CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“HYDROGEN FUEL PLAN STILL TILTS TOWARD
HUGE CORPORATIONS”
Six months after pulling back about
$12 million worth of grants to help build refueling stations for the hydrogen
fuel cell cars due to debut by 2017, the California Energy Commission is ready
to take applications for new grants.
The problem: Revised rules issued by the commission appear at
first glance to cut out the favoritism that sullied last spring's stymied
grants, but the new rules still seem likely to place all or almost all the
money in the same hands that would have received the cancelled grants. They
also encourage a modicum of pollution over completely clean air.
The grants commissioners tried to dole out last spring required
prior approval for any prospective refueling location from at least one of the
eight big carmakers that will produce the first hydrogen cars.
Oddly enough, all but one station
approved by those billion-dollar-plus corporations – Mercedes Benz, Nissan,
General Motors, Toyota, Honda, Chrysler, Volkswagen and Hyundai – would have
belonged to two other huge international companies, German-based Linde Group
and Pennsylvania-based Air Products & Chemicals Co.
The Energy Commission only pulled back
its millions after this column exposed the fact that smaller operators were
systematically excluded, including some that proposed making H2 fuel from water
– almost the ultimate in pollution-free renewable energy.
The money has been lying around ever
since, and now the commission is about to accept applications for new grants
using the same funds, plus more, for a total of about $28.5 million. It all
comes from the state vehicle license tax.
But as always, the devil is in the
details. And some see the details as particularly devilish in the commission’s
new “program opportunity notice,” a 49-page document (http://www.energy.ca.gov/contracts/PON-12-606/PON-12-606.pdf)
calling for grant applications to be submitted by Jan. 17.
That date, for example, is no problem
for the two big industrial gas suppliers who, like the car companies and the
Energy Commission are members of the California Fuel Cell Partnership
organization, where membership costs almost $90,000 per year. They have
sufficient staff to complete complex documentation quickly for every service
station to which they’d like to add a hydrogen pump or two. But smaller firms
reported they had difficulty getting staff to work on those applications
through the holiday period.
“A Feb. 17 deadline date would be much
more fair to small companies like ours that will sell purely renewable
hydrogen,” said Paul Staples, president and project director for Eureka-based
Hygen Industries. “They can still reset that due date.”
The new plan also names new areas for the refueling stations,
while eliminating other places targeted in previous versions, another advantage
to big companies with multiple operatives to recruit service station owners.
Because at least one large company
signed up a few stations in the new areas several weeks before those locations
showed up in any commission documents, there’s also a possibility commission
insiders tipped off outfits they favor for the grants.
The Energy Commission has also changed
the amount it plans to reimburse builders of the new hydrogen stations, without
which no one would likely buy fuel cell cars, no matter how efficient they are
or how they look and perform. Where grants were once intended to fund 70
percent of building costs, that figure is down to 65 percent in the newest
filing and a 5 percent bonus for completing projects within 18 months of
approval has disappeared from the plan.
The reimbursement difference won’t
hurt the big fellas much, but makes it tougher for smaller guys to compete.
The new plan also requires state
approval for any loans a company takes out to build a station, and gives state
government veto power over any subsequent station sale.
“That is unacceptable,” says Staples.
“Lack of outright ownership makes it harder for small businesses to attract
venture capital and project investment.”
Taken together, the rules the Energy
Commission seeks to impose would apparently assure most control of hydrogen
refueling by the same companies on whom the commission originally planned to
bestow almost all its grant money.
One way to sum this up is to say that,
as the apocryphal Mr. Dooley observed more than 100 years ago, “The more things
change, the more they stays the same.”
Another way to say it: Stymie state
bureaucrats in their efforts to favor their cronies one way and they’ll try to
find another way to give the same money to the same people and companies.
Devilish details, indeed.
The bottom line: While the newest plan
on its face looks like a big improvement over the one abandoned last spring, it
still favors the same big companies and their fossil-fuel derived H2 over
outfits wanting to use the cleanest form of hydrogen fuel.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book,
"The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the
Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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