Inefficient, Unreliable, Unaffordable Wind turbines! What a waste of money!!!

Wind power may be responsible for £200m of constraint payments

Credit:  The Herald | Thursday 1 May 2014 | www.heraldscotland.com ~~

 

Having digested Jenny Hogan’s defence of wind power (“Time truth was told about the vital role of renewables in our wellbeing,” Agenda, The Herald, April 22), I feel I must respond.

As the policy director of Scottish Renewables she is clearly concerned that wind energy is getting an increasingly bad press because of rising constraint payments with wind farms being shut down by the National Grid controller, and being paid for not producing electricity. By her own estimate £39m was paid to UK wind farms for this reason over the last 12-month period.

Her defence seems to be that fossil fuel generators are also paid for not putting power on the grid – about £270m over the same period. What she does not point out, or perhaps does not understand, is that the majority of these payments are also due to the deployment of wind power, forcing the fossil fuel power stations to operate less efficiently.

Wind may well be responsible for nearer to £200m of constraint payments for our bills, rather than the £39m declared.

It used to be the case that a small “spinning reserve” was all that was needed at some gas-fired power stations to cover for the occasional unexpected blips in supply or demand on the grid caused by unit failure, weather damage or unexpectedly high or low customer demand. However these were rare events, probably amounting on average to no more than one incident per month.

The advent of wind power with significant amounts of variable and unpredictable power spikes and slumps being offered to the grid coming from many wind turbines powering up or down more or less together, forces more conventional power stations, especially gas-fired power stations, to run or be constrained much more frequently.

For example, over the 30 days of a recent November, six very large power spikes and eight almost complete power slumps were experienced from the combined output of all wind farms in the UK. Constraint payments would have been made on all of these occasions, both to the wind farm operators and to those companies providing the balancing reserve power.

Renewables are of course a very mixed bag – hydro, biomass, and solar are very much more controllable and predictable technologies, and at the level they are deployed, cause no real problems for the grid.

Wind power is vastly different, expensive and inefficient in ways that we have yet to get our minds fully around.

Bruce McIntosh,

Corriedoo,

Dalry,

Castle Douglas.

Source:  The Herald | Thursday 1 May 2014 | www.heraldscotland.com

Very Informative Talk by Carmen Krogh…May 7, 3:30 – 5:00pm….Be There!

CARMEN KROGH TO GIVE SPEECH ON THE HARM CAUSED BY WIND TURBINES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO — MAY 7TH

Originally posted on Global Wind Energy — The Human Impact:

Krogh-poster  inpdf formatCapture

The Windscam – Hurting Families and Others who Cannot Afford it!

Bjørn Lomborg: Cost of Renewables Hit Poorest the Hardest

Bjorn-Lomborg-wsj

Bjørn Lomborg has become one of the most high profile critics of insanely expensive and utterly pointless renewable energy policies across the globe (see our posts here and here).

Bjørn’s back – and this time adds the impact our ludicrous Renewable Energy Target has had – and will have – on power prices and the ensuing punishment that spiralling power costs cause to the poorest and most vulnerable in Australian society.

Renewables pave path to poverty
The Australian
Bjørn Lomborg
29 April 2014

THE Australian government recently released an issues paper for the review of the renewable energy target. What everyone engaged in this debate should recognise is that policies such as the carbon tax and the RET have contributed to household electricity costs rising 110 per cent in the past five years, hitting the poor the hardest.

A Salvation Army report from last year found 58 per cent of low-income households were unable to pay their electricity bills on time. Lynne Chester of the University of Sydney estimated last year that 20 per cent of households are now energy poor: “Parents are going without food, families are sitting around the kitchen table using one light, putting extra clothes on and sleeping in one room to keep warm, and this is Australia 2013.”

What is true in Australia is true globally. According to the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, “Climate change harms the poor first and worst.” But we often forget that current policies to address global warming harm the world’s poor much more.

Solar and wind power was subsidised by $65 billion in 2012. And because the total climate benefit was a paltry $1.5bn, the subsidies essentially wasted $63.5bn. Biofuels were subsidised by another $20bn, with ­essentially no climate benefit. All of that money could have been spent on healthcare, education, better roads or lower taxes.

Forcing everyone to buy more expensive, less-reliable energy pushes up costs throughout the economy, leaving less for other public goods. The average of macroeconomic models indicates the total cost of the EU’s climate policy will be $US310bn a year from 2020 until the end of the century.

The burden of these policies falls overwhelmingly on the world’s poor, because the rich can easily pay more for their ​energy. In the US, well-meaning and well-off environmentalists often cavalierly suggest petrol prices should be doubled or electricity exclusively sourced from high-cost green sources.

That may be OK in affluent suburbs, where residents reportedly spend just 2 per cent of their income on petrol. But the poorest 30 per cent of the US population spends almost 17 per cent of its after-tax income on petrol.

Similarly, environmentalists boast that households in Britain have reduced their electricity consumption almost 10 per cent since 2005. But they neglect to mention that this reflects a 50 per cent increase in electricity prices, mostly to pay for an increase in the share of renewables from 1.8 per cent to 4.6 per cent.

The poor, no surprise, have reduced their consumption by much more than 10 per cent, whereas the rich have not reduced theirs at all.

Over the past five years, heating a home has become 63 per cent more ​expensive in Britain while real wages have declined. About 17 per cent of households are now energy-poor — they have to spend more than 10 per cent of their income on energy; and, because the elderly are typically poorer, about a quarter of their households are energy poor. Pensioners burn old books to keep warm because it is cheaper than coal; they ride on heated buses all day, and a third leave part of their homes cold.

In Germany, where green subsidies will cost $US35bn ($37.6bn) this year, household electricity prices have increased 80 per cent since 2000, causing 6.9 million households to live in energy poverty. Wealthy homeowners in Bavaria can feel good about their inefficient solar panels, receiving lavish subsidies essentially paid by poor tenants in the Ruhr who cannot afford solar panels, but still have to
pay more for power.

In Greece, where tax hikes on oil have driven up heating costs 48 per cent, more and more Athenians are cutting down park trees, causing air pollution from wood burning to triple. It is even worse in the developing world, where three billion lack access to cheap energy. They cook
and keep warm by burning twigs and dung, producing indoor air pollution that causes 3.5 million deaths a year — by far the world’s biggest environmental problem.

Access to electricity could solve that while allowing families to read at night, own a refrigerator or use a computer. It would also allow businesses to operate more competitively, creating jobs and economic growth.

Consider Pakistan and South Africa, where a dearth of generating capacity means recurrent blackouts wreak havoc on businesses and cost jobs. Yet funding new coal-fired power plants in both countries has been widely opposed by well-meaning Westerners and governments.

Instead, they suggest renewables. This is hypocritical. The rich world gets just 1.2 per cent of its energy from hugely expensive solar and wind technologies, and we would never accept having power only when the wind was blowing. In the next two years, Germany will build 10 coal-fired power plants.

In 1971, 40 per cent of China’s energy came from renewables. Since then it has lifted 680 million people out of poverty using coal. Today, China gets a trifling 0.23 per cent of its energy from wind and solar. Africa gets 50 per cent of its energy today from ​renewables — and remains poor.
New analysis from the Centre for Global Development shows that, investing in renewables, we can pull one person out of poverty for about $US500.

But, using gas electrification, we could quadruple that. By ​focusing on our climate concerns, we deliberately choose to leave more than three out of four people in darkness and poverty.

Addressing global warming requires long-term innovation that makes green energy affordable. Until then, wasting enormous sums of money at the expense of the world’s poor is no solution at all.
The Australian

For a household to be “energy poor” is defined as needing to spend more than 10% of household income on energy, which, in practice, often leaves families with the choice of lighting or heating their homes and putting bread on the table.

The finding that 20 per cent of Australian households are now energy poor is a National Disgrace. That it has occurred as a consequence of renewable policies that amount to the largest wealth transfer from the poor to the rich in human history is nothing short of obscene.

The mandatory Renewable Energy Target is utterly devoid of merit and is simply punishing those who cannot fight back: it must go now.

bread and water for dinner

Invest in the Renewables Scam? Better think again!!!

German Consumer Agency Issues Open Letter, Warns Deutsche Bank Of

“Dubious Renewable Energy…Burdens Of Over 1 Trillion Euros Feared”

In a bid to protect consumers and investors. The Berlin-based consumer investor protection organization Verbraucherzentrale für Kapitalanleger (VzfK) has issued a press release here warning Deutsche Bank AG of the high risks of investments in “dubious renewable energy companies” and their projects after a string of spectacular insolvencies.

Hat-tip: EIKE.

What follows is the VzfK press release, translated to English:

The Verbraucherzentrale für Kapitalanleger [Consumer Agency for Investors] has sent an open letter to Jürgen Fitschen, the spokesman of the board of directors of Deutsche Bank AG, warning of engagement in the sector of renewable energies. The VzfK especially requests a critical review of customer relations to controversial project developer juwi AG based in Wörrstadt.

The VzfK argues that the spectacular insolvency of Prokon, Windwärts, Windreich, Solar Millennium AG and many other dubious renewable energy companies leads us to expect further damage not only to capital investors, but also to shareholders of credit institutes due to the sheer grievances in the sector of renewable energies. The VzfK requests the Deutsche Bank board of directors to assure that the damage to Deutsche Bank AG, its shareholders, and customers be minimized through appropriate portfolio measures and credit decisions. Especially requested is a critical review of the credit engagement that has come under fire because of the corruption scandal in Thuringia and controversial wind projects in the Hochtaunus nature reserve by project developer juwi AG.

Referring to the federal government’s Council of Expert Advisors the VzfK expects the EEG renewable energy feed-in system has to collapse and that economic damage of at least triple-digit billions are to be expected. Already today consumers are groaning and German industry are burdened by ludicrously high costs compared to other European countries and internationally. Energy prices are often more than 50% higher than those in neighboring countries or in the USA. In other words: German workers, as electric power customers, are paying for a gigantic job destruction program. The EEG system is only forcing the chemical industry and other energy-intensive industries to move abroad.

Dr. Martin Weimann, Chairman of the VzfK: “We ask the board to use the societal and political influence of Deutsche Bank AG to act to bring about a stop to the EEG feed-in system and to usher a fundamental reform for the interests of the stakeholders.“

In the letter itself, Weimann writes:

Should the renewable energy support continue to develop further and go on unbraked, burdens to the economy to the tune of over one trillion euros are to be feared.”

 

– See more at: http://notrickszone.com/2014/04/30/german-consumer-agency-issues-open-letter-warns-deutsche-bank-of-dubious-renewable-energy-burdens-of-over-1-trillion-euros-feared/#sthash.x0nrSgKY.dpuf

The Liberals claim of “Green Jobs”, was just another scam!!!

Labour war: Green energy and foreign workers

The taxpayer-subsidized green energy industry brings in temporary foreign workers

Tamsin McMahon

4

(Nick Brancaccio, The Windsor Star)

When it opened for business at the site of a shuttered assembly plant in Windsor, Ont., CS Wind was hailed as an early success story for the Ontario government’s flagship green energy program, which aimed to spark a renewable resource industry in the province and create jobs for thousands of unemployed manufacturing workers.

The Korean company, which manufactures the towers used in wind turbines, is a partner in a consortium led by Samsung that promised to open factories to employ Canadians building wind turbines and solar panels. In exchange, the province agreed to buy nearly $10 billion worth of renewable energy from producers at above market-rates (later reduced to $6 billion after complaints it would drive up energy bills). CS Wind said it planned to hire as many as 500 local workers, many of them out-of-work welders, and build towers out of steel from Sault Ste. Marie.

Yet years after then-premier Dalton McGuinty toured the plant for its December 2011 opening—sitting at the controls of a specialized hoist truck and declaring that his green energy strategy was “creating good jobs for our families”— the company’s use of two dozen temporary workers from Vietnam has become a key issue in an ongoing labour dispute at the factory.

An Ontario Labour Relations Board ruling released last month to determine which of CS Wind’s employees could form a prospective bargaining unit—as part of a union drive by the Iron Workers—noted the company had employed more than 30 workers from Vietnam in jobs that ranged from welding to assembly to quality control. Many worked more than 60 hours a week, compared to an average of 46 hours a week for Canadian counterparts. Three employees told the board they were being paid the equivalent of between $960- $1,600 a month in Vietnamese currency, while the company also gave them a retention bonus and covered their Canadian living expenses. The employees, who had come from the company’s Vietnamese factory, originally expected to stay between six months to a year to train Canadian workers. But the company extended their work permits because of “production and quality control issues” at the plant. Many have now been there more than two years.

CS Wind says it has had no choice but to bring over Vietnamese workers since it has struggled to find workers in Windsor experienced in the specific type of welding it needs. Its critics, however, have questioned why so many foreign workers are employed in a provincial program aimed at trading government- subsidized energy for Canadian jobs. “Back in the day we trained young Canadians,” says Lash Ray, business representative for the Iron Workers, who is involved in trying to organize the plant. “Today, unless you fit the exact criteria, they’ve got an easy way out to say, ‘We’ve got to get workers from halfway around the world that cost us less.’ ”

Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker Program has been under fire amid allegations some restaurants have abused the system to hire low-wage foreign workers in place of Canadians. Last week, the federal government set a moratorium for restaurant employers. CS Wind’s Vietnamese workers came to Canada through an intra-company transfer, which allows companies to bring in workers with “specialized skills” without getting a labour- market opinion to show no Canadian workers can do the job. Employment Minister Jason Kenney has said that process is being investigated for abuse after complaints an Indian outsourcer contracted by the Royal Bank of Canada used it to replace Canadian IT employees.

CS Wind says its use of temporary workers from Vietnam has nothing to do with replacing Canadians with low-wage foreign labour, but is instead a reflection of the country’s skilled labour shortage and the challenges of trying to build a renewable energy manufacturing industry in Ontario from scratch. “This is a company that’s invested tens of millions of dollars in Canada and created employment for Canadians in an area that was frankly depressed with high unemployment,” says David McNevin, the company’s legal counsel. Today, the plant indeed employs 500 workers, just 25 of whom are from Vietnam. They’re mainly welders who have a decade of experience with a highly specialized type of welding not widely used in Ontario’s heavy manufacturing industry. Initially, says McNevin, the workers were paid roughly five times their Vietnamese salary, which ranged from $140-$421 a month, because they were expected to stay for only a few months. Back then the company had just one Canadian customer. But the green energy industry “has just exploded,” says McNevin, and the company has had to grow quickly to fill orders from across North America.

In January of last year, when it became clear the Vietnamese workers would be there a while, the company began paying them the same as its Canadian employees, between $17.50 and $23.50 an hour. Ultimately, McNevin says CS Wind hopes to transition to an entirely Canadian workforce, but the training process can take years. “This is not an employer attempting to avoid hiring local workers,” he says. “The bottom line is a lack of skilled workers in Canada and the need to improve apprenticeship programs.” Ray, of the Iron Workers, argues that two years is plenty of time to train a group of welders on how to learn a new type of welding. “We build cars, we build robots. We’re used to building stuff in this country, he says. “You can’t tell me that you can’t have your workforce trained in two years.”

Company vice-president S.H. Bang says he’s still desperately scouring the country in search of skilled welders. Whether they would be willing to accept the company’s wages is another matter. At $17.50-$23.50 an hour, roughly $33,000-$41,000 a year, the wages are less than half of what experienced welders can make in the Alberta oil sands, for instance.  Bang says the company’s wages are competitive in the sector, which faces intense international competition. Alberta oil workers may be rolling in cash, but Ray says the legions of unemployed welders in the Windsor region would be happy to work for $17 an hour. That’s the other issue with the foreign worker program: it risks driving down wages, even in industries looking for workers, like Ontario’s taxpayer-supported green energy industry.

“It’s not about finding skilled people or people who are interested in these jobs. It’s: ‘This is the wage we’re going to pay and we’re going to scan the globe to find people who are will- ing to work for that wage,’ ” says Angelo Dicaro, a researcher at private sector union Unifor. “It’s globalization run amok.”

Finally….American Bird Conservancy decides to sue Obama, and the Interior Dept!

Group plans lawsuit against Interior rule that ‘gambles recklessly’ with eagles

Scott Streater, E&E reporter  4-30-2014

http://ads.eenews.net/b/ident.gif?b=266&r=3qytg5495w&a=64670&p=4
A leading bird conservation group has notified the Obama administration that it intends to sue over a rule for renewable energy projects that would permit injuring, killing or disturbing bald eagles for up to 30 years.

The American Bird Conservancy (ABC) today sent a notice of intent to sue to Interior Secretary Sally Jewell and Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe saying the group plans to take legal action against the Interior Department and FWS over the revised eagle “take” rule announced in December 2013 and implemented earlier this year.

ABC states in the eight-page notice of intent that the rule — which allows Fish and Wildlife to grant programmatic incidental take permits to wind farms, transmission projects and other long-term energy operations for a much longer period than the previous five-year term — is riddled with violations of federal law, including the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act.

“ABC strongly supports wind power and other renewable energy projects when those projects are located in an appropriate, wildlife-friendly manner and when the impacts on birds and other wildlife have been conscientiously considered and addressed before irreversible actions are undertaken,” according to the notice filed on behalf of ABC by the Washington, D.C.-based public interest law firm of Meyer Glitzenstein & Crystal.

“On the other hand, when decisions regarding such projects are made precipitously and without compliance with elementary legal safeguards designed to ensure that our nation’s invaluable trust resources are not placed at risk, ABC will take appropriate action to safeguard eagles and other migratory birds.”

The group asserts in the notice that Fish and Wildlife adopted the rule “in the absence of any NEPA document or any consultation under Section 7 of the ESA,” marking it as “a glaring example of an agency action that gambles recklessly with the fate of the nation’s bald and golden eagle populations.”

ABC wants a court to throw out the rule “pending full compliance with federal environmental statutes,” according to a press release accompanying the notice.

“ABC has heard from thousands of citizens from across the country who are outraged that [FWS] wants to let the wind industry legally kill our country’s iconic Bald and Golden eagles,” Michael Hutchins, national coordinator of ABC’s Bird Smart Wind Energy Campaign, said in a statement. “The rule lacks a firm foundation in scientific justification and was generated without the benefit of a full assessment of its impacts on eagle populations.”

Laury Parramore, an FWS spokeswoman in Arlington, Va., said the agency cannot comment on pending litigation.
The notice of intent to sue is the latest in the ongoing debate over federal regulation of the wind industry and the impacts of the growing number of wind turbines on birds and bats.

The rule at issue in the notice of intent amends an eagle permitting program established in 2009 that initially allowed the five-year take permits only if the disturbing, harming or killing of eagles was unavoidable.

The take permits are only to be issued to applicants that commit to strict adaptive-management measures that include site-specific steps that reduce impacts to eagles. Fish and Wildlife would review the permits and the conservation measures every five years.

Groups including the National Audubon Society and Natural Resources Defense Council strongly opposed FWS’s decision to allow 30-year eagle take permits.

The National Audubon Society says it is considering following ABC’s lead and taking similar legal action.

“This is an eagle-killing rule that deserves to be challenged,” Mike Daulton, Audubon’s vice president for government relations, said in an emailed statement. “We strongly support the deployment of renewable energy, but reckless slaughter of eagles is not an option. We’re considering legal options of our own.”

ABC “made a decision to go it alone” with legal action because the group “feels very strongly about this issue,” said Robert Johns, a spokesman for the group.

“We’re losing many eagles a year,” Johns said.

What’s more, the federal government has filed only one criminal enforcement action involving bird-protection laws at a wind energy facility, entering a plea agreement last year with Duke Energy Corp. that involved fining the North Carolina-based energy giant $1 million for killing more than 150 migratory birds, including 14 golden eagles, at two Wyoming wind farms over the past few years (Greenwire, Nov. 25, 2013).

“We think that’s ridiculous,” Johns said.

The American Wind Energy Association has argued that the industry takes enormous steps to protect birds, more so than other industries, and that when it comes to eagles, the industry has been unfairly singled out. AWEA has pointed to studies that show eagle populations over the last 40 years have stabilized and that the wind power industry conducts more pre- and post-construction studies to guard against impacts to eagles and other sensitive avian species than any other energy sector.

Lindsay North, an AWEA spokeswoman, said the group would not comment on the ABC notice of intent to sue.

But the wind industry says such incidental take permits give it more regulatory certainty while allowing it to incorporate measures that help protect eagles. And the industry has argued that it makes no sense to not have an eagle permitting system that covers the typical 30-year life of an operating commercial-scale wind farm.

Ashe, the FWS director, told Greenwire last year that the permit should also help protect eagles by ensuring that wind power developments take proper steps to avoid affecting the iconic birds (Greenwire, Dec. 23, 2013).

But ABC states in the notice of intent to sue that the 30-year take rule “undermines the nation’s longstanding commitment to conservation of eagles” and that the group has no choice but to take legal action to “ensure that eagles, and the millions of Americans who enjoy and benefit from them, obtain the legal protections to which they are entitled under U.S. law.”

Vote Conservative for an End to the Wind Scam!!!

A PC government will not allow connection of Gilead and wpd wind projects to the grid

For release April 30, 2014

MPP Todd Smith confirms that a PC government will not allow connection of proposed County wind projects to the grid

Prince Edward County, ON — Responding to a request for clarification by CCSAGE Naturally Green regarding the PC Party’s position on wind projects currently “in the pipeline”, local MPP Todd Smith has confirmed by letter that, under a PC government, such projects will not be allowed to proceed if there is no municipal consent.

Smith referred to the text of Bill 42, the Affordable Energy and Restoration of Local Decision Making Act, introduced by Tim Hudak in the Ontario Legislature in 2012. Smith said, “The intention here is quite clear that, regardless of where in the process a project is, provided a project is not connected to the grid, it is our intention not to go ahead with it unless it has municipal consent. Clearly, the projects planned for Prince Edward County do not have municipal consent and thus, would be cancelled.”

Smith reconfirmed the PC Party’s position after consultation with Tim Hudak, and taking account of County Council’s “not a willing host” motion passed on April 23, 2013.

Following receipt of Smith’s letter, Gary Mooney of CCSAGE said, “From the day that he was elected, Todd has been 100% supportive of the several County groups opposing wind turbines on grounds of adverse effects on human health, the natural environment, heritage, property values, the local economy and municipal control. We couldn’t ask more from our MPP.”

Smith’s statement covers both Gilead Power’s 9-turbine Ostrander Point project, already given REA approval but still under appeal, and wpd Canada’s 29-turbine White Pines project, currently undergoing technical review by the Ministry of the Environment.

Informed of the contents of Smith’s letter, Mayor Peter Mertens had this to say, “We are greatly indebted to Todd for his close attention to the concerns of County residents and business owners, and for his support of the position of County Council.”

STOP SUBSIDIZING USELESS, INEFFICIENT WIND!

Perverse Renewables Policy turns Wind Power into Super-Predator

great white shark

The RET turned me into an occasional Super-Predator.

On the rare occasions when wind power is able to deliver meaningful output to the grid – usually at night-time – generators are more than happy for the dispatch price (the price paid by the grid operator to generators) to hit zero – and have even paid the grid operator to take their output, on occasions.

In Australia, that perverse market outcome is a product of the mandatory Renewal Energy Target – which forces retailers to take wind power output ahead of every other generation source (failure to take wind power and Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) that go with it, leaves the retailer liable to pay a fine (the “shortfall charge”) of $65 for each MW/h the retailer falls short of the mandated target; the REC that is issued to wind power generators for each MW of wind power dispatched (currently worth around $28); and the Power Purchase Agreements wind power generators hold with retailers, containing fixed and guaranteed guarantee minimum prices of between $90-120 per MW/h (3-4 times the cost of conventional power).

As a result of the above, when they’re delivering to the grid, wind power generators are happy to watch the dispatch price plummet, punishing base-load generators, while having no impact on their own returns.

Some might call it “predatory pricing” – Travis Fisher an American economist with the Institute for Energy Research certainly does.

Here’s a very detailed analysis of the US energy market by Travis in which he demonstrates just how perverse renewable energy policy is.

What Travis says about predatory pricing by wind power generators in the US has direct relevance to what’s happening in the Australian energy market. In the piece below just substitute the “Clean Energy Council” for the “American Wind Energy Association (AWEA)”; and substitute “Renewable Energy Target (RET) and Renewable Energy Certificate (REC)” for “Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) and Production Tax Credit (PTC)”.

AWEA’s Bold Push for More Wind Welfare Wind
Institute for Energy Research
Travis Fisher
23 April 23

The American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) is making an all-out effort to convince Congress to renew the wind production tax credit (PTC), the wind industry’s lucrative subsidy that expired at the end of 2013. AWEA is desperate to revive the PTC and, unfortunately, its most recent lobbying push relies heavily on misinformation and half-truths in order to divert attention away from the PTC’s many critics.

To set the record straight, this article addresses some of AWEA’s flawed arguments and glaring omissions. The PTC, while incredibly valuable to owners of wind power facilities, hurts U.S. taxpayers and undermines the economic efficiency and physical reliability of the U.S. power grid.

Background

AWEA is a well-funded and well-organized industry association with 40 years of experience influencing public policy and an annual budget of more than $30 million. Perhaps due to AWEA’s skilled lobbying efforts, four different administrations and countless lawmakers have sided with AWEA and provided the wind industry a direct hand-out from American taxpayers.

Initially signed into law by George H. W. Bush as part of the Energy Policy Act of 1992, the PTC has expired and been renewed multiple times. Each renewal lasted only a short period, designed to extend the industry’s coveted subsidy for just one or two more years. Most recently, the PTC was extended through the 2013 calendar year as part of the “fiscal cliff” legislation passed in early 2013. A PTC extension for 2014 recently passed the Senate Finance Committee after being added to a tax extenders package by one of the wind industry’s most enthusiastic supporters, Senator Chuck Grassley. The Joint Committee on Taxation projects that a one-year extension of the PTC will cost American taxpayers over $6 billion.

The Institute for Energy Research (IER) has consistently argued against the PTC and highlighted its negative effects, which range from threatening grid reliability to redistributing federal tax dollars to a minority of U.S. states.

AWEA and Exelon Spar Over the PTC

As part of AWEA’s push to renew the PTC, it recently published a 28-page report that attempted to show that the PTC does not distort electricity markets and does not harm nuclear plant owner-operators. The policy report comes as a direct response to Exelon Corporation, the owner of the largest fleet of nuclear plants in the U.S. The issue at the center of the policy debate is “negative pricing.”

What is Negative Pricing?

Unlike the stable and predictable price of electricity at the retail level, market prices for wholesale electricity can fluctuate widely throughout the day – usually referred to as on-peak and off-peak prices – and across seasons. For example, wholesale prices tend to range between $30 and $50 per megawatt-hour but can drop into the negative or spike well above $500 per megawatt-hour. When the price becomes negative, electric generators are actually paying the grid to take their electricity. Several factors influence wholesale prices, namely supply, demand, and transmission constraints. Fundamentally, negative wholesale prices send a distress signal to markets that the supply and demand balance on the grid is economically unsustainable and suppliers need to reduce their output.

Why do sellers not drop out of the market when negative pricing occurs? As the Energy Information Administration (EIA) notes, “negative prices generally occur more often in markets with large amounts of nuclear, hydro, and/or wind generation.” That is because each of these technologies has an incentive to continue operating even when its facilities are temporarily paying the grid to take their power.

Nuclear plants are designed to run at full output and not “ramp” up and down, making them very reliable but inflexible. In times of very low demand, nuclear plants will sometimes take negative prices rather than go through the long and expensive process of lowering their output. Similarly, hydroelectric plants sometimes take negative prices in power markets because they are forced to run in order to comply with environmental requirements that force them to release water, regardless of whether the electricity is needed.

Unlike nuclear or hydro producers, the wind industry actually profits from negative prices because the PTC is such a large subsidy. Wind producers receive PTC payments per unit of power produced (even when the power has no value whatsoever to the grid), so they flood the grid with uneconomic power and ignore the distress signal sent by negative prices. Specifically, wind producers are paid the equivalent of $35 per megawatt-hour in PTC subsidies, so a wind producer taking the PTC can still profit while paying the grid to take its electricity.

Wind’s inflexibility in the face of negative prices is therefore a policy problem with a policy solution (let the PTC expire), not a matter of physics or environmental restrictions.

The threat to baseload generation from negative prices is very real. Already, Dominion closed its Kewaunee Nuclear Plant in Wisconsin 20 years ahead of schedule and Entergy plans to retire its Vermont Yankee Nuclear Plant at the end of this year. Both companies cited economic considerations as the reason for closing the plants. While it is true that low-cost natural gas is partially responsible, it is also clear that artificially low prices caused by the PTC during off-peak hours played a role. In fact, the Department of Energy’s assistant secretary for nuclear energy referred to this emerging pattern of nuclear plants shutting down early as “a trend we are clearly very, very concerned about.”

Exelon’s Argument

Exelon argues that the PTC wreaks havoc on baseload or “around-the-clock” generation such as nuclear power by encouraging negative prices in wholesale electricity markets. In contrast to baseload units, electricity production from wind peaks at night and in the early morning when electricity demand is low, which contributes to a situation of over-supply. A 2012 study commissioned by Exelon maintains that PTC-related negative prices harm baseload power and grid reliability because they “directly conflict with the performance and operational needs of the electric system.” Essentially, if the PTC is extended, it will induce more negative pricing events during off-peak hours, and make more baseload units uneconomic. In other words, the PTC perpetuates a system of predatory negative prices that attack reliable (and far less subsidized) baseload producers.

The power grid reliability implications are straightforward. The PTC is making reliable generation uneconomic, while subsidizing unreliable wind power. Without reliable generation up and running, many regions will struggle to meet seasonal peak demand in winter or summer. For most of the country, the highest peaks occur in the summer months. The following chart from a study on the intermittency of wind power illustrates just how little wind contributes to those summer peaks (click on the graph for a clearer view).

ERCOT-Wind-Power

On these arguments against the PTC, IER is not alone – energy experts across the board agree with Exelon. The Congressional Research Service (CRS) acknowledged the problem of negative pricing, noting in 2012 that “[n]egative power prices associated with wind power might generally occur at night when wind is producing at high levels. Large amounts of wind power generation can potentially contribute to transmission congestion and result in negatively priced wholesale power in certain locations.” The EIA also specifically lists the PTC as a cause of negative prices.

The same CRS report from 2012 outlined the reliability issues associated with wind, predicting that “should wind power continue to experience growth, it is uncertain whether current [regional transmission organization] market designs would function to ensure availability of the types of generation that would be necessary to both maintain resource adequacy and manage the variable and intermittent nature of wind power.”

Last December, the New York Times published an article about how wind and nuclear power “are trying to kill each other off” and noted the “cannibal behavior” of wind in power markets.

Focusing on Texas, which is the U.S. market hit hardest by wind power, Public Utility Commission Chairman Donna Nelson testified in 2012 that “[t]he market distortions caused by renewable energy incentives are one of the primary causes I believe of our current resource adequacy issue … [T]his distortion makes it difficult for other generation types to recover their cost and discourages investment in new generation.” And as the non-partisan Center for Strategic and International Studies wrote in May of 2013, “[a] growing number of analytical reports … point to the negative impact of renewable energy mandates and subsidies (direct and indirect) on the competitiveness of nuclear power.”

In fact, some environmentalists are troubled by wind power’s parasitic effect on nuclear power. James Hansen’s observation relating to a similar policy – renewable portfolio standards – actually underscores Exelon’s argument regarding the PTC:

The asymmetry finally hit me over the head when a renewable energy advocate told me that the main purpose of renewable portfolio standards (RPS) was to “kill nuclear”. I had naively thought that the purpose was simply to kick-start renewables. Instead, I was told, because utilities were required to accept intermittent renewable energies, nuclear power would become less economic, because it works best if it runs flat out.

In short, the predatory pricing enabled by the PTC is real, it is harmful to reliable generation, and it hits nuclear generation the hardest. AWEA cannot shrug off the harmful effects of the PTC or pretend they do not exist. As an Exelon executive said recently, “[w]e can work with AWEA on a clean energy future but we can’t deny the truth.”

AWEA’s Fuzzy Math

AWEA’s policy report, titled “The facts about wind energy’s impacts on electricity markets: Cutting through Exelon’s claims about ‘negative prices’ and ‘market distortion,’” attempts to turn the negative pricing arguments on their head by narrowly focusing on the wind industry’s side of the story. Specifically, AWEA flatly misrepresents the effect of the PTC on wholesale markets by omitting important information and making bogus comparisons.

AWEA claims the impact of wind on wholesale markets is “entirely market-driven” and “widely seen as beneficial.” The first claim is patently false and the second is very misleading.

No one at AWEA can claim with a straight face that the growth in the wind industry is “entirely market-driven.” AWEA spends millions of dollars a year lobbying for renewable energy mandates in the states and for the PTC and other support at the federal level. If wind were truly “market-driven,” there would be no need for AWEA’s massive lobbying effort for mandates and subsidies. The mandates and subsidies AWEA supports are the exact opposite of “market-driven.”

AWEA knows better than any other organization just how much government support the wind industry receives – support that simply does not exist for baseload generation and should not exist for any power generation source whatsoever. Because of AWEA’s lobbying efforts to mandate the use of their product, 29 states and the District of Columbia mandate certain levels of renewable energy generation (these laws are commonly called Renewable Portfolio Standards or RPSs). Because the vast majority of the power being used to satisfy these requirements comes from wind plants, the wind industry currently enjoys a government-mandated market share. This alone is enough to discredit AWEA’s comment about Exelon obscuring the “real story of wind energy successfully competing against more expensive forms of energy in the market.” AWEA knows the wind industry is winning on government support, not the free market.

State-level mandates aside, AWEA attempts to downplay the role of the PTC specifically in undermining baseload generation. It is vitally important to realize that negative prices are not the only indicator of market distortion. AWEA draws a false dichotomy in its report between the “real economic savings” from wind and the “exceedingly rare” negative prices that cause market distortions. Here, AWEA downplays the possibility that market distortion can exist without negative prices. But just as the PTC subsidy causes negative prices at the extreme, it regularly causes artificially low power prices in off-peak hours that can be just as damaging to baseload generation.

AWEA then makes the stretch that, because the negative pricing problem was less rampant in 2013 than it was in 2012, market distortions from the PTC no longer exist or are “extremely rare.” This argument is fatally flawed as demonstrated by the following analogy. Consider if a thief said, “I didn’t do anything wrong in 2013. I only stole half as often as I did in 2012.” Such a statement would be silly because theft is theft. The same is true of harmful market distortions.

Just because there were fewer hours in 2013 with negative prices, it does not follow that the PTC is any less of a problem. Even in a world where prices were never to fall below zero, market distortion caused by the PTC could still render baseload units uneconomic. For example, reliable power plants would still close if prices were consistently at or very near zero. As discussed above, this is what we are seeing in practice, AWEA’s distractions notwithstanding.

Also, the 2012 data are so bad that 2013 was bound to be a less damaging year – in fact, one of Exelon’s plants took negative prices for 8.3 percent of all hours in 2012. The fact that this statistic fell to 4.3 percent in 2013 is little consolation. Essentially, we can debate the extent to which the PTC continues to cause negative prices, but to recast the PTC as incapable of distorting power markets is disingenuous on AWEA’s part.

Finally and perhaps most disturbingly, AWEA’s report fails to capture any long-term effects of the PTC. For example, in several places the AWEA report talks about wind power “replacing the most expensive and polluting sources of energy.” In practice, wind cannot do this because wind is unreliable. Wind cannot replace the most expensive source of electricity generation because those generation sources only run at peak times. The wind does not blow when AWEA wants it to and millions of dollars spent on lobbying cannot change that simple fact of the physical world.

Furthermore, as James Hansen and others have observed, heavily subsidized wind power is actually displacing zero-emission nuclear power rather than the “most polluting” sources AWEA references. If the goal of the PTC was to wipe out America’s nuclear fleet, then it is succeeding. But if the goal was to support zero-emission generation, then it has backfired miserably. The PTC has wasted billions of taxpayer dollars to replace nuclear, a clean technology that works, with one that only sounds good and is fundamentally unreliable.

Conclusion

The wind production tax credit distorts power markets by allowing wind producers to profit from artificially low prices. Such market distortion undermines the reliability of America’s power grid in the long run by forcing reliable baseload power plants to close -including nuclear plants, which in turn defeats any environmental purpose for keeping the PTC.

AWEA’s recent study is a desperate attempt to obscure the very real and worrisome long-term effects of the PTC by relying on misleading data. The PTC has rightly received scrutiny from energy experts across the political spectrum, and it deserves a more comprehensive analysis than AWEA provides in its report.
IER Economist Travis Fisher authored this post.
Institute for Energy Research

The only significant difference between the Australian energy market and that detailed above, is that Australia doesn’t have any nuclear power generation at all.

Instead, it’s base-load gas generators who are being pounded by wind power generators’ ability to periodically crash the dispatch price.

By base-load gas generators, we’re referring to either gas/thermal plants (where gas is used to fire boilers, create steam and run turbines) or highly efficient Combined Cycle Gas Turbines.

One early casualty was Stanwell (Queensland’s largest power generator) – which back in February took the extraordinary step of announcing it would mothball its biggest gas-fired power station – the Swanbank E power station, near Ipswich – a highly efficient Combined Cycle Gas Turbine (CCGT) plant – and resurrect a coal facility built in the 1980s. Stanwell put its inability to operate its gas-fired plant squarely down to the market distortions created by the mandatory RET (see our post here).

What’s doubly perverse is that generating power using CCGTs produces about 50% less CO2 emissions than coal/thermal. Instead of CCGTs, generators have invested $millions in Open Cycle Gas Turbines (OCGTs) that emit 3-4 times the CO2 per unit of electricity – when compared to a modern coal-fired thermal plant and cost a small fortune to run (between $200-300 per MW/h, compared to $25 for coal/thermal). So much for a policy designed to “save the planet”.

Because wind power can only be ever delivered at crazy, random intervals – 100% of its capacity has to backed up 100% of the time with spinning reserve and inefficient OCGTs – which can be deployed in a heartbeat to keep the grid balanced — and the lights on – whenever wind power output varies or disappears altogether (see our post here).

Wind power generators’ ability to game and distort the dispatch price by operation of the mandatory RET (and the matters outlined above) is about to come under the microscope of the RET review panel.

The top-flight energy market consultancy, ACIL Allen has been directed by the panel to focus on the cost impacts of renewable energy in the electricity sector. And that means the whole electricity market – and the long-run impact the RET will have on power prices, including the impact of periodic predatory pricing by wind power generators knocking out highly efficient base-load gas generators – like Stanwell’s Ipswich plant.

Given the make-up of the panel – and the terms of its brief – we doubt that ACIL Allen will pull any punches.

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Now – have I got your attention?

Liberals are a Detriment to Our Province! Election Needed NOW!

 

Gas Plant scandal is just one of the many more scandals ongoing with the Liberals!!!!

by thebiggreenlie

Everyone seems to have their “panties in a knot” over the gas plant scandal in Ontario but there are many more recent muck ups unfolding right now within Queen’s Park that involves the Western portion of our once great Province!

Wynne in tandem with Horwath has basically ruined this Province with one bad decision over another and it will be decades before we can fix this mess IF these tow failed leaders are thrown out of the Pink Building once and for all.

Without a house cleaning like no other in modern history Ontarians should all start to think about moving to another Province for a new start before there isn’t anything left to hang on to except a bleak broken and overpriced future!

Time for Wynne to go and take all her herd of gerbils with her along with the NDP who have clung to Wynne’s pant legs like thirsty pups and give us all a break!

Jarvis: We need a conscious uncoupling

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne speaks to The Empire Club of Canada in Toronto on Monday, April 28, 2014. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne speaks to The Empire Club of Canada in Toronto on Monday, April 28, 2014. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press

Anne Jarvis
Apr 29, 2014 – 6:30 PM EDT

The government is a shambles. It’s time for the NDP to stop propping it up. Andrea Horwath should pull the plug.

Consider the news this week (and it’s still early). The government admitted that it – specifically Premier Kathleen Wynne, when she was Transportation minister – “negotiated away” its oversight over the $1.4-billion Herb Gray Parkway, the biggest infrastructure project in the province. It bungled a major plan to modernize gambling, astray in its projections by a total of almost $5 billion and hundreds of jobs, according to a damning report by the auditor general. While the government touts a new, $2.5-billion fund to attract business, the skyrocketing cost of electricity is “breaking” already battered manufacturers. And the deficit, which the government said it would eliminate by 2017-18, is expected to rise with a free-spending budget designed in part to woo the NDP and be an attractive platform for an election.

Among the revelations in the reports and emails obtained by the NDP under a Freedom of Information request and reported by The Windsor Star’s Dave Battagello, Ontario’s Transportation Ministry “consistently notes” that the contract for the parkway, awarded by Wynne when she was transportation minister, “does not allow the MTO to exercise its role and responsibilities as the legislated road authority and puts the provincial interest (the public) at risk.”

The agreement provided no way for the ministry to intervene to ensure standards were met, no authority to change or stop construction if there was a serious problem and no penalties.

“…there was nothing that MTO could do on its own to force compliance with Canadian standards.”

Current Transportation Minister Glen Murray wrote in an email to the CEO of Infrastructure Ontario last June, “We may have compromised our ability to enforce the law by negotiating our authority away.”

And we all know what happened with the parkway: hundreds of potentially faulty girders were installed and later had to be ripped out.

The Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation’s plan to modernize gambling two years ago, approved by the cabinet that included Wynne, was supposed to create jobs. Instead, according to Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk, it will likely cost jobs. Profit that would go to the government to pay down the deficit was supposed to increase by $4.6 billion over five years; now, the projection is less than $2 billion. The plan was supposed to draw $3.2 billion in investment; now the projection is less than $1 billion.

In short, the government didn’t do its homework. It banked on as many as a dozen new casinos, but five municipalities either voted against them or changed them significantly. It abruptly cancelled the sharing of slot machine revenue with horse racing and then had to spend half a billion dollars helping the industry’s transition. Meanwhile, the OLG has had five board chairs and seven CEOs in nine years.

The government on Monday announced its $2.5-billion Jobs and Prosperity Fund to attract investment and help existing businesses expand. The same day, Gary Goodyear, the Minister of State responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario, told a conference at the University of Windsor that skyrocketing electricity costs are “breaking” manufacturers.

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