Townhall
Finance
Death
by Renewables
by
Marita Noon
Dec
15, 2013
“Even
green projects have an impact on their surrounding environment.”
Green energy, specifically so-called renewables, has been sold to the
American public as the answer to a host of crimes against the planet.
But, as Lex Berko points out in her post on Motherboard, “even
green” has its downside. Biomass may be “renewable,” but
burning it releases CO2. Then, it’s expensive: “A 100%
renewable-energy mix from in-state sources could cost up to five
times more,” reports the Wall Street Journal (WSJ). And, energy
from wind and solar sources kills birds.
Wind
turbines chop up bald and golden eagles, and other endangered
species, like a Cuisinart—the taller turbines with longer blades
(which produce more energy, and, therefore, is where the trend is
heading) have a predicted annual ten-fold mortality increase. The
authors ofa new study on bird collision mortality at wind facilities
concludes: “Given that we found evidence for increased bird
mortality with increasing height of monopole turbines along with a
move toward increasing turbine size, we argue that wildlife collision
risk should be incorporated with energy efficiency considerations
when evaluating the ‘greenness’ of alternative wind energy
development options.” If the Department of Energy were to meet its
2030 goal of having 20 percent of the nation’s electricity
generated from wind, they project: “a mean annual mortality
estimate of roughly 1.4 million birds.”
Hundreds
of acres of photovoltaic solar panels confuse migratory water birds,
such as the “once-critically endangered brown pelican whose
lifestyle involves fishing by diving into open water,” to veer
miles out of their way to dive toward what they perceive are lakes or
wetlands—only to die from “blunt force trauma.” At the largest
solar thermal plant in the world, Ivanpah, owned by Brightsource
Energy, the 170,000 reflecting mirrors—designed to “superheat
liquid in boilers”—literally fries feathers. The USA Today
reports that the intense radiation—called solar flux—has singed
some birds, melted feathers, and denatured the protein in their wings
as they fly through the intense heat. Unable to fly, the injured
birds drop out of the sky and die.
The
federally Endangered Yuma clapper rail, the dramatic-looking
black-crowned night heron, double-crested cormorant, red-breasted
merganser, American coots, warblers, goldfinches, a common raven, and
a barn owl—just to name a few, may get a reprieve from being lured
to their death by solar power plants.
USA
Today references a “solar-industrial corridor” along I-10 in
Riverside County, California, which
was to have 80 percent of its 148,000 acres covered with solar panels
or mirrors. However, it reports: “Today, that seems unlikely.
Industry trends are toward smaller solar projects and the U.S.
Department of Energy’s (DOE) loan-guarantee program has ended.”
(Remember, last week, I reported on the crony corruption behind the
loan approval process for BrightSource’s Ivanpah project.)
Additionally, Friday, December 13, was unlucky for the solar
industry—but lucky for the birds. Giving official recognition of
the threat solar power tower projects pose to wildlife, The
California Energy Commission announced that it is “likely to deny
approval to a major Riverside County solar power project that has
been criticized for posing an unacceptable risk to birds and other
wildlife.”
The
bald and golden eagles aren’t so lucky. The Friday before, December
6, the Obama Administration announced an extension of the existing
five-year eagle take permit. Effective immediately, the new rule
issued by the Department of Interior (DOI) will grant 30-year permits
allowing wind farms to “accidently kill federally protected
eagles.” The “rule” is in direct violation of the Bald and
Golden Eagle Protection Act passed by Congress in 1940. Once again,
executive action trumps the law. The DOI decision prompted this
response from Mike Daulton, vice president of government relations
for the National Audubon Society: “This is going to lead to more
dead eagles—plain and simple.”
To
encourage Interior Secretary Jewell to reverse the decision, the
National Audubon Society has set up a direct email option with a
customizable letter to Secretary Jewell that states: “The 30-year
permit rule is a blank check for the wind industry and provides no
comfort or confidence at all that you will be protecting America’s
majestic Bald and Golden Eagles and safeguarding their populations.”
Like
the expiration of the DOE loan guarantee program has increased the
likelihood populations of migratory birds will survive death by
renewables, the pending expiration of the Production Tax Credit (PTC)
for wind energy could help the eagles and other raptors that are
attracted to the towering turbines.
A
December 12 WSJ editorial, Powering Down the Wind Subsidy, points
out, as the subtitle states: “How Congress can achieve something by
doing nothing.” The WSJ is encouraging Congress to “do nothing”
and allow the PTC to expire as scheduled on December 31—which would
save taxpayers $18 billion over the next five years. Expire it may,
as the current budget deal takes away last minute negotiations that
got it extended last year—but that doesn’t mean it is really
gone. The PTC has expired several times in its twenty-year history
and has always been extended retroactively—which is what we may be
facing this year. The WSJ states: “The wind lobby is now trying to
get the subsidy included in a January ‘tax extender’ package and
made retroactive.”
Senator
Ron Wyden (D-OR), Chairman of the Energy and Natural Resources
Committee, on December 13, for the first time hinted, according to
Politico.com, that he may push the Senate to consider a tax extenders
package. Wyden said: “If you didn't have tax reform and you didn't
have extenders, you’d do crushing damage to solar, wind and
renewables.” No mention was made of the “crushing damage” to
America’s migratory bird population or to the bald and golden
eagles...
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