Documents
Category:
Impact on Economy or Tax Breaks & Subsidies
Browse in :
All
> Topics
> Impact on Economy (60)
All > Topics > Impact on Economy > Tax Breaks & Subsidies (46)
All of these categories
All > Topics > Impact on Economy > Tax Breaks & Subsidies (46)
All of these categories
Study of the effects on employment of public aid to renewable energy sources
March 27, 2009
by Gabriel Calzada Álvarez PhD. et.al.
US President Barack Obama defends his energy subsidy package to invest billions into alternative energy generation by citing examples from Spain, Germany, and Japan. He has pointed to the renewables industry as a way to create new and sustainable jobs during a period of economic downturn. But this recent report prepared by Dr. Gabriel Calzada, an economics professor at Juan Carlos University in Madrid, shows that for Spain the “green employment opportunity” has proven elusive and unsustainable. The executive summary of Dr. Calzada’s report is posted below. The full report can be accessed by selecting one of the links at the bottom of this page.
Paper: Green jobs myths
March 12, 2009
by Morriss, A. P., Bogart, W. T., Dorchak, A., Meiners, R. E.
In this Article, the authors survey the green jobs literature, analyze its assumptions, and show how the special interest groups promoting the idea of green jobs have embedded dubious assumptions and techniques within their analyses. Before undertaking efforts to restructure and possibly impoverish our society, careful analysis and informed public debate about these assumptions and prescriptions are necessary.
Also filed under [
Impact on Economy|
USA]
Impact of wind turbines on market value of Texas rural land
February 13, 2009
by Derry T. Gardner of Gardner Appraisal Group, Inc.
This report was prepared for a presentation given at the South Plains Agriculture Wind & Wildlife Conference in Lubbock, Texas on February 13, 2009. The findings and conclusions contained herein are the exclusive property of Gardner Appraisal Group, Inc., and cannot be re-produced without the express written permission of Gardner Appraisal Group, Inc. Windaction.org wishes to thank Mr. Derry T. Gardner for kindly granting us permission to post his presentation to the www.windaction.org website. To access the document, click on the link at the bottom of this page.
Chris Luxemburger is a real estate broker, director of the Brampton Real Estate Board and the Chairperson of the Real Estate By-Laws Committee in Ontario, Canada. In his survey of the three-year sales records for the Melancthon Wind Plant and surrounding area, Luxemburger found significant differences among 600 properties within and beyond three nautical miles of the plant. Those in proximity to wind turbines had either a higher rate of non-sale (11% vs. 3%) or took twice as long to sell. He summarizes his findings in this presentation.
Flaws in and solutions to integrating renewable energy resources in New England
November 18, 2008
by William P Short
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Energy Policy]
California Renewable Portfolio Standard, quarterly report
September, 2008
by California Public Utilities Commission
Texas oilman T. Boone Pickens is on a mission, and wants you to support his energy plan away from imported oil and towards natural gas and wind power. But commentator Will Wilkinson says to be wary of what you hear.
Pickens' decision to back wind power shows why the Wind Production Tax Credit (PTC) should NOT be extended
May 12, 2008
by Glenn R. Schleede
Energy expert, Glenn Schleede, explains how federal subsidies make wind power an easy choice for T. Boone Pickens but a losing proposition for American taxpayers.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
USA]
Federal energy subsidies and support double between 1999 and 2007
March, 2008
by Energy Information Administration
Federal electricity subsidies and support per unit of production (dollars per megawatt hour) varied widely by fuel in FY2007, according to EIA. Coal-based synfuels (refined coal) that are eligible for the alternative fuels tax credit, solar power and wind power received the highest subsidies per unit of generation, ranging from more than $23 to nearly $30 per megawatt hour of generation.
The smallest subsidies on a per unit basis were for coal, natural gas and petroleum liquids, and municipal solid waste, all at less than $0.45 per megawatthour of generation.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
USA]