Don't hit wind with job-killing tax hike

Cross-posted from National Journal's Energy & Environment Expert Blog.

Congress should extend the renewable energy production tax credit (PTC) before the end of this year. Here is why:

First, American manufacturing jobs are coming back, with tens of thousands of new jobs from wind power. But these jobs could vanish if Congress allows the credit to expire, in effect enacting a targeted tax increase, crippling an American manufacturing success story and sending our jobs to foreign countries. With a job-killing tax increase on the horizon and the PTC's future uncertain, businesses are hesitant to plan future US wind projects, American manufacturers have seen a drop in orders, and layoffs have already started.  For the purposes of the American wind industry manufacturing sector, which needs lead time to make its products, the PTC effectively expires at the end of this year.  To preserve tens of thousands of good-paying manufacturing jobs, the wind energy industry urgently needs Congress to take action to extend the PTC before the end of this calendar year.

Second, the PTC is a proven, effective tool to keep electricity rates low and encourage development of proven renewable energy projects. The past four years of stable tax policy demonstrate the economic security and energy diversity benefits that the wind industry can continue to provide in a stable policy environment.  During those four years, the wind industry has grown at an annual rate of 37 percent. Today, over 400 facilities across 43 states manufacture for the wind energy industry, and 60 percent of a wind turbine’s value is now produced here in America, compared to 25% prior to 2005. Also, the price of American wind power has dropped by over 90% since 1980, benefiting utilities and consumers, and more than $60 billion of investment has been made since 2005.

Third, the PTC directly impacts American wind energy investment and project development. The wind industry’s boom-and-bust cycle is evidence that the PTC affects project development.  When it has been allowed to expire in the past, installations have dropped between 73% and 93%, with corresponding job losses.

Finally, the PTC is a performance-based business tax credit that is supported on a bipartisan basis. It applies only to actual electricity produced from utility-scale wind turbines–a wind project developer does not receive the credit until the wind turbine actually generates power.  Because it is a business tax credit, funding is based solely on project performance, not evaluation by government officials. The PTC has been supported on a bipartisan basis in the past, and continues to receive support from both sides of the aisle.

For all of these reasons, Congress should extend the renewable energy Production Tax Credit now.

 

More reading:

 

Fact check: Pompeo and Labrador miss mark with subsidy bill, December 1, 2011
Selective Use of Energy Subsidies is Unfair (letter to editor, Washington Times), November 30, 2011
Red State Energy, Red State Jobs, November 29, 2011
Governors' letter urges prompt extension of wind tax incentive, November 16, 2011
Wind power: Keeping America's lunch money at home, November 14, 2011
Clean energy: A bipartisan goal, November 9, 2011
Nonpartisan Congressional report underscores need for stable wind energy policy, October 3, 2011
Iowa Gov. Branstad cites wind jobs, current and future, September 14, 2011

Stay informed

Take Action

Subscribe to the American Clean Power blog and receive the latest renewable energy news, policy updates, and opportunities to get involved.