The Telegram (St. John's)

Holiday’s over

Trump admin slaps solar, wind operators with retroactiv­e rent bills

- NICHOLA GROOM

The Trump administra­tion has ended a two-year rent holiday for solar and wind projects operating on federal lands, handing them whopping retroactiv­e bills at a time the industry is struggling with the fallout of the coronaviru­s outbreak, according to company officials.

The move represents a multimilli­on-dollar hit to an industry that has already seen installati­on projects cancelled or delayed by the global health crisis, which has cut investment and dimmed the demand outlook for power.

It also clashes with broader government efforts in the United States to shield companies from the worst of the economic turmoil through federal loans, waived fees, tax breaks and trimmed regulatory enforcemen­t.

U.S. power plant owner Avangrid Inc., majority owned by Spain’s Iberdrola, received a bill for more than $3 million for two years of rent on its 131-megawatt Tule wind project on federal land near San Diego, according to spokesman Paul Copleman.

Officials at two other renewable projects also confirmed they had received retroactiv­e rent bills from the feds but asked not to be named discussing the issue as the industry continues to lobby the government for support to weather the downturn.

Some 96 utility-scale solar, wind and geothermal projects operate on lands run by the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management, according to The Wilderness Society and Yale Center for Business and the Environmen­t.

The bills came as a surprise, said Shannon Eddy, executive director of the Large-scale Solar Associatio­n, a trade group for owners of big solar farms. But she said some companies had likely set funds aside in case the bills ever came.

The Interior Department had stopped charging the rents at the end of 2018 to review company complaints that former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion had increased them too much, making them uncompetit­ive with rents on private property.

The Interior Department declined repeated requests to comment on the outcome of that review, or the issuance of the retroactiv­e rent bills.

A budget document on the Interior Department’s web site shows it expects to collect $50 million in rent fees for wind and solar projects in 2020, up from $1.1 million in 2019 and $21.6 million in 2018.

The rent bills landed around the same time the Bureau of Land Management notified oil and gas drillers on federal lands of the procedures they would need to follow to get relief from paying royalties amid an oil market slump.

The administra­tion has also expanded the drilling industry’s access to economy-wide government lending facilities and is contemplat­ing ways to pump additional billions of dollars into the sector through tax breaks.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A wind farm is shown in Movave, California, in November 2019.
REUTERS A wind farm is shown in Movave, California, in November 2019.

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