I’ve been
trying to discover if MEC is paying the correct amount of property taxes at
their wind farm located near me. The
quick answer is- I don’t think they are-
due to information (mostly a lack of information) provided by MEC employee Dean
Crist.
This is the
latest of several blog posts on this subject. Interested folks are invited to
examine the earlier ones here.
To recap: I became curious about how Pocahontas County determined the rates for the MidAmerican (MEC) wind project in the county. The assessor’s office provided me with a property tax appraisal for the wind farm (constructed in three phases) for the first 131 turbines - $2,580,000 ($1720 per kW), the next 39 at $2,850,000 ($1,900 per kW) and $3,660,000 ($1591 per kW) for the final 13. The assessor’s office reluctantly provided basic filings (after an attorney requested them in writing) submitted to the county by MEC that roughly match the assessments, listing met tower, land, turbines, and substation.
To recap: I became curious about how Pocahontas County determined the rates for the MidAmerican (MEC) wind project in the county. The assessor’s office provided me with a property tax appraisal for the wind farm (constructed in three phases) for the first 131 turbines - $2,580,000 ($1720 per kW), the next 39 at $2,850,000 ($1,900 per kW) and $3,660,000 ($1591 per kW) for the final 13. The assessor’s office reluctantly provided basic filings (after an attorney requested them in writing) submitted to the county by MEC that roughly match the assessments, listing met tower, land, turbines, and substation.
The
following numbers were provided by Mr. Crist -
1.
The
first phase of Pomeroy (123 MW in 2007) was constructed under a Board-approved
cost cap of $1,811 per kW.
2. The second and third phase of the
Pomeroy project (75 MW in 2007and 51 MW in 2008, respectively) was constructed
under an economic test approved by the Board which resulted in cap caps ranging
from $2,230 per kW to $2,480 per kW.
3. The fourth phase of the Pomeroy
project (7.5 MW in 2008) was added with a Board-approved cost cap of $2,300 per
kW.
The
fifth phase was an addition of 30 MW in the last ratemaking proceeding. At this
moment I cannot find what year it was added as projects were added in 2009 –
2012. Cost caps for these projects were $2,050 per kW in 2009, $2,200 per kW
for 2010 and $2,300 per kW for 2011-2012.
So, these are cost caps determined by the Iowa Utilities
Board. MEC has been unwilling to date to provide actual project costs, only
assuring me that the projects were completed under these cost caps.
To me, the most interesting thing about these figures is that
MEC’s cost caps were adjusted 5 different times, but the project has only three
property tax assessments.
The assessment of the first phase looks to be on low side to
similar projects completed by Nextera (one of the largest wind developers in
the country) in IUB DOCKET NO. RPU-09-0003. But, more noticeably, the cost cap
for part of phase 1 and all of phase 2 is $300 to $400 higher per kW than the
property tax assessments. The phase 3 cost cap is $400 higher per kW than the
property tax assessments.
There is no assessment for underground cable between the
turbines. The assessor suggested I contact MEC when I questioned why. MEC did
not supply itemized costs to verify that cable costs were in the turbine
assessments. A wind consultant friend estimated costs of “Lighter cable 4/0 34.5 kV,
$115,000 / mile (good for 4
turbines or so)”. MEC has 183
turbines in the county, which would mean that potentially $5,175,000 in cable
costs are missing from the tax rolls.
The difference in the cost caps vs. property tax assessments
concerns me. If the assessments for the first 2 phases (170 turbines, are off
by $300 per installed KW, that figure is $76,500,000. If the 3rd phase assessment is off by $400 per
installed KW, that amount is $11,900,000.
These figures total $92,575,000.
I was also unable to verify
that construction and soft costs that were capitalized , depreciated, ( and therefore
taxable), were included in the assessments. MEC declined to provide the confidential
Utilities board filings that I requested that would have helped determine this.
Finally, Mr. Crist noted in an email that the wind project costs
beyond the Pomeroy substation were assessed under the Iowa utility property
replacement tax system, rather than under 427B.26 -- Special valuation of wind energy conversion property. Since he did not respond to my phone call request for more
information on the differences on tax rates between these 2 programs, I can
only deduce that it produced favorable tax advantages for MEC. 427b.26 states that “Wind energy conversion property”
means the entire windplant including, but not limited to, a wind charger,
windmill, wind turbine, tower and electrical equipment, pad mount transformers,
power lines, and substation.
Possibly, the county is
missing some additional revenue here as well.
My interest in this issue started
when Pocahontas County considered creating a tax increment finance district to
divert wind project property tax into special projects, potentially affecting 3
school districts and surrounding counties. It looks like residents of those
school districts should demand a careful review of how the county determined
tax rates for this project, as those school districts might be due more revenue
than they are receiving now.
There was little public
information available at the Iowa Utilities Board to assist me on this quest.
The documents describing the MEC wind builds have a lot of confidential
information not available to Iowans, but I did find a U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission document that shed some additional
information on wind project rate making principles for investor owned utilities.