Wind Energy's Ghosts
Bankrupt Europe has a lesson for Congress about wind power.
Wiwo...wiwo...wiwo.
The
sound floats on the winds of Ka Le, this southernmost tip of Hawaii's
Big Island, where Polynesian colonists first landed some 1,500 years
ago.
Some say that Ka Le is haunted -- and it is. But it's haunted not by Hawaii's legendary night marchers.
The mysterious sounds are "Na leo o Kamaoa"-- the disembodied voices of
37 skeletal wind turbines abandoned to rust on the hundred-acre site of
the former Kamaoa Wind Farm.
The
voices of Kamaoa cry out their warning as a new batch of colonists,
having looted the taxpayers of Spain, Portugal, and Greece, seeks to
expand upon their multi-billion-dollar foothold half a world away on the
shores of the distant Potomac River. European wind developers are
fleeing the EU's expiring wind subsidies, shuttering factories, laying
off workers, and leaving billions of Euros of sovereign debt and a
continent-wide financial crisis in their wake. But their game is not
over. Already they are tapping a new vein of lucre from the taxpayers
and ratepayers of the United States.
The
Waxman-Markey Cap-and-Trade Bill appears to be politically dead since
Republican Scott Brown's paradigm-shattering Massachusetts Senate
victory. But alternative proposals being floated by Senator Byron Dorgan
(D-ND) and others still promise billions of dollars to wind developers
and commit the United States to generate as much as 20% of its
electricity from so-called "renewable" sources.
The
ghosts of Kamaoa are not alone in warning us. Five other abandoned wind
sites dot the Hawaiian Isles -- but it is in California where the
impact of past mandates and subsidies is felt most strongly. Thousands
of abandoned wind turbines littered the landscape of wind energy's
California "big three" locations -- Altamont Pass, Tehachapi, and San
Gorgonio -- considered among the world's best wind sites.
Built
in 1985, at the end of the boom, Kamaoa soon suffered from lack of
maintenance. In 1994, the site lease was purchased by Redwood City,
CA-based Apollo Energy.
Cannibalizing
parts from the original 37 turbines, Apollo personnel kept the
declining facility going with outdated equipment. But even in a place
where wind-shaped trees grow sideways, maintenance issues were
overwhelming. By 2004 Kamaoa accounts began to show up on a Hawaii
State Department of Finance list of unclaimed properties. In 2006, transmission was finally cut off by Hawaii Electric Company.
California's
wind farms -- then comprising about 80% of the world's wind generation
capacity -- ceased to generate much more quickly than Kamaoa. In the
best wind spots on earth, over 14,000 turbines were simply abandoned.
Spinning, post-industrial junk which generates nothing but bird kills.
The
City of Palm Springs was forced to enact an ordinance requiring their
removal from San Gorgonio. But California's Kern County, encompassing
the Tehachapi area, has no such law. Wind Power advocate Paul Gipe, who
got his start as an early 1970s environmental activist at Indiana's Ball State University, describes a 1998 Tehachapi tour thusly:
"Our bus drove directly through the Tehachapi Gorge passing the abandoned Airtricity site with its derelict Storm Master and Wind-Matic turbines and the deserted Wind Source site with its defunct Aeroman machines. We also got a freeway-close glimpse of Zond's wind wall with its 400 Vestas V15 turbines, the former Arbutus site on rugged Pajuela Peak where only the Bonus turbines are still in service, and steep-sided Cameron Ridge topped with FloWind's few remaining Darrieus turbines before reaching SeaWest, our first stop."As we approached SeaWest from the desert town of Mojave, the old Micon 108s were spinning merrily, but the Mitsubishis with their higher start-up speed were just coming to life. SeaWest and Fluidyne had done a commendable job of cleaning the Mitsubishis of their infamous oil leaks for the tour's arrival."
Tehachapi's dead turbines
(image via webecoist, sky#walker; Center for Land Use Interpretation; Terminal Tower)
From 1981 through 1985 federal and state tax subsidies in California were so great that wealthy investors could recover up to 50 percent of a wind turbine's cost. The lure of quick riches resulted in a flood of development using new and mostly untested wind turbines. By the end of 1986, when projects already underway in 1985 were completed, developers had installed nearly 15,000 wind turbines. These machines represented 1,200 MW of capacity worth US$2.4 billion in 1986 dollars.
It
took nearly a decade from the time the first flimsy wind turbines were
installed before the performance of California wind projects could
dispel the widespread belief among the public and investors that wind
energy was just a tax scam.
Ben Lieberman, a senior policy analyst focusing on energy and environmental issues for the Heritage Foundation, is not surprised. He asks:
"If wind power made sense, why would it need a government subsidy in the first place? It's a bubble which bursts as soon as the government subsidies end."
After the collapse, wind promoters had a solution to their public image problem. Hide the derelict turbines. Gipe in 1993 wrote for the American Wind Energy Association:
Currently most of the older, less productive wind turbines are located within sight of major travel corridors such as I-580 and I-10. Many first generation turbines and some of the second generation designs are inoperative, and all turbines of these generations are more prone to mechanical failure than contemporary designs. Public opinion surveys have consistently found that inoperative wind turbines tarnish the public's perception of wind energy's efficacy."
Gipe then quotes a 1991 UC Davis study, which explains:
"Our research and that of others show that turbines' non-operation and public fear of wind farm abandonment is still a critical issue, and it therefore behooves the wind industry to return to the 'big three' wind farm sites (Altamont, San Gorgonio, and Tehachapi) and to ensure that these areas are operating as efficiently as possible, and all turbine arrays which do not contribute significantly and conspicuously to power production are either replaced or, if necessary, removed."
Altamont's
turbines have since 2008 been tethered four months of every year in an
effort to protect migrating birds after environmentalists filed suit.
According to the Golden Gate Audubon Society,
75 to 110 Golden Eagles, 380 Burrowing Owls, 300 Red-tailed Hawks, and
333 American Kestrels (falcons) are killed by Altamont turbines
annually. A July, 2008 study
by the Alameda County Community Development Agency points to 10,000
annual bird deaths from Altamont Pass wind turbines. Audubon calls
Altamont, "probably the worst site ever chosen for a wind energy
project." In 2004 the group unsuccessfully challenged renewal applications for 18 of 20 Altamont wind farms.
From
its beginnings as a slogan of the anti-nuclear movement, wind energy
has always been tied to taxpayer support and government intervention.
Wind farms got their first boost with the Carter-era Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978
(PURPA) which encouraged states to enact their own tax incentives.
PURPA also for the first time allowed non-utility energy producers to
sell electricity to utilities -- the first step towards a bungled
half-privatization of electricity supply which would come two decades
hence.
In the 1985 book "Dynamos and Virgins"
a San Francisco based PG&E utility heir tells the story of how he
joined forces in the 1970s with lawyers from the Environmental Defense
Fund. Together they worked for years to obstruct coal and nuclear power
plants until utilities were forced to do business with wind energy
suppliers.
Protest
and litigation remain among the foremost competitive tools used by the
now multi-billion dollar "alternative" energy industry. Reviewing the
book, Robert Reich, a Kennedy School of Government professor who would
later become Clinton's Secretary of Labor, wrote:
"The old paradigms of large-scale production, centralized management, and infinite resources are crumbling. We are on the verge of a new political economy."
The
new paradigm created by the generation of 1968 is more political and
less economy. Without government intervention, utilities normally avoid
wind energy. Wind's erratic power feed destabilizes power grids and
forces engineers to stand by, always ready to fire up traditional
generators. Wind does not fit into an electric supply model made up of
steady massive low cost "base load" coal or nuclear plants backed up by
on-call natural gas powered "peaker" units which kick in during high
demand. No coal or nuclear power plant has ever been replaced by wind
energy.
Although
carbon credit schemes often assign profitable carbon credits to wind
farm operators based on a theoretical displacement of carbon emitted by
coal or natural gas producers, in reality these plants must keep burning
to be able to quickly add supply every time the wind drops off. The
formulae do not take into account carbon emitted by idling coal and
natural gas plants nor the excess carbon generated by constant fire-up
and shut down cycles necessitated to balance fluctuating wind supplies.
But
with PURPA on the federal books, the State of California quickly
created "Interim Standard Offer" (ISO4) contracts guaranteeing a
purchase price based on utilities' "avoided costs"--launching the first
"California Wind Rush". By 1982 turbines were sprouting from the dusty
terrain of Altamont Pass, Tehachapi, and San Gorgonio. The ISO4
contracts were written with the assumption that fuel prices would
continue to soar.
But that's not what happened.
By
1985 oil and natural gas prices were dropping. This changed the
"avoided cost" calculations to the disadvantage of alternative energy
producers. ISO4 contracts no longer guaranteed a price sufficient to
attract investment in wind energy. Construction of new turbines
stopped. As the old ten-year contracts began to expire in the late
1980s, renewals were pegged at much lower avoided cost estimates. As a
result, many California wind developers quickly closed up shop,
abandoning their turbines to moan out the one note song.
Then Enron got involved.
Building on the foundation laid by PURPA, 1992 Energy Policy Act (EPAct) began
the partial deregulation of wholesale -- but not retail --
electricity. Reich in 1985 had lauded the "crumbling" of "large-scale
production (and) centralized management". He got his wish. EPAct set the stage
for Enron's California energy market manipulations which led to the
2003 recall of Governor Gray Davis (D-CA). The movement started by a
PG&E heir led to the bankruptcy of PG&E. Perhaps this is why
some call the children of the 1960s "the destructive generation."
Designed
to create a renewable energy trading market, EPAct -- much of which
took effect in 1997 -- created a combination of mandates, incentives,
and tax credits. These included:
- laws requiring large wind producers to be allowed to tie into the existing utility grid
- "Renewable Portfolio Standards" forcing utilities to buy intermittent wind generated electricity.
- "Renewable Energy Certificates" tradable separately from the electricity itself to sell to companies needing to meet the portfolio standards.
- A 10-year "Production Tax Credit" that now equals $.019/kWh
- Accelerated depreciation allowing tax write-off using an accelerated 5-year double-declining-balance method (40% per year).
Wind capacity had stagnated through the mid-1990s. But Enron in January, 1997 bought out Tehachapi-based industry leader Zond Corporation - launching the second California Wind Rush.
Four
years later, Enron would implode. The company which gamed a
government-crippled artificial marketplace was deconstructed as poster
boy for unbridled capitalism.
But
the tax credits, mandates, and regulations which made Enron possible
did not die with it. Enron Wind's turbine manufacturing subsidiary was
purchased by General Electric. Many of its wind farms went to Florida
Light and Power. By 2009, the US Department of Energy estimates mandate-and-subsidy-driven wind capacity would rise to 28,635mw.
That
much coal or nuclear "capacity" would power 28.635 million homes, but
wind "capacity" is calculated assuming perfect wind 24 hours a day, 365
days of the year. At the best wind sites, such as Kamaoa, newly
installed turbines generate only 30-40% of "capacity". At most sites,
the figure is 20% or less. After 30 years of development, wind produces
only 2.3% of California's electricity.
And
then there is maintenance. The turbines installed in the first wind
rush were not very reliable. Some never worked at all. As the years
passed and the elements took their toll, downtime climbed ever closer to
100% and production dwindled to negligible amounts. Developers often
set malfunctioning turbines to "virtual" mode -- blades spinning without
generating electricity -- in order to keep oil circulating inside the
turbine drive. Of course this habit also gives passing drivers an
illusion of productivity.
Wind
developers claim that today's American and European-made turbines are
more reliable and longer-lasting than their old-tech predecessors. But new Chinese turbine manufacturers of untested quality are crowding the marketplace Europe's subsidy-driven turbine meisters are chased from their home markets.
After
the debacle of the First California Wind Rush, the European Union had
moved ahead of the US on efforts to subsidize "renewable"
energy--including a "Feed in Tariff" even more lucrative than the ISO4
contracts. EU governments provided government-backed securities to
support utilities burdened by Feed-in Tariff costs. But last year, as
the national debt of wind-intensive EU countries became unbearable, the
EU subsidy bubble burst.
Wind maven Gipe proudly takes a page from the disastrous European playbook, crediting himself with "Almost single-handedly launch(ing) a campaign for Advanced Renewable Tariffs (electricity feed laws) in North America."
But addressing a Heritage Foundation seminar last May, Dr. Gabriel Calzada, Professor of King Juan Carlos University in Madrid explained what Feed In Tariffs and other wind subsidies did to Spain (as well as Portugal and Greece) got into debt:
"The feed-in tariff... would make (utility) companies go bankrupt eventually. So...the government guarantees...to give back the money in the future -- when (they) are not going to be in the office any more. Slowly the market does not want to have these securities that they are selling. Right now there is a debt related to these renewable energies that nobody knows how it is going to be paid -- of 16 Billion Euros."
In early 2009 the Socialist government of Spain reduced alternative energy subsidies by 30%. Calzada continues:
"At that point the whole pyramid collapsed. They are firing thousands of people. BP closed down the two largest solar production plants in Europe. They are firing between 25,000 and 40,000 people...."
"What do we do with all this industry that we have been creating with subsidies that now is collapsing? The bubble is too big. We cannot continue pumping enough money. ...The President of the Renewable Industry in Spain (wrote a column arguing that) ...the only way is finding other countries that will give taxpayers' money away to our industry to take it and continue maintaining these jobs."
That "other country" is the United States of America.
Waxman-Markey
seems dead, and Europe's southern periphery is bankrupt. But the
wind-subsidy proposals being floated in Congress suggest that American
political leaders have yet to understand that "green power" means
generating electricity by burning dollars.
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2010/02/wind_energys_ghosts_1.html#ixzz3OjAd1h00
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