Green Choice fails in Austin
posted at 6:45 pm on July 13, 2009 by Ed Morrissey
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At the turn of the century, Austin positioned itself to be the “green energy” capital of the world by creating a program that would allow utility consumers to choose their energy source. Called GreenChoice, Austin Energy bought electricity from wind farms as a means to allow their customers the option of supporting alternative energy and to promote development of other green resources. Nine years later, no one’s buying — because the wind farms are far more expensive and less able to keep up with demand:
For the past decade, Austin’s ambition to become the world’s clean-energy capital has been best exemplified by one effort: GreenChoice, a program that sells electricity generated entirely from renewable sources such as wind.
Now the nationally renowned program is struggling to find buyers — the latest allotment is 99 percent unsold after seven months on the market — and Austin Energy is looking for ways to bring down the rising costs. …
Although it generally cost a little more than standard electricity, a GreenChoice contract guaranteed a price would not change for a decade. Because of that promise, there were times when coal, oil and natural gas prices spiked and made them more expensive than GreenChoice.
“Customers got a 10-year fixed cost — that’s why it sold out,” Clark said. “It was designed to be a value proposition to customers, instead of just asking them to pay more to be environmentally friendly.”
But lately, customers haven’t been sold on that proposition.
While previous offerings took about half a year to sell out, the current one has attracted only 104 homes and five businesses — leaving about 99 percent of its power unpurchased, according to Austin Energy.
The reason is that GreenChoice prices have risen more than fivefold since the program started. GreenChoice now would add about $58 a month to the electricity bill of an average home.
Part of the problem, GreenChoice execs say, is the lack of transmission capacity from West Texas to Austin. The state plans to spend over $6 billion adding capacity to the transmission, which Austin Energy says will lower the price to the consumer, although they admit, not dramatically. They also fail to mention that the same people who will pay more for wind-generating electricity also have to pay the $6 billion bill, along with the rest of Texas.
Why did wind power become more expensive? The increase in demand from those ten-year, fixed-price contracts outstripped the wind farms’ ability to produce electricity. The imbalance caused prices to hike, as well as an increase in materials for the windmills themselves, and wind farm production already costs more than traditional electricity. Now that the contracts are about to expire, GreenChoice has to recalculate the prices to cover the cost increases — and pass them along to the consumers. Not surprisingly, in a recession, the consumers — primarily businesses — don’t want to incur additional expenses.
The best part about GreenChoice was its voluntary nature. Austin Energy gave its consumers a choice between traditional and alternative energy sources, and the market has delivered its verdict. If Barack Obama’s cap-and-trade scheme passes Congress, those choices will no longer be voluntary, and the costs of energy will “skyrocket” in a similar manner.
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We’re not amused by having the EPIC FAILURE EXPERIMENT foisted on us, the taxpayers. Austin’s a bloody mess from this little experiment.
Sancho Panza, and
RucioMr. Ed, his donkey could have told you about windmills.luvstotango on July 14, 2009 at 12:15 PM
Right, and since it’s predictable, it doesn’t require the backup that intermittent wind requires. So tidal power can add capacity, whereas wind can add almost zilch.
The problem with tidal power is the generation plants need to be in coastal waters near beaches (where libs live), not [like windmills] in rural America (where GOP voters live).
petefrt on July 14, 2009 at 1:15 PM
Creating much fertilizer
DSchoen on July 14, 2009 at 1:37 PM
So lets build the nuke plants off shore.
A floating nuke plant. Say about 1,123 ft ft long 132.8 ft wide 7 stories high.
It would displace about 73,858 tons.
It would be on the water so a water supply is not a problem.
It would have enough space so a large crew of workers could be on broad for weeks at a time, or it will have enough open space to land and take off small planes and helicopters for the folks who don’t want to stay overnight.
In fact to make this even more cooooool we can make this nuke plant mobile!
How coool is that!!!
And the best part?
This could be a turn key operation by 2012 or early 2013.
Oh one more thing, its already been built tested and certified.
DSchoen on July 14, 2009 at 2:00 PM
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It would take at least 12 years for the the FDA to bring a new aspirin to market!
Go back to singing, “To Dream the Impossible Dream”, Mr.
RucioEd.Nuke it, Build it, Drill it, Cut it Down!
JOBS, JOBS, JOBS…back to a time, when Pan American Airways and TWA was king of the air.
luvstotango on July 14, 2009 at 2:32 PM
Ya but each time you change the current from AC to DC (run it through a T/R transformer rectifier) you lose some of the power created.
You can store the DC power it “batteries”.
DC can not be transmitted over long distances so you would then need to take the “stored” DC power convert it a “square wave chopped AC”, use another step up transformer to kick it up to 110 kV or above in order to send it down the lines.
Each time something has to be done to the current you loose power it starts to become very inefficient.
“They use electronics to synchronize the current”
I’m referring to the actual “physical” rotation of parallel generators.
In other words how do you “throttle” the wind, while still on the grid?
DSchoen on July 14, 2009 at 2:40 PM
“GE doesn’t make this product”
Houston I think we have a bingo!
DSchoen on July 14, 2009 at 2:43 PM
On several different occasions, Green Mountain Energy tried pimping their “clean” electricity to us. Well, at one time, we had it, then dropped it. Too expensive.
So when I told the pimps it was too expensive, all of them responded “administrative costs”.
I thought wind was free? Apparently not.
madmonkphotog on July 14, 2009 at 4:11 PM
Think outside the box.
The USS Enterprise with 8 Nuke reactors is scheduled for decommission in 2012.
Fact The USS Enterprise with 8 Nuke reactors already exists, this is not a dream.
Fact the 8 Nuke reactors have been built, tested, certified and what ever else.
Several Navy Nuke ships are coming up for decommission. There is nothing wrong with them, we just need newer ships with a different mission capabilities.
DSchoen on July 14, 2009 at 7:19 PM
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Not sure how to respond. I hate to feed the troll.
One, the detail for this subject is way above my paygrade.
I’ll take a stab at one item, in my housewifey, common sense kinda way. Your comment:
What the hell do I know about navy ships?…
I don’t know why they’re being decommissioned.
Maybe they’re obsolete, like the great English battleship, “Dreadnought” or the great Japanese battleship, “Yamato”.
New stuff has come along, ICBM’s, F-22’s, and don’t forget windmill power.
Life in America would be a lot better, if we could get you people to think inside the box.
Let’s get this country moving again, digging for coal, shale, drilling for oil. It’s how we became great. There’s no basis for your objections in “allowing” Americans to get to all of our resources again. It’s why we love Sarah Palin.
luvstotango on July 14, 2009 at 9:20 PM
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