Mark Dewdney lists “a few” of the Reasons, the Liberals have got to go!

So…it’s “only” the gas plants and e-Health, according to some friends who, if the Liberals even admitted they were guilty of this list, would still create justifications to vote for them this time. Well, here you go – if you can’t stomach the idea of anything less than a massacre at the polls this time around, I suggest posting this to your timelines once a week.
Green Energy Act (20 billion).
eHealth scandal (almost 2 billion).
Gas plant scandal (1.1 billion theft and cover-up of our tax dollars).
ORNGE scandal (700 million).
Ontario Northland Railway scandal (820 million).
Caledonia Hydro Line scandal (116 million).
Lobbyist scandal (two multi-million dollar scandals).
Eco-Fee Reversal scandal (18 million).
CancerCare Ontario scandal (millions of dollars).
Slush Fund scandal (32 million).
Niagara Falls Commission scandal.
Ontario Power Generation scandal.
Children’s Aid Society scandal.
Nanticoke Coal Power Plant Shutdown scandal.
G20 Secretly Approved Police Power scandal.
Auto Insurance scandal.
Foreign Scholarships scandal (our students pay the highest tuition in Canada while foreign students get free university educations).
Offshore Wind Turbines scandal.
Samsung scandal (sole-sourcing).
Pan Am scandal (cost increase from 1.4 to 2.5 billion).
MPAC scandal (over and under-valuation of properties).
OLG scandal (millions of dollars).
Isotape Shortage scandal.
Chemotherapy Dosage scandal.
Payout for Pan Am CEO (250 million).
Trillium Wind Power and Sky Power Limited lawsuit (500 million)
Cement company lawsuit (275 million) – Quarry outside Hamilton was scuttled for political reasons.
School bus service lawsuit.
Augusta/Westland lawsuit as it pertains to ORNGE.
Elliot Lake Collapse lawsuits (two lives lost due to recovery delays).
Ontario Medical Association lawsuits – applied to Superior Court alleging McGuinty not negotiating in “good faith” .
Breast Screening scandal (ensuing lawsuits due to thousands of misread mammograms, one life lost.)
Class-action lawsuit for autism funding cancellation.
Over 650 new agencies, boards, commissions and entities such as LHIN’s and CCAC’s.
Over 300,000 new public servants many of whom, are on the sunshine list.
Public sector employment in health care increased by 39%.
Public sector employment in social services increased by 39%.
Public sector employment in education increased by 34%.
Paying more Liberal taxes only to receive fewer services as taxes now being spent to pay the salaries and perks of newly-assigned, Liberal-friendly public servants.
Gutted our manufacturing base (job growth across Canada except in Ontario).
Nearly one million Ontarians now out of work.
Increased spending by 80% while our economy grew by only 9%.
More than doubled our debt to 288 billion.
Running a 11.3 billion annual deficit.
Debt servicing costs will rise from 11.4 billion today to 14.5 billion once the debt exceeds 300 billion by 2017-18.
Interest payments on our debt now the third largest budget expenditure after health and education.
Task Force on Competitiveness, Productivity and Economic Progress confirmed that McGuinty’s Green Energy Act grossly underestimated the cost to consumers and overestimated the number of new jobs that would be created.
Tax collectors getting 45,000.00 severance packages for switching job titles from provincial to federal.
Two ministries under an OPP criminal investigation – ORNGE and gas plant scandals.
Pharmacy war.
Illegal green taxes.
Increased smart meter, electricity, hydro, tuition and car insurance costs.
Implemented tire tax, electronics tax, eco fee, health premium (tax), WSIB tax increase, HST, beer surtax.
Failing grade on ADHD education.
Ranking the lowest of all provinces for fiscal performance.
Delisting eye exams, physiotherapy, chiropractic care, diabetic strips, etc.
Increasing wait time for cataract surgery.
No longer covered for eye exams yet taxpayers paying for sex changes.
Wait time for nursing home bed tripled.
Failure to disclose elevated radiation levels.
OES missed its collection and recycling targets by 59%.
Not correcting the foreign ownership of our beer market.
Acceptance of garbage striker extortion.
Harassing labour inspectors.
Kowtowing to green energy lobbies.
Imposing blood alcohol rules that punish people who are not impaired.
Public utilities donating to Liberals.
Voting to cover up the Niagara Parks Commission scandal.
Emergency room wait times not meeting provincial targets.
Put on notice by Standard and Poor, credit rating downgraded, under a very serious credit watch.
Have-not province for the first time in Canadian history
Borrowing more debt than any province except NB
Dramatic cuts in health care services in schools
Nurses getting bonuses despite a wage freeze
Insufficient senior homecare services
Failing grade of Family Responsibility Office
Abstained from vote to investigate CBC expenses
Cash kickback scheme involving government cleaning contracts
Talked about a two-year freeze on wages for public sector while previously giving the OPP a 5% wage increase – the OPP received another raise of over 8% in January, 2014
Energy now unaffordable yet we must pay Quebec and some north-eastern States to take our surplus energy.
Encouraging farmers to build small-scale solar projects but having no way to connect them to the power grid.
Laid up in US hospital beds as no beds available in Ontario.
Refusing public inquiry into G20 fiasco.
Giving those who hire only newcomers a 10,000.00 tax credit.
Third highest user of food banks.
Announced pay freezes knowing that 38,000 were getting a 3% salary increase after the election.
Nortel Pensions bailout .
Hiding hospital errors from the public.
Teachers skipping classes to assist with anti-Conservative campaign.
Failing grade in northern forestry management.
Almost 40 C. difficile deaths to date.
Loss of 6,500 cancer patient health records.
Highest rent increase rate in years.
Ignoring evidence that wind turbines can cause poor health.
Workers at eHealth suing for not receiving bonuses.
Liam denied eye care that another child is receiving under OHIP.
Ontarians pleading for their lives or dying because they aren’t getting the health care they need.
Lady with a brain tumor denied help to cover costs which costs are covered in Manitoba.
Electricity rates to rise 42% over five years.
Prior loss of 60,000 jobs in the horse racing industry – now attempting to correct this.
Presto
Ring of Fire Cleaning kick-back scheme that ended with the conviction of three Liberal officials.

 

Agenda 21….At the Municipal Level! Fight it!

 

Municipal Primer:

Agenda 21 Guide-Book

The Municipal Primer is the Agenda 21 guide-book for municipalities.

The municipal governments are doing the bidding of international

globalists……… not you. Please read and pass along. Don’t forget to send

a copy to your local council.

No longer can your elected officials hide or deny Agenda 21.

Municipal Primer pdf

There is a Lot of Unwarranted Alarmism Concerning Fracking!

How Risky Is Fracking?

April 28, 2014

Environmentalists have targeted fracking, lambasting it as a danger and an environmental hazard, but those concerns are largely overblown. While there are real risks due to fracking, actual occurrences are rare, say Terry Anderson and Carson Bruno of the Hoover Institution.

The three main concerns with fracking involve water use, water contamination and seismic activity.

  • Water use: There are concerns that fracking will deplete water supplies, as a fracking well uses somewhere between 2 million and 5 million gallons of water, with up to 80 percent of that water staying below the earth’s surface. However, that number needs to be put into perspective — New York City uses 5 million gallons of water in just six minutes. While dry, western states undoubtedly have concerns about water usage, developing water markets and defining property rights would best lead to efficient water use.
  • Water contamination: There is little evidence to support claims that fracturing fluids could contaminate groundwater. Studies from Duke University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Environmental Protection Agency all found no evidence of fracking fluid contamination in local water sources. As for methane leakage — the other potential contamination source — studies indicate that high methane levels found near fracking wells are either naturally occurring, or are the product of poor well design, a problem easily remedied.
  • Induced seismic activity: Will fracking cause earthquakes? In theory, it is possible that improper water disposal could cause seismic activity. Even so, it is unlikely that such an earthquake would be significant and would, instead, be felt only by persons at rest.

Moreover, the risks of fracking should always be weighed against the benefits. North Dakota — whose unemployment rate moved only from 3 percent to 4 percent during the Great Recession, largely escaping the problems seen by the rest of the nation — has been at the center of the fracking boom, with oil and gas production rising 58 percent between December 2007 and June 2009.

Oil and gas production due to fracking offers massive benefits to the rest of the economy, not just North Dakota. According to IHS Global Insight, by 2020, fracking could yield an additional $417 billion to the U.S. economy, employing close to 3 million Americans.

Even though fracking risks are rare, they should be addressed. But addressing them does not mean imposing a moratorium on the practice or implementing burdensome regulations.

Source: Terry Anderson and Carson Bruno, “Risky Hydraulic Fracturing?” Hoover Institution, April 15, 2014.

There is NO Net Benefit to Industrial Wind Turbines~

The cost of wind-farms will dwarf that of HS2

We’ll need four times the number of planned offshore wind farms to meet EU energy targets

Wind farm

The £60 billion cost of the extra wind farms needed would be added to household electricity bills Photo: ALAMY

Much attention was paid to the vote by a huge majority of MPs for the HS2 project, the main objections to which are that it will cost a staggering £50 billion and cause immense environmental damage, to much less useful purpose than is claimed for it.

But no one seems to have noticed that the same is true for another of the Government’s projects: its bid to meet our agreed EU target that, within six years, we must treble the amount of our electricity derived from “renewables”. Ed Davey, our energy and climate change minister, claims that his £12 billion plan, centred on six giant offshore wind farms, will add “4.5 gigawatts” to our generating capacity.

What Davey concealed, as I wrote last week, is that, thanks to the unreliability of the wind, the actual output of his project will be half that, 2.2 gigawatts, a mere 4 per cent of the electricity we use.

So, to meet our EU target by 2020, we would need four more projects of similar size, at a total cost of £60 billion, paid for through subsidies hidden in our electricity bills equating to £3,000 a year for every home in the land. We would need to spend billions more on connecting these wind farms to the grid, plus further billions on gas-fired power stations to provide back-up for the times when the wind isn’t blowing at the right speed.

When people finally wake up to what we are being let in for, their anger will make the row over HS2 look like chicken feed. But fortunately for Mr Davey, none of our MPs have yet done enough homework to grasp that what he is proposing is utterly insane.

Donna Quixote’s “Liberal Monopoly” makes the NEWS!!!

Merriam: Grits’ fixation on wind power is a losing game

By Jim Merriam

How dreadful . . . to be caught up in a game and have no idea of the rules.

— Caroline Stevermer

Two games have taken on new meanings, thanks to opponents of the Ontario government’s fixation with wind power.

First is the game of politics and second is the board game Monopoly.

A new game circulating via electronic media is called Ontario Liberal Monopoly. The game highlights the relationship between this power-hungry party and its various power flubs.

Instead of jail, there’s an unemployment line for all those thrown out of work by the government’s destruction of the manufacturing sector.

There’s also a wind victims’ safe house, presumably a place where all the folks can move after they’ve been driven from their farms by wind turbines that have caused serious health problems.

Permit me an aside. I recently exchanged correspondence with a dear friend who couldn’t understand how I could abandon the “Liberal family,” to which my clan has belonged since Ontario was nothing but unsettled bush.

The answer: I could never support a party that condones big business delivering health problems to people and driving them off the land, for no good reason. I doubt most of my ancestors would have supported such reckless disregard for people either.

But I digress.

Back on the special monopoly board, we see the price of various wind factory developments. These include Wolfe Island at $75 billion, Melancthon wind farm at $80 billion, Port Alma at $30 billion and Underwood at $50 billion.

As you roll the dice and make your move you might land on a square that gives you a gift basket. Of course, it’s for Toronto residents only.

Another square says you can take a ride on an Ornge ambulance. Perhaps it should have said, be taken for a ride by Ornge.

Just like real Monopoly, another square moves you directly to the unemployment line because your company has moved to New York for cheaper electricity rates.

When CEOs pass “Go” they receive $2 million in salary, but unlucky players might end up paying $20 in gas tax and 10% or $200 in debt retirement charges.

On the square for electricity charges, you get to choose one only from heat, light, food or shelter.

Instead of the likes of Marvin Gardens, you can buy various parts of the province. Widely ranging prices seem related to how much the province cares about the area in question.

For example you can buy Don Valley West for $2,000, but Guelph will cost you only $25. Shelburne is $12, while Port Burwell and Kincardine are $10 each.

Huntsville will cost you $50 or you can buy Vaughan for $110 and the Muskokas for $150. (I know it’s not “Muskokas” but that’s what it says on the board.)

If you get an unlucky roll, you land on the cancelled gas plants square and get to pay $1.1 billion. Other unlucky players take a chance and get to deal with the fact their neighbours leased land to a wind developer.

You can learn more about this special game and about the Liberal party’s destruction of Ontario at http://www.QuixotesLastStand.com. Here is the history of the Liberal monopoly game:

“With more and more families in Ontario entering energy poverty, thanks to the insane policies of the Liberal party, families are now finding themselves sitting in the dark at night. This has spawned a resurgence in board games, and the newest rage in board games is the Ontario Liberal party version of Monopoly.”

It’s all kind of funny, except it’s a sad commentary on the last decade of Liberal rule in Ontario.

jmerriam@bmts.com

 

UK is Wising Up to the Windscam….JUST SAY NO!!!

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Finally….the plug is pulled on the Liberal Fiasco!!! Oh HAPPY DAY!!!

TORONTO – Ontario is heading to the polls.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said she will vote against Premier Kathleen Wynne’s spring budget which means that the Liberal minority government would fall on a confidence vote as early as May 7.

“It’s time for change,” Horwath said Friday. “You deserve a better government.”

Horwath said the growing list of scandals attached to the Liberal government and her lack of confidence in Wynne to deliver on her budget promises are behind her party’s decision to pull the plug on its support.

Wynne had given Horwath until May 8 to decide but she rendered her decision one day after Finance Minister Charles Sousa delivered his supposedly NDP-friendly budget.

“Kathleen Wynne cannot even build a raft. How do we expect her to actually build a ship?” Horwath said. “We will not be voting in favour of any confidence motion including the budget.”

A confidence vote could be held any time between May 7 and June 2, but Wynne could also trigger an earlier election herself.

Premier Kathleen Wynne, speaking on the Lorne Brooker Show on CJBQ radio in Belleville, said Friday that she was disappointed that Horwath would not meet with her as requested to discuss the budget.

“I think there’s a lot in this budget that needs to be implemented in the province,” Wynne said. “But I’ve said all along if we didn’t have a partner in the Legislature then we would taken this budget to the people of the province. And we will do that.”

 

Lies that the Wind Developers tell…..Will that be their downfall?

Elected officials suppressed key report, failed to halt project or recover taxpayer dollars

“It was heartbreaking to see this project desecrate such a historically and culturally significant landscape, and it’s even worse when you find out that it was built on false claims by the developer, and with the assistance of the BLM. “– Anthony Pico, Chairman, Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians

By Miriam Raftery

April 30, 2014 (Ocotillo) – An international wind energy expert has concluded that Pattern Energy appears to have defrauded the federal government in order to obtain lucrative tax subsidies for a wind energy development in southern California that has failed to live up to the developer’s claims.

“I believe we have a clear case for the False Claims Act,” Nicolas Boccard told East County Magazine, after reviewing full first-year wind production data for the Ocotillo Wind Energy Facility on U..S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) public land.  The project produced only about half of the energy that Pattern claimed it would produce—far below levels deemed viable for a wind project, a second expert confirms.

These dismal results are no surprise to Boccard, who predicted in a report written before construction of the project was  completed that Ocotillo lacks sufficient wind speeds to sustain a viable wind energy project.

So were Pattern’s lofty wind speed claims nothing more than spin?

Boccard, an international energy expert and assistant professor of economics at the University of Girona, Spain, has written and published in Energy Policy prior reports exposing exaggerated wind  production claims made by energy companies in Europe. The Ocotillo report authored by Boccard was commissioned by the  Desert Protective Council but its findings have since been independently validated by multiple experts.

Concerned tribal leaders, environmentalists and residents initially kept the Boccard  report  on Ocotillo confidential, but did share copies only with their public officials– members of Congress and the Legislature, who failed to take action to prevent the project from being built—with one exception; one Congressman sent a letter to the U.S. Treasury Department asking that funds for the project be halted pending an investigation of wind speeds, but the agency failed to act.  The other political leaders appear to have done nothing to investigate the fraud allegations before the project was built.  Confronted with the year-end wind speed data, however, a second Congressional member has now taken action, asking the U.S. Department of Energy to investigate fraud claims.

The citizens’ coalition also provided evidence strongly suggesting fraud to the North American Development Bank, which financed the project, but the evidence was ignored. Documents obtained by East County Magazine, which were provided to NADB,  suggest that Pattern falsified maps to make it appear that wind turbines would be built atop windy ridges 3,000 feet higher in elevation than the flat desert sands on which the project was actually built. 

Boccard’s report has not been published—until now.  East County Magazine received the Boccard report on Ocotillo Wind before the  Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) released its data  on the project’s actual wind production,  under condition that we withhold publication until the first full year of wind speed data was available and analyzed.  That analysis is now complete, confirmed by multiple experts.

The project was offline for several weeks due to dropping a multi-ton blade on a Jeep trail on public land.  But even after accounting for the missing months using several different calculations, all with very generous estimates for how much power the project might have produced if not for the accident, the full-year results are still very poor.  Moreover, experts agree, there is no reason to believe this project will ever produce significantly more power.  After all, Boccard noted, “California winds for 2013 were not unduly weak.”

Decommission Ocotillo Wind  Now (DOWN), a coalition of environmentalists,  Native American tribal representatives and Ocotillo residents has formed and is calling on the federal government to take action and order the decommissioning of the project on public lands, which has a long track record of  serious  and in some cases, dangerous problems. (Photo, left: protesters beneath turbine section on passing truck)

Pattern Energy has not responded to our requests for comment on this story.

The finds raise doubts not only about the Ocotillo project’s viability, but about the fast-tracking process and the potential viability of other projects proposed in our region. Pattern Energy has indicated it aims to expand to add a future phase at Ocotillo. Federal agencies and San Diego County have approved Tule Wind, a massive project slated to be built in McCain Valley. Plus San Diego’s Supervisors recently enacted a controversial county wind ordinance that would open wide much of East County to industrial-scale wind energy development.

Scroll down for details with links to full documentation regarding the dubious claims in Ocotillo and citizens’ efforts to expose what they contend is fraud.

Why the Boccard report was commissioned

We thought this was a terribly inappropriate and destructive project to begin with,” Terry Weiner with the Desert Protective Council told East County Magazine.  The DPC, along with Native American tribes, residents and others, had grown frustrated that new federal fast-tracking procedures had failed to heed serious concerns raised by the project—including doubts about the developer’s wind speed projections raised by Jim Pelley, an aerospace engineer and Ocotillo resident, and others.

So the DPC with help from consultant John Kennedy of San Diego sought out Boccard, a University of Girona, Spain faculty member and wind energy expert who had authored a prior report which found that the wind industry in Europe had published wind production estimates that were overly optimistic, given the experiences of Denmark and Germany.

That earlier report found that though the wind industry had claimed a capacity factor of 35% overall in Europe, the actual wind capacity for 2003-2007 was only about 21%, thus making “costs 66% higher than previously thought.”

Kennedy had learned about Boccard after reading peer-reviewed materials in the book Green Illusions: the Dirty Secrets of Clean Energy and the Future of Environmentalism, by Ozzie Zehner.

Weiner recalls, “We told Boccard, ‘We don’t want you to alter the report in any way, shape or form. We want the truth.”

Boccard report predicted failure of Ocotillo project

Boccard’s Ocotillo Wind Resource Study examined numerous documents including wind density maps from the federal government.  He concluded that the Ocotillo project design was “suboptimal” due to its location in what he found to be a class 2 wind resource area—class 1 being the worst on a scale of 1 to 7.   “If one is to follow the standard rule, this site should be listed as `unsuitable for the development of wind-powered electricity,’” Boccard concluded while the project was being built. He concluded the report with: “The 34% capacity factor claimed by the  Ocotillo developer is far off the mark and shall never be achieved.”

How inflated were Pattern Energy’s claims, in Boccard’s estimation?  To produce as much power as Pattern projected would require wind speeds higher than some of the windiest places on earth, such as Ireland’s Atlantic coast wind projects.  Overall, Ireland had a 30% wind capacity factor for the past decade, Boccard found.  He then predicted that the actual power produced at Ocotillo would likely range between 20% and 23%.

Actual wind production at Ocotillo during first year

In fact, wind production at Ocotillo during its first year was even lower than Boccard forecasted.  After obtaining federal data from FERC following a long day delay due to a website upgrade at the agency, we had four different sources crunch the numbers based on a standard mathematical calculation for wind capacity factor.  Below are the results.

Over the year 2013, the Ocotillo Wind capacity factor was somewhere between 15.7% and 17.7%. Expert calculations varied slightly, due to minor variables and whether turbine sizes were 2.3 or 2.37 MW, how long each turbine was actually offline, and so forth. All turbines were off line for the last half of May, and some remained offline for June and a portion of July due to the fallen blade.

But even if we look at only the 9 months with full data, the capacity factor is still only 18.9%.

If we make a generous estimate of strong winds for those months (purely a guess) and estimate how much the project might have produced if it hadn’t dropped a multi-ton blade and been forced offline, the number would still be only about 21.5% in a best case scenario for Pattern.

Overall for the year, Pattern’s project generated only 334 gigawatts (Gwh of power.  That’s astonishingly short—less than 52%–of the 646 Gwh that Pattern claimed in its application to the NADB.  It falls even more short—just 37.5% of an even higher claim, 891 Gwh, that SDG&E claimed  the project would produce in a resolution  sent to the California Public Utilities Commission.  Even allowing for a fallen blade, it’s clear that this project could not have come close to the wind production claims made to secure financing, a 30% cash grant under Section 1603, and an approved Power Purchase Agreement funded by SDG&E ratepayers.

The following calculations were made by Parke Ewing and Jim Pelley, a former construction superintendent and an aerospace engineer in Ocotillo.   Since both are on record opposed to the project, East County Magazine’s staff ran the calculations and confirmed their estimates.

We then sent the data to Reza Alam, a wind energy expert and assistant professor of mechanical engineering at the University of California, Berkeley College of Engineering. At the time, we had the first 11 months of data.  “Yes, capacity factors are calculated correctly,” Alam confirmed.

He added, “Anything below 30% capacity factor for wind is considered relatively low.” He added that other factors may impact output such as storms, long-term weather patterns, turbine models and efficiency.

OCOTILLO ACTUAL WIND PRODUCTION CHART:

Shown the first year of wind data at Ocotillo, Boccard’s initial reaction was, “Told ya. There’s no rocket science here.”

Boccard calculated that if the blade had not fallen, Ocotillo might have reached at best a 17.7% capacity factor and 379 Mwh for the full year—far below Pattern’s projections.

Boccard subsequently crunched some more numbers, comparing data from the Kumeyaay Wind facility in nearby Campo atop a ridgeline. He found that the Kumeyaay facility lived up to its projected capacity factor, actually hitting 33.9% for the year overall—nearly spot on the 34% that Pattern predicted for Ocotillo.

Pattern Energy’s predecessor built the Kumeyaay wind facility (photo, right), so the company had good reason to know  that wind speeds at the higher elevations were strong.  But why would Pattern claim an identical capacity factor for Ocotillo, knowing the site is on flat desert, at several thousand feet lower in elevation in an area ranked only a class 2 wind resource area?

Boccard observed, “The builder may be excellent but if you do that at the bottom of a valley you’re doomed.” He predicted, “There is no reason to believe it will improve, since performance is driven by Mother Nature alone, unless the local shaman put a spell on local winds.”

Boccard stated that he would support decommissioning (tearing down) the Ocotillo project and moving the turbines to a good location since many Californians favor this type of electricity. Further,  he stated, he believes the U.S. government should seek financial redress from Pattern.  “After all, “ he said, “they lied to their funding bank and the authorities, for they must have seen the wind maps.” He added that he hoped such action would “set a precedent against stupid, rushed locations.”

The False Claims Act, also known as the Lincoln Law, imposes liability on companies or people who defraud the U.S. government, typically federal contractors. Over 70% of such cases are initiated by whistleblowers, who can share in a portion of any financial recoveries.  Over $35 billion has been recovered under the False Claims Act from 1987 to 2012.

Alam stated that he, too, might support decommissioning if turbines could be reassembled elsewhere.

A Pattern of misrepresentation

Pattern’s spokesperson, Matt Dallas, failed to respond to multiple requests for comment including requests sent to his email list listed as a current contact on an April 25, 2014 press release on Pattern Energy’s website.  We also asked Pattern to disclose proprietary wind data now that the project is built, but the company ignored our requests over several weeks.

John Calloway from Pattern Energy, at a public Bureau of Land Management scoping meeting on Ocotillo wind, made this statement, “Why here in Ocotillo?”  He then showed a map from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory of wind resources at 50 meters above ground.  “As you can see, almost all of Imperial County is absolutely no wind,” he stated, then later added that their measurements confirm that “as the wind comes off of the mountains, as it hits the flat area it starts to dissipate out and it just goes away,” confirming that Pattern knew the flat desert area lacks wind, unlike the ridgelines above.  View video with embedded clip from the meeting.

Pattern put up meteorological (MET) wind testing towers for two to three years, the Imperial Valley Press reported and residents confirm. But Patternsubmitted less than a year of data (7,700 hours from 2010, according to the Final Enviornmental Impact Report section on meteorological resources) to the federal government. Why?  Pattern also claims to have conducted additional wind speed testing with equipment such as “Sodar” and “Lidar” system (or as residents derisively call it, “Lie-dar”) .  An Imperial Valley Pres article quoted Pattern’s Matt Dallas stating these “showed the Ocotillo area to have a strong wind resource.”

Numerous interested parties have sought to obtain the full data on all testing, but neither the federal government nor Pattern would release that information, claiming it is proprietary data.  In other words, your government wants to keep secret whether or not your tax dollars are being paid out for projects that may have been funded based on incomplete, inaccurate, or outright falsified reports.

“I have argued to all decision makers that they should include public access to the MET tower data in any permits that get issued,” Donna Tisdale with the Protect Our Communities Foundation said.  “At a minimum, the agency with jurisdiction should require access to that data in order to make an informed decision before handing over public land and funds for private profit.”

It gets worse.

In its application for financing and certification sent to the Border Environmental Cooperation Commission (BECC) Pattern again claimed the project has “excellent wind resources” and that the “area boasts strong winds…”

But William C. Pate, an attorney representing Ocotillo residents,  has concluded in a letter he sent seeking to block funding of the project that Pattern falsified data to make it appear that the project would be situated atop ridgelines –where winds actually are strong.

The North American Development Bank (NADB) and its sister institution, BECC, were created by the governments of the U.S. and Mexico in a joint effort to “preserve and enhance environmental conditions and the quality of life of people living along the U.S. –Mexico border.”

Numerous opponents of the Ocotillo project sent letters to the NADB or BECC urging that funds be withheld on a wide range of grounds. But Pate’s letter stood out for bold-faced allegation that Pattern provided misleading data on not only wind speeds, but the location of the project itself.

In a letter to the BECC, Pate overlaid maps from Pattern and from the National Renewable Energy Lab (a California wind resources map).  His shocking conclusion: the NREL map that Pattern submitted with its application “has been altered to remove longitude lines and Interstate 8 as a point of reference…GPS coordinates do not lie.” But Pattern did lie, Pate contends.  “GPS confirms that contrary to Pattern’s statement in this federal financing proposal, none of the project boundary is where wind speeds achieve “excellent” and above classifications.”

According to the maps Pate provided, Pattern’s application for certification and financing falsely indicated that the project would be located 3,000 feet higher in elevation and substantially further west than where it was actually built.  Pattern’s mapping (click to see enlarged copy of map, right) would have placed the project atop the Mountain Springs grade at Boulder Park, where the Desert View Tower in Jacumba is located –a place known for his strong winds—and a place off-limit to development due to bighorn sheep habitat and other factors.

Moreover, Pate  noted, the Record of Decision approving the project lists blade diameters that were never included when the project was built. “Complete bait and switch,” he said.

He called for the loan proposal to be rejected   “because Pattern has materially misrepresented the wind resources for the project.”

Pate wasn’t the only one to alert the NADB.

Edie Harmon, a biologist, wrote in her comments to the NADB, that a review of San Diego-Imperial Counties at the NREL website revealed that, “Indeed, the project area for Ocotillo wind is not even mentioned as one of the places with records of high wind potential at  . Similarly, a review of the Wind Atlas map for southern California suggests that the site for the Ocotillo Wind Energy Project is not a good wind resource. ,” she wrote.

Harmon added, “Because I could not locate the source of any map for Southern California which looks anything like the overlay on BECC Figure 6, I conclude that the NREL maps are more likely to be an accurate assessment of wind resource potential. Failure of the OWEF EIS/EIR to provide the results of any wind speed data at the site should raise considerable concerns with the BECC staff about a potential recipient of a NADB loan.”

Many similar complaints were made to elected officials in Congress and to the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), but the project was built anyhow atop 12,000 acres of publicly owned BLM land.

Before construction, residents were so confident that the area lacked winds that they staged a public kite-flying contest and invited the media, offering cash prizes for any child who could fly a kite for at least one minute. None could.

Since construction, Pelley has taken videos nearly every day documenting in almost all cases, turbines not moving, or barely moving due to no or low winds far below what a viable project would need. View sample videos.   Also read about serious questions about wind production vs. claims around the world and at Ocotillo raised in our January 2013 special report, Where is the Wind?

Another possible red flag suggesting Pattern has something to hide occurred when Pelley and Ewing videotaped Ocotillo’s wind project manager giving a tour at the project on public land.  Asked how many homes the project would power, he gave a figure that was one-tenth the number Pattern had promised the federal government the project would power.  The manager, Russell Graham, later threatened both photographers with violence and physically attacked Ewing, attempting to take his camera as he demanded the video be taken offline. Ewing recorded the exchange on his camera as Graham threatened to “kick a hole in your f***ing throat.”

A judge later issued restraining orders against Graham to protect both photographers. Graham claimed in court that he made a mistake on the wind production remark. So why didn’t he simply ask to have his statement /explanation added to the photographer’s story, which was published on ECM?

Edi Harmon, a biologist and Ocotillo resident, wants to know if Pattern misled the government and is upset that records on wind tests are kept secret.

If this was not fraud, she asks, “What is the alternative explanation of why turbines are motionless ghosts so much of the time?  I wonder if ratepayers and investors in SDG&E might be having similar questions and awaiting answers.”

Warnings ignored by elected officials

Consultant John Kennedy says the FERC findings on poor energy output in Ocotillo demonstrate that Boccard’s predictions were accurate and Pattern’s were wrong.  “The Boccard report serves as a big `We told you so’ and all the while, local Congressmen had the Boccard report and sat on their hands,” he concluded.

Robert Scheid, vice president of community and public relations at Viejas, observed, “It was frustrating to all of us that it [the Boccard report] didn’t blow things wide open. It’s been a tough battle.”

“We were hoping that our legislators, both Democratic and Republican, would pick up on this and realize that this is a great example of what not to do with people’s tax funds and our stimulus dollars,” Weiner told ECM. “We have a wind project that’s not producing wind.”

The DPC wanted to release the Boccard report immediately, but after consulting with other stakeholders, decided to wait in hopes that their Congressional members would agree to hold a joint press conference to expose what increasingly looked like a taxpayer-funded boondoggle, Weiner told ECM.

Despite the Boccard report bearing out this forecast, however, officials largely ignored such concerns and one official, Congressman Darrell Issa, led residents and tribal representative to believe his House Oversight Committee would take action, but dropped the ball entirely.

Members of the coalition opposed to the Ocotillo project met with Congressman Issa’s staffer, John Franklin in August 2012, Kennedy confirmed. “He said he needed more than our interpretation of the data to set up a meeting with the Congressman. It was at that point we contracted with Dr. Boccard to do the study. The study was completed in October 2012 and forwarded to John Franklin immediately.”

At all of the meetings, Kennedy emphasized “We asked the same question. How can Pattern Energy achieve an above average capacity factor with the sub-standard winds in Ocotillo?” He elaborated, “If the average of all the projects in the U.S. for the last 40 years is only 24%, how can Ocotillo generate significantly higher capacity factor with a below average wind resource?”

But three months passed, and nothing was done. A string of emails from Issa’s office to concerned citizens revealed repeated promises of a full investigation, but we could find no evidence that any such investigation was ever done. Our pointed request to Issa, including asking if defrauding taxpayers should be a matter his committee should investigate, never received a response.

The project opened in December 2012. Congressman Issa declined to meet with his concerned constituents until January 2013, at which time he said his staff needed to vet Dr. Boccard’s finding. “We have been waiting for 12 months for any word from his office,” Kennedy said.  ECM contacted several  Issa staffers with a detailed list of questions, but did not receive any response.

The group also asked  then-Congressman Bob Filner and later, Congressman Juan Vargas to ask the U.S. Treasury Department to withhold all stimulus funds pending an investigation into the wind speed claims. “To date, there has been a deafening silence,” Kennedy said.

Rep. Filner, before stepping down from Congress to become Mayor of San Diego, did send a letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geitner asking that the funds be withheld. Written shortly after the Solyndra scandal over a failed solar company in which the government had invested taxpayer funds, Filner’s letter included this hand-written note in the margin: “Mr. Secretary–this could be another embarrassment for the Administration.”  A Treasury official, Richard Gregg, wrote back to Filner indicated the agency would look into the matter. The letter said payment is required to any applicant meeting statutory criteria, but that a review of the application would be conducted as in all applications to determine if eligibility criteria had been met.  Geitner subsequently has been replaced as Treasury Secretary.

ECM sent a public records request to the Treasury Department asking to see results of its “review.”  We received hundreds of pages in response, with more than a thousand pages more withheld on various grounds including proprietary data.  However all the key portions that might have proved informative had been redacted, or blacked out. The agency also refused  to turn over any correspondence with Pattern, members of Congress, or the White House.

Viejas Chairman Anthony Pico, along with Kennedy, met with Aaron Allen, a staffer for Congressman Juan Vargas, who replaced Filner.  A Vargas staffer read a statement on behalf of the Congressman into the record at a California Native American Heritage Commission (NAHC) hearing in San Diego. Vargas supported Viejas’ request, granted by the NAHC, to declare Ocotillo a scared cemetery and chastised the BLM for building atop a site that tribes had testified repeatedly to federal and local agencies had been a burial site for over 10,000 years.  The NAHC Chairman indicated he believed the Ocotillo project should be torn down for desecrating Native American cultural resource sites that should have been protected under federal and state law.

Chairman Pico said, “It was heartbreaking to see this project desecrate such a historically and culturally significant landscape, and it’s even worse when you find out that it was built on false claims by the developer, and with the assistance of the BLM. We absolutely support renewable energy but the costs of this project clearly outweighed the benefits. It’s a travesty, not only to Native Americans but to all area residents and taxpayers.”

Vargas office did not initially respond to constituents’ requests for help to stop taxpayer funding of what increasingly appeared to be a boondoggle project in Ocotillo.   Last June, in a meeting with Vargas staffer Jason Moore in Chula Vista, Kennedy recalled, “He already had seen the Boccard report or was aware of it because it had been given to the Congressman at the Chairman Pico meeting.  We discussed fully all of the issues.” He  was referred  to Vargas’ El Centro office and further, advised that  since the project was now operational, this was a state issue (despite being a federally funded project on federal land) and referred them to State Senator Ben Hueso.

“We met with Ben Hueso on October 18, 2013,” said Ocotillo resident Parke Ewing. But Hueso’s office took no actions.

Our initial request for records of correspondence to Vargas office was rejected because Congress has exempted itself from the Freedom of Information Act.  However, at a meeting with constituents of the Congressmen at his Imperial Valley office, a Vargas staffer ,  Rebecca Terrazas Baxter, did obtain FERC data on wind records that had been unavailable previously despite repeated requests from FERC.

After ECM forwarded analysis of the wind data for Ocotillo’s first year, along with other documentation such as the claims of map falsification and more, we received a response from Dianna Zamora in Rep. Vargas’ office in Washington D.C. on March 1, 2014.

“I would like to thank you and our constituents, as it is clear that you did your due diligence,” she stated. The Congressman takes any accusations of impropriety or fraud very seriously. He has reached out to the Department of Energy to share with them the information you have provided.”  She added that Vargas has asked the best method for evaluating the information to “determine if any wrongdoing has occurred,” she added, promising to get back to us “as soon as we hear details of the Department’s evaluation.”  Two months later, we have not received a response.

Congresswoman Susan Davis’ office also made efforts to obtain the FERC records on our behalf, questioning whether FERC’s delays in providing data may have violated federal law.

We also reached out to Senator Barbara Boxer’s office with a detailed list of concerns and requests, since Senator Boxer chairs the Senate Environmental committee. Her staff referred our request to the committee, which in turn passed the buck back to her office.  Neither ever responded to our requests, other than to refer us to Matt Weiner, legislative director for Rep. Henry Waxman, to assist us in getting wind speed data. He didn’t.

In each of our inquiries to officials – Issa, Vargas, Davis, and Boxer, we attached the Boccard report, Filner’s letter, additional documentation and asked how many other “green” projects might be similarly questionable or even fraudulent.

Nor is this the only indication of misleading claims made by Pattern.  ECM has previously documented dubious claims made about earthquake seismic safety, distances from homes and earthquake faults, avian radar,  health, safety and jobs, and wildlife issues at a project that has also been linked to Dust Bowl-scale dust storms and pollution of Ocotillo waterways and residential areas with a flammable dust suppression chemical.

The company also drew criticism from multiple Native American tribes for desecrating sacred sites and burial grounds.  In addition, the project also destroyed groves of century-old Ocotillo plants for which the town was named, as this video and the photo (right) shows.

Follow the Money

Why didn’t public officials do more to prevent taxpayer dollars from being squandered on a wind project that appears to lack adequate wind resources?

We don’t know.  What we can tell you, however, is that officials in both parties have taken substantial sums of money in campaign contributions from vested special interests including energy companies, utilities, and labor unions that all backed construction of the Ocotillo wind project.

According to Open Secrets, Rep. Issa’s top 20 contributors in 2009/2010 included Leidos Engineering (formerly SAIC). Leidos, which has wind projects, contributed $20,000 to Issa and its executives or employees donated another $9,600 for a total of $29,600.  In 2011/2012, Leidos and its representatives gave even more–$41,150 –to Issa.  Issa had other energy industry donations including oil companies; Carlyle Group, Pattern’s parent corporation, also has oil interests. Carlyle was also a major donor to the Republican National Committee, giving $35,000.

Rep. Vargas received $52,000 in his 2012 campaign for the state legislature from the building trades union, which supports wind project construction to create jobs. His second highest contribution in his  2014 Congressional race was the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, which backs construction of  industrial wind projects and power lines.

State Senator Hueso received $8,000 from Sempra Energy and $28,200 from electric utilities, as well as $175,300 from general trade unions.

Responses and reactions

We asked SDG&E to review the Boccard report and respond.  Jennifer Ramp replied that SDG&E is not in a position to comment or critique validity of the Boccard report.  As for whether SDG&E is disappointed in the first year energy production levels, or might consider cancelling its power purchase agreement for the project, she said, “It would be imprudent to review the first year of operation to make assumptions as to the longer term viability of any project.”

Could ratepayers be stuck with a higher bill? Not according to Ramp. “SDG&E only pays a developer for the amount of energy actually produced. In the event that the amount of energy falls short of initial expectations in any year, then SDG&E’s customers are protected.”

Perhaps.  But if a project repeatedly fails to produce the power promised, where will replacement power come from?  Building additional power plants, power lines and substations are costs that in part have historically flowed back to ratepayers to absorb.

Ramp added that SDG&E had to comply with state law requiring it to meet renewable portfolio obligations.  She said Pattern placed successful bids and received all required state and federal approvals to construct the project. In addition, SDG&E’s contracts were reviewed and approved by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) as being “in the best interest of SDG&E’s customers,” Ramp stated.

Terrie Prosper, director of news and information at the CPUC, told ECM, “The contract terms are based on the electricity actually produced, so if the facility is underperforming, ratepayers pay less.  The risk of underperformance is on the developer and not SGD&E ratepayers.”

But federal tax subsidies are coming directly out of taxpayers’ pockets—and not just for construction.  Wind projects reap subsidies for years or even decades on each wind turbine—and Ocotillo has 112. This amounts to many millions of dollars per project. Moreover, KCET reported that the IRS recently revealed that many energy companies have been illegally double-dipping, taking both stimulus funds and wind production tax credits—but that the agency has no mechanism to check and find out how many companies may have engaged in this form of theft from taxpayers.  ECM has asked the IRS whether Pattern Energy was among companies found double-dipping in an initial check, but has not yet received a response.

Greener options

The Washington Post recently ran an editorial calling for an end to wind production tax credits, noting that the credits have been renewed repeatedly “with a cockroach-like resilience” despite evidence of what the Post calls a “boondoggle” as “industries develop to chase federal handouts.”   The Post calls for a simple, transparent tax on carbon credits instead.

Others, including the DPC, favor shifting tax credits to homeowners and business owners to install  solar on rooftops (distributed generation with power produced near where it is used instead of remote industrialization of public lands). Rooftop solar increasingly is being shown to be available at lower cost than wind projects and with far fewer negative impacts on the environment, wildlife, public health and safety.

Ironically, utilities are required to produce 33% of their power from renewable sources by 2030 in California—but due to utility lobbying, state law does not allow utilities to even consider rooftop solar as alternatives to utility-scale projects such as Ocotillo wind. Utilities make money charging back costs to ratepayers for every mile of transmission lines, so remote projects are far more profitable for utilities such as Sempra Energy, owner of SDG&E.

Utilities also support construction of backup gas-fired “peaker” power plants such as Quail Brush proposed near Mission Trails Regional Park for when the wind doesn’t blow, which in Ocotillo is the vast majority of the time.  Cogentrix, applicant for the Quail Brush project, is owned by the Carlyle Group—the same company that owns Pattern Energy, developer of Ocotillo wind. Carlyle’s 2009 Annual Report confirms that Carlyle founded Pattern Energy.   Riverstone Holdings, parent of Pattern Energy, formed  a joint venture partner of the Carlyle Report, Bloomberg News reported.

Thus if the Quail Brush gas plant  is approved by the CPUC, Carylye would be poised to make money regardless of whether Ocotillo produces significant power or not.

For area residents, tribes, and environmentalists, destruction of the Ocotillo desert now seems not only heartbreaking, but senseless.

Tom Budlong, an outdoor enthusiast recently met with a Bureau of Land Management representative at a community meeting and asked why data on a project built on public land was kept secret from the public.  If it had been made public, he concluded, “It might have revealed that the wind resources here were indeed insufficient.”

After discovering that the project is generating electricity at only half the capacity factor of a well-sited wind energy facility, he lamented that while Pattern pocketed profits off tax subsidies,  “A lot of very good land got chewed up. Added together, it is all a farce.”

Miriam Raftery is a national award-winning journalism who has won more than 200 major journalism prizes, including top honors from the Society of Professional Journalists in San Diego and the San Diego Press Club, for her investigative reporting on issues involving the Ocotillo Wind Energy Facility. She is the editor and founder of East County Magazine, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media outlet which has won over 58 awards.  You can help support independent reporting in the public interest by donating online atwww.EastCountyMagazine.org

Ontario Chamber of Commerce discusses the Liberals 2014 budget….

Ontario Budget 2014: What Businesses Needs to Know

Today, the Government of Ontario tabled its 2014 Budget. What follows is a summary of the key highlights from a business perspective.

On the whole, this is a ‘two-steps back’ budget for Ontario businesses. The budget does little to address Ontario’s most significant problem: its runaway debt and deficit.


Spending, deficit, and debt are going up.

This budget increases government spending by $3 billion, from $127 billion in 2013-14 to $130 billion in 2014-15.

The deficit will grow from $11.3 billion to $12.5 billion over the same period. Meanwhile, Ontario’s overall debt will grow to $289.3 billion by end of 2014-15 and $317.2 billion by the end 2016-17. The province’s debt-to-GDP ratio will grow to an alarming 40.3 percent in 2014-15.

Servicing the debt will cost $11 billion in 2014-15, approximately $3 billion more than government spends on colleges and universities.

The budget includes an annual program review savings target of $250 million for 2014-15 and $500 million for each of the subsequent two years.

OCC Analysis

Ontario requires a robust plan to reduce spending and tackle the debt. Controlling spending in an effort to reduce the deficit and debt is a top priority for the OCC and the number one means by which Ontario can guarantee its long-term prosperity.

This budget falls short on the pace of deficit and debt reduction. The annual program review targets are too modest. For the OCC’s vision for a smarter, more efficient government, see Unlocking the Public Service Economy in Ontario.


Ontario is introducing a new pension plan, but at what price?

The government plans to establish the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan (ORPP) in 2017. The new pension plan will coincide with expected reductions in Employment Insurance premiums. Employers and employees will each contribute 1.9 percent of wages to a maximum of $90,000. These premiums would be in addition to existing Canada Pension Plan (CPP) contributions.

The government will also introduce legislation on Pooled Registered Pension Plans (PRPPs) in 2014. PRPPs are a new form of tax-assisted individual retirement savings plan for workers without employer-sponsored pension plans.

OCC Analysis

According to an OCC survey, 72 percent of members feel that pension reform should be a provincial priority. Eighty-six percent of members support PRPPs.

The OCC does not support a stand-alone Ontario pension plan, as the plan will create administrative duplication with the CPP, further fragment Canada’s pension landscape, and potentially deter job creation.

Only 23 percent of those surveyed said they could afford additional employer premiums. Seerecent OCC economic analysis projects that the Ring of Fire will contribute up to $9.4 billion to Ontario’s Gross Domestic Product and sustain over 5,000 jobs annually over the first 10 years of its development. In the analysis, it is estimated that government will receive between $1.8 and $1.95 billion in revenue in the first 10 years of Ring of Fire development, and up to $6.7 billion over the first 32 years.

The federal government has a history of investing in large transformational economic development projects (e.g. Alberta’s oil sands and Churchill Falls in Newfoundland and Labrador). The federal government should match the province’s commitment.


The government is dedicating revenue for transit and transportation infrastructure.

The Government of Ontario is dedicating $29 billion in funding over the next 10 years to public transit and transportation infrastructure projects. The money will come from new sources (including a 148 percent increase in the provincial aviation fuel tax over the next 4 years) and repurposed revenues from the HST on gasoline and road diesel.

OCC Analysis

Improving transit and transportation in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area is a priority for the OCC. The OCC is disappointed that the government has not looked to reducing costs to help fund any new government spending.


Some taxes are going up.

The government is raising some taxes, including tobacco taxes (up 1.5 cents per cigarette), personal income taxes (a 1-point increase for those who earn between $150,000 and $220,000 annually, and a 2-point increase on those who earn between $220,000 and $514,000 annually), and aviation fuel taxes (148 percent increase in the provincial aviation fuel tax over the next 4 years).

Further, government will no longer allow larger businesses to use the Small Business Deduction (SBD). The SBD reduces the general corporate income tax rate from 11.5 percent to 4.5 percent on the first $500,000 of income.

OCC Analysis

Any measures that diminish the province’s tax competitiveness will hurt job creation and detract from investment. For example, the government’s plan to more than double the provincial aviation fuel tax will increase the cost of flying domestically and internationally. Fuel is already airlines’ biggest cost, and Canada already loses nearly 5 million passengers to American airports every year.


The government is creating a $2.5 billion fund to attract investment to Ontario.

The government is creating a 10-year, $2.5 billion Jobs and Prosperity Fund aimed at attracting business investment to Ontario. The fund will be used to secure investments that will create jobs in Ontario and/or improve the province’s productivity and export performance.

OCC Analysis

Ontario must focus its efforts on the overall business climate, including lowering energy prices and holding the line on payroll taxes.


The province will impose registration and licensing requirements on road-building machines that use public roads and highways.

Road-building machines, including mobile cranes, hydrovacs, and concrete pumpers, are currently allowed to use tax-exempt diesel fuel in unlicensed commercial vehicles. The government will end this exemption and dedicate the revenues to public transit and transportation infrastructure.

OCC Analysis

The OCC will consult with its members to further understand the impact of these changes.


Ontario is moving forward with sector-based strategies in an effort to capitalize on the province’s competitive advantages.

The province is partnering with industry and, in some cases, providing new funding to boost growth in key industries, including Information and Communications Technology, Manufacturing, and Agri-Food.

OCC Analysis

The OCC is pleased to see the government taking a sector-based approach to economic development. The OCC’s economic agenda for Ontario, Emerging Stronger, calls on government to support the province’s competitive advantages.

 

Aussie Federal Treasurer finds Wind Turbines….”Utterly offensive”!

Joe Hockey says wind turbines ‘utterly offensive’, flags budget cuts to clean

energy schemes

Wind turbines at Capital wind farm stand next to Lake George near Canberra.

Federal Treasurer Joe Hockey says he finds wind turbines “utterly offensive”, but is powerless to close down the ones operating outside Canberra.

Speaking to Macquarie Radio, Mr Hockey was being asked about whether the Government would target clean energy programs in its quest for massive spending cuts.

“Well, they say get rid of the clean energy regulator, and we are,” he said.

He then mounted an attack on wind farms, specifically the wind turbines operating outside the national capital.

“If I can be a little indulgent please, I drive to Canberra to go to Parliament, I drive myself and I must say I find those wind turbines around Lake George to be utterly offensive,” he said.

“I think they’re just a blight on the landscape.”

Asked if he would cut Government subsidies to wind farms, in line with the Government’s stance on corporate welfare, Mr Hockey said he could not stop the Bungendore wind turbines from spinning.

“We can’t knock those ones off because they’re into locked-in schemes and there is a certain contractual obligation I’m told associated with those things,” he said.

But Mr Hockey hinted new climate and green energy schemes could be on the chopping block come budget night.

“You will see in the budget that we have addressed the massive duplication that you have just talked about and the vast number of agencies that are involved doing the same thing,” he said.

“We are addressing that in the budget, [and] we are considering that very carefully.”