Canadian firm will receive up to 50 million stimulus dollars for Nevada solar plant that employs two people


Energy generated will cost ratepayers almost
three times as much as energy from natural gas

By Kyle Gillis | Thursday, May 10, 2012 | 0 Comments

Enbridge's Silver State North solar plant opened on Monday, May 7. The plant only employs two full-time workers. Photo courtesy of Enbridge Energy.

LAS VEGAS — The company behind the recently opened Silver State North solar plant is eligible to receive up to $50 million in federal tax credits under the Obama administration’s “stimulus” legislation, even though the plant created only two full-time jobs.

According to a Department of Interior memo, Enbridge Energy Partners, a Canadian-based company with extensive energy holdings in the U.S. that purchased the Southern Nevada plant from Arizona-based First Solar, “can apply for payments of up to 30 percent of the eligible costs of the project — approximately $50 million.”

The payments are available through the 1603 Program, a special exemption in the Treasury Department created by the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act to “reimburse eligible applicants for a portion of the cost of installing specified energy property used in a trade or business or for the production of income.”

The program states that the “1603 payment is made after the energy property is placed in service; a 1603 payment is not made prior to or during construction of the energy property.”

Silver State North began service on Monday, May 7. Larry Springer, a community relations manager at Enbridge, confirmed to Nevada Journal the company intends to file a 1603 application for reimbursement.

As of March 2012, over 34,000 renewable-energy projects across the country have received $11.2 billion in taxpayer funds through the ARRA-funded program. In Nevada, 108 projects have received $147.1 million.

The Department of Energy estimates 5,500 full-time jobs were created by the program, meaning each job cost taxpayers approximately $2,036,363.

Construction of the Silver State North plant, overseen by First Solar, employed 350 people. Now owned by Enbridge, the plant only requires two full-time employees for operation.

Asked why a plant at the very southern-most tip of Nevada is named “Silver State North,” a First Solar spokesman explained that the name was selected to distinguish that plant from a second plant for which the firm is currently seeking permits. That plant — designated “Silver State South” — is to be six times larger than Silver State North, said the spokesman.

Silver State North was opened by Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar on Monday and received praise from Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid back in Washington, D.C.

“This important clean energy project will generate affordable electricity for thousands of homes with no air pollution or waste production,” said Reid, a longtime champion of alternative-energy subsidies, in a statement. “Developing similar projects in Nevada should be an essential part of our future economic growth strategy.”

Silver State North’s subsidy per job is even greater than what the Copper Mountain Solar 1 plant in Boulder City received. That plant obtained $42 million in federal tax credits but only employs five full-time employees.

Enbridge plans to sell power generated by Silver State North to NV Energy so NV Energy can meet the state-imposed Renewable Portfolio Standard of 25 percent “green” energy by 2025.

NV Energy will pay 13 cents per kilowatt hour for Silver State North’s solar power, nearly three times the amount the company pays for natural gas, and four cents more than it pays for geothermal.

Geoffrey Lawrence, deputy policy director at the Nevada Policy Research Institute, the free-market think tank that publishes Nevada Journal, recently noted that Nevada’s residential electricity prices are 31.1 percent higher than they were in 2002.

Lawrence compared Nevada electricity prices to those in Texas, which has a deregulated energy market yet still manages to generate renewable energy.

“In fact, private retailers in Texas have shown that they can generate a significant share of the electricity mix using renewable sources even without government mandates,” wrote Lawrence.

“On the competitive market, advertising high renewable content has become an important marketing concept to attract customers. So, entrepreneurs have discovered innovative ways to bring renewable electricity to market in order to satisfy consumers’ desires — rather than to just satisfy government mandates.”

The White House plans to continue to promote clean-energy efforts in Nevada, with Nancy Sutley, chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, scheduled to visit Henderson today. In Reno on Friday, President Obama will tout his congressional “To-Do List,” which includes “invest in clean energy manufacturing.”

Kyle Gillis is an investigative reporter for Nevada Journal, a publication of the Nevada Policy Research Institute. For more in-depth reporting, visit Nevada Journal and Nevada Policy Research Institute.


Canadian firm will receive up to 50 million stimulus dollars for Nevada solar plant that employs two people | Nevada Journal









Canadian firm will receive up to 50 million stimulus dollars for Nevada solar plant that employs two people | Nevada Journal