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Solar power: The Nevada Solar One thermal solar plant in Boulder City, Nev., generates 64 megawatts of power.
andy nelson/STAFF/file
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Wind, solar tax
credits to expire
Green Energy Advocates
urge sustained support through inclusion in stimulus package.
By Mark Clayton | Staff
writer of The Christian Science Monitor
BOSTON - With a big new solar power plant
in the Nevada desert and thousands of wind turbines sprouting
nationwide, US renewable energy seems poised for a boom as long as
federal tax credits don't suddenly evaporate.
After years of start-and-stop growth,
wind-and solar- power industries soared in 2007, thanks to three
consecutive years of tax credits that provided a critical lift for
both sectors.
But whether the fledgling industries can fly
without tax credits, due to expire at the end of this year, is a
question being debated on Capitol Hill this week.
As demand grows for a stimulus package for
the faltering US economy, green-energy advocates argue that wind and
solar – both left out of the new energy law passed last month –
should be part of the package.
"The wind and solar investment project
decisions made in this quarter will be halted without these critical
tax credits," says Anna Aurilio, federal legislative director for US
Public Interest Research Group in Washington. "It would be a tragedy
to bypass industries that are going to meet US energy needs and
create jobs."

The 2005 energy bill provided exactly the
kind of multiyear support the wind industry says it needs. The
impact has been dramatic. Nearly one-third of all US power capacity
added last year – about 5,244 megawatts – was in wind. Overall
wind-generating capacity soared 45 percent last year, adding the
clean-energy equivalent of 10 large coal-fired power plants, the
American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) reported last week.
Wind power injected $9 billion into the US
economy and now employs 20,000 people directly, the industry says.
Plans for at least eight new US wind-power manufacturing plants
employing 5,000 workers were announced last year, AWEA officials
say.
"This is a critical time for extending the
production tax credit for wind," says Joshua Magee, research
director for wind energy at Emerging Energy Research, a Boston-based
research firm. "If we move into 2009 and it hasn't been extended,
new orders will shrink and it will be a major blow to these new US
[wind] manufacturing, investment, and jobs across many states."
Last year solar power, though far smaller
than wind, grew 43 percent, adding 110 megawatts of new capacity. At
least eight large solar-power projects – with capacity equal to six
large 500-megawatt coal-fired plants – are now in the development
pipeline. Manufacturing and jobs are part of the solar picture, too.
With such growth in view, Schott AG of Mainz,
Germany, last week announced plans to spend $100 million to build a
new solar-part production factory near Albuquerque, N.M. It will
initially employ 350 workers.
If the US market expands, the new Schott
factory could expand to employ as many as 1,500 people. But if tax
incentives aren't extended for several more years, the number of
jobs would probably be far smaller, company officials say.
"The tax credits definitely set a positive
environment for manufacturers like us to make long-term
investments," says Mark Finocchario, president of Schott Solar, the
US subsidiary headquartered in Roseville, Calif.
A one-year extension would help, he says. But
it's the proposal for an eight-year extension that would be a
long-term stimulus for jobs and investment.
The production tax credit, or PTC, now pays
utilities about 2 cents for every kilowatt of wind power they
produce over the first 10 years of a project's operation. Congress's
Joint Committee on Taxation estimated the cost to taxpayers at less
than $1 billion a year, AWEA officials say.
The solar investment tax credit, or ITC, if
extended for eight years would raise a cap on the tax credit for
residential installations from $2,000 to $4,000, and would allow
utilities to tap the credit, too. Total cost: about $800 million.
Together, today's tax breaks for wind and
solar cost taxpayers a little more than $1 billion annually.
Where to get the money to pay for the renewed
tax credits for solar and wind power has been difficult. Efforts to
wrap them into the new energy law foundered last month, in the face
of opposition from the White House and GOP senators.
In a press conference expected Tuesday,
environmental groups will push for the credits to be included in the
new stimulus package. If that fails, hope remains that the farm bill
or some other bill may rescue wind and solar before the year ends.
"This is good public policy that will produce
jobs and help the economy," says Randall Swisher, AWEA executive
director. "The question remains how Congress will get this done, but
I think they will. I hope so."
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