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4 Major U.S. Projects Get Federal Approval

By Renewable Energy World Editors
July 20, 2011   |   5 Comments

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5 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 5
July 22, 2011
Kudos' to those companies and those States that won the DOE lottery....

To bad we have a Crook for a Governor now here in Florida that has reneged on almost every campaign promises made....OOpps that right he is a Crook (largest Federal Fraud case of its type in History this was his Company) ...OH, My, My how stupid of the voting public of Florida for having believed in a Lying CROOK....
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Comment
2 of 5
Anonymous
July 22, 2011
Very interesting. Particularly, in order to provide the cleanest energy known to man, all of these guys have to kick in some environmental projects. This is nothing more than an environmental tax on a clean energy source. Other energy producers, coal in the mid-west for instance, have constructed facilities and transmission corridors on BLM lands without any such environmental taxation being imposed.
The justification that this somehow mitigates impact on so-called unspoiled desert land doesn't hold water unless you impose the same restrictions on oil and gas exploration and development, urban sprawl, and those idiots on ATVs that have made a mockery of the 'unspoiled' descriptor. Why not put an envirotax on every ATV sold in the US southwest to mitigate the damage they do (say $1 per mile)?
Comment
3 of 5
July 23, 2011
What a horrible decision!! Solar needs to go on the rooftops of citizens to get out from underneath the greedy clutches of energy monopolies and banksters. After the initial investment Americans would pay nothing for energy coming from our sun. What a ripoff!.
Get rooftop solar units on the roofs of low income, senior and those with disabilities. Get the corporate welfare scroungers out of the picture. No overhead, profit or transmission costs need to be passed on to American citizens.
Don't give a man a fish -teach him how to fish! Let the extra $400-$500 a month generated by rooftop solar go to the people who need the financial benefit. Who's sun is it anyways??
Comment
4 of 5
July 23, 2011
Hear hear to the comment from anonymous, add power boats and other such luxury polluters to that as well. Renewable energy means jobs, for something we need anyway. If the hands of the investors are tied, they're less likely to make those investments, and our nation plumets further into the abyss of debt and dispair. When people have jobs they are more likely able to give to funding environmental projects for nature preserves and the like. Without jobs they are more taxing to government programs, thus closing other programs that would help people, and the environment.
Comment
5 of 5
July 25, 2011
Electric38 - the sun belongs to everyone, even industrialists. The US needs solar and wind power in any form they can get it. In Europe, 25% of new peak capacity was solar and 16% was wind in 2010. The US is an order of magnitude in the rear. Any commitment to these sources at this point is a good thing. In any case, BLM would have egg on its face if it denied transmission lines for solar and wind in light of the volume of land use grants for coal and natural gas power.
Note: in these cases, the actual land being used is private land - unless basic freedoms in the US have been revoked, entrpreneurs should be able to develop their own land as they see fit.
While rooftop solar has a place and should be persued, the economic and regulatory environment in the US works against it. The use of SRECs and tax credits as incentives means that only operating companies can make maximum use of the incentives and that implies utility scale projects. Also, the cost and complexity of permitting makes small scale rooftop much more expensive and can act as a deterent (not always unintentionally). You've also got to consider the impact of zoning bylaws that adversely affect deployment of rooftop solar and back yard wind.
In any case, I'm not sure why solar gets 'special' consideration / discrimination: to be fair, why not rooftop coal?
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