[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 158 (2012), Part 12]
[House]
[Pages 16951-16952]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                   THE WIND INDUSTRY AND OUR VETERANS

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
California (Mr. McNerney) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. McNERNEY. This morning, I rise to talk about two issues I care 
very passionately about: wind energy and veterans.
  Mr. Speaker, I spent more than 20 years in the wind industry as a 
technology development engineer. In those early days, we saw some 
spectacular failures and dramatic failures, but every year, we put more 
into the technology development. We put a little bit this year in the 
gear box, in the foundations. Every year, we put a little increment of 
improvement in the control systems, in the field testing, in the power 
electronics so that we understood what was going on.

                              {time}  1030

  Today we have an industry that is a spectacular industry. The wind 
turbines now are hundreds of feet tall. They are extremely reliable. 
They produce power for 4 to 5 cents a kilowatt hour, depending on the 
resource. It's been a very successful business.
  In the early days, the United States of America dominated that 
business because of consistent policies, consistent tax policies. We 
could rely on the policies being there year after year. Investors came 
in; engineers came in. But in the early 1980s, those policies began to 
change, and the technology began to leave our country.
  We've seen, I've seen in my career, the incentives come and go over 
the years. I can tell you, it's devastating to the industry. It takes 
years to develop the infrastructure to produce wind turbines. The 
bearings are 20 feet in diameter. It takes expertise. In order to get a 
project in, you need to get a power purchase agreement. You need to get 
permits. You need to get investments, and then you need to order 
products. The products have a 1- to 2-year lead time they're so large. 
We're putting a lot at risk by ending the production tax credit.
  And not only that, we'll see at least 40,000 jobs lost when the 
production tax credit expires at the end of this year. A lot of those 
jobs go to United States veterans, veterans of our armed services. And 
I can tell you what, when soldiers are trained, they're trained on 
large equipment. They're trained on big projects. They're well 
disciplined. They're reliable. They work in very adverse conditions. 
And that's exactly the kind of training you need to be a windsmith and 
a wind turbine installer, so it's been a very good fit.
  There's one company in particular, Airstreams. They train wind 
turbine windsmiths, and 80 percent of their graduates are veterans. 
They get good jobs in this country. And when the production tax credit 
goes away, that removes the hope of many of our veterans.
  Now, the veterans of our country were soldiers and sailors. They 
volunteered their time for our country. They put themselves in grave 
danger, and they came home and found a very bad employment situation. 
The wind energy has been a tremendous opportunity for them, and to take 
this hope away from our veterans is a travesty. Eliminating those jobs 
for veterans is absolutely unacceptable.
  Now, the production tax credit, itself, is a very effective way to 
produce energy. You get paid for when you deliver energy in the 
production tax credit. In the early days, the credits went to 
investments, and a lot of investments were not so good. But today, the 
motive is to have a very reliable, a very productive set of equipment, 
and that's what happens when the production tax credit is extended. It 
creates jobs. It helps develop the manufacturing base in this country. 
And I can tell you, if you want to be a great country, you have to have 
a big manufacturing base. Of those things that are at risk of going 
overseas, our manufacturing base, our engineering expertise, jobs, 
investment, this will be a real loss for our country. It will hurt our 
veterans. And the last thing it will hurt is our climate.
  Now, there are people who don't believe in climate change, but I can 
tell you what: The evidence out there is absolutely overwhelming, 
whether it's biological systems migrating to higher elevations, more 
northern latitude, whether it's the melting of our glaciers, whether 
it's Hurricane Sandy, event after event shows climate change

[[Page 16952]]

is here; it's real; it's a threat, and we need to reduce our 
consumption of fossil fuels. Wind energy is a tremendous opportunity 
for us to do that.
  So if we let the production tax credit expire, we are risking losing 
manufacturing. We're risking putting veterans out of work. We're 
risking climate change. This is something we can't afford to do as a 
Nation. The production tax credit is a very good investment in America 
and our future and our manufacturing base.
  I urge all of my colleagues to consider helping to extend the 
production tax credits for our Nation and for our future.

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