Los Angeles Times

Green-energy projects can expect cold shoulder

The Trump team now includes a key member of the Koch brothers’ network of renewable-power foes.

- By Evan Halper

WASHINGTON — When an obscure nonprofit group attacked one of California’s signature green-energy projects this summer — warning a congressio­nal panel that the embrace of solar energy would lead to crippling hikes in electricit­y bills — officials in the state shrugged off the testimony as noise from the fringe.

With Donald Trump’s election, however, that group, the Institute for Energy Research, has moved suddenly from the fringe to the center of power. The president-elect has sent the group’s president, a former Koch Industries lobbyist named Thomas Pyle, to the Energy Department to take charge of its transition.

For years, Pyle has led a coordinate­d national assault on renewable power. His groups and others that belong to the sprawling network bankrolled by Charles and David Koch, whose vast fortune stems originally from oil refining, pressure lawmakers to roll back policies that promote green power. The Koch network gave Pyle’s groups $3 million in 2015.

Now, in his role with the Trump transition, Pyle’s vision will shape the new direction of a federal agency that has been a crucial partner to California and likeminded states in their embrace of solar, wind and geothermal power.

Days before he was appointed to the role, Pyle, who did not respond to interview requests, tweeted that he expected the new administra­tion would go beyond a mere rollback of President Obama’s climate-change actions and bring about “a reset of a generation of failed energy

and environmen­tal policies.”

The impending shift would return California and other states to where they were more than a decade ago when they first began putting aggressive climatecha­nge policies in place — swimming against the tide of a federal government antagonist­ic to their mission.

After years of growth, state programs to foster renewable energy are considerab­ly more durable now and are positioned to withstand federal abandonmen­t. But a Department of Energy guided by Koch principles could still create complicati­ons.

The industrial-scale desert solar operations that power tens of thousands of California homes, for example, were built with considerab­le financial backing from the Energy Department. The agency’s national laboratori­es in the West have been incubators for nextgenera­tion renewable-energy technologi­es. The department has taken a lead in encouragin­g other states to pursue California-style programs.

“It is inevitable with the Koch brothers already showing they have so much influence in this administra­tion, that it will do everything in its power to inhibit the growth of renewables,” said Bryan Miller, a lobbyist for green-energy firms.

Pyle’s influence reflects how wide the Koch network’s reach has grown in Republican politics.

His ascent is particular­ly notable since it follows an election in which Charles and David Koch refused to put their formidable political machine to work helping get Trump elected.

Pyle’s groups, the Institute for Energy Research and the American Energy Alliance, reject the findings of most mainstream scientists regarding climate change.

They specifical­ly dismiss as overblown the warnings from scores of published academics that a global temperatur­e rise of more than 2 degrees Celsius, or 3.6 Fahrenheit, would be devastatin­g. Preventing a rise in temperatur­es of that scale is at the root of the global climate agreement the United States and 195 other countries signed last year in Paris.

Pyle’s groups are pushing for Trump to make good on his vow to scrap that deal.

“The economic damages incurred achieving that goal would be greater than the damage caused by a warming world,” said Daniel Simmons, vice president for policy at the Institute for Energy Research.

The institute and the alliance also receive money from oil, gas and coal companies, but won’t say which ones. Bankruptcy court records show contributi­ons from Peabody Energy and Alpha Natural Resources, two coal-mining firms. Exxon says it gave the groups money years ago, but stopped.

The institute is a favored think tank among climate skeptics, regularly reaching past mainstream climate scientists to produce contrarian research reports that it and other Koch-funded activists use in lobbying lawmakers.

“They fund research and citable material that fits with the Koch network ideology, and which can be used for its political goals,” said Robert Maguire of the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisa­n group that tracks the impact of money on politics and policy.

“They can then go to lawmakers and say, ‘These energy experts say this is what you should do.’ ”

In lobbying against state laws that require utilities to generate a share of their electricit­y from green sources, the institute regularly cites a study from Spain that concluded more than two jobs are lost for every new green-energy job created.

The study became such a prominent talking point in state legislatur­es and Washington that the Spanish government sent a letter to Congress in 2009 highlighti­ng what it said were flaws in the study’s methodolog­y and data and noting that several other studies had concluded the opposite.

Yet the study continues on as a central talking point for the institute, a decision Simmons defends by pointing to Spain’s phasing out of some solar and wind subsidies.

“I think history shows our reports were accurate,” he said.

In 2014, the group’s research helped score the first big win for the Koch network’s crusade against such mandatory renewable-energy quotas when lawmakers in Ohio voted to temporaril­y roll back their state’s law.

Back in Congress, the Koch network had been leading efforts to end a multibilli­on-dollar Energy Department loan-guarantee program that helped jump-start many of the country’s major green-energy projects.

The “No More Solyndras Act” — named for the California solar company that went bankrupt after receiving its loan guarantees — passed the House in 2012 but died in the Senate.

The American Energy Alliance wrote lawmakers warning them that voting against the bill would “indicate your disregard for fiscal discipline and your unwillingn­ess to rein in wasteful spending of taxpayer money.”

Despite such dire forecasts, the Government Accountabi­lity Office reported this year that the program was running under budget. The White House said the loss rate on the department’s loan portfolio was only 2%, even after accounting for the losses incurred by Solyndra and some other failed renewable-energy companies.

Despite those successes, the Institute for Energy Research continues to attack the program. In testimony before a congressio­nal committee in July, Simmons took aim at the Ivanpah power plant, an industrial­scale solar facility in the Mojave Desert that uses nextgenera­tion technology to provide electricit­y to California­ns.

A partnershi­p of companies, including Google, tapped federal subsidies to build the plant.

“It is unseemly that the American taxpayer has contribute­d billions of dollars to these facilities,” Simmons said in his testimony. “The owners could have financed these projects.”

In the next year, the Energy Department will have some $40 billion at its disposal to distribute as new loans. That money can go to clean-energy innovation­s, but it can also go to coal, gas or nuclear efforts. Pyle has made clear his preference — as has Trump.

Come January, pioneering green-energy projects can start expecting a much colder winter.

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? THE IVANPAH POWER PLANT, a solar facility in the Mojave Desert that uses next-generation technology to provide electricit­y to California­ns. A nonprofit bankrolled by Charles and David Koch opposes the plant. “It is unseemly that the American taxpayer...
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times THE IVANPAH POWER PLANT, a solar facility in the Mojave Desert that uses next-generation technology to provide electricit­y to California­ns. A nonprofit bankrolled by Charles and David Koch opposes the plant. “It is unseemly that the American taxpayer...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States