[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 160 (Wednesday, December 12, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Page S7760]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                         WIND ENERGY TAX CREDIT

  Mr. UDALL of Colorado. Madam President, I now wish to turn to the 
wind production tax credit. The Presiding Officer has been in the chair 
listening on a number of occasions and she has been gracious in her 
interest and support of what we are trying to do.
  This is my 26th speech urging all of us to extend the wind production 
tax credit. It is known simply as the PTC in the abbreviated form. It 
is going to expire in 4 weeks--less than 4 weeks, actually--if we don't 
extend it. I am so worried about what is going to happen to this 
important industry.
  The PTC has created good-paying middle-class jobs in the wind energy 
industry not only in my own State--I have a bias about my own State--
but all across the Nation. Almost every State has a stake in the wind 
energy industry. When we think about what the PTC has done, we realize 
it has also stimulated the growth of our clean energy economy as well 
as promoted clean energy security. The Presiding Officer serves on the 
Armed Services Committee so she knows the importance of energy to 
national security.
  We have 75,000 jobs in the wind industry right now in Colorado. We 
are on track to produce 20 percent of our electricity through the wind, 
by harvesting the wind, by 2030. But if we let the PTC expire, 
estimates suggest we will lose half of those jobs. We would be down to 
37,000 jobs. We also undermine our Nation's pursuit of true energy 
security.
  Our inaction, although the tax credit hasn't expired, has halted 
further development in the wind energy industry because that set of 
leaders can't in good faith bring that capital to bear and make those 
investments if they think the wind energy credit will truly expire. We 
have had hundreds of layoffs in Colorado. The business has nearly 
ground to a halt, and we see that all over the country. Then we get a 
ripple effect in those communities because tax receipts go down, people 
aren't as upbeat about the future, and it is a downward spiral we have 
to end. We should be doing everything we can coming out of this tough 
economic recession--the great recession--to make strategic investments 
in our economy and in our energy portfolio.
  So with that general outline of what we face, I wish to turn to the 
State of Maine today. The Presiding Officer and I have great respect 
for both of our Maine Senators. We are going to miss Senator Snowe, and 
Senator Collins has been a strong supporter as well.
  Maine is well positioned to become a major player in the wind energy 
industry going forward. Maine has the potential for significant 
economic development and environmental benefits. In 2011, wind energy 
provided 2.9 percent of the Pine Tree State's power and Maine's wind 
farms power the equivalent of about 100,000 homes. The outlook for 
their wind energy industry is bright. The State has another 34 
megawatts of wind power under construction and enough untapped 
potential to power three times the State's current electricity needs. 
Three times their needs will be powered by harvesting all the wind 
resources there. So I will say the PTC is crucial to their continued 
growth and the capacity they have to tap into their available wind 
resources.
  Maine, of course, has a vast interior, but it also is on the coast. 
Right now Maine is New England's leading land-based wind producer, and 
experts predict it could become the leading offshore wind producer in 
the coming years. The University of Maine has a center called the 
Advanced Structures and Composites Center, and their research and 
development is paving the way for this additional offshore development.
  There is also an expiring tax credit called the investment tax 
credit--the ITC--and that provides additional incentives. The ITC will 
be vital to the growth of offshore and distributed wind power 
development as well. It is also at risk. We need to include a 
discussion of the ITC as we consider the extenders package.
  I have mentioned that what the wind projects do is to lift local 
economies. The Presiding Officer has a lot of rural economies in the 
north and the west of New York, a lot of agricultural-based economic 
activity. Wind power, when it is properly developed, is a cash crop 
that always comes in. As we face the consequences of this economic 
slowdown, wind power has helped a lot of local economies have 
additional revenue, economic activity, and jobs.
  In that context, I wanted to talk about the Bull Hill Wind Project in 
Maine. It is in Hancock County, down here on the coast. I think it is 
called down east if one is from Maine. That project was just completed. 
It will generate $100,000 annually in tax revenue, and it has supported 
about 100 jobs during the peak of the construction. That is a 
significant number of jobs in a rural county in a State such as Maine.
  I have to put a pitch in for Colorado. This project uses wind 
turbines which are made by Vestas which manufactures blades, nacelles, 
and towers in Colorado.
  Much like in Colorado, the production tax credit creates and sustains 
manufacturing jobs, and it is creating growth in Maine. I know we have 
some job numbers in the manufacturing sector that I will share with my 
colleagues. There are four facilities in Maine that produce components 
for the wind energy industry and the installed wind projects across the 
State to which I have alluded. Those jobs number about 500--500 being 
actual jobs. Speaking of tax payments, property tax payments, about $6 
million comes in from those wind projects to local governments. That 
money helps infrastructure improvements and other vital services for 
local Maine communities.
  So it is obvious that the growth of our domestic wind energy 
industry, aided by the wind production tax credit, has helped create 
jobs, encouraged energy security, and grown a clean energy economy in 
Maine and all across our country. It is really that simple. The wind 
energy PTC powers good-paying middle-class jobs. However, if we do not 
extend it--it is a bipartisan policy, by the way, and the father of the 
wind PTC is our own Senator Grassley from Iowa--if we do not extend 
this, we are going to lose thousands of jobs. At a time when our 
economy is still in imbalance, that is not acceptable. It cannot happen 
in Maine, it cannot happen in Colorado, and it should not be happening 
to thousands of families across our country. So it is simple.
  The PTC equals jobs. We need to pass it ASAP. Let's work together. 
Our inaction is stunting the growth of a 21st-century clean energy 
economic opportunity for us. Those jobs are not necessarily going to be 
lost if we do not do what we should do, but they are going to go to 
places such as China, Europe. The world is investing in big numbers in 
wind energy because of all the possibilities for economic development.
  So let's, in sum, remember that the production tax credit equals 
jobs. The PTC equals jobs. Let's pass it as soon as possible. Time is 
running out. The clock is ticking.
  I thank the Acting President pro tempore for her interest and for her 
support. New York has great wind energy potential.
  With that, I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. CORKER. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.

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