Obama Pissing Our Money Away On Defunct Solar Strategies: No
More Solyndras Act!
October
17, 2012 0 Comments
Waltham, Massachusetts battery company A123 is bankrupt. A123 which makes batteries for electric vehicles, was awarded a $249 million federal grant which does not need to be repaid as would a loan.
The filing may fuel a debate over
government financing of alternative-energy and transportation businesses.
Federal grants and loans to companies including A123, Fisker Automotive Inc.
and Tesla Motors Inc. (TSLA) have drawn scrutiny
from congressional Republicans following the September 2011 bankruptcy filing
of solar-panel maker Solyndra LLC two years
after it received a $535 million loan guarantee from the U.S. Energy
Department. Bloomberg
1. No More Solyndras Act
The A123 bankruptcy follows in the
wake of a host of green energy bankruptcies. Shouldn’t we learn from Solyndra, Evergreen Solar, Q-Cells and the rest?
Solyndra’s executives took the fifth, but we
don’t think they missed any meals. Green energy profiteers get rich and leave
workers and taxpayers to share the pain.
cFact
cFact
The Green Graveyard of
Taxpayer-Funded Failures!
Solar-cell manufacturer Solyndra became a household name
when it collapsed, taking $627 million in American taxpayer dollars with it.
It’s the poster company for the government picking winners and losers—or
really, just losers—in the energy market. But there are 12 more “green energy”
losers that have declared bankruptcy despite attempts to prop them up with
taxpayer money—and the list is growing.
There’s a reason why these companies could not rely solely on private financing and needed help from the government. They couldn’t make it on their own; they couldn’t even make it with extra taxpayer help.
These green government “investments” take from one (by taxing or borrowing) and give to another, but they merely move money around. They do not create jobs. They send labor and resources to areas of the economy where they are wasted. Proponents of special financing and tax credits for solar companies claim that these benefits will pay for themselves down the line—but when the companies receiving them are going bankrupt, that is highly unlikely.
Kate Adams, a member of Heritage’s Young Leaders Program, and Heritage’s Rachael Slobodien compiled a list of the 12 members of the Green Graveyard—companies that received taxpayer money for green initiatives yet have filed for bankruptcy.
There’s a reason why these companies could not rely solely on private financing and needed help from the government. They couldn’t make it on their own; they couldn’t even make it with extra taxpayer help.
These green government “investments” take from one (by taxing or borrowing) and give to another, but they merely move money around. They do not create jobs. They send labor and resources to areas of the economy where they are wasted. Proponents of special financing and tax credits for solar companies claim that these benefits will pay for themselves down the line—but when the companies receiving them are going bankrupt, that is highly unlikely.
Kate Adams, a member of Heritage’s Young Leaders Program, and Heritage’s Rachael Slobodien compiled a list of the 12 members of the Green Graveyard—companies that received taxpayer money for green initiatives yet have filed for bankruptcy.
- Abound
Solar (Loveland, Colorado), manufacturer of thin film photovoltaic
modules.
- Beacon
Power (Tyngsborough, Massachusetts), designed
and developed advanced products and services to support stable, reliable
and efficient electricity grid operation.
- Ener1
(Indianapolis, Indiana), built compact lithium-ion-powered battery solutions
for hybrid and electric cars.
- Energy
Conversion Devices (Rochester Hills, Michigan/Auburn Hills, Michigan),
manufacturer of flexible thin film photovoltaic (PV) technology and a
producer of batteries and other renewable energy-related products.
- Evergreen Solar, Inc.
(Marlborough, Massachusetts), manufactured and installed solar panels.
- Mountain
Plaza, Inc. (Dandridge,
Tennessee), designed and implemented “truck-stop
electrification” technology.
- Olsen’s
Crop Service and Olsens Mills Acquisition Co. (Berlin, Wisconsin), a
private company producing ethanol.
- Range
Fuels (Soperton,
Georgia), tried to develop a technology that converted biomass
into ethanol without the use of enzymes.
- Raser
Technologies (Provo, Utah), geothermal power plants and technology
licensing.
- Solyndra
(Fremont, California), manufacturer of cylindrical panels of thin-film
solar cells.
- Spectrawatt
(Hopewell,
New York), solar cell manufacturer.
- Thompson
River Power LLC (Wayzata, Minnesota), designed and developed advanced
products and services to support stable, reliable and efficient
electricity grid operation.
Some lawmakers are looking for a
solution. The aptly named No More Solyndras Act would prohibit any new
loan guarantees from Title XVII of the Energy Policy Act
of 2005.
As Heritage’s Nicolas Loris wrote,
As Heritage’s Nicolas Loris wrote,
Republicans and Democrats alike need
to end their addiction to energy subsidies, or we’re going to continue down the
same failed path of wasteful spending…We don’t need to fix the energy subsidy
programs. We need to abolish them.
President Obama said in 2010 that “the true engine of economic growth will always be
companies like Solyndra.” He couldn’t be more wrong. Companies that
are innovating and creating real value for consumers are the engine of economic
growth, and they’re doing it without millions in taxpayer funding.
Quick Hits:
Quick Hits:
- This
year is the fifth straight fiscal year “in which the federal government
has increased its debt by more than a trillion dollars,”
reports CNSNews.com.
- Sally Ride, the
first American woman in space and a trained scientist who helped develop
the space shuttle’s robotic arm, has passed away at 61.
- “Moody’s
lowered the outlook to negative for the AAA credit
ratings of Germany, the Netherlands and Luxembourg,” reports Bloomberg.
- More
U.K. military personnel are deployed in some capacity at the London Olympicsthan
in Afghanistan, reports the AP.
- Most
American commentary about the U.N. Arms Trade Treaty has focused on the
Second Amendment, but Heritage’s Ted Bromund goes further and explains the treaty’s five fundamental flaws.
Related articles
- WSJ: Taxpayers Will Lose Twice
if Bankruptcy Court Allows Solyndra Insiders to Harvest $975m of NOLs
(taxprof.typepad.com)
- And The Massive, Obama-Funded,
Green Energy Failures Just Keep Coming
(thedaleygator.wordpress.com)
- Electric Car Battery Maker
A123 Systems Files Bankruptcy – Businessweek (businessweek.com)
- Another Obama Success in
Spending Your Money – $259 Million Dollars Out the Window a 123 Battery
Fies for Bankruptcy (itmakessenseblog.com)
- US-funded battery maker files
for bankruptcy – USA TODAY (usatoday.com)
- Obama’s Green Stimulus Under
Scrutiny After Battery Maker Bankruptcy (huffingtonpost.com)
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