Newsday recently published an editorial promoting windmills off the Long Island shore. The editorial centered on whether windmills could coexist with the livelihood of fisherman. Ultimately, they concluded they can, and that the windmills should be built because it’s good for the environment. Case closed.
Remarkably, the editorial completely ignored the enormous potential costs of the project and its impact on ratepayers.
As a former County Executive, I prided myself in promoting alternative energies, but never took the unrealistic view that renewables could replace all of our fossil fuels within the next few years.
However, politicians, including New York’s Governor, are spouting the nonsense that we can mandate having renewables meet 50% of our energy needs in the next decade, without causing extensive economic hardship. They have an obligation to warn ratepayers that their electric bills are going to skyrocket, and that wind power could cost anywhere from 4 to 7 times more than traditional means,
For instance, windmills off Block Island had start up costs of $240/MWh, while nationwide wholesale electricity prices averaged $20 to $45 per MWh in 2016.
According to the Empire Center for Public Policy, Long Island’s planned windmills are modeled after those in Ocean City, Maryland, which cost $132 per megawatt. New York’s average cost per megawatt hour for power is $36.56. If New York were to provide the same subsidy Maryland did, it would cost our ratepayers $392 million annually; that’s $7 billion over 20 years.
Yet another $7 billion price tag awaits New York ratepayers because the governor has, in his quest to meet his self imposed renewable goals, demanded that failing upstate nuclear power plants (which fall under his non fossil fuel label) be kept open via ratepayer subsidies, even though they are non competitive in today’s market. His rationale is that we must save the 1000 jobs employed by the plants – that’s $7 million per job.
And, let’s reflect on what Manhattan Institute’s Robert Bryce noted about Germany’s experience in pushing to have 80 percent of its electricity coming from renewables. He cited a German study, which confirmed that between 2007 and 2018, residential electricity prices in Germany jumped by 50 percent.
German residential customers now pay nearly three times the price of residential electricity in the US.
Moreover, Bryce referenced California, which also mandated 50 percent of the state’s electricity be sourced from renewables by 2030, and an Environmental Progress study, which reported California’s rates rose more than five times the rate of electricity prices in the rest of the US between 2011 and 2017.
Californians now pay about 60 percent more for electricity than residents of other states.
I’m not exactly California Dreamin’ over that, and neither should any other New York ratepayer.
The Kavanaugh Hearings and the O.J. Simpson Trial
October 9, 2018We Can’t Afford Not to Build the Border Wall
October 16, 2018Newsday recently published an editorial promoting windmills off the Long Island shore. The editorial centered on whether windmills could coexist with the livelihood of fisherman. Ultimately, they concluded they can, and that the windmills should be built because it’s good for the environment. Case closed.
Remarkably, the editorial completely ignored the enormous potential costs of the project and its impact on ratepayers.
As a former County Executive, I prided myself in promoting alternative energies, but never took the unrealistic view that renewables could replace all of our fossil fuels within the next few years.
However, politicians, including New York’s Governor, are spouting the nonsense that we can mandate having renewables meet 50% of our energy needs in the next decade, without causing extensive economic hardship. They have an obligation to warn ratepayers that their electric bills are going to skyrocket, and that wind power could cost anywhere from 4 to 7 times more than traditional means,
For instance, windmills off Block Island had start up costs of $240/MWh, while nationwide wholesale electricity prices averaged $20 to $45 per MWh in 2016.
According to the Empire Center for Public Policy, Long Island’s planned windmills are modeled after those in Ocean City, Maryland, which cost $132 per megawatt. New York’s average cost per megawatt hour for power is $36.56. If New York were to provide the same subsidy Maryland did, it would cost our ratepayers $392 million annually; that’s $7 billion over 20 years.
Yet another $7 billion price tag awaits New York ratepayers because the governor has, in his quest to meet his self imposed renewable goals, demanded that failing upstate nuclear power plants (which fall under his non fossil fuel label) be kept open via ratepayer subsidies, even though they are non competitive in today’s market. His rationale is that we must save the 1000 jobs employed by the plants – that’s $7 million per job.
And, let’s reflect on what Manhattan Institute’s Robert Bryce noted about Germany’s experience in pushing to have 80 percent of its electricity coming from renewables. He cited a German study, which confirmed that between 2007 and 2018, residential electricity prices in Germany jumped by 50 percent.
German residential customers now pay nearly three times the price of residential electricity in the US.
Moreover, Bryce referenced California, which also mandated 50 percent of the state’s electricity be sourced from renewables by 2030, and an Environmental Progress study, which reported California’s rates rose more than five times the rate of electricity prices in the rest of the US between 2011 and 2017.
Californians now pay about 60 percent more for electricity than residents of other states.
I’m not exactly California Dreamin’ over that, and neither should any other New York ratepayer.
Freddy Philantrope
Related posts
Trump’s Abortion Curveball Misses Golden Opportunity
Read more
Senate Immigration Bill a Gift to Open Borders Democrats
Read more
Senate Bill Sanctions Illegal Immigration
Read more