George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.

Saturday, September 5, 2015

Unsettled science causes Wall St. losses in tax-advantaged US wind farm investments. Experts failed to anticipate drop in US wind despite increase in capacity. Goldman Sachs -16% in Cabazon Wind Farms, JP Morgan Chase -18% via Alta Wind X. Negative outlook on wind bonds by S&P-CNBC, Financial Times

9/1/15, "US clean energy suffers from lack of wind," CNBC, Gregory Meyer

"We never anticipated a drop-off in the wind resource as we have witnessed over the past six months," David Crane, chief executive of power producer NRG Energy, told analysts last month.
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The situation is likely to intensify into the first quarter of 2016 as the El Niño weather phenomenon holds back wind speeds around much of the US, according to Vaisala, a Helsinki-based weather measurement company.
"We do know that the strong El Niño cycle that we are now in tends to be correlated with below-average continental wind resource, and we also know that meteorological expectations are for the El Niño phase to continue," Moray Dewhurst, chief financial officer of NextEra Energy, said on a recent conference call. 

US wind farms are increasingly owned by so-called yieldcos, spinoffs from power producers that promise steady payments based on contracted electricity sales. Shares of wind-exposed yieldcos such as NextEra Energy Partners, Pattern Energy Group and NRG Yield, controlled by NRG Energy, have declined this year. NRG Yield reduced its earnings forecast due to what it called "unusually low wind production across the fleet". 
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Wall Street banks are passive investors in wind farms, often through tax-advantaged financing structures. Goldman Sachs's holdings include a stake in Cabazon Wind Partners in California, where generation fell by 16 per cent in the first half, EIA data show. JPMorgan Chase recently acquired an interest in California's Alta Wind X facility, which suffered an 18 per cent decline in electricity output. 

Standard and Poor's put a negative outlook on bonds issued by two wind farm companies as their revenues tracked wind speeds lower.

"Although our current expectation is that the wind resource will revert back to historical averages, at this time it is unclear when that will happen," the rating agency said.
Wind generated 4.4 per cent of US electricity last year, up from 0.4 per cent a decade earlier. But this year US wind plants' "capacity factor" has averaged just a third of their total generating capacity, down from 38 per cent in 2014. EIA noted that slightly slower wind speeds can reduce output by a disproportionately large amount
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Investors and analysts said the lighter wind compels renewable energy investors to own wind farms and solar plants in diverse places. 

Pascal Storck, Vaisala's global manager of energy services, said: "You don't want to have all your eggs in one basket. You don't want to be all in Texas and not have some mitigation strategy for when wind speeds are below average.""

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Wind farms themselves may reduce wind:

5/30/2013, "FYI: Do Wind Farms Make It Less Windy?" Popular Science, by Daniel Engber

"Wind turbines extract kinetic energy from the air around them, and since less energy makes for weaker winds, turbines do indeed make it less windy. Technically speaking, the climate zone right behind a turbine (or behind all the turbines on a wind farm) experiences what's called a "wind speed vacuum," or a "momentum deficit." In other words, the air slows down.

The effect has implications for wind-farm efficiency. Upwind turbines in a densely packed farm may weaken the breeze before it reaches the downwind ones. It could even have a more general impact. If wind farms were constructed on a truly massive scale, their cumulative momentum deficit could conceivably alter wind speeds on a global scale (though how winds would change is complex—they'd likely slow in places and speed up in others).

Wind farms can also affect the local temperature. According to Somnath Baidya Roy, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Illinois, as a breeze passes over a wind farm, the turbines create an atmospheric wake where wind speeds drop and turbulence increases. The rotors spawn a set of eddies that mix air from above with air from below. The eddies can lift cool air and sink warm air or vice-versa. That turbulence could raise or lower local temperatures. In a paper published in 2012, one group of researchers studied areas over several wind farms in Texas and found that local surface temperatures had risen by a small but significant amount."

"Related: Do they change the surrounding temperature?"


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I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.