a new 20% tax credit for energy research. The big loser here was nuclear power, with the Conference striking $50 B in loan guarantees for new plants.
You don't have to be a big believer in the merits of a fiscal stimulus to see that if all this money hit the ground this year and next, it would certainly have a big impact on the energy industry in general, and on renewable energy, in particular, including investors in the sector. But if the above sums conjure up images of new electric power transmission lines to carry all that new renewable power to where it's needed, an article in today's Washington Post ought to impart some caution. Among other projects, it looks at the Sunrise Powerlink of the San Diego Gas & Electric Co., which was proposed in 2005 and might be finished in 2012. And the Wall Street Journal recently examined the track record of the Department of Energy, which will have authority over large portions of these appropriations, in distributing loan guarantees under a 2007 program. Setting up the approval and accountability systems to manage and monitor additional billions of dollars will be a huge undertaking in its own right, entailing the twin risks of creating impassable bottlenecks or funding scams and scoundrels.
I encourage my readers to browse the bill, if you have the time. You'll find plenty of language in there about oversight and periodic reports to Congress, and I'm sure your Congressman and Senators would be delighted to receive an email from you, emphasizing the need for them to follow through on these requirements. They might also want to think about granting fast-track permitting authority and immunity from frivolous lawsuits for any projects funded under the stimulus, to prevent this from becoming the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2016, instead of 2009.
Link to original post
Other Posts by Geoffrey Styles
E15's Problems Are Symptomatic of A Failing Biofuels Policy - May 22, 2012
Are Chesapeake's Problems A Red Flag For Shale Gas? - May 17, 2012
Where Gas is Already $10 per Gallon - May 9, 2012
Resources from Space? - May 4, 2012
US Natural Gas Price Nears $10 per Barrel Equivalence - April 30, 2012
» Already a member? Login now to comment!
» Not a member? Register to comment!
RodAdams said:
Geoff:Geoffrey Styles said:
I also can't help wondering whether those who were so keen to pull the plug on funding for nuclear power understand that the output of these plants doesn't compete with wind and solar power, any more than the latter actually do with coal. Nuclear and coal provide baseload power, and more nukes offer our best hope--along with efficiency--for backing out most coal power in the long run. Wind and solar compete with natural gas, but are also synergistic with it, since both need natural gas-fired turbines to back up their intermittent and cyclical output. The only renewable technologies that compete with nuclear, other than perhaps for funding, are hydro--for which the US will likely build no new large dams and will probably tear more existing ones down--and geothermal, which has managed to coexist with nuclear for generations. Whatever energy choices our country ultimately makes, they must be better informed by facts and driven much less by beliefs.RodAdams said:
Geoff:-
Baby You Can Drive My (Electric) Car
Posted May 11, 2012 by Scott Edward Anderson
-
Siemens develops ABS plastic alternative
Posted May 9, 2012 by Doris de Guzman
-
Reduce CO2 and Slow Global Warming?
Posted April 30, 2012 by Willem Post
-
WGC 2012 - 25th World Gas Conference
June 4, 2012, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
-
Ecwatech 2012
June 4, 2012, Moscow, Russia
-
Intersolar Europe
June 11, 2012, Munich, Germany
Scott Edward Anderson is a consultant, blogger, and media commentator who blogs at The Green Skeptic. More »
Marc Gunther is a writer, speaker and consultant, who focuses on business and the environment. More »
Christine Hertzog is a consultant, author, and a professional explainer focused on Smart Grid. More »
Jesse Jenkins is the director of energy and climate policy at the Breakthrough Institute. More »
Robert Rapier works in the energy industry and writes and speaks about energy and the environment. More »
Geoffrey Styles is Managing Director of GSW Strategy Group, LLC and an award-winning blogger. More »
Dan Yurman is a nuclear energy blogger and writes regularly for Fuel Cycle Week. More »
The Energy Collective
- YOU
- Rod Adams
- Scott Edward Anderson
- Charles Barton
- Barry Brook
- Dick DeBlasio
- Simon Donner
- Big Gav
- Michael Giberson
- James Greenberger
- Lou Grinzo
- Marc Gunther
- Tyler Hamilton
- Christine Hertzog
- David Hone
- Jesse Jenkins
- Lynne Kiesling
- Sonita Lontoh
- Jesse Parent
- Vicky Portwain
- Tom Raftery
- Robert Rapier
- Joseph Romm
- Robert Stavins
- Robert Stowe
- Geoffrey Styles
- Alex Trembath
- Gernot Wagner
- John Whitehead
- Dan Yurman
Hidroenergia 2012
When: Wed, 2012-05-23 09:00
NERC CIP Compliance Training
When: Thu, 2012-05-24 08:00
Webinar on Transported Asset Protection Association’s (TAPA) Freight Security Requirements and Trucking Security Requirements
When: Thu, 2012-05-24 14:00
Global JOJOBAWORLD 2012
When: Fri, 2012-05-25 09:00
NESCO Town Hall: Security Risk Management Practices for Electric Utilities
When: Wed, 2012-05-30 13:00
Ecwatech 2012
When: Mon, 2012-06-04 09:00

About Social Media Today




