The lame-duck House of Representatives this week voted to extend controversial
tax credits for “green” power projects, using the U.S. Treasury to keep the
government-dependent industry on life support.
As in previous years, the Production Tax Credit program — skewed heavily toward
wind and solar projects — lapsed at the end of 2013. But as Watchdog.org
reported last month, industry lobbyists worked overtime to convince
congressional Democrats and Republicans to retroactively renew it.
Bloomberg News reported Thursday that the House voted 378-46 to extend the
credits through 2014. If the Senate goes along, as expected, the action sets up
yet another year-end scramble in 2015.
“This is a lousy way to run a tax code; it’s a lousy way to run a government,”
said U.S. Rep. Ron Kind, a Wisconsin Democrat. “I reluctantly support it.”
For now, renewable energy companies can claim a last-minute victory with H.R.
5771.
“A one-year extension is an early Christmas present from the House Republicans
to big wind manufacturers like GE and a number of foreign-owned companies,”
groused Thomas Pyle, president of the American Energy Alliance, which has
criticized the PTC program for distorting the market.
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AEA estimates that wind power is more than 125 percent more
expensive than natural gas-generated electricity and 90 percent more
costly than coal-fired generation.
The only way wind producers stay in business is with the taxpayers’
help, Pyle said.
Free-market groups call highly subsidized wind- and solar-power
projects “central building blocks” in the Obama administration’s war
on coal.
When the tax credit expired in 2013, new wind installations came to
a halt, resulting in a 92 percent drop in new wind projects compared
to 2012 and a $23 billion drop in private investment in the U.S.
economy, according to the American Wind Energy Association, which
represents companies such as GE Energy and Florida-based wind farm
developer NextEra Energy Inc., Bloomberg said.
Solar power ventures have ridden a similar roller-coaster ride at
public expense, garnering even larger government subsidies per
kilowatt than wind.
See how your representative voted here.
Kenric Ward is a national correspondent for Watchdog.org. Contact
him at (571) 319-9824. @Kenricward
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