| It’s time for wind tax credit to get blown away 
 By THOMAS PYLE
 SPECIAL TO THE LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
 
 Lame-duck  Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid soon will lose control of a chamber  he has helmed for eight years. As the sun sets on his reign, one  question remains: will Reid, D-Nev., go out with bang or a whimper?
 
 The  answer to that question could depend on what Congress decides to do  about one of Reid’s favorite corporate subsidies: the wind production  tax credit.
 
 First, the backstory: Congress enacted the wind tax  credit in 1992 as a temporary kick-start for the renewable energy  industry, especially wind power. Since its inception, however, the  credit has been extended seven times, costing Nevada taxpayers more than  $12 million in 2012 alone.
 
 The wind tax credit is one of the most  contentious issues on the legislative agenda during the lame-duck  session. And for good reason: it is integral to President Barack Obama’s  climate change agenda, which will destroy jobs and raise energy prices  on Nevada families.
 
 The foundation of the president’s climate plan  is the Environmental Protection Agency’s greenhouse gas emissions rule  for existing power plants — the president’s attempt to shut down  America’s coal industry. A recent analysis finds that residents in 43  states, including Nevada, will face double-digit power bill increases  under the rule. For all that pain, the rule would reduce global carbon  dioxide emissions by just 1.5 percent by 2050.
 
 One of the central  building blocks of the EPA’s power plant rule is increased use of wind  and solar for electricity generation. But wind and solar are  uncompetitive without massive taxpayer subsidies and mandated renewable  portfolio standards. For wind, that takes the form of the production tax  credit.
 
 Thus, a vote for the tax credit is a vote for Obama’s climate change agenda.
 
 But  there’s another important reason to reject the wind production tax  credit: America’s largest and wealthiest corporations exploit the  subsidy at taxpayers’ expense.
 
 In recent years, the credit has  become one of Wall Street’s favorite tax loopholes. Take billionaire  investor Warren Buffett. His company, Berkshire Hathaway, has heavily  invested in wind power in recent years, including the purchase of  Nevada’s dominant power company, NV Energy. However, Buffett admits he  never would have invested in wind if taxpayers weren’t picking up the  tab. According to Buffet, the production tax credit is “the only reason  to build” wind facilities.
 
 His isn’t the only company to figure  out that taxpayers can fund a corporate windfall. GE, one of the largest  companies in the country and with deep ties to the Obama  administration, is a major wind turbine manufacturer. And T. Boone  Pickens, who made his billions in the oil patch, peddled wind energy as  part of his “Pickens Plan” before losing $150 million on failed wind  projects.
 
 It’s no wonder the production tax credit is a prized  subsidy for Wall Street. The credit can be so lucrative that wind  producers often turn a profit while paying utilities to take their  electricity.
 
 These perverse financial incentives explain why  corporate America is flocking to the wind industry, Pickens’ failures  notwithstanding. Such abuse has drastically spiked the cost of the  production tax credit to taxpayers. In the past seven years, taxpayers  have forked over more than $7 billion, including nearly $3 billion alone  in 2012, according to government estimates.
 
 Congress should  reject any attempt by Reid to revive the wind production tax credit in  the lame-duck session. It’s clearly a bad deal for Nevadans, enriching  out-of-state billionaires at the expense of working families.
 
 When Reid rides off into the sunset, he should take the wind production tax credit with him.
 
 Thomas Pyle is president of the American Energy Alliance.
 
 reviewjournal.com
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