American Energy Alliance

Harry Reid Reaps Subsidies for Green Energy Companies

A new report raises questions about dealings between Sen. Harry Reid and green energy companies seeking federal subsidies. These companies received billions in taxpayer dollars after donating to an organization run by Reid allies, according to The Washington Free Beacon.

Reid, who was Senate Majority Leader from 2007–2015, has bragged about steering federal grants and loans to green energy companies in Nevada. Each of these companies happened to receive subsidies after donating to a nonprofit group founded by former Reid staffers, the Clean Energy Project (CEP).

Below is a partial list of the companies that donated to the Reid-tied CEP and also received preferential treatment from Sen. Reid and the Obama administration:

Sen. Reid exploited the gusher of taxpayer funds made available by the federal stimulus in 2009. The stimulus funneled billions of dollars to green energy companies, many of which went bankrupt after receiving federal support.

Some of the biggest green-energy failures have come from the biofuel industry. For example, one of Reid’s favored solar companies, Spanish-based Abengoa, also received $132 million in subsidies for a biofuel facility in Kansas. That plant was supposed to open in 2013 with an annual capacity of 25 million gallons of cellulosic biofuel. However, the plant didn’t open until October 2014 and hasn’t come anywhere close to meeting production targets. In fact, all of the cellulosic biofuel facilities in the country produced just 728,509 gallons of biofuel last year, according to EPA data, despite a federal Renewable Fuel Standard mandating millions of gallons per year.

Abengoa’s woes pale in comparison to those of KiOR, another politically-connected biofuel company. KiOR was founded by Vinod Khosla, a billionaire investor and Obama donor. The company received a $75 million loan from the state of Mississippi to build a biofuel facility in Columbus. In November, KiOR filed for bankruptcy after years of cost overruns and missed production targets. Court papers show KiOR’s revenue totaled just $2.25 million compared to $629.3 million in losses, leaving creditors, including Mississippi taxpayers, on the hook. KiOR is also facing a class-action lawsuit for allegedly making “false and misleading statements” to investors about the “timing of projected production levels” at its Columbus facility.

The government can’t simply subsidize or mandate a product to be cost effective. Despite lavish subsidies and mandates, the cellulosic biofuel industry has failed to get off the ground, with troubled companies like Abengoa and KiOR securing billions of dollars in federal and state subsidies to build production facilities that often fail to live up to the hype. These companies also benefit from the RFS, a federal mandate that requires refiners to purchase and blend millions of gallons of biofuels into gasoline each year.

The solution is to let Americans – not politicians – make their own energy choices. While Sen. Reid brags about giving preferential treatment to companies that support his political allies, American families suffer the consequences. This system of cronyism creates inefficiencies by propping up failing companies at the expense of successful ones. As a result, the public ends up paying higher energy costs and taxpayers are left picking up the tab. The success or failure of energy sources shouldn’t depend on their ability to trade donations for handouts, but rather on their ability to provide a valuable product to American families.

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