Friday, 31 July 2020

Trump Admin Recovers Taxpayer Cash from Obsolete Obama-Backed Solar Plant

The Department of Energy reached a settlement Thursday to recover $200 million in taxpayer funds from a loan the Obama administration distributed in 2011 to finance a $1 billion solar power plant that was deemed obsolete before it could officially go online.
The settlement between the Department of Energy and Tonopah Solar Energy must now be approved by a bankruptcy court, the Las Vegas Review Journal reported.
The Department of Energy provided a $737 million loan to Tonopah in September 2011 for the purposes of financing the $1.1 billion Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Project in Nevada. 

The agency disbursed funds for the plant in 2011 and 2013 before the project experienced problems requiring improvements, rendering the project obsolete by 2015, Bloomberg reported in January.
Thursday’s settlement will allow the Energy Department to recoup a portion of the $424 million Tonopah owes. 
The plant experienced an outage in 2016, forcing a shutdown lasting from October 2016 to July 2017, the Wall Street Journal reported in January. Another outage occurred in April 2019 and is continuing.
Both problems were a result of issues with the facility’s hot salt tanks, the Journal noted. 
“This project has consistently faced technical failures that have proven difficult to overcome,” Energy Department spokeswoman Shaylyn Hynes said in a statement.
“The Department’s decision was made after years of exhausting options within our authority to get the project back on track, given the significant taxpayer investment the prior Administration committed to this project,”
Department of Energy officials sent a default notice in September before Crescent’s only customer, NV Energy, terminated its purchase agreement.
SolarReserve, the developer behind Crescent, sued for the dissolution of Tonopah Solar Energy LLC.
The developer told a federal court in November that “the plant is moribund–neither generating energy nor revenue” and had debt of more than $440 million with “assets of much less value,” the Journal reported. 
ACS Cobra, another developer that aided in the project, would control Tonopah once the Energy Department is free of its obligation, Hynes noted.
The loan was distributed three weeks after Solyndra got $535 million in government loan guarantees during former President Barack Obama’s administration before declaring bankruptcy in 2011.

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