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Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘fossil fuel’

Erie Times E-Edition Article-Fossil fuel subsidies don’t pay off for Pennsylvanians

Posted by M. C. on February 26, 2021

Government shouldn’t subsidize anyone. Government messes up most everything it touches.

If consumers aren’t happy with price, product or delivery of anything the consumer should be free to go somewhere else, stimulating providers to either develop something new and better or fix what they have.

That is called free market.

Did I mention government shouldn’t subsidize anyone. Government messes up most everything it touches?

https://erietimes-pa-app.newsmemory.com/?publink=158714e9e

Budget hearings began this week in Harrisburg, a long process that will culminate with the passage of a new spending plan by the end of June.

The next several months will be filled with contentious hearings and verbal sparring as lawmakers grapple with a $3 billion budget deficit. While legislators will argue about individual line items, a much larger issue will be largely ignored — the massive amount of money being wasted on fossil fuel subsidies.

According to research conducted by PennFuture, the fossil fuel industry received $3.8 billion in subsidies for fiscal year 2019 alone, or about $296 per Pennsylvania resident. This makes Pennsylvania one of the largest corporate subsidizers in a country that is the second largest fossil fuel subsidizer in the world.

This industry harms public health, degrades the environment and destabilizes our climate as the people of Pennsylvania suffer very real costs. Instead of ensuring the fossil fuel industry pays for the damage it causes, the commonwealth has been more interested in helping corporate polluters generate as much profit as possible.

These subsidies distort our markets and make it harder for better, cleaner technologies to compete. At a time when we need to be transitioning to a clean energy economy to fight the climate crisis, these subsidies do the exact opposite by prolonging our dependence on polluting industries.

Of the $3.8 billion in fossil fuel subsidies, the fracked gas and petrochemical industry captured at least $2 billion, or 52%. Despite the continued pleas of those living nearest fracked gas and petrochemical development, more subsidies are added every year. Our subsidy problem is getting worse, not better.

The industry continues to claim that keeping the subsidies flowing will bring jobs and prosperity, but as a recent

report from the Ohio River Valley Institute shows, counties with significant oil and gas development are far below average in both job growth and personal income. Even the S&P 500 Energy Index has fallen more than 50% from its 2014 peak. This is the picture of an industry in decline.

As this decline continues, our families, schools and local governments wrestle with unprecedented challenges made worse by dirty industries that are given a free pass to drain our resources. Sustainable alternatives exist, but any attempt to invest in better choices is quickly attacked by the industry as the government ‘picking winners and losers.’

The damage doesn’t stop in the counties with fracked gas. Our report reveals an additional $11.1 billion in external costs, including drinking water contamination, infrastructure damage and health impacts like respiratory problems and cancers. That’s not to mention the greatest damages that come from methane pollution contributing to climate change.

Our legislators owe it to each and every Pennsylvanian to do better than this. PennFuture’s report details over 50 fossil fuel subsidies that have covertly wormed their way into Pennsylvania’s tax code and other rules and regulations.

After reviewing these harmful and unfair subsidies, we find our way forward with a package of key recommendations.

Perhaps most importantly: Pennsylvania’s fossil fuel subsidies are pernicious in part because they are buried out of sight and difficult to disentangle. To tackle this problem, we need to report and track these fossil fuel subsidies so that we can accurately understand the scope and nature of the problem at hand. While watchdog organizations like PennFuture are happy to bring sunlight to this problem, our state government should be providing this transparency. Even before achieving full transparency, however, there are a few things we can say for sure: Fossil fuel development and consumption is not sustaining our communities; it’s fueling their deterioration.

We ask that fossil fuel companies, for just once in their centuries-long existence, begin to pay the full price for consumption of limited natural resources, contribute their fair share to the state treasury, and prevent and mitigate their eroding impact on health and well-being, the environment and the climate.

These are commonsense solutions at a time we need them most. As budget season progresses, we will have our eyes on Harrisburg, hoping that our elected officials do the right thing.

Rob Altenburg is the director of the PennFuture Energy Center, and co-author of a new report that details fossil fuel subsidies in Pennsylvania.

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The Real Cost of Wind and Solar – American Thinker

Posted by M. C. on September 30, 2020

Adding wind or solar to a grid does not mean that existing fossil fuel plants can be retired. Often, neither wind nor solar is working and at those times a full complement of fossil fuel plants, or sometimes nuclear or hydro plants, must be available.

No utility would buy $80 renewable electricity to replace $15 fossil fuel electricity. A stand-alone, enterprise wind or solar plant would be a huge economic failure because there would be no market for overpriced electricity. The entire renewable electricity industry is actually a government boondoggle. Neither, is renewable electricity an economic method for reducing CO2 emissions as has been made clear by the most important proselytizers for global warming such as Climate Scientists for Nuclear.

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2020/09/the_real_cost_of_wind_and_solar.html

By Norman Rogers

The main problem with either wind or solar is that they generate electricity erratically, depending on the wind or sunshine. In contrast, a fossil-fuel plant can generate electricity predictably upon request. Blackouts are very expensive for society, so grid operators and designers go to a lot of trouble to make sure that blackouts are rare. The electrical grid should have spare capacity sufficient to meet the largest demand peaks even when some plants are out of commission.  Plants in spinning reserve status stand by ready to take over if a plant trips (breaks down). Injecting erratic electricity into the grid means that other plants have to seesaw output to balance the ups and downs of wind or solar.

Adding wind or solar to a grid does not mean that existing fossil fuel plants can be retired. Often, neither wind nor solar is working and at those times a full complement of fossil fuel plants, or sometimes nuclear or hydro plants, must be available. Both wind and solar have pronounced seasonality. During low output times, as for summer wind, the fossil-fuel plants are carrying more of the load. Of course, solar stops working as the sun sets.

Wind behaves erratically hour to hour. Even though the Texas 18,000-megawatt system has thousands of turbines spread over a wide area, the net output is erratic changing by thousands of megawatts in a single hour. These shifts must be balanced by fossil-fuel plants slewing their output up and down to compensate and keep load matched to generation.

Even very sunny southwest cities have 50 or more cloudy days per year, stopping or reducing solar generation. Wind turbines are very sensitive to wind speed. A 10% change in wind speed will change power output by 30%, amplifying the erratic nature of wind.

The big picture is that when wind or solar is added to a grid it is supplemental power. No coal or gas plants are eliminated. Those plants have to stay in place to handle periods when wind and solar are not producing electricity. This does not stop claims that wind or solar is replacing fossil fuel, but it is fuel that is replaced, not fossil-fuel plants. When wind or solar is producing, the fossil fuel plants are throttled back and they use less fuel. If, for example, a coal plant was closed when wind was added to the grid, the safety margin would be compromised.

Viewed from the effect on the economy, adding wind or solar electricity provides the benefit of reduced fuel consumption in backup fossil fuel plants. This saving in fuel amounts to about $15 per megawatt hour, the cost of natural gas to generate a megawatt hour of electricity.  The cost of coal is similar. The backup fossil-fuel plant still has to have its full staff and may have more costly maintenance due to the up-down style of operation forced by the introduction of erratic energy. If the renewable energy costs more than $15 per megawatt hour, then it is not competitive. Wind or solar power actually costs around $80 per megawatt hour.

How can I claim that wind or solar cost $80 when power purchase agreements at $25 per megawatt hour are often touted in the press? Even at $25 the wind or solar is far from competitive. The gap between $80 and $25 is accounted for by subsidies. The $10 difference between $25 and $15 is also a subsidy because the purchaser is paying $25 for the electricity that could be generated in a backup fossil fuel plant, that already exists and that must exist, for $15. What are the subsidies that lower the $80 cost to the publicized $25?

The biggest and most important subsidy is not an explicit subsidy but a mandate. Thirty states have renewable portfolio standards. These are laws that require the utilities to supply a certain percentage of renewable power. For example, California has a law that 60% of its power must be renewable by 2030. The consequence of the mandate is that the utility has to grant whatever terms are required to convince investors to build the renewable power plants. In practice this results in the utility promising to purchase all the power generated for 25 years at a fixed rate. The contract is signed before a shovel of dirt is moved. Forcing utilities to buy renewable power puts the suppliers of renewable power in an advantageous position. The subsidy that reduces the cost from $80 to $25 are federal explicit subsidies, better financing, and lower required rate of return that results from having a 25-year contract in hand from a credit worthy utility. There is a federal tax credit that pays up to 30% of the plants cost. Additionally, there is a tax subsidy called tax equity financing that allows a highly taxed partner to the investor to divert money from the federal treasury to the project. This subsidy depends on special depreciation rules enacted by congress to subsidize renewable energy.

Wind or solar does not use fuel. The cost of the electricity is mostly determined by the capital cost amortized over the life of the plant. That in turn depends on the interest rate or discount factor. That factor is dramatically better due to the 25-year contract. If you take away the subsidies, renewable electricity, wind or solar, will cost about $80 per megawatt hour. Such comparisons are still dubious because there are no unsubsidized, utility-scale wind or solar plants. No utility would buy $80 renewable electricity to replace $15 fossil fuel electricity. A stand-alone, enterprise wind or solar plant would be a huge economic failure because there would be no market for overpriced electricity. The entire renewable electricity industry is actually a government boondoggle. Neither, is renewable electricity an economic method for reducing CO2 emissions as has been made clear by the most important proselytizers for global warming such as Climate Scientists for Nuclear.

Norman Rogers write often about renewable energy. His Inconvenient Facts About Dumb Renewable Energy is here.

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