PEPEEKEO, Hawaii County 鈥 The company building a controversial wood-burning power plant north of Hilo may get a sizable Christmas bonus courtesy of American taxpayers 鈥 provided it starts supplying renewable energy by year鈥檚 end.
Dec. 31 is the deadline for Hu Honua Bioenergy to qualify for a federal tax credit of 鈥渦pwards of $100 million,鈥 company President Warren Lee said.
That windfall would underwrite a big portion of gave before legal disputes and flooding delayed an expected 2017 completion. The project is opposed by some community and environmental organizations.
The company, which also goes by Honua Ola, still needs to wrap up the years-long conversion of the former Pepeekeo coal-powered plant and obtain two additional governmental approvals before it may begin the biomass operation and seek the tax credit.
鈥淭his is a serious situation,鈥 Lee said of possibly forfeiting the financial benefit available to companies that produce biomass, solar or other forms of renewable energy.
鈥淎t this point, we still need to go forward,鈥 Lee said when asked if Hu Honua can complete the project without the tax subsidy.
Credit Will Keep Electricity Costs Down
Thirty percent of allowable development costs can be applied to a company鈥檚 federal tax liability under the investment tax credit. It鈥檚 the same savings individual homeowners can claim by making their own renewable energy through use of residential solar systems.
The credit is designed to avoid creating harmful greenhouses gases, while commercial operations offer the added benefit aiding ratepayers.
鈥淲hen developers are able to take advantage of federal tax credits for their renewable energy projects, it helps to lower the cost of energy that they sell to Hawaii Electric Light, Maui Electric and Hawaiian Electric.
Keeping the cost of renewable energy affordable allows our companies to pass savings on to our consumers,鈥 Rhea Lee-Moku, director of administration for Hawaii Electric Light, wrote in an email.
Local electricity rates would be 鈥渕uch higher鈥 without the federal investment tax credit for renewable energy, said Woody Rubin, president of AES Distributed Energy.
AES factored the tax savings into the price of renewable electricity it is negotiating to produce and sell to Hawaii Electric Light, Rubin said.
鈥淪o, that is kind of a pass-through鈥 reflected in lower rates, he said.
Rubin declined to reveal his project鈥檚 estimated tax savings because the parties have not signed a power purchase contract.
Electricity would come from a cutting edge 30-megawatt solar plant to be built near Waikoloa on the Big Island鈥檚 sunny leeward side and feature batteries capable of storing 30 MW for four hours, Rubin said. AES is now building two of its solar-plus-storage facilities on Kauai and hopes to add a Maui plant that would be one of the world鈥檚 largest of its kind, he said.
As for Hu Honua, its 21.5-megawatt plant will save Big Island electricity customers more than $100 million over its 30-year life expectancy, Lee said. The company claims it will be carbon-neutral and power 14,000 homes.
Another public benefit of the federal tax credit is moving the Big Island and Hawaii closer to meeting a mandate to producing only renewable energy by 2045.
Hawaii Electric Light was getting 57 percent of its power from renewable sources, but that number dropped to 37 percent when the Kilauea eruption closed Puna Geothermal Venture鈥檚 Pohoiki plant in May, utility president Jay Ignacio told Civil Beat in July.
Hu Honua is expected to make up half of that loss, Ignacio said at the time.
Renewable energy production statewide has risen at least six straight years, reaching 28 percent in 2017, according to the Hawaii State Energy Office. Tax breaks likely contributed to that trend.
鈥淭ax credits have helped expedite the development of renewable energy projects,鈥 said Hu Honua鈥檚 Lee.
But Hu Honua may be the one needing help since both time and聽 a growing number of Big Island residents are working against it.
Construction was delayed in August when massive flooding from Hurricane Lane damaged the Pepeekeo construction site. That followed previous shutdowns due to now-resolved legal battles Hu Honua had with a contractor and Hawaii Electric Light, which plans to buy all its electricity.
The company also needs a permit for re-injecting millions of gallons of cooling water into the ground and another for controlling surface runoff at the oceanfront site. Its applications are now under consideration by the Hawaii Department of Health, which held an unusual public question-and-answer session and hearing on the permit request Nov. 14 in Hilo.
Students from two schools, project opponents who set up informational displays and supporters wearing green Honua Ola T-shirts comprised the standing-room-only crowd of more than 200.
Among those commenting during the sometimes heated exchange was Dave Clark, who works as a laborer on the construction project. Clark said on behalf of his children and grandchildren, he had to report that while working on the site Nov. 9 he observed a 鈥渘asty鈥 discharge of black liquid flow 鈥10 feet from a running stream鈥 and into the ocean.
鈥淵es, I鈥檓 grateful for a job,鈥 Clark said at the permitting hearing. 鈥淭hanks for keeping me employed, but this is totally uncalled for.鈥
Fearing plant operations will harm the nearby marine environment, the 1,000-member Sierra Club, Moku Loa Group, on Nov. 1 requested the DOH hold a contested-case hearing before deciding on Hu Honua鈥檚 water-control applications.
鈥淲e believe issuance of these permits will allow contaminants, thermal pollution and likely inadequate salinity to negatively impact our coastal fisheries,鈥 the group wrote in its filing.
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About the Author
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Jason Armstrong has reported extensively for both of Hawaii Island鈥檚 daily newspapers. He was a public information officer/grant writer for the Hawaii County Department of Parks and Recreation from 2012 to 2016 and has lived in Hilo since 1987. Email Jason at jarmstrong@civilbeat.org