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Congresswoman Debbie Dingell

Representing the 12th District of Michigan

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Morning Consult: GOP complains of double standard on renewables

July 14, 2016
In The News

House Republicans accused the Obama administration on Thursday of employing a double standard in favor of renewable energy when leasing out federal lands, pointing in particular to a controversial solar project in California.

The Ivanpah Solar Power Facility in the Mojave Desert became the focal point of a House Natural Resources subcommittee hearing. Republicans complained that the plant owners have not been punished for killing birds, and pointed to the federal government’s sizable investment in a plant that produces more expensive energy than fossil fuels.

The plant, which is owned by NRG Energy, Google and BrightSource Energy, received $1.6 billion in federal loan guarantees ahead of its opening in 2013, and has also received more than $500 million in federal grants.

Republicans criticized that financial assistance, especially to a plant with such well-financed parent corporations. They also pointed to a concerning number of bird deaths at the plant. Rep. Raúl Labrador (R-Idaho) said “thousands of birds” have been killed at Ivanpah, although experts have debated the specifics of whether the plant creates more of a hazard for birds than any other man-made structure.

Labrador pointed to a case in which a traditional fuel company, Brigham Oil and Gas, was charged with violating the Migratory Bird Treaty Act because of two dead birds found near their facilities, although a court dismissed those charges. Regardless, Labrador accused the Obama administration of letting Ivanpah skirt the law.

“It seems like they’re getting preferential treatment with money,” Labrador said. “Now they’re getting preferential treatment with enforcement as well.”

The administration’s lone witness at the hearing, Bureau of Land Management Assistant Director Mike Nedd, was unable to answer many of the committee’s questions, which focused on the administration’s stance on the country’s energy resources and on the plant’s potential danger to migratory birds. Those questions are more in the wheelhouse of the Department of Energy and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which declined to send representatives to the hearing.

Rep. Debbie Dingell of Michigan, the oversight subcommittee’s ranking Democrat, called the hearing a waste of time, designed to take shots at the Obama administration rather than genuinely discuss its energy policies.

Dingell conceded that the solar plant has underperformed in terms of electricity production in its first few years, but said that’s improving. Nedd testified that the plant had met all of its financial obligations to the government, such as  lease payments.

“I do think today’s hearing is designed to sort of become the grand finale, as we approach the end of the Obama administration, to [ask], ‘How do we embarrass this administration again?'” Dingell said.

Dingell also offered a slew of counterpoints to Republicans’ complaints about the administration’s alleged bias in favor of renewables. Renewable producers pay at least $17.24 per acre of leased BLM lands, and that rent can reach $6,000 per acre, depending on the location, Nedd said. Coal producers, meanwhile, pay $3 per acre plus royalty fees, and oil and gas producers pay $1.50 to $2 per acre, plus royalty fees.