Seems the Mojave evictions WERE to make way for solar and wind projects
Guest post by Alec Rawls
In 2006 California’s Senate Bill 107 codified a requirement that by 2010 all electricity retailers in the state were to procure 20% of their electricity from “renewables.” That same year L.A. County Supervisor Michael Antonovich established Nuisance Abatement Teams that started combing the Mojave desert hitting isolated residents with ever-expanding lists of code violations, imposing whatever it took to drive residents out, and they made their intentions perfectly clear:
As her ordeal wore on, she heard one agent, looking inside their comfortable cabin, say to another: “This one’s a real shame — this is a real nice one.”
A “shame” because the authorities eventually would enact some of the most powerful rules imaginable against rural residents: the order to bring the home up to current codes or dismantle the 26-year-old cabin, leaving only bare ground.
“They wouldn’t let me grandfather in the water tank,” Jacques Dupuis says. “It is so heart-wrenching because there was a way to salvage this, but they wouldn’t work with me. It was, ‘Tear it down. Period.’ ”
The immediate object in this case was actual confiscation of the land:
In order to clear the title on their land, the Dupuises are spending what would have been peaceful retirement days dismantling every board and nail of their home — by hand — because they can’t afford to hire a crew.
As the de facto evictions and confiscations multiplied, Antonovich’s motives were questioned. Was he trying to clear the land for redevelopment? In August of 2011, Antonivich Press Secretary Tony Bell denied it (at 8:40):
The county is simply responding to code violation complaints from neighbors in the area and any speculation about redevelopment was purely a conspiracy theory.
I did some Google searching at the time to see if any major wind or solar developments were planned for the area where the evictions were centered (the western Mojave’s Antelope Valley), but couldn’t pin down the connection. When First Solar recently cleared a permit for a massive Antelope Valley project I tried again and found some things I should have seen before.
It seems the wraps were already off when Antonovich issued his denials. Newspapers had reported just a month before that Antelope Valley had “33 utility-scale renewable energy installations” in the works. The updated map above shows how much of the valley has been sectioned off for various wind and solar projects.
These are presumably the anonymous “neighbors” who were asking for previous residents to be evicted. Apparently it is not enough that our green crony capitalists are getting billions in taxpayer subsidies, or that that rate-payers are forced to buy their “renewable” energy at extra-high prices. They also need their pet politicians to steal the land for them.
First Solar is the largest recipient of Obama loan guarantees at $3.73b
From last June:
The Arizona company is set to get a guarantee for a $680 million loan for the 230 MW Antelope Valley Solar Ranch 1 project, partial guarantees for $1.88 billion in loans for the 550 MW Desert Sunlight project and partial guarantees for $1.93 billion in loans for the 550 MW Topaz Solar project. Electricity from these projects will go to utilities Pacific Gas & Electric Co. and Southern California Edison.
PG&E and SCE. It’s all to feed California’s renewables mandate, now raised to 33% by 2020. (That’s Senate Bill X1-2, signed by Governor Brown in 2011.)
California is the perfect patsy. First Solar makes its own cadmium-telluride solar panels. Another cadmium-telluride panel manufacturer, Abound Solar (recipient of $400 million in loan guarantees) just shut down production, but First Solar doesn’t have to worry how much it costs to produce intermittent solar in the Mojave. California residents are required by law to pay whatever it takes. That’s the key to successful green crony capitalism: vertical green-subsidy integration. Solyndra and Abound really should have known. They weren’t corrupt enough.
Grumman Aircraft objected that First Solar’s 2100 acre AV Solar Ranch One would interfere with its stealth radar testing, but this concern was brushed aside:
A solar energy generating plant is “the highest and best use for this particular property,” said Mel Layne, president of the Greater Antelope Valley Economic Alliance.
More important than national security and certainly more important than the property rights of a bunch of isolated “desert rats.” If only we didn’t have the lowest and the worst telling us what the “highest and the best” is, but this is why we have rights. The voluntary nature of the market insures that the benefits from each transaction are sufficient to make all parties better off. As soon as government starts subsidizing loans, forcing customers to buy inefficiently produced power, and otherwise confiscating property, there are no limits to the losses.
Wind was also big on the Antelope Valley menu, but the opposition firmed up
Perhaps that should be re-phrased. Antelope Valley was also big on the wind farmers’ menu:
“The western Antelope Valley boasts both the highest and most consistent winds in almost all of Southern California,” said Nat Parker, project manager for Element Power’s proposed Wildflower Green Energy Farm. “Between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. the winds reach their highest peak, and it falls in line with when the electrical grid has highest demand.”
County Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich, who represents the unincorporated Antelope Valley, said this region “has the potential to become the nation’s leader in green, alternative energy innovation and production.” But he emphasized that community support is key to the success of these projects.
Element wants to use 4,000 acres of private land next to the poppy reserve for solar panels and some 50 wind turbines almost 500 feet high. Each turbine would produce enough electricity to power up to 2,000 homes, Parker said.
As for the wisdom of putting 500 foot tall wind turbines in the Antelope Valley, Antonovich’s own website has an item on the hurricane force winds that struck the area early last December. That nice peak-demand wind isn’t going to help much when half the turbines are on the ground.
Thankfully, the opposition has organized sufficiently to block the big windmills. Even Antonovich is cowed enough to put a wet finger in the air and pretend that he is all about protecting birds now, but of course he’s not done yet. Next in Antonovich’s sights: high speed rail to Las Vegas. Weather warning for the eastern Mojave: 80% chance of confiscatory Nuisance Abatement Teams. S#!+$torm guaranteed.

Enough with the term crony capitalism. This is just cronyism among leftist warm-mongers, with NOTHING to do with capitalism.
Vee Vill send them to relocation camps
I have this feeling in my bones that Alec is leaving stuff out. Something does not smell right.
LazyTeenager @ur momisugly 2012/04/07 at 6:14 pm
I have this feeling in my bones that Alec is leaving stuff out. Something does not smell right.
So which is it – feelings or smell? Make up your mind so we can laugh at your fecklessness appropriately – Anthony
LazyT says:
“I have this feeling in my bones that Alec is leaving stuff out. Something does not smell right.”
This isn’t Skeptical Pseudo-Science, or Tamina, or Closed Mind. That’s where your comment belongs. This is the internet’s Best Science & Technology site, where readers prefer reasons over a “feeling” in their “bones”. Maybe your witch doctor needs to give you a new spell to control that feeling.
LazyTeenager says:
“I have this feeling in my bones that Alec is leaving stuff out. Something does not smell right.”
Two things: The above comment was coined by the people of HebertShausen, Germany (downwind from Dachau); and I think that the name was Adolf not Alex.
Go read up on what is actually going on, even you might be disgusted.
Now that the reason has become obvious I wonder if the people whose land was taken by fraud can sue the crap out of the dirty politicians involved.
It seem one American really got fed up by the corrupt town government of Granby, Colorado who played similar games with zoning and decided to do something about it: On June 4, 2004, Marvin Heemeyer, destroyed several town buildings and the home of the former mayor. the total damage was about $7 million. No one was hurt except Marvin Heemeyer who committed suicide. : http://www.damninteresting.com/the-wrath-of-the-killdozer/
Despite the 2nd Amendment and the fact that zoning is used to force people off there land so it become available cheap this type of violence in the USA is very rare.
BWUAAUAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAAAHAHHAHAHAHAAAAAA
Couldn’t happen to a nicer Socialist driven state.
Stop fighting what they want.
Unfortunately, its usually the conservative rural voters that get shafted instead of the uber-large urban socialites.
Reblogged this on News You May Have Missed.
I have spent a good part of the afternoon researching this story. Its very disturbing. I did not select my nomme de guerre lightly. I can relate to the plight of these desert-rats. I plan on retiring out in the middle of the desert, just like many of these folks. I was also bothered by the protagonist being a republican. He is the sort for which the term RINO was invented. Apparently, republicans in his own district aren’t amused.
http://49.nationbuilder.com/what_s_up_with_that_mr_antonovitch
“What’s Up with That, Mr. Antonovitch? Range Wars in CA Again?
Posted by Ron Robinson 6969pc on August 27, 2011 · Flag
Troubling news regarding our esteemed county supervisor from District 5, Mike Antonovich. It’s serious enough that ReasonTV made a 10 minute video about the issue of “Nuisance Abatement Teams” telling people in the Anteleope Valley to tear down their houses and move off their own land. We’re wondering what law gives county code enforcement the authority to make such assertions and Mr. Antonovich doesn’t seem to want to answer. These “Nuisance Abatement Teams” (NATS) were created at the behest of Antonovich, and he won’t answer questions from the public about their true purpose. Mr. Antonovich’s email is fifthdistrict@lacbos.org. Usually, Republicans are for private property rights and the individual’s right to have his govenment leave him alone. So what’s up with that, Mr. Mayor Supervisor Antonovich?”
P.S. The pieces title is kind of funny!”
Are any bookmakers taking bets on when California becomes not only morally bankrupt, but fiscally bankrupt as well? Could be a nice little earner if the odds are reasonable.
I am not blocked from
http://www.avhidesert.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=1442
if I set my IP address to be in Florida instead of NZ.
[works for me in Godzone ~ac, mod]
Wind Mill Disaster: A stark look at the reality behind wind farms. They have been painted as “beautiful” too long.
Features California.
I just noticed that-
“Antelope Valley Solar Ranch One Receives First Loan Advance-
Exelon-owned solar photovoltaic project will be one of world’s largest”
April 5
.” CHICAGO & TEMPE, Ariz.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Exelon Corporation (NYSE: EXC) and First Solar, Inc. (Nasdaq: FSLR) today announced that the Antelope Valley Solar Ranch One project has received the first advance of a loan guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Loan Programs Office, finalizing Exelon’s ownership of the project………..”
http://investor.firstsolar.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=662186
“AV Solar Ranch One will generate enough electricity to power the equivalent of 75,000 average California homes — with no water use, no air emissions and no waste production — displacing approximately 140,000 metric tons of carbon emissions per year, the equivalent of taking approximately 30,000 cars off the road. The project has a 25-year power purchase agreement, approved by the California Public Utilities Commission, with Pacific Gas & Electric Company for the full output of the plant.”
It appears that First Solar cashed out of the program (except for maintenance and the like). In case your interested in the the method used to estimate displacement of co2 it is located here- http://www.firstsolar.com/~/media/WWW/Files/Downloads/PDF/Document-Library/Sustainable-Development/TechnicalReport_CarbonDisplacement_02761_NA.ashx
As the output of this facility is going to PG&E’s customers I think it would be appropriate for the model noted above to use current data on PG&E’s “Grid GHG emissions intensity”- not basing the calculation of benefits on data from 2007 (see footnote 16).
First Solar shareholders have suffered a loss of market value on the stock market with shares plummeting from a high of $317.00 per share on 30 May 2008 to only $20.98 per share 5 April 2012. If you sold shares of First Solar short at a price of #175.00 per share on 18 February 2011, you would have gained about $154.98 per share or about $154,980.00 per thousand shares. Short sellers of First Solar stock still have more than $20.00 per share of potential profit to be made before First Solar becomes another bankrupt government rent seeker.
Good article here mentions First Solar and several others. Taxpayers Take Hit as Solar Industry Implodes. from the National and Legal Policy Center, January 2012.
http://thegwpf.org/energy-news/4684-taxpayers-take-hit-as-solar-industry-implodes.html
Nice find from Kakatoa on First Solar being granted a 25 year electricity purchase gurarantee through the California Public Utilities Commission. Public utilities contracts are typically based on a guaranteed minimum rate of return so they can’t lose. PG&E is required to take all the output whenever the sun is shining, meaning it will have to shut down its other plants accordingly, making them uneconomic. But then PG&E also gets a guaranteed rate of return, so no matter how inefficient all these arrangements are, the cost just gets passed on to ratepayers.
The People’s Democratic Republic of California
Just abandon California to the bunny-humping ecosimp trash and wait for it to collapse. We can re-occupy in twenty years.
Alec,
It looks like the 25 year PPA with PG&E falls under the CPUC 2009 Energy Division Resolution E-4298 http://docs.cpuc.ca.gov/PUBLISHED/FINAL_RESOLUTION/111386.htm . PG&E will be paying $.2392 kwh at Super Peak times during the June- September time period this year. See- “Appendix B: Utility Time-of- Delivery (TOD) periods and factors” with a Market Price Referent of $.10852/kwh.
Sarc on /
Reasonable people would not object to having their home demolished as part of a scheme to save the world for our children and grandchildren.
So what if somebody is making money from conducting this scheme? Surely, such high-minded people are entitled to be rewarded for their efforts to save the world for our children and grandchildren.
Sarc off/
Richard
Everyone should start getting Land Patents, now. NOTHING trumps a Land Patent in court, it’s not subject to eminent domain, and these people could have told those fu***rs to get lost! This chaps my butt, but it’s all part of Agenda 21.
http://www.teamlaw.org/PatentHowTo.htm
http://teamlawforum.net/viewtopic.php?t=3
This has to be one of the most unjust reports I have ever read about Gov’t taking what they want supposedly for the good of the people but only to line their pockets. My wife and I both served this great country for 12 + years and swore an Oath to give up our live’s if need be to defend it. I’m 53 and have lived a good life. The time seems to be here to keep the promise. Our children have not been brainwashed by the system as they grew up in a home that took NO Sh#t from anyone or entity and hold the same values as we do. I do not want to see my children or anyone die because of the course this country is following but it seems inevitable if something is not done and soon there is going to be alot of misery and grief. I know that I will not be able to get them all but if I get at least 10 (20) that will be enough to justify my life defending this once great nation. Because of the business I’m in It’s close and I know I am not alone.