Timothy Carney

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Timothy P. Carney: Congress gives your money to T. Boone Pickens

By: Timothy P. Carney
Examiner Columnist
July 10, 2009

T. Boone Pickens, like any good businessman, can read changing economic conditions. While he spent the 1980s as a “corporate raider” and oilman, in this age of Barack Obama and Henry Waxman, he has shifted his focus to lobbyists, feel-good green messages, and technology that depends on government subsidies.

The result: Taxpayers will now be subsidizing T. Boone Pickens, a billionaire—and Republicans and Democrats in Congress tell you it’s for your own good.
 
This week, three senators proposed special tax credits that will subsidize Pickens’ latest business venture, which he calls “the Pickens Plan.” Like his previous undertakings, Pickens has launched his plan as a way to get richer. Unlike his previous undertakings, the Pickens Plan is completely dependent on government subsidies—and this has ingratiated him to politicians and media.
 
The Pickens Plan, in short, in this: We should get more electricity from windmills and power our cars with natural gas. Pickens happens to be a major investor in windmills and natural-gas cars. Both of these energy sources are heavily subsidized, but not enough for Pickens to profit from them, apparently.
 
This week, Senators Robert Menendez, D-N.J., Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Harry Reid, D-Nev., at Pickens’ urging, sponsored a bill to double the huge subsidies natural gas cars already receive, and to provide a $100,000 tax credit for the construction of a natural-gas filling station.
 
Menendez, Hatch, and Reid introduced this bill eight days after the largest natural gas truck fueling station in the world was opened. The builder: Clean Energy Fuels Corp., founded and partly owned by Pickens. Pickens’ company is the leading builder of natural gas fueling stations, and thus the leading beneficiary of this subsidy.
 
The House version of the bill included $30 million per year to fund research into natural-gas cars—even more of your money that could line Pickens’ pockets.
 
So while our government is running a trillion-dollar deficit, which will lead to tax hikes and inflation that make us and our children poorer, Congress is thinking of creating subsidies and a private tax cut to a man on Forbes magazine’s list of the world’s richest people.
 
Pickens’ Clean Energy Fuels is also a leader in transporting natural gas. Plus, he has invested in the V-Vehicle Company, building a natural-gas-powered car.
 
And it’s not as if natural-gas powered cars aren’t already subsidized. The 2005 energy bill created special tax credits for natural-gas powered cars. There is also already a $30,000 tax credit for the construction of natural-gas fueling stations—a credit Menendez and Hatch would more than triple.
 
Why are natural-gas cars so subsidized? Because they are so unprofitable. Honda’s methane-powered Civic costs nearly $10,000 more than a regular Civic (unless you go to a dealer who’s stuck with these cars after betting on gasoline prices to continue to rise), and doesn’t come close topaying for itself in fuel savings.
 
If natural gas stays inexpensive, and oil climbs again, the market could drive business to natural gas cars. In fear that might not happen soon enough, though, Pickens was on Capitol Hill this week lobbying for subsidies.
 
Pickens has long nurtured ties with government (he began lobbying for natural gas subsidies back in 1992), but his Pickens Plan differs starkly from the way he did business back in the 1980s. He used to make money through commerce and the power of the market. Now he makes money through subsidy and the power of the government—and for this he was abused.
 
Perversely, his recent shift—from selling stuff (such as oil) that people want to buy, to selling stuff (like gas cars and wind power) that people buy only when it’s subsidized or mandated—has elevated Pickens’ reputation from greedy capitalist to world-saver.
 
Pickens was one of the bad guys in a 1992 book Den of Thieves where he was derided as a “corporate raider” and named by one reviewer as oneof “the main players behind why the 1980’s were characterized as the ‘decade of greed.’ ” The offense back then—in addition to selling oil—was his penchant for “hostile takeovers.”
 
“Hostile takeovers” is an inaccurate term for what Pickens used to do. The management didn’t like them, sure, but the transactions in question consisted of shareholders voluntarily giving their stock to Pickens in exchange for Pickens’ money.
 
Pickens’ new bid actually is hostile. I don’t want to fund his windmills or methane cars. But if I refuse, the IRS will come after me. But instead of“greed” it’s dubbed as “green.”
 
Timothy P. Carney is The Washington Examiner's Lobbying Editor. His K Street column appears on Wednesdays. 
 
 

 



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FireInsideTheMan

Jul 10, 2009

All those flashy commercials last year about the "Pickens Energy Plan" reminded me of another smooth talking con artist. Something is not right when Pickens (and Al Gore) are investing millions (if not billions) of dollars in so-called "green" initiatives, hoping the government will enforce tax increases and subsidies to pay for this hoax. I guess that is why Washington is BROKE -- they have already sold their souls to the devil.

 

Jul 10, 2009

Go Pickens, we need to be using the wind power. This is a much better alternative to Nuclear plants. Much of west Texas is powered be natural gas turbines burning all day long, putting gases in the atmosphere and using another nonreplacable resource. Sounds to me like this author's pay check is coming from electric companies that don't care what they do to our planet as long as they make a buck. This administration is blowing tons of cash on stupid stuff, here is something that actually makes since.

 

fred

Jul 11, 2009

just once i'd like a naysayer to present a better plan. fine, don't give pickens any money. tell him not to invest in america and not to try and get more tax dollars to do it. but what about you? do you use gas? you use electricity? batteries? coffee? live in america? where's your oil coming from? want congress to keep us sending our cash over seas? i was gonna say that only dead people don't use foreign oil, but diesel fuel the backoes that dig their graves.

 

Paul High

Jul 12, 2009

Dear Mr. Carney, I was a bit disturbed by you editorial concerning the Pickens Plan. You infer that anyone who proposes a plan to save the country and yet makes a profit by doing so is an unsavory person. There is something wrong with that logic. I am convinced we must become independent of foreign oil or our National Security will be adversely affected and our grandchildren (of which I have 11 and counting) will live in a country with limited means due to an absence of affordable energy to run our cars and trucks; to light our homes and cities and to fuel our industry. If there is a better plan than the one proposed by T. Boone Pickens -- I'll be the first in line to support it but believe me, we better get on with it or we face a century of suffering. Paul High, Springfield Virginia"

 

James

Jul 14, 2009

Carney is one of the few young reporters in DC willing to investigate the nexus of these rigged crises, their world-saving plans, and world-saving, narcissistic and self-serving legislation. If you are worried about the coming century of suffering just ask anyone, like my mother-in-law, who suffered through the centrally planned energy systems of the Soviet Bloc. Most of the world suffered in the 20th century from these Utopian visions of governmental salvation. Now you guys are cheering on our coming suffering and enslavement as high-minded and noble. It is the definition of tragedy to mistake our enemies for friends and our friends for enemies. Good luck Paul, good luck fred, in the coming gloom...

 


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