Washington, Dec. 17 - U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) and a
bipartisan group of senators today sent a letter to Senate Finance
Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and Ranking Member Orrin Hatch (R-Utah),
calling on them to let wind power “stand on its own” in the marketplace
by allowing the wind production tax credit to expire as required under
current law.
The bipartisan letter, led by Alexander and Senator Joe Manchin
(D-W.Va.), states that after more than 20 years and eight extensions, a
1992 tax credit originally intended to boost a fledgling technology is
now subsidizing a “mature technology,” wasting taxpayer money and
distorting energy markets by “picking winners and losers.” It requests
that the Finance Committee exclude the wind production tax credit –
which under current law will have provided $22 billion to wind producers
between 1992 and 2022 – from any legislation the committee may
consider.
The letter was signed by several members of the Senate Committee on
Energy and Natural Resources. Signatories include Senators Alexander,
Manchin, Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), Mike Lee (R-Utah),
Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), Tim Scott (R-S.C.), Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), Jim
Risch (R-Ida.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.)
“Congress is struggling to find $63 billion to spend in the budget
agreement, when all we have to do is get rid of the wasteful wind
production tax credit,” Alexander said. “For the next 10 years,
extending the tax credit one year at a time could cost $60 billion or
more. Using the wind production tax credit to pay for all or part of the
budget agreement would do this country more good than extending this
subsidy for expensive, low-quality wind electricity ever could.”
The senators write, “Our nation’s energy policy must make economic
sense for taxpayers and not manipulate markets. Continuation of the wind
PTC not only picks winners and losers, it is distorting our energy
markets and it's past time to end a temporary tax credit that was put
into law in 1992. After more than 20 years, and tens of billions of
tax-payer dollars, it’s time to let the wind PTC expire and continue to
invest in new technologies.”
In the letter, the senators call for the Finance Committee to let the
wind production tax credit expire as scheduled at the end of 2013 and
not consider any kind of extension, pointing out that wind producers
will continue to qualify for subsidies if the wind facility is placed in
service before Jan. 1, 2016. As it stands now, the wind production tax
credit will have given $22 billion to wind producers by 2022, according
to the most recent estimate from the Congressional Research Service.
That doesn’t include additional subsidies to wind as part of President
Obama’s federal stimulus bill, which total another $12.9 billion,
according to the U.S. Treasury.
The letter also describes how the wind production tax credit is
wasting taxpayer money on what the Obama administration has called a
“mature technology” while distorting energy markets, putting cheaper and
more reliable forms of energy, such as coal and nuclear, at a
competitive disadvantage.
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