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Wind Industry Fires Back, Calls for RES

By Jennifer Runyon, Managing Editor
March 9, 2010   |   3 Comments

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3 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 3
March 10, 2010
When will the political leaders in the USA ever finally figure out that a long term stable policy will attract foreign investments into component manufacturing?

The history of the PTC with its boom and bust cycles translating to making or breaking developers pipelines (and thus manufacturers orders) should be a clear enough indication as to why component manufacturing corporations see the States as a risky long term investment.

Policy creates markets. No long term policy, no long term manufacturing supply chain. Who missed risk management and macro-economics on Capital Hill?
Comment
2 of 3
March 10, 2010
Renewable energy standards are OK if they are met by feed-in tariffs for all renewable energy technologies - wind, solar, geothermal, biomass and small-hydro. Unfortunately, the wind industry has made a deal with the utility monopolies to support competitive bidding. Competitive bidding has generally been rigged by utilities to favor their own company, affiliates and friends, particularly their friends in the windpower industry. Bids can be rigged because utilities are allowed to opt out of bidding altogether and just build their own, bid only certain technologies, particularly windpower, and select higher cost bids through the use of subjective bidding criteria.
Comment
3 of 3
March 10, 2010
Schumer has the right idea but he's addressing it the wrong way. The bitch and moan from the wind industry is all about subsidies. So, instead demanding 100% American made wind projects to collect subsidies (which I can understand, if anything just to create jobs at home), place the subsidies in direct proportion of the project's cost in relation to materials and labor. If 65% of your project is materials made overseas, you only get 35% of potential subsidies. Something like that.
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Jennifer Runyon

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About: Jennifer Runyon is managing editor of RenewableEnergyWorld.com and Renewable Energy World North America magazine, coordinating, writing and/or editing columns, ... more »

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