XPost: alt.energy.renewable, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, nj.politics   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns   
   From: up.yours@democrats.org   
      
   On 19 Jun 2023, DeSantis Pedo Clergy posted some   
   news:u6r7nh$2bkhp$2@dont-email.me:   
      
   > Looks like the global warming pie-in-the-sky bullshit is going where   
   > it should, down the toilet.   
      
   OCEAN CITY, N.J. — Offshore wind power company Orsted is trying to get   
   out of a $300 million guarantee it agreed to pay New Jersey in the event   
   it failed to build its first wind farm off the state’s coast.   
      
   Last Tuesday, the Danish firm scrapped its Ocean Wind I and II projects   
   in southern New Jersey, saying the projects were no longer financially   
   feasible. The company cited supply chain issues, inflation and a failure   
   to gain enough government tax credits.   
      
   The next day, Orsted wrote to the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities,   
   saying it was withdrawing from an agreement it signed with the state   
   under which it would forfeit the money if it did not build Ocean Wind I.   
      
   The company said it was doing so because the board had not taken final   
   action to approve the agreement.   
      
   “The Board has not issued a final approval of the Compliance Filing,”   
   Orsted wrote in a letter to the utilities board, saying it was   
   withdrawing from the agreement “due to changed circumstances.”   
      
   In an emailed statement Monday, Orsted said, “We withdrew our filings   
   because we are no longer developing Ocean Wind I and thus are no longer   
   pursuing the tax incentives related to the project.”   
      
   In July, New Jersey approved a tax break that would have allowed Orsted   
   to keep federal tax credits that it otherwise would have had to return   
   to electric ratepayers, had the project been built.   
      
   The company said it has transferred $200 million to an escrow account   
   with the state thus far.   
      
   The BPU did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.   
      
   It was not immediately clear what will happen next. In the agreement,   
   Orsted and the state agreed not to sue each other over any dispute   
   unless they tried and failed to resolve it through negotiations.   
      
   On the evening that Orsted canceled its two large projects in New   
   Jersey, Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, reacted angrily. He said his   
   administration would hold the company accountable to its cancellation   
   obligations.   
      
   On Monday, a spokeswoman, Alexandra Altman, said Murphy’s administration   
   “is evaluating Orsted’s recent statements and correspondence, and will   
   take any and all actions necessary to ensure Orsted honors its   
   commitment and responsibility to the state.”   
      
   The company agreed to put up a $100 million guarantee that it would have   
   Ocean Wind I built by the end of 2025. It also was obligated to pay an   
   additional $200 million toward the development of the offshore wind   
   industry in New Jersey.   
      
   Orsted wrote off $4 billion last week, due largely to costs associated   
   with the cancellation of its two New Jersey projects.   
      
   The cancellations added fresh uncertainty to an industry seen by   
   supporters as a way to help end the burning of planet-warming fossil   
   fuels, but derided by opponents as inherently unworkable without massive   
   financial subsidies.   
      
   And it is another political headache for Murphy and Democrats a week   
   before elections for the state Legislature in which opposition to   
   offshore wind has become an important part of Republican campaigns.   
      
   New Jersey still has several other offshore wind projects in various   
   stages of development, with four new proposals submitted in August   
   alone. They join the one remaining project of the three originally   
   approved by the state, Atlantic Shores. That is a project by Shell New   
   Energies US and EDF Renewables North America.   
      
   Atlantic Shores said last week it remains committed to its project,   
   though it hinted in a statement that it, too, is seeking additional   
   help.   
      
   Wayne Parry reports for The Associated Press.   
      
   https://thedailyrecord.com/2023/11/06/orsted-wants-out-of-300m-forfeiture   
   -for-scrapped-nj-offshore-wind-farms/   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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