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The alternative-energy sector has run smack into a credit crisis, probably a recession as well, and almost all industry experts think the fourth quarter is going to be worse. ...The reality today is that it's more expensive to produce renewable energy than it is from traditional resources, and consumers suddenly strapped for cash will start moving away, said Jerry Taylor, a senior fellow at Cato Institute.
Even proponents are slowing the move toward alternative energy, at least for the moment.
Also filed under [
USA]
The U.S. government is committing billions of dollars to support renewable energy such as wind- and solar-power plants. Some say it should use more of that financial clout to encourage less energy consumption in the first place.
Advocates of conservation, including businesses that help homeowners and companies save energy, think there should be more subsidies and tax incentives for basics like insulation and window shading, and for newer, more costly products like light-emitting-diode lamps and building-automation systems.
Also filed under [
USA]
Bluewater Wind says a deal on wind farm is reached
September 13, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
September 13, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
Bluewater Wind will build 150 energy-producing turbines off the coast of Rehoboth Beach by about 2014 at an estimated cost of $1.6 billion, according to a statement released this afternoon by Bluewater. ...Bluewater spokesman Jim Lanard put it more bluntly: "Our biggest concern is that Delmarva has a secret black box they may use to try to blow up the process."
Delmarva would pay 10.59 cents per kilowatt hour for the wind energy, McGonigle wrote. That's 1.05 cents higher than Bluewater's original bid.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Delaware]
BP Wind & Solar CEO: Project Money 'completely dried up'
October 23, 2008 by Ucilia Wang in The Street
October 23, 2008 by Ucilia Wang in The Street
Financing for wind farms has disappeared and fewer companies will be able to develop the kind of "mega projects" needed to feed the growing demand for energy, said Reyad Fezzani, CEO of BP's wind and solar operations, at the Dow Jones Alternative Energy Innovations conference Wednesday.
In just the last month, money that typically would be available for building renewable-energy projects has "completely dried up," thanks to the financial market crisis, Fezzani said during a keynote and on-stage interview with Yuliya Chernova, editor of Dow Jones' Clean Technology Insight.
California study shows high cost of renewable power
November 7, 2008 by Bernie Woodall in Thomson Reuters
November 7, 2008 by Bernie Woodall in Thomson Reuters
If California expands its renewable power generation to be a third of electricity delivered in the state by 2020, it may cost $60 billion, the state's utility regulator said in a report issued on Thursday.
It is more costly to make electricity with renewable power -- solar, wind, geothermal and other sources that emit no or low amounts of global-warming greenhouse gases -- than with natural gas, nuclear and coal power plants. ...On Tuesday, California voters overwhelmingly -- 65 percent of the vote -- rejected a statewide ballot measure that would have required 50 percent of power to be generated from renewables by 2025.
Also filed under [
General|
California]
Challenges emerge for wind power
July 12, 2006 by Chris Mulick, Herald Olympia bureau in Tri-City Herald
July 12, 2006 by Chris Mulick, Herald Olympia bureau in Tri-City Herald
A series of factors -- including increasing demand for wind farms, rising costs for materials and the weakening U.S. dollar -- have driven up construction prices.
At the same time, Northwest dams don't have enough remaining flexibility to supplement and smooth the up and down generation patterns of new wind farms.
Cold air blown on wind farmers
May 12, 2006 by Wendy Frew, Environment Reporter in The Sydney Morning Herald
May 12, 2006 by Wendy Frew, Environment Reporter in The Sydney Morning Herald
TWO wind farms worth a total of $550 million have been shelved and another worth $250 million is at risk because of a lack of support from the Federal Government, a developer says.
Also filed under [
General|
Australia / New Zealand]
Controversy erupts over districts not sharing windfall from wind farms
April 3, 2009 by Danny Robbins in Star-Telegram
April 3, 2009 by Danny Robbins in Star-Telegram
Property values are soaring in this West Texas community, and the reason is obvious. Looming on the northern horizon, hundreds of new wind turbines dot the once-barren hills.
Ordinarily, much of the tax dollars generated by the turbines would go to the state's "Robin Hood" school finance plan, which requires property-rich districts to share their wealth with those less fortunate. But that won't happen in Sterling City, at least not if school officials have their way.
Also filed under [
Texas]
County attorney tasked with negotiating contract for Fairfield wind project
December 14, 2007 by Rob Juteau in The Evening Times
December 14, 2007 by Rob Juteau in The Evening Times
“I’m not sure everyone knows what they are voting on,” Bono, District 11, said prior to the vote. ...information included guidelines for the contract negotiation, which include a proposal for a payment in lieu of taxes of $8,000 per megawatt, for a total of $640,000 on an 80 megawatt project. The information also said that the county would receive a one-time payment of $360,000 to $400,000 in its general fund for use on other projects such as the construction of a new county correctional facility.
“One of my main concerns is how can I justify an 85 percent tax break for this company and not for anyone else,” Bono said. “We want to attract businesses to Herkimer County, but we cannot give 85 percent tax breaks to everyone. We need to continue to work with the numbers.”
Also filed under [
New York]
County Road Dept. to receive $100,000 from wind farm impact fees payment
August 19, 2008 by LeAnne Kavanagh in Glacial Reporter
August 19, 2008 by LeAnne Kavanagh in Glacial Reporter
Also filed under [
Montana]
County commissioners unveiled a draft agreement Thursday for a tax-increment financing district that could bring the county up to $4 million over 20 years to use for economic development in unorganized territories. ...But Carrabassett Valley Town Manager Dave Cota said the draft agreement would shift more of the county tax burden to organized towns and let the company get away with not paying its fair share of taxes.
Mitchell said the purpose was to reach a balanced agreement that would benefit all of the county directly and indirectly.
The TIF would capture 75 percent of the new tax revenue for the first 10 years and 50 percent for the latter 10, with the county keeping 40 percent and TransCanada getting 60 percent. The remaining tax revenue gained would go into the state's unorganized territory fund.
Also filed under [
Maine]
Data to show likely costs of wind farm; Consumer price analysis to take longer
September 13, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
September 13, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
Friday is the deadline for Delmarva Power to release details of agreements with three power companies to provide stable-priced electricity for the next 25 years. Homeowners, environmentalists and state officials are awaiting data to see if the wind farm will offer a competitive price, as well as whether the wind farm will be big enough to make a sizable contribution to the state's electricity supply. ...
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Delaware]
DCOA helps wind tower maker; Up to $700,000 in additional money approved
October 28, 2008 by Doug Myers in Abilene Reporter News
October 28, 2008 by Doug Myers in Abilene Reporter News
A wind tower manufacturing company, facing construction costs that were significantly higher than expected, received a shot in the arm Tuesday.
Members of the Development Corporation of Abilene voted to approve Tower Tech Systems Inc.'s request for additional money -- up to $700,000 more -- to help cover nearly $7 million in unanticipated building costs.
Also filed under [
Texas]
Del. could learn from N.Y.'s ill wind; Cost hikes likely to shelve wind farm on Long Island
October 21, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
October 21, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
When LIPA ...first proposed the offshore wind project in 2003, costs were estimated at $200 million. The company said it would have little to no impact on electricity rates.
That was the last published cost estimate until fall 2006, when under a Freedom of Information Law request from Newsday, the power authority released the original, winning bid from FPL Energy of Florida: $356 million. The price increases didn't stop there. ..."Long Islanders shouldn't believe for one minute that any major form of renewable energy is going to be cheaper than traditional resources produced by oil or natural gas," Kessel wrote.
The nation's severe credit crisis is dimming the appeal of a long-awaited extension for renewable-energy tax credits.
After months of delays, Congress finally passed the extension Oct. 3 - just in time for the alternative-energy industry to face the full brunt of the upheaval in financial markets that has sharply reduced commercial lending.
Some wind- and solar-energy projects are moving forward under the impetus of the renewed tax credits. But many others are on hold as developers compete for a trickle of available financing.
Also filed under [
USA]
Gargantuan London Array offshore wind farm in doubt as E.ON questions economics
January 26, 2009 in Power Engineering
January 26, 2009 in Power Engineering
According to the Financial Times, E.ON UK, the British arm of the German energy group, said the viability of its London Array project, a planned 1000 MW wind farm in the Thames estuary, had been called into question by the falling prices of oil, gas and carbon dioxide emissions permits. ...Centrica, the owner of British Gas, estimates that each megawatt of wind power capacity costs about £3m to build: more than the equivalent cost for a nuclear power station.
Also filed under [
UK]
The group behind what is said to be Australia's first community-owned wind farm says the global financial crisis has affected fundraising for the project.
Hepburn Wind wants to build two turbines at Leonard's Hill near Daylesford.
It has spent the past three months trying to raise $5 million from investors, but it has only received share applications worth $2 million.
Also filed under [
Australia / New Zealand]
Grant residents sue to block wind turbine project
November 30, 2005 by Ken Ward Jr., Staff writer in The Charleston Gazette
November 30, 2005 by Ken Ward Jr., Staff writer in The Charleston Gazette
Seven Grant County residents have filed suit to try to block construction of 200 giant wind turbines proposed near their homes.
Jerome E. Burch and six other residents sued developers of the $150 million Mount Storm wind project.
In their 14-page complaint, the residents allege that the NedPower Mount Storm LLC project will be a “nuisance” and “an eyesore” that creates excess noise and kills birds and bats.
The suit also alleges that the project will generate little power but receive lucrative federal and state tax breaks.
The reason solar, wind, geothermal and power conservation stocks crashed largely comes down to fears of recession and to politics - as opposed to a major bubble across the green industry.
While there are exceptions like waste-to-energy, most alternative energies depend on federal tax credits. The production tax credit (PTC) provides 19 cents per kilowatt hour for renewable energies, while the investment tax credit (ITC) offers a 30 percent rebate on the cost of a solar system.
But the tax credits "sunset" every year or two and must be renewed, creating a boom-and-bust cycle. ...And with the PTC and ITC going the way of the dodo on Dec. 31, fears of recession and a credit crunch have all conspired against green investors.
Also filed under [
USA]
New global investment in clean-energy companies fell 22 percent in the third quarter as government financing was offset by tight credit markets, according to new research released Friday.
From July to September, new global investment totaled $25.9 billion, down 22 percent from a year ago and off 9 percent from the second quarter, according to London-based New Energy Finance, a global research firm.