When Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) unveiled his Republican House Budget plan a few weeks ago, he specifically criticized two U.S. solar projects as examples of “ill-fated ventures” that received federal loan guarantees from the Obama administration.
Even for Ryan, it was an odd thing to complain about. The two projects the congressman called out — Solar Reserve’s solar tower in Nevada and Sempra Energy’s Mesquite Solar complex in Arizona — are both doing quite well. Solar Reserve chief executive Kevin B. Smith, who wrote a letter to Ryan to explain why his business is an American “success story,” told the Washington Post he has “no idea” why the Budget Committee chairman made the charge.
Asked why Ryan calls the businesses “ill-fated ventures,” the congressman’s spokesperson dodged the question and changed the subject.
There is, of course, a larger point to this: not only are the companies Ryan doesn’t like succeeding, but the entire solar industry is starting to boom. Bloomberg News reports that, as of this year, solar power “will be the second-biggest source of generating capacity added to the U.S. electric grid.”









