Another of Obama's green energy companies about to go bust

M

miles

Guest
What's another $3B?

Everything The Fraud touches turns to shit.

We tried to warn you.
 
News, or a pathetic attempt to deflect attention from gun-toting maniacs?
 
I just want to know what the total failure/success rate is in some kind of real terms. I actually googled it but it looks like nobody has updated it since 2012 and then it was 2.7 % or there abouts as far as actual failed companies. And some of the money spent was never really meant to come back in any real sense of the word. Fixing houses so they'd withstand the weather better was just an investment and many of the turbines and solar panels at least in theory were meant to pay out years down the road. So I want to know what we're looking at.
 
I just want to know what the total failure/success rate is in some kind of real terms. I actually googled it but it looks like nobody has updated it since 2012 and then it was 2.7 % or there abouts as far as actual failed companies. And some of the money spent was never really meant to come back in any real sense of the word. Fixing houses so they'd withstand the weather better was just an investment and many of the turbines and solar panels at least in theory were meant to pay out years down the road. So I want to know what we're looking at.
This is from last year: http://www.npr.org/2014/11/13/363572151/after-solyndra-loss-u-s-energy-loan-program-turning-a-profit

2.28% loss rate, recovered (and then some) by interest payments.

$10 billion was set aside by Congress to cover losses. Solyndra's loss was $535 million.

Getting back to Miles' question, what's another $3 billion?

I presume he's referring to the imminent failure of Abengoa, which is a Spanish company. They have two projects in the US - the Solana Generating Station in Arizona and the Mojave Solar Project in the Soda Mountains of California. Both projects are doing just fine. US investment in these projects is $2.7 billion.
 
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