Posts Tagged ‘Stimulus’

“Cash for Clunkers” Retrospective

Friday, July 31st, 2009

The "Cash for Clunkers" program led a short life--only a week--before its $1 billion in funding was exhausted. What is your view of the program? Should it be extended? What should happen now? Is the apparently short life of this program indicative of what we can expect from other stimulus attempts?

Wikipedia has a fairly long article, under the title Car Allowance Rebate System. Below the fold are a few comments:

White House reviewing 'cash for clunkers' program

The White House said Thursday it was reviewing what has turned out to be a wildly popular "cash for clunkers" program amid concerns the $1 billion budget for rebates for new auto purchases may have been exhausted in only a week.

Transportation Department officials called lawmakers' offices earlier Thursday to alert them of plans to suspend the program as early as Friday. But a White House official said later the program had not been suspended and officials there were assessing their options.

"We are working tonight to assess the situation facing what is obviously an incredibly popular program," White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said of the Car Allowance Rebate System. "Auto dealers and consumers should have confidence that all valid CARS transactions that have taken place to date will be honored."

E-mail from Oil Drum Staff Member (at time when it appeared program was being stopped as of Thursday midnight):

I have a friend who works at a car dealership, and he reports business has been absolutely insane because of Cash for Clunkers. Phones ringing off the hook, customers swarming the lot, etc.

He's not looking forward to going to work tomorrow. People are going to be pretty ticked off to hear the program's over. Plus there will be a ton of work to do, wrapping everything up. He says they spent hundreds of thousands of dollars advertising Cash for Clunkers, and the ads are still running even though the program is over.

Cash for Clunkers Suspended? Funds Already Running Out

"Cash for Clunkers" was supposed to continue through November 1, 2009 or until the money ran out. But with the number of dealers participating, if each completed just a dozen cash for clunkers deals, the $1 billion dollars would be spent. And some dealers have initiated more like 250 cash for clunkers deals -- 20 times what the government was expecting.

At Fitzgerald Toyota in Gaithersburg, Maryland, it's a different kind of car race as the sales staff rushes to process "Cash for Clunkers" transactio " ns before the government slams the brakes on the program.

US 'cash for clunkers' scheme gives out $1bn in less than a week

Britain's similar car scrappage initiative is on track to run out of money in just over two months. The scheme, which began in mid-May, is designed to run until the end of February 2010 or until the £300m put in by the government has been spent.

'Clunkers' Program Is Running Out of Cash

Under the program, dealers credit the amount of the voucher to customers who buy new cars. They then get reimbursed by the government.

"There's a whole lot of money out there that dealers haven't collected on," said Darvish, who noted that she's taken in about 200 clunkers. "We've sold the cars and we've processed the paperwork, but we haven't been reimbursed. I'm out about $1 million. The government is supposed to reimburse me for that."

Auto recyclers leery of cash for clunkers

Not all auto recyclers are relishing the government's new cash for clunkers program, which requires car dealers to destroy the gas-guzzlers they get as trade-ins from new car buyers.

Used engines and drivetrains are a big part of recyclers' income from each scrapped car, and under the federal program those engines must be destroyed. The idea is to promote fuel efficiency and help automakers, but it comes at a time when more than a dozen U.S. auto parts suppliers have filed for bankruptcy this year. . .

Under cash for clunkers, the government is advising car dealers to replace a trade-in's engine oil with a sodium silicate solution and run the engine to ruin it before giving or selling the car to a scrap dealer.

The Automotive Recyclers Association says that can damage otherwise sellable parts like pistons - and mean smaller profits for scrap yards, considering it can cost $700 to $1,200 to process a car, including transport and removing toxic items like mercury, Wilson said. Recyclers' profits vary but can reach several hundred dollars for a 6-year-old car.

If Cash for Clunkers Survives, Will Ethanol Funding Suffer?

Friday, July 31st, 2009

junk cars

If you could get it into the dealer, it was Cash for Clunkers material. (Flickr/iboy daniel)

Congress saves the day! It miraculously comes up with $2 billion to save the bankrupt Cash for Clunkers program, which somehow ran through it's meager funding in just four days! But the $2 billion wasn't just lying around--it was effectively hijacked from the stimulus funds intended to provide loan guarantees for renewable fuels. And the ethanol lobbyists aren't too happy.

I predicted here that the $1 billion in funding would not last long. I said June 20: "The problem with CARS (Car Allowance Rebate System) is the limited $1 billion funding and the July 1 to November 1 window to grab a piece of it. If you want fed assistance to buy your next green car, apply now, because it won't last long. President Obama weighed in today as a cheerleader for renewing the program, a speech he undoubtedly didn't realize he'd have to make:

The program was originally funded with $4 billion, but the budget process resulted in drastic cuts. Some observers thought that even $1 billion was too much, and that there would be money left over on October 31, when the program would have ended.

Bob Dinneen, president and CEO of the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA), commented that "One of the advantages of the Cash for Clunkers program is putting more fuel-efficient cars on the road, however these new cars should also be running on renewable fuels like ethanol in order to benefit both the changing climate and the domestic economy. For the U.S. long-term auto and fuel needs, it seems counterproductive to limit the renewable fuels industry."

Sure, but how many of the millions of flexible-fuel vehicles already on the road actually run on ethanol? Not many, unfortunately -- and a lot are big gas-guzzlers such as Chevy Tahoes and Ford Expeditions.

GE Unveils a Glimpse of the Coming Smart Grid

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

ge smart grid

Dialing in the smart grid at GE in Niskayuna. (Jim Motavalli photo)

NISKAYUNA, NEW YORK-We hear a lot of talk about the "smart grid," and it sounds high-tech and cool, not to mention just around the corner. A look at how General Electric is preparing for this brave new future was both exhilarating and sobering.

Exhilarating, because it promises to give consumers considerable control over their energy efficient destiny. We'll be able to order our energy-conscious appliances to run only when the time-dependent rates are low, and switch to half-power when peak use sends those rates soaring. We'll see our real-time power use displayed on "smart meters" and home energy managers. We'll plug in our cars, and let the grid decide on an optimal charging time.

Sobering because it isn't here yet, and won't be tomorrow either. There are 140 million electric meters in use in the U.S., and just making them "smart" will take at least 10 years, GE officials said. Replacing all the transmission lines that make our grid "dumb" -- ie, unable to move wind power generated in North Dakota to, say, New York, where there's a big population waiting to use it -- will take much longer and cost much more. Estimates of total cost range from $100 billion to $2 trillion.

ge smart meter

The Obama administration's $11 billion in smart grid stimulus funding certainly helps, but even the most optimistic estimate sees a relatively long timetable and huge investment for the full vision to be realized.

While at GE, I watched a technician simulate what it would be like for the grid to take control of my power use, and visited the "kitchen of the future," a row of cutaway appliances (with neon tubes substituting for stove burners) at General Electric's Global Research HQ in Niskayuna, New York. A computer monitor would allow me to cut my dryer's electric use from 4.5 to 2.5 kilowatts when rates spike (and increasing drying time in the process, of course).