Here’s a quick footnote to our commentary published yesterday about the bankruptcy announcement by Ener1, another of Obama’s failed green-energy “investments.” Ener1 manufactured lithium-ion batteries to be used in electric vehicles, EVs. Today’s Wall Street Journal provides further reasons to question Obama’s judgment and his irresponsible stewardship of the taxpayer’s dollars.
Ener1 blamed the anemic market for rechargeable
battery cars and an overly competitive market place for the company’s financial
woes. That is a similar refrain to the
one offered by Solyndra, the California solar energy company that went bust
last September even after Obama had guaranteed $535 million in loans.
But, flooding an uncertain, limited, nascent
market with a plethora of manufacturers did not seem to bother the Obama
Administration or cross anyone’s mind at the DOE. “The battery glut was created in substantial
part by the Obama Administration, which handed out money to no fewer than 48
different battery technology and electric vehicle projects in 2009,” according to the WSJ.
Ener1 was awarded a $118 million
grant by the DOE in 2009. That’s a “grant”
– as in “gift” – not a loan like Solyndra or Beacon Power, a Massachusetts green
company that also went bankrupt after a $43 million DOE loan guarantee. At
least with a government loan there is an assumption, however weak, that the
funds will eventually be paid back. Not
so with a grant.
It’s far from clear why a taxpayer
gift of $118 million seemed justified other than that the Obama Administration
was passing out favors to just about anybody that could say “green energy” –
better still if they had also contributed to the Obama campaign. It certainly wasn’t based on prior
performance.
The company was founded in 2002, but
was never able to post a profitable year.
Even 2010, the year after the $118 million grant, Ener1 posted a $165
million loss. That was also the year
that Vice-President Biden visited
the plant and said the company “was leading the way…sparking whole new
industries that will ensure our competitiveness for decades to come.”
Give Joe credit for being an eternal
optimist, but he certainly isn’t very good at business. Only Joe would claim that a company showing
loses of hundreds of millions of dollars and less than a year away from
bankruptcy was “leading the way” to anything but the poor house.

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