Oh My…Enercon Floundering? What a Shame! Subsidies end….Turbines NOT Sustainable!

Brazil Tax Exemption Removal Curbs Wobben’s Wind Turbine Orders

Enercon GmbH’s Wobben Windpower is losing contracts in Brazil after tax authorities canceled some exemptions for wind turbine manufacturers in the country, an official said.

The Brazil unit of Germany’s Enercon had a single customer so far this year, Mathias Moser, a vice president of Wobben, said in an interview yesterday in Rio de Janeiro. The company had considered leaving South America’s fastest-growing market after Brazilian tax authorities in April removed a tax incentive and required turbine makers such as Wobben, Spain’s Gamesa Corp., Tecnologica SA and Denmark’s Vestas Wind Systems A/S to pay back taxes for the exemption.

“This is definitely a restructuring year for us in Brazil,” said Mathias, who came to the country in April amid a management change.

Enercon, based in Aurich, Germany, decided to stay in Brazil last month after filing an appeal on the tax incentive ruling, according to Mathias. He didn’t disclose how much the company owes in back taxes. Brazil is seeking the previous five fiscal years of back taxes for the exemption.

“We have always produced in Brazil, so we have had the benefit for many years,” Mathias said. “It is a lot of money.”

Wobben started manufacturing turbines in Brazil in 1995, the first turbine maker to install a facility in the country. It has four facilities in the country, and has the capacity to produce as many as 200 turbines at its Sorocaba plant in Sao Paulo state. In its sole contract this year, the company delivered 23 turbines for Elecnor SA of Spain’s wind park in southern Brazil.

“It is a drop from last year’s,” Mathias said, without specifying 2013 deliveries.

Turbine Talks

Brazil’s Ministry of Finance is considering reinstating the tax exemption for turbine makers, according to Elbia Melo, president of the country’s wind power association known as Abeeolica.

“The wind industry is facing problems with the government’s special incentive plan for the equipment manufacturers and it is relevant to solve it,” Melo said in a phone interview from Sao Paulo. “We are in talks with the government.”

The Ministry of Finance’s press office said it does not comment on potential rule changes.

Wind energy in Brazil is among the cheapest sources of power. The country has the biggest capacity in Latin America, according to a Global Wind Energy Council report of 2013.

Wobben is optimistic about winning its appeal in court, according to Mathias.

“We are staying, given the good prospects for the Brazilian market,” said Mathias. “The size of the company’s business in the country can be affected if we don’t sign contracts in the future.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Vanessa Dezem in Sao Paulo at vdezem@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.netRobin Saponar, Carlos Caminada

  • SSE and Centrica have Cancelled Economically Unfeasible Big Wind Projects! Check this out!

    Funding boost will help fuel SSE joint venture

     

    A JOINT venture between energy giant SSE and Intelligent Energy which is developing technology to change the way domestic energy is generated and consumed has received £800,000 in fresh funding.

     

    Bellshill-based IE-CHP will use the latest funds from its backers, which also include the Scottish Investment Bank, to develop its mini power station or smart power unit prototype.

    It says the fuel cell technology, which works alongside existing heating systems, has the potential to reduce the fuel bills of millions of home owners.

    The technology takes mains gas and converts it into hydrogen, which is then fed into a hydrogen fuel cell stack. The cell then acts like a mini power station by converting the hydrogen into low-cost electrical power and heat, which can be used in the home.

    IE-CHP technical director Mark Bugler, who hopes to start rolling out the technology in 18 months, said the latest funds will allow it “to finish some of the development work we are doing”.

    He noted: “We’ve got some political lobbying to do to get a fuller understanding really of the potential for fuel cells. Certainly on the technology side, it [the funding] helps.

    “This is really the start of the journey to get the whole of the UK excited about the potential for what ultimately is the best form of using a gas in a chemical process, rather than burning it.”

    The funding boost, which takes the total raised by IE-CHP to £5 million, coincides with research suggesting the installation of millions of mini power stations could transform the UK power market.

    A report by Ecuity, the energy analyst, claimed the roll out of five million fuel cell smart power units across the UK by 2030 would generate annual energy bill savings of £1000 for five million consumers.

    It is understood smart units are significantly more efficient than power stations, where energy is lost through production and transmission. More than 80,000 smart power units have been installed in Japan, which plans to roll out 5.3 million by 2030 as it replaces nuclear power with fuel cells.

    Mr Bugler said: “We see this as part of the UK energy mix for the future. At the moment you have got centralised power stations, which generate electricity at less than 50 per cent efficiency.

    “By decentralising power and putting power stations at the homes, rather than centrally in the country, you avoid all the emissions plus all the losses and extra cost of upgrading and maintaining the network.”

    He added: “SSE and Centrica have announced cancellation of their big wind farms because the economics don’t stack up. There will have to be some other low carbon technology which replaces that. We think fuel cells is probably that technology.”

    The Good People of Maine have made Radio Commercials to Educate the Public about Wind Turbines!

    Listen to Saving Maine’s first three radio commercials exposing wind power in Maine

    Click right here and turn your speakers on. These spots are being aired as part of Saving Maine’s continuing advertising effort to counter the wind propaganda spewed by the wind industry and their sock puppets at Maine’s so called environmental groups who have sold out the people of Maine.

     
    Click here and then click on each of the three :60 radio spots.
     
     
     
    Wind power sailed into Maine on a free pass and has survived thus far based on cheer leading from the Baldacci administration which in 2008 pushed through a law written by and for the wind industry. That law, which completely stacked the deck against ordinary Mainers, will be changed and advertising will speed up the process. For the first time, through the power of paid advertising, large numbers of Mainers are learning the other side of the wind story – paid for by their fellow Mainers.
     
    These wind companies are on the ropes. It is time to put them away. So make sure we keep the pressure on by clicking the DONATE button at http://savingmaine.org/ Even a small amount will add up so go ahead and click that button and ask everyone you know to do the same. Please do this today.
     
    The following is from a wind industry consultant and it speaks volumes about the importance of getting our message out:
      
     
     

    During the webinar, Justin Rolfe-Redding, a doctoral student from the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University, discussed ways for wind-energy proponents to get their message out to the public.Rolfe-Redding said that polling data showed that “after reading arguments for and against wind, wind lost support.” He went on to say that concerns about wind energy’s cost and its effect on property values “crowded out climate change” among those surveyed.

     

    The most astounding thing to come out of Rolfe-Redding’s mouth — and yes, I heard him say it myself — was this: “The things people are educated about are a real deficit for us.” After the briefings on the pros and cons of wind, said Rolfe-Redding, “enthusiasm decreased for wind. That’s a troubling finding.” 

    The Truth About Wind Turbines….A Victim’s Testimony!

    Victims of industrial wind
     

    We are “Victims of Industrial Wind” (which is also the name of our open Facebook group, with members from around the world).

    We are the Therriens of Sheffield. Many already know our story. We own 50 acres abutting First Wind’s Sheffield project. We have spent more than 18 years living here, cultivating a beautiful sugar bush. Yes, we live off grid. Yes, we live near the Interstate. The interstate is quiet at night, unlike the wind turbines that make noise 24/7 more often than not. The Interstate also does not make a repetitive obnoxious noise that wakes you then keeps you awake, night after night.

    We did not oppose the industrial wind power plant at any stage. From proposal to construction, we had no idea what to expect so we were not about to judge.

    We never once harassed any employees working on the project nor with First Wind. Not until the project began operating, only when we experienced the noise first-hand, did we begin to understand and wonder just what we were facing. About six months in, we started to realize the project was affecting us. Less than one year in, everything started to add up for us, correlating the connection between the sounds and how we felt. We hardly could believe it was true until we started reading up on wind turbine syndrome. This syndrome is real, too darn real. The exact same symptoms are echoed worldwide.

    These facts about wind turbine noise and health have been known for a long time and totally ignored by our federal and state governments. These elected people who are in charge of protecting the public have chosen to blindly believe the big wind developers, while turning a deaf ear to towns and residents to be impacted for the good or bad by industrial power plants.

    Health studies should have been done before big wind turbines were put close to people, but they weren’t. Instead we get literature reviews done by people with financial ties to the wind industry who claim there are no “direct” health effects. It has also been spread far and wide that anyone who opposes clean green energy (laugh) is a NIMBY (not in my back yard) or that people are only seeking financial gain by falsely claiming to being negatively impacted.

    Positive outcome studies are funded by industrial wind, and they get to hand-pick their experts. The nonpositive studies are done by honest hard-working individuals who face public persecution and possibly the loss of their jobs if they go public with their negative findings.

    Just ask Dr. Henrik Moller of Denmark, a highly respected academic noise researcher who was fired after exposing the Danish government’s role in covering up the health risks caused by wind turbine noise pollution. Kind of says a lot right there, doesn’t it?

    Even with all this information, no precautions were taken to prepare in advance to rectify any problems that may arise. Various problems have arisen, and yet they are still largely ignored because no one knows how to solve any problems pertaining to industrial wind power plants. We hear “this is all new to us.” Well, it is old hat to us.

    The Public Service Board has held hearings and workshops to hear both sides of the story. Now you would be led to believe that both sides would be given equal time to be heard. No, that couldn’t be further from the truth. The developers’ side has gotten most of the time while attending victims have to sit and be further insulted and mistreated in the process and are lucky to speak at all. We attended the PSB’s Morrisville workshop and will never participate in another unless it is to protest. It was that much of an insult.

    So here we are nearly three years into this nightmare and no closer to a resolution then we were on day one. We had asked First Wind to buy us out for $150,000. This prompted a meeting where we were told of a possible option to pay us $45,000 for our house and two acres, but it was not an official offer. This is what we were told: “It’s what I think I can do so it’s not as though it’s First Wind’s thing.”

    Yeah, right, the head of safety and compliance out of Boston is not about to stick his neck out with talk of a “possible option” if he hadn’t already had some kind of approval. We expected to be low-balled but not to this extreme.

    It seems they are well schooled in the art of approaching a town, making promises that the project will cause no harm — while quietly buying/paying off select home/land owners because they know there will be harm. The paid-off residents have signed nondisclosure agreements so they cannot say one word against the project. The developer then sits back after construction and waits for surrounding residents to become so desperate to move they will sell at almost any price. Then try to act like a good neighbor by offering a possible option at a ridiculously low insulting price. And they wanted us to sign a nondisclosure for this pittance.

    Luann Therrien lives in Sheffield.

    Why are there no Industrial Wind Complexes in Toronto? Ontario Place Grounds, would be perfect!

    TIME TO TURN THE TABLES ON WIND PROPONENTS WHO ACCUSE OPPONENTS OF ‘NIMBYISM’.

    It’s astounding to read these days how pleased with themselves liberals are that the Wynne Ont gov’t is remaining steadfast in their refusal to amend the Green Energy Act in any meaningful way. It’s as easy as water off a ducks back for these progressives to delight in calling opponents to Industrial Wind Turbines as NIMBY’s and having democracy essentially waived to accomplish the policy goals backed by the GEA.

    I only have this to say;

    I want all these cheering Liberals to consider this;

    Take your worst nightmare of a conservative leader. An amalgam of the very worst of Harper. Harris, throw in a little Ralph Klein and some Tea Party Timmy Hudak. I can sense your blood pressure rising as I write this. Oh the horror.
    In the Legislature, a new bill is to be introduced called the “Nuclear Waste Recovery Act”

    It will allow land owners to store nuclear waste on their properties until at such time facilities are available to neutralize the radioactive waste. Of course a setback of 550 metres would be required to non- participating “receptors” Land owners would negotiate 20 year contracts with the private companies running the nuclear facilities such as Bruce , Darlington and Pickering. Big time subsidies from the government ensure that developers and landowners alike are lining up out the door to cash in. Industrial Park areas sprinkled about the GTA sound like swell places to make this work.

    Facilities that would eventually deal with the waste will be developed and the process of nuetralizing all that radioactive material would come online. The program would be a model to the world and create 50,000 jobs, ( Actually, this program could actually have a better shot at creating said number of jobs.) lowering the unemployment rate in the GTA which at present is above the national average.

    So, developers with empty space in industrial parks in say, Scarborough, Pickering, North York or Mississauga, could apply for this and as long as they’re 550metres from residential areas, hey, it’s game on.

    In addition, a special urban home owner program will be enacted. This unique initiative would allow home owners in large urban areas to sign contracts allowing a special individual-sized container of nuclear waste to be buried in their backyards. For doing this, each home owner will be paid $5,000 a year for 25 years. There will be no setback distances, because the government has done it’s homework and found numerous experts in the nuclear field who have testified that these containers are 100% safe. No neighbourhood input or objections would be allowed, since “nimbyism” will not be tolerated.

    I sense it could face some opposition. Municipal governments would complain as their constituents would be going apoplectic over a nuclear waste facility in their neighborhood. Proponents, funded by Big Nuclear, would just refer to them as NIMBY’s. It would slowly dawn upon these residents that the NWR act strips away all municipalities rights to oppose this very much needed service.

    Residents would come armed with health studies, but those dastardly conservatives in power have studies of their own citing that their own Medical Officer Of Health has signed off on the policy and states that there is “No significant hazard to health.” Tribunals set up to hear citizens grievances, would be stacked by the conservatives with sympathetic board members making any challenge an exercise in futility.

    So now, with some facilities now open, reports of radiation leaks are ubiqutous. MoE will come to investigate and essentially find nothing since they’re not even equipped to measure anything. Wildlife , such as it is would be struggling to adapt to these conditions. Local human health could also suffer an immeasurable toll. Meanwhile, the developers and landowners are far,far away counting and folding all that taxpayer booty.

    My point to all you liberal cheerleaders is that you’re all for this when it suits you. When it’s on the other foot, you’d be unspooling.  My contention is that no government, be it Liberal ,Conservative or otherwise should EVER be able to wield this kind of power over it’s citizens, urban or rural.

    Paul Kuster

    nuclearwaste-2

    The Real Truth Behind the Global Warming/Climate Change Agenda!

    It’s about the money, not the climate

    • Who wants to be a millionaire

    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900), the Irish poet and dramatist, wrote “Pray don’t talk to me about the weather. Whenever people talk to me about the weather, I always feel quite certain that they mean something else.”

    These days, when some world leader or politician speaks of the climate—the weather is what is happening right now wherever you are—they are not talking about sunshine or rain. They are talking about a devilishly obscene way of raising money by claiming that it is humans that are threatening the climate with everything they do, from turning on the lights to driving anywhere.

    That’s why “global warming” was invented in the late 1980s as an immense threat to the Earth and to mankind. Never mind that Earth has routinely passed through warmer and cooler cycles for billions of years; much of which occurred before mankind emerged. And never mind that the Earth has been a distinct cooling cycle for the past seventeen years and likely to stay in it for a while. If the history of ice ages is any guide, we could literally be on the cusp of a new one.

    If, however, a government can tax the use of energy, it stands to make a lot of money. That is why carbon taxes have been introduced in some nations and why the nearly useless “clean energy” options of wind and solar have been introduced even though they both require the backup of traditional coal, natural gas and nuclear energy plants because they cannot produce electricity if the wind isn’t blowing and the sun is obscured by clouds.

    Taxing energy use means taxing “greenhouse gas” emissions; primarily carbon dioxide (C02) so that every ton of it added to the atmosphere by a power plant and any other commercial activity becomes a source of income for the nation. The Australians went through this and rapidly discovered it drove up their cost of electricity and negatively affected their economy so much that they rid themselves of a prime minister and the tax within the past year.

    Fortunately, every effort to introduce a carbon tax has been defeated by the U.S. Congress, but that it has shelled out billions for

    Rep. Henry Waxman

    “climate research” over the years. That doesn’t mean, however, that 41 demented Democrats in the House of Representatives haven’t gotten together in a “Safe Climate Caucus” led by Rep. Henry A. Waxman. The Washington Post reported that when it was launched in February 2013, the members promised to talk every day on the House floor about “the urgent need to address climate change.”

    Check out the caucus and, if your Representative is a member, vote to replace him or her with someone less idiotic.

    When you hear the President or a member of Congress talk about the climate, they are really talking about the scheme to generate revenue from it through taxation or to raise money from those who will personally benefit from any scheme related to the climate such as “clean energy.”

    The need of governments to frighten their citizens about the climate in order to raise money is international in scope. A United States that has a $17 trillion debt is a prime example, much of it due to a government grown so large it wastes taxpayer’s money in the millions with every passing day whether it is sunny or rainy, warm or cold.

    In late July, Reuters reported that Christine Lagarde, the chair of theInternational Monetary Fund, (IMF) opined in her new book that “energy taxes in much of the world are far below what they should be to reflect the harmful environmental and health impact of fossil fuels use.”

    Please pay no attention to the billions of dollars that coal, oil and natural gas already generate for the nations in which they are found. Nations such as India and China are building coal-fired plants as fast as possible to provide the electricity every modern nation needs to expand its economy, provide more employment, and improve their citizen’s lives in every way imaginable.

    “For the first time,” Reuters reported, “the IMF laid out exactly what it views as appropriate taxes on coal, natural gas, gasoline, and diesel in 156 countries to factor in the fuel’s overall costs, which include carbon dioxide emissions, air pollution, congestion and traffic accidents.” The problem with this is that the costs cited are bogus.

    Christine Lagarde

    “Nations,” said Lagarde, “are now working on a United Nations deal for late 2015 to rein in greenhouse gas emissions that have hit repeated highs this century, but progress has been slow as nations fret about the impact any measures may have on economic growth.” As in bad impacts!

    Ignore the claims that carbon dioxide affects the climate. Its role is so small it can barely be measured because CO2 represents 380 parts per million. When our primate ancestors began to climb down out of the trees, CO2 levels were about 1,000 parts per million. More CO2 means more crops, healthy growing forests, and all the other benefits that every form of vegetation provides. The breath we humans exhale contains about 4% of CO2.

    The fact is that the United States and other nations are being run by politicians who are incapable of reducing spending or borrowing more in order to spend more. Venezuela just defaulted again on the payment of bonds it issued to raise money. They did this in 2001 and one must wonder why any financial institution purchases them.

    There are eleven other nations whose credit ratings are flirting with big trouble. They include Greece, Ukraine, Pakistan, Cypress, and in the Americas Argentina, Venezuela, Cuba, Ecuador and Belize. Borrowing by such nations is very expensive. A U.S. Treasury Note pays an annual coupon of just 2.5%, but the yields on 10-year bonds issue by Greece reached 29% in early 2012, just before it defaulted.

    Adding to problems in the U.S. is the Obama agenda being acted upon by the Environmental Protection Agency whose “war on coal” has shuttered several hundred plants that produce the electricity needed to maintain the economy. In coal producing states this is playing havoc and it is driving up the cost of electricity in others.

    The growth of oil and natural gas production in the U.S. is almost entirely on privately owned land as opposed to that controlled by the government. Supporting the attack on energy are the multi-million dollar environmental organizations like Friends of the Earth and the Sierra Club.

    The world has not warmed since the nineties and many factors influence the climate other than CO2, the Sun, the oceans, clouds, and volcanic activity. Nothing any government does, here and worldwide, has any meaningful impact on it, but if nations can demonize the use of energy and tax the CO2 it produces, they can generate more money to spend and waste.

    The lies that governments, the United Nations, and the International Monetary Fund tell about the climate are about the money they can extract from citizens who must be kept frightened enough to pay taxes on their use of energy.

     

    – See more at: http://www.cfact.org/2014/08/22/its-about-the-money-not-the-climate/#sthash.2UXTRUgG.dpuf

    Why Would Any Decent Government Allow This to Happen? Our Children Deserve Protection!

    Out of the Mouths of Babes

    Fantasy

    fantasy

    Reality

    Sophia, 7, wrote during school.

    “You may think wind turbines are good but when you have 50 by your home…you can’t sleep in your own room and you try to sleep but you can’t because of the wind turbines (noise). I had to move into a mobile home because my mom, dad and brother plus me couldn’t sleep.”

    Here is a list of Companies Making Huge Profits, From the Physical, and Financial Fallout, Caused by Wind Turbines

     
     
     
     
    CanWEA Members 2014*
     
     
    3M Canada Company
     
    ABB Inc.
     
    Acciona Wind Energy Canada
     
    Activa Environnement Inc
     
    Aeolis Wind Power Corp.
     
    Aercoustics Engineering Ltd.
     
    Aird & Berlis LLP
     
    Airway Services Canada
     
    Alberta Wind Energy Corporation
     
    Algonquin Power
     
    ALL Canada Crane Rental Corp.
     
    Alstom Power
     
    AltaGas Ltd.
     
    Alterra Power Corp.
     
    Altus Group
     
    AMEC Black & McDonald
     
    American Wire Group
     
    AMSOIL INC.
     
    Anemos Energy Corporation
     
    Ascent Solutions Inc.
     
    ATCO Power
     
    Atlantic Power
     
    Automodular Corporation
     
    Avanti Wind Systems Inc.
     
    Avertex Utility Solutions Inc.
     
    Avro Wind Energy Inc.
     
    AWS Truepower LLC
     
    Barnhart Canada LLC
     
    BASF Canada
     
    BBA Inc.
     
    Bellemare Groupe
     
    Benign Energy Canada Inc.
     
    Bennett Jones LLP
     
    BGB Technology Inc.
     
    Black River Wind Ltd.
     
    Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP
     
    Blattner Energy Inc.
     
    BluEarth Renewables Inc.
     
    Boralex Inc.
     
    Borden Ladner Gervais LLP
     
    Borea Construction
     
    BowArk Energy Ltd.
     
    Brookfield Renewable Energy Group
     
    Brüel & Kjær Vibro
     
    Bullfrog Power Inc.
     
    Burndy Canada Inc.
     
    BZEE Academy GmbH
     
    C.H. Robinson Project Logistics Ltd.
     
    Callon Dietz
     
    Campbell Scientific (Canada) Corp.
     
    CanACRE
     
    Canadian Clean Energy Conferences
     
    Canadian Copper & Brass Development Association
     
    Canadian German Chamber of Industry and Commerce
     
    Capital City Renewables LLC
     
    Capital Power Corp.
     
    Capstone Infrastructure
     
    Carleton University
     
    Carlsun Energy Solutions Inc.
     
    Cartier Energie Eolienne Inc.
     
    Challenger Motor Freight Inc.
     
    Chinodin Wind Power
     
    Chinook Power Corp.
     
    Clark Wilson LLP
     
    Consulate General of Argentina in Toronto
     
    CSA International
     
    CSS Wind Inc.
     
    Curry & Kerlinger LLC
     
    Customized Energy Solutions
     
    Dale & Lessmann LLP
     
    Dentons Canada LLP
     
    DESSAU
     
    Dialight Corporation
     
    Dillon Consulting Ltd.
     
    DNV GL
     
    DP Energy Ireland Ltd.
     
    E.ON Climate & Renewables Ltd.
     
    EBC Inc.
     
    EchoTrack Inc.
     
    EDF EN Canada
     
    EDP Renewables Canada Ltd.
     
    Elemental Energy Inc.
     
    Elevator One
     
    Elexco Ltd.
     
    EMA Electromechanics
     
    Emera Inc.
     
    Enbridge Inc.
     
    Enel Green Power Canada Inc.
     
    ENERCON
     
    Enerfin Energy Company of Canada Inc.
     
    Enmax Corporation
     
    Enterprise Commercial Truck
     
    Eolectric Inc.
     
    Eon WindElectric Inc.
     
    EPTCON / One Line Engineering
     
    Ernst & Young
     
    ESAC Inc.
     
    Essar Steel Algoma
     
    Exelon Wind, a Division of Exelon Power
     
    F Rohmann
     
    Fabrication Delta
     
    Firelight Infrastructure Partners
     
    Flash Technology
     
    Fri-El Green Power
     
    Fritz Construction Services Inc.
     
    G Seven Generations Ltd.
     
    G&W Electric Co.
     
    Gamesa Technology Corporation
     
    GasTOPS Ltd.
     
    Gaz Metro
     
    GDF SUEZ Canada Inc.
     
    GE Power & Water
     
    Gilead Power
     
    Golder Associates Ltd.
     
    Goldwind USA Inc.
     
    Gowling Lafleur Henderson LLP
     
    Graham Infrastructure Ltd.
     
    Grand Valley Wind Farms Inc.
     
    GRANT THORNTON LLP
     
    Graybar Energy Ltd.
     
    Greengate Power Corporation
     
    Greenwind Global Inc
     
    Groupe Delom Inc.
     
    Groupe Robert
     
    H.B. White Canada Corp.
     
    Hatch Energy
     
    Heenan Blaikie LLP
     
    Hemmera
     
    Hempel (Canada) Inc.
     
    Henkels & McCoy Canada Inc.
     
    HGC Engineering
     
    Holland College
     
    Honeywell Safety Products
     
    Horizon Legacy Energy Corp.
     
    Hydro One Networks
     
    Hydro Quebec Distribution
     
    Hytorc Ontario
     
    IBI Group
     
    Innergex Renewable Energy Inc.
     
    Inspec-Sol Inc.
     
    International Tower Lighting LLC
     
    Invenergy Canada LLC
     
    IPS Trico
     
    Jones Group Engineering Ltd.
     
    Joss Wind Power Inc.
     
    Juwi Wind Canada Ltd.
     
    K-Line Maintenance & Construction Ltd.
     
    Knight Piesold
     
    KPMG
     
    Kruger Energy Inc.
     
    Lafarge Canada Inc.
     
    Lahave Renewables Inc.
     
    Landstar Transportation Logistics
     
    Lapp Canada
     
    Le Groupe Ohmega Inc.
     
    Leader Resources Services Corp.
     
    LEITWIND
     
    Lethbridge College
     
    Lincoln Electric Company of Canada
     
    Local Content Assurance Bureau
     
    Longyuan Canada Renewables Ltd.
     
    Mammoet Canada Western Ltd.
     
    Manitoba Hydro
     
    Manulife Financial
     
    Maritime Electric Company Ltd.
     
    Marmen Inc.
     
    Mastec Renewables Construction, LTD
     
    McCann Equipment Ltd.
     
    McCarthy Tetrault LLP
     
    McElhanney Land Surveys Ltd.
     
    Michels Canada
     
    Miller Thomson LLP
     
    Moloney Electric Inc.
     
    Morgan AM&T
     
    Mortenson Construction
     
    Motion Industries (Canada) Inc.
     
    Moventas Ltd.
     
    Myshak Crane & Rigging Ltd
     
    Nalcor Energy
     
    Natural Forces Wind Inc.
     
    Natural Resource Solutions Inc.
     
    NaturEner Canada Inc.
     
    NB Power
     
    NCSG Crane & Heavy Haul Services
     
    Neoen North America
     
    NextEra Energy Canada Development and Acquisitions, Inc.
     
    Niagara Region Wind Corporation
     
    Northern Lights College
     
    Northland Power Inc.
     
    Northwind Solutions
     
    Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP
     
    Olympus
     
    Ontario Sustainable Energy Association
     
    ORTECH Consulting Inc.
     
    Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP
     
    Pattern Renewable Holdings Canada ULC
     
    PCL Constructors Canada Inc.
     
    PESCA Environnement
     
    Power Climber Wind
     
    PowerTel Utilities Contractors Ltd.
     
    Prowind Canada Inc.
     
    PSB Securite
     
    R.J. Burnside & Associates Ltd.
     
    R360 WIND INC. (A JR Group Company)
     
    Rabobank
     
    Rankin Construction Inc.
     
    Regional Power
     
    Renewable Energy Systems Canada Inc.
     
    Renewable NRG Systems
     
    Rigarus Construction Inc.
     
    Rittal Systems Ltd.
     
    Rodan Energy Solutions
     
    Rombro Solar Energy Inc.
     
    Rope Partner Canada, Inc.
     
    Royal & Sun Alliance Insurance Co.
     
    Run Energy
     
    RWDI
     
    S&C Electric Canada Ltd.
     
    Samsung Renewable Energy Inc.
     
    Samuel Son & Co. Ltd.
     
    Saskatchewan Research Council
     
    SaskPower
     
    Saturn Power Inc.
     
    Schaeffler Canada Inc.
     
    Schneider Electric Canada Inc.
     
    Schunk Graphite Technology
     
    Scotian WindFields
     
    Sea Breeze Power Corp.
     
    Second Wind Inc.
     
    Select Elevator Solutions Inc.
     
    Sentrex Wind Services Inc.
     
    Sentry Electrical (Canada) Inc.
     
    Senvion Canada Inc.
     
    SgurrEnergy Ltd.
     
    Shell Canada Ltd.
     
    Shermco Industries
     
    Sherwood Electromotion Inc.
     
    Siemens Canada Limited
     
    Signal Energy Constructors
     
    Sika Canada Inc.
     
    SNC-Lavalin Environnement Inc.
     
    Solas Energy Consulting Inc.
     
    Spirit Pine Energy Corporation
     
    SPX Hydraulic Technologies
     
    Stantec
     
    Stikeman Elliott LLP
     
    Stoel Rives LLP
     
    Stonebridge Financial Corporation
     
    Suncor Energy Services Inc.
     
    Surespan Wind Energy Services
     
    Sussex Strategy Group
     
    Suzlon Wind Energy Corporation
     
    Synergy Cables USA Ltd.
     
    Synergy Land Services Ltd.
     
    TE CONNECTIVITY
     
    TEAM-1 Academy
     
    TechnoCentre Eolien
     
    Technostrobe
     
    Telecon Inc.
     
    Terrafix Geosynthetics Inc.
     
    Tetra Tech
     
    Thomas & Betts Canada
     
    Thunder Bay Port Authority
     
    TimberWest Forest Corp.
     
    Toronto Hydro Corporation
     
    Torys LLP
     
    TransAlta Corporation
     
    TransCanada Energy Ltd.
     
    Tribute Resources Inc.
     
    TSP Canada Towers Inc.
     
    Tulloch Engineering Inc.
     
    TWR Lighting Inc.
     
    Ultra Torq Hydraulic Bolting
     
    Unirope Ltd.
     
    Valard Construction
     
    Vestas Canada
     
    Virelec Ltd
     
    WEB Wind Energy North America Inc.
     
    Westburne
     
    Williams Form Hardware & Rockbolt
     
    Wind Dynamics Inc.
     
    Wind Energy Institute of Canada
     
    Wind Power Inc.
     
    Wind Simplicity Inc.
     
    Wind Systems Magazine
     
    WindAxis
     
    Winergy Drive System Corporation
     
    Woodward Inc.
     
    wpd Canada
     
    WSP Canada Inc.
     
    Zephyr North Ltd.
     
     

     

    Finally…the Scam is Being Exposed! They Know They Are NOT Helping Our Environment!

    It’s about something

    Ms. McCarthy is now saying that the Clean Power Plan is not about climate. Ms. McCarthy’s July 23 testimony on the Clean Power Plan was that it is not about climate or pollution control.  This contradicts the June testimony, the web site and the federal register notice.  So it’s about something.  

    From the Bonner Cohen, Heartland.org:

    EPA’s recently announced restrictions on carbon dioxide emissions have nothing to do with reducing pollution, EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy admitted in Senate hearings. Instead, said McCarthy, EPA imposed the restrictions based on a belief imposing expensive renewable energy on the electricity marketplace will stimulate the economy.

    ‘Not About Pollution Control’
    “The great thing about this proposal is that it really is an investment opportunity. This is not about pollution control,” McCarthy told the Senate Environment & Public Works Committee July 23. “It’s about increased efficiency at our plants. It’s about investment in renewables and clean energy. It’s about investments in people’s ability to lower their electricity bills by getting good, clean, efficient appliances, homes, rental units.”

    McCarthy’s comments came as a shock to utilities facing steep costs attempting to comply with the proposed restrictions. The comments also came at a time when the Obama administration’s prior EPA restrictions have pushed U.S. electricity prices to an all-time record high.

    Contradicts Prior Testimony
    McCarthy’s Senate testimony represents a significant departure from the way EPA defended its proposal before lawmakers just a month earlier. At a June hearing before the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Acting Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation Janet McCabe offered a different explanation. Citing Section 111 (b) of the Clean Air Act, which authorizes EPA to regulate certain pollutants, McCabe made that argument in her testimony:

    “Chairman Upton, this is not an energy plan. This is a rule done within the four corners of 111 (b) that looks to the best system of emission reduction to reduce emission.… This is a pollution control rule as EPA has traditionally done under section 111 (d).”

    McCarthy’s comment didn’t escape the attention of climatologist Roy Spencer.

    “This gaffe could come back to bite the EPA,” Spencer wrote on his website. “The Endangerment Finding was all about the negative effect of ‘carbon pollution’ on the environment. Now we find out ‘this is not about pollution control’?”

    In her testimony, McCarthy repeatedly emphasized EPA views its rule as an investment opportunity for the business community, while downplaying the cost it would impose on consumers.

    “This is an investment strategy that will not just reduce carbon pollution but will position the United States to continue to grow economically in every state, based on their own design,” she said.

    So CO2 restrictions are not about climate and all the supposed health benefits are not about pollution control, they are energy efficiency, jobs and economic programs.  Sounds like EPA is getting caught with a reg that obviously doesn’t do what they said it was designed to do and are scrambling.

    Aussies Know Renewable Energy Targets are a SCAM! Get rid of them!

    Senator Matt Canavan: mandatory RET is an Enormous Wind Industry Protection Racket

    abbott, hockey, cormann

    With news that Tony Abbott, Joe Hockey and Mathias Cormann have teamed up to axe the mandatory RET (see our post here), the wind industry and its parasites have been reduced to a pitiful spectacle: drifting between pleading and begging for mercy, on the one hand, and foaming rage, on the other.

    These desperados are like a band of teenage brats facing a little “parenting” for the first time in their lives: how dare anyone pull the plug on $50 billion worth of REC Tax/Subsidy that would have given me a delightful Point Piper view of Sydney Harbour, and kept me and my mates in Mercs and Beamers for life?!?!

    And like spoilt infants facing a little discipline, these boys are looking for any hint that they might avoid punishment. Overblown reports put out by the ABC and Fairfax press that the Coalition isn’t really intent on scrapping the mandatory RET outright have been seized on by the wind industry and its parasites like shipwreck survivors clinging to floating wreckage.

    But this is one occasion where the stricken will be denied any salvation.

    STT hears that what was reported in the Australian Financial Review (and covered in this post) is just the beginning of the wind industry’s woes.

    STT hears that Tony Abbott harbours a deep antipathy to the wind industry, which is only matched by his distaste for corporate welfare; we’ve covered a little of it in our posts here and here and here.  The PM is determined to bring the wind industry to an end; the only question is precisely how that objective is to be achieved. While the shortest route home is to simply scrap the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Act 2000, there are plenty of other ways of skinning the subsidy cat.

    STT hears that the (current) preferred option is to leave the legislation in tact, but to gut it in such a way that the wind industry will be starved of subsidies by choking off the current and, more importantly, expected value of RECs.

    The plan goes a little like this.

    The Coalition has a policy aimed at achieving least-cost CO2 abatement, called “Direct Action” (a run down on the policy is available here). The policy has its critics on other scores, but it may well end up being the wind industry’s Armageddon.

    Under the Direct Action policy, CO2 abatement is to be achieved at the lowest possible cost using “Australian Carbon Credit Units” (CCUs).

    CCUs would be issued on audited proof of the abatement of 1 tonne of CO2. That could be by way of “carbon farming”: planting trees or restoring vegetation cover to over-grazed pastoral range-lands, say.

    RECs, on the other hand, are issued on proof of renewable power dispatched to the grid: 1 REC for each and every MWh delivered. The deal has proceeded on the (wild) assumption that 1 MWh of wind power dispatched to the grid results in 1 tonne of CO2 emissions reduction in the electricity sector.

    Under the PM’s brewing plan to kill the wind industry, RECs would be made redundant and, instead, wind power generators would be entitled to apply for CCUs. RECs and CCUs would be consolidated, with the former being phased out, and eventually replaced by the latter.

    Now, here’s the clever part.

    A CCU will only be issued on audited proof that the applicant has, in fact, reduced or abated 1 tonne of CO2 emissions. That will see wind power outfits struggle to jump the first hurdle: despite some “smoke and mirrors” modelling, the wind industry has never produced a shred of evidence to back its CO2 abatement claims.

    The auditing of CCU applications will be done by way of certification and verification by a registered valuer. In the event that wind power outfits can satisfy the auditor and pocket a CCU, they then face the prospect of a far less generous subsidy stream.

    (As an aside, one earlier variation of the plan was that the recipient of the CCU would not be able to cash it in, but would, rather, surrender the CCU to the Australian Tax Office and enjoy a reduction in their taxable income to the (pre-determined) value of the CCU: after auditing, the applicant would present their CCUs to a Certified Practicing Accountant to be submitted to the ATO with the applicant’s tax returns.)

    The point of Direct Action and the CCU is to bring about the cheapest possible CO2 abatement, by whatever means. This means that the market for CCUs will be open to all comers and competitive in a way which the market for RECs isn’t.

    The REC price is underpinned by the mandated shortfall charge of $65 per MWh: the effect of which comes into play from 2017, as the annual RET figure begins to climb from 27,200 GWh to the 41,000 GWh target, effective from 2020 to 2031. It’s that relationship that has wind power outfits salivating at the prospect of RECs being worth at least $65 and, by 2017, exceeding $100.

    The CCU, however, is meant to be tradeable and interchangeable with carbon credits on international markets; such as those traded in Europe. Under Direct Action, certain CO2 emitters will be able to meet their obligations to surrender CCUs by purchasing European carbon credits at the going rate: the trading price of which has ranged between A$7-10.

    The price for CCUs is, therefore, expected to top out at around $10.

    And it’s on the issue of being able to trade CCU’s on the international market that the Coalition have been talking seriously to big Clive Palmer and, in this respect, may end up adopting parts of the PUP’s much reported plan for an ETS – starting with internationally tradeable CCUs. Of course, Palmer’s stated position is that the price for ETS credits must be set at ZERO, until such time as all of Australia’s major trading partners (like Europe, China, Japan, Canada and the US etc) sign up to an international ETS (see our post here).

    For wind power outfits to survive, let alone build any new capacity, they need RECs to be trading at around $40, at a minimum. Anything less than $30, and wind power generators will never cover their operating costs, which run between $25-30 per MWh (see our post here).

    Under Direct Action (assuming audited proof that 1 tonne of CO2 emissions has been abated) wind power generators would be issued with 1 CCU (instead of 1 REC).

    By replacing RECs (currently trading around $30) with CCUs likely to trade around $8, the wind industry would disappear in a heartbeat. Although, we note that wind industry barrackers, the Climate Institute predicts that wind power outfits will soon be able to survive on subsidies of around $10 per MWh (see further below) – in which case, the wind industry will lap up CCUs at $8-10 and rub along just fine: but we doubt it … What’s that they say about being careful about what you wish for?

    STT hears that over the last few months crack energy market economist, Danny Price has been working on the plan to rework the RET to bring it into line with the Direct Action policy; starting with the plan to replace the REC system with CCUs (see our post here).

    So, if you hear the members of the Coalition talking about retaining the mandatory RET, don’t be too concerned. STT hears that Tony Abbott is absolutely committed to killing the wind industry; and how it’s done is a matter of substance, not form.

    In the meantime, a growing number of Coalition members are going on the offensive; calling for the mandatory RET to be scrapped outright.

    matt canavan

    Another to join the queue is Queensland Nationals Senator, Matt Canavan (a former Director of the Productivity Commission) who penned this brilliant piece for The Australian.

    Dodgy sums on renewables don’t add up
    The Australian
    Matt Canavan
    19 August 2014

    THE advocates of renewable energy would have you believe that they have discovered the economic equivalent of the fountain of youth. According to them, we can adopt more expensive ways of doing things, yet that will lead to cheaper prices.

    That renewable energy is more expensive than fossil fuels should not be in dispute. If renewables were cheaper, they would not need the billions of dollars in subsidies they receive every year courtesy of taxpayers.

    The most recent example of magic pudding economic modelling was released by the Climate Institute yesterday and purports to show that subsidising renewable energy will in fact reduce energy prices. The report concedes, at least in its graphs, that abolishing the renewable energy target will reduce power prices.

    The Climate Institute claims that after a few years of falling prices, they will increase. This primarily occurs because the modelling assumes that renewable energy will get cheaper through learning by doing. Thanks to this miraculously rapid learning, it is assumed that subsidies to renewables will drop from more than $70 per megawatt hour in 2020 to just over $10 by 2030. The modelling refers to “international studies” to support this assumption without referencing any. So much for peer review.

    Windmills have been around for centuries and despite massive investment from countries such as Denmark, they are still not economically viable without subsidies. But if the RET is about to solve the problem of affordable energy, why stop there?

    For instance, Australia has long had a problem producing cheap and competitive cars but we have the solution. All we need is a domestic automobile target. The DAT will mandate that, say, 20 per cent of our cars should be produced domestically. Domestic manufacturers will receive domestic automobile certificates for every car they produce. Importers of cars will have to buy these DACs. We know this will work because it is a market-based solution. Just like the RET, it should magically reduce the price of cars for Australian consumers.

    In reality, such a scheme would be nothing but a fancy form of tariff. Those who argued for tariffs argued that Australian industry needed protection when it was young, but one day it would grow up and would become cheaper and more competitive. Advocates of renewables use a version of this discredited infant industry argument today.

    The models used to support this just confirm the old joke: ask an economist what two plus two equals and he will respond: “How much would you like it to equal?”

    Some who can’t bear to defend wealthy companies asking for taxpayer handouts say the RET is cheap. It is true that credible economic modelling shows the RET probably costs consumers about $50 a year. Is that cheap?

    Last week, the nation was gripped by the spectacle of a “regressive” fuel tax that would cost the average consumer $20 a year. The same people who pillory the Treasurer for indexing fuel excise argue for a RET more than twice as costly. At least fuel excise will help build roads, whereas the RET doesn’t make electricity more reliable or powerful, it just makes pensioners and the poor go without heating or airconditioning to subsidise the lucky few with the resources to invest in the latest fad: renewables.

    The RET is an extremely expensive form of emission reductions, between double and six times the cost of the carbon tax.

    And it doesn’t stop there. The big losers from the RET are those industries that use lots of energy, such as aluminium and fertiliser producers. Some economic modelling finds that the RET will lead to 5000 fewer jobs.

    There are few supporters left of high car or other tariffs. The biggest protection racket left is renewable energy.

    The final argument used to stop protection from being removed is that it introduces sovereign risk and would be unfair to those who have invested in an industry based on government policy. Even some who want to remove renewable subsidies argue that we should grandfather existing investments.

    There is merit in this but it cuts both ways. When the 20 per cent RET was introduced five years ago it effectively devalued billions of dollars worth of coal and gas assets. Some estimates say the RET will transfer more than $5 billion from fossil fuel to renewable assets in the next 15 years. Such an expropriation also represents sovereign risk. It is fine to talk about grand­fathering renewables but we should also great-grandfather those who invested in coal, gas or aluminium before there was a prospect of a RET.

    As an economically damaging protectionist policy, the RET should be removed. The adjustment should be done over time and the costs should be shared between fossil fuel, energy-intensive and renewable sectors alike.

    Matt Canavan is a Nationals senator for Queensland. He was formerly a director of the Productivity Commission.
    The Australian

    The only quibble we have with Matt’s fine piece of analysis is the implicit concession that reducing or scrapping the mandatory RET amounts to “sovereign risk”.

    In this post, WA Senator, Chris Back slammed that one straight over the long-boundary, based on Parliamentary advice which, funnily enough, reflects what STT has already said on the issue (see our posts here andhere). What the wind industry faces is “regulatory risk” – just like the risk realised by aluminium processors and conventional power generators when Labor increased the mandatory RET to 41,000 GWh in 2010: examples relied on by Matt when dealing with the claimed need for “grandfathering” wind industry investments.

    Matt has a pretty fair crack at the “Magic Pudding” economics put up by wind industry cheer squad, the Climate Institute and its nonsensical claims that subsidies to wind power outfits will drop from $70 per MWh in 2020 to around $10 per MWh by 2030. That fiction dissolves with a cursory peek at the legislation that makes up the mandatory RET; and the application of plain old arithmetic to its terms.

    By 2020, the RECs issued to wind power outfits (1 REC per MWh dispatched) will be worth at least $65 (equal to the cost of the mandated shortfall charge) – and are expected to trade at around $100 by then – which means the subsidy extracted from power consumers and directed to wind power outfits will be worth at least $65 per MWh and, more likely, $100 per MWh, right up until 2031. Between 2014 and 2031, the REC Tax/Subsidy will add between $36 billion and $50 billion to Australian power consumers’ bills (see our post here).

    Not only is the Climate Institute’s claim about the cost of subsidies to wind power outfits utter bunkum, its “modelling”, of course, deliberately ignores the impact of the Power Purchase Agreements struck between wind power generators and retailers, which guarantee returns of between $90-120 per MWh (versus the wholesale price for conventional power of $30-40 per MWh). Sticking with its “Magic Pudding” approach to the cost of the mandatory RET, the Climate Institute tosses up the wind industry’s argument that wind power lowers wholesale prices: precisely how it does so on days when the entire wind power output of all wind farms connected to the Eastern Grid struggles to top 20 MW is anybody’s guess (see our post here). But, in any event, power consumers don’t pay the wholesale price (and couldn’t care less about it): it’s the price fixed by PPAs (which run from 15 to 25 years) that determines the price retailers charge their customers and the final cost of wind power; and, therefore, retail prices (see our posts here and here).

    The Magic Pudding’s ability to return to his original form – no matter how many times he was eaten – is the stuff of delicious fantasy. However, slice $50 billion from Australian power consumers and our economy is unlikely to mimic the Magic Pudding’s most desirable quality and bounce back without a scratch. The mandatory RET is not only “the biggest protection racket left”, it is the single biggest (and perfectly avoidable) threat to sustainable Australian employment and prosperity there is. The mandatory RET must go now.

    MagicPudding