Giving money to Peabody is not economic development
There is a great post on the Daily Yonder blog by Judy Owens from the Mountain Association for Community Economic Development (MACED) about the history of economic development incentives in Kentucky. Looking at the historical context of these incentives, it becomes abundantly clear that giving $315 million dollars to energy giant Peabody Energy is a bad deal no matter how you cut it:
There are lots of reasons not to like the deal that Peabody Energy Co. is cooking up to build a coal-to-liquid fuel plant in Kentucky. The incentives Peabody wants are unprecedented: $315 million in subsidies that will be on the backs of Kentucky taxpayers for the next 25 years. Worse, it’s an unproven technology that will create bigger environmental problems under the guise of solving the country’s energy dependence. The U.S. Senate considered similar legislation last month, and it failed. Miserably. The uber-conservative editorial staff of the Wall Street Journal, who are as pro-business as it gets, thought government funding of coal conversion was a waste of public money.
But even if Peabody Energy Co. were not a coal company, and made tennis shoes, cell phones or computers, this deal would be a bad one.
Like so many other big deal incentives have been in Kentucky, coal-to-liquid fuel will be a bad deal for the state’s taxpayers, small businesses, entrepreneurs, local school districts and communities in general. Why is that? It’s simple. Over the years, the incentives keep getting bigger and bigger, the toll on taxpayers worse and worse while the corporate demands grow more outrageous.
Read the full post here "Speak Your Piece: Tax Lure for a Liquid Coal Plant Will Put Kentucky on the Hook"
And, if you want to learn more about the problems with economic development policy in Kentucky and how we can fix it, visit our High Road to Economic Development pages.
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The URI to TrackBack this entry is: http://www.kftc.org/blog/archive/2007/07/27/giving-money-to-peabody-is-not-economic-development/trackbackOne answer to "Why?"
Take a look at it, and you will see Why politicians are able to go to sleep at night with a self-perceived clean conscience. The info they are being fed indicates to them that not only is coal to liquid fuel not a bad thing, but it appears to them to that by backing it, they are acting as savior for Eastern KY.
Someone needs to tell them that we don't need that kind of savior.

Peabody
It is my understanding 80% of the coal severence tax will be given to Peabody as part of the incentive. And, yet Peabody has $1.2 B CASH to offer for a leverage buyout of EXCEL coal IN Australia.
From what I understand in a deal like this Peabody would bring a 30% equity factor to the deal. Wich means . . . we , taxpayers, pay the othr 70%.
It will be interesting to see which members of the General Assembly stand tall and TELL IT LIKE IT IS. I supspect even with all the questions about the safety and long term impact to our enciornment is not know.
Why?
Politics, Money, Ego and re-election.
Jim Anderson Stivers