Beacon Power Follows Solyndra into Bankruptcy - You’re On The Hook For $43 Million More In Federal Loan Guarantees
“According
to published reports, Beacon’s shares traded for $47 in 2005 but fell
to $3.44 in February 2011 and less than $1 a few months later.”
By Dell Hill
Beacon Power,
a Massachusetts-based company that won praise from renewable power
activists and loan guarantees from the federal government, has filed for
bankruptcy, potentially leaving taxpayers on the hook for $43 million.
Loans Called into Question
The
company, which promised to build storage devices for intermittent power
produced by wind and solar power facilities, was never able to attract
investors. Coming on the heels of the Solyndra bankruptcy and ensuing
scandal, the Beacon Power bankruptcy has a growing number of people
calling for an end to federal loan guarantees for risky alternative
energy start-ups.
“I
don’t think the government should be picking winners and losers for the
private sector,” said Barbara Anderson, executive director of the
Massachusetts-based Citizens for Limited Taxation. “Obviously, they’re
not qualified.”
According
to published reports, Beacon’s shares traded for $47 in 2005 but fell
to $3.44 in February 2011 and less than $1 a few months later.
The
company was cautioned by Nasdaq it was in danger of losing its listing.
In late October, the price per share fell to just under 11 cents,
leaving the company with a market value of $3 million.
“We
take a pretty dim view of government getting too deeply involved in
private companies and picking winners and losers,” said Steve Poftak,
research director for the Massachusetts-based Pioneer Institute. “When
they start to rend away from support at the early stage of
development—at the science and research stage—and get into the balance
sheets of companies, that’s [crossing the line].”
And
we thought pensions would break the bank? At the rate they’re falling,
the federal loan guarantee program might sink this ship any day.
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