Obama energy officials funded solar firms despite ‘junk bond’ ratings from
S&P, Fitch

The U.S. Department of Energy backed hundreds of millions of dollars in
loans for discredited solar power start-ups whose corporate debt was
already sullied with “junk” ratings by Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings,
two of the world’s leading credit agencies, a federal government
investigation has shown.

Despite the finding, Energy Secretary Steven Chu vigorously defended the
ethics of his agency in a hearing last week held by House Oversight
Committee Chairman Rep. Darrell Issa.

Details are emerging this week about the Energy Department’s practices that
indicate the agency spent a disproportionate amount of funding on these
tainted solar power projects.

Congressional aides interviewed personnel at Fitch and S&P, and officials
inside Obama’s Energy Department, as part of their investigation.

A company called Solopower was cited in a “dire” warning by S&P, which
accurately forecast that the firm would “fail to meet its debt
obligations.” Nonetheless, it received $170 million in federal funding
guarantees, investigators told The Daily Caller.

Another company, Abound Solar, was approved for a $400 million loan
guarantee by Obama officials, investigators said. Fitch Ratings, however,
had earlier assigned a “junk credit” rating to Abound. Fitch deemed the
firm “highly speculative” and “lagging in technology” behind its
competitors.

It was also rated less creditworthy than Solyndra, another infamous
administration solar power investment, which caused scandal for the White
House last year when it declared bankruptcy.

“The markets were expressing a sense of caution on these firms,” Jeffrey
Solsby, a senior aide to Issa, told TheDC. “The administration did not have
this same sense of caution.”

Earlier this month, About Solar announced that it would stop producing
solar power panels and lay off 180 employees. Before the disclosure, the
company had already spent $70 million of its awarded federal funds.

Federal investigators detailed other dramatic abuses at the green energy
firms:

Bright Source Energy, which received a $1.6 billion federal loan guarantee
to build a solar power plant, has spent some $56 million on a “desert
tortoise relocation program.” And Beacon Power, which received Energy
Department funding, went bankrupt — but not before paying three executives
more than $250,000 in “bonuses” in March 2010.

Foreign firms also received loan guarantees from the federal government as
part of the program. One such overseas company was Spain’s Abengoa, another
corporation with a poor credit rating, which rounded out the energy
department’s junk bond portfolio.

Federal investigators told TheDC that an audit of these loans and loan
guarantees indicated that the administration “ignored” clear warning signs
of a “likely loss” of taxpayer dollars. Investigators also said the
administration exercised “improper influence” in the approval of loan
guarantees to favored companies “through manipulation of analysis —
defrauding taxpayers and misappropriating assets.”

Even more damning allegations, which suggest that former Obama
administration officials and campaign bundlers received a sizable share of
those federal funds, are now surfacing.

http://dailycaller.com/2012/03/31/obama-energy-officials-funded-solar-firms-despite-junk-bond-ratings-from-sp-fitch/


This is the part I find interesting and have always suspected:

Even more damning allegations, which suggest that former Obama
administration officials and campaign bundlers received a sizable share of
those federal funds, are now surfacing.





J

-

Ninety percent of politicians give the other ten percent a bad reputation.
- Henry Kissinger

Politicians are people who, when they see light at the end of the tunnel,
go out and 

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