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View Full Version : Companies eye Wixom plant for energy park (Metro Detroit)



LMich
08-27-2009, 12:31 PM
Usually, these job announcements are something to be skeptical of because it's a hundred jobs, here, and a hudred jobs, there, in a state bleeding thousands a month, but this one sounds more promising than anything secured, yet. It's definitely one of the more impressive pieces of our economic puzzle. IT's also great to see yet another shuttered auto plant being reused.



http://cmsimg.detnews.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=C3&Date=20090827&Category=AUTO01&ArtNo=908270345&Ref=AR&Profile=1001

Companies eye Wixom plant for energy park (http://www.detnews.com/article/20090827/AUTO01/908270345/1001/rss21)

Christina Rogers And Mark Hornbeck / The Detroit News

August 27, 2009

Plans by two out-of-state companies to redevelop Ford Motor Co.'s abandoned Wixom plant into an energy park could help further solidify Michigan's effort to become an alternative energy hub, some industry observers say.

But the $725 million project hinges on Xtreme Power of Austin, Texas, and Clairvoyant Energy of Santa Barbara, Calif., winning federal loans and state tax breaks to refurbish the 318-acre property.

The project could create about 4,300 jobs. It also could establish a North American headquarters in Wixom for Oerlikon Solar, a Switzerland-based leader in thin-film solar technology, said Phil Horlock, chairman and CEO of Ford's real estate division.

Clairvoyant Energy is working with Oerlikon to bring the Swiss company's solar manufacturing technology to the United States. Clairvoyant plans to make utility-size solar panels at the site. Xtreme Power builds large-scale battery systems for storing renewable power.

Michigan lawmakers are trying to bring the deal to fruition. Both companies also plan to seek federal stimulus money with the Department of Energy and are considering sites in other states. They will select a site before Sept. 14, the deadline for applying for a federal loan.

A specialized tax credit tailored to the companies for a maximum of $100 million over four years was unanimously approved by a state House committee Wednesday but no vote was taken.

In a related development, the Senate Finance Committee passed a package Wednesday afternoon that would expand Michigan Economic Growth Authority tax credits this year.

The state is brushing up against its limit on the tax breaks for the year, and Gov. Jennifer Granholm and state economic development officials are pushing for an increase so Michigan does not lose a business attraction tool for the next few months.

Executives for the two energy companies said renovation of the site could begin almost immediately and production could start by late 2011.

"We have a unique opportunity in Michigan," said Carlos Coe, the CEO of Xtreme Power. "The infrastructure is in place there, and we can co-locate with other renewable energy manufacturers."

He said several other states were vying for the project but he declined to name them. Xtreme power develops and manufactures large-scale battery storage systems for use with renewable power sources, such as wind turbines and solar panels.

David Hardee, CEO of Clairvoyant Energy, said the chance to work with other alternative energy manufacturers is the key to the project.

Like a 'Silicon Valley'

The project is expected to attract other renewable energy companies. A research and development center also will be located at the site and the firms will partner with a Michigan university. The companies are working with University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Wayne State University.

"This could possibly become what Silicon Valley was to California," Wixom Mayor Kevin Hinkley told the House committee.

Creating an industrial park specifically for alternative energy businesses is a novel concept that could help generate some industry buzz for Michigan, said Dan Radomski, vice president of industry services for NextEnergy, a business incubator in Detroit.

"You haven't seen a whole lot of clustering in the renewable energy sector," he said. "If we're able to pull this off, it will be widely recognized as a kind of hub."

Granholm has made growth in renewable energy a cornerstone of diversifying Michigan's auto-centric economy. Earlier this month, Michigan and Detroit's Big Three automakers won more than $1.3 billion in federal grants to support the next generation of batteries and electric vehicles.

Clemente said the bill that passed Wednesday was rushed to committee to help meet the energy companies' mid-September deadline. "Usually we want a longer filtering process but in this economy we expect cooperation," he said.

Establishing a solar manufacturing business can be a risky proposition with countries like China and Taiwan churning out cheaper products on the market, said Adam Krop, a solar analyst for Ardour Capital Investments, LLC in New York.

Still, with the federal government promoting renewable energy, the United States has become the "next frontier" for many global solar companies and thin-film solar technology stands out from more traditional wafer-based equipment, Krop said.

DruidCity
08-28-2009, 04:01 AM
This is interesting. I can add that Xtreme Power is a 5-year-old company with about 100 employees, based in Kyle, Texas (between Austin and San Marcos).

This project would be much, much larger than anything they've done anywhere else.

Raining Inside
08-28-2009, 06:11 AM
This is interesting. I can add that Xtreme Power is a 5-year-old company with about 100 employees, based in Kyle, Texas (between Austin and San Marcos).

This project would be much, much larger than anything they've done anywhere else.

Wow. I live in Kyle and have never heard of this company.

LMich
08-28-2009, 08:58 AM
Probably because they only employ 100 people. lol

hudkina
08-28-2009, 06:09 PM
Does that mean that Michigan actually has a chance of poaching a Texas company?!

Raining Inside
08-28-2009, 09:06 PM
Does that mean that Michigan actually has a chance of poaching a Texas company?!

Actually Michigan has been poaching a lot of the movie business from Texas. A lot of films used to be made in the Austin area, but states like Michigan, Louisiana and New Mexico have taken that business because of bigger incentives.

Hayward
08-28-2009, 11:46 PM
Michigan is still competing big with New Mexico. But Michigan is making a big enough dent. My sister works in the film industry out in LA, and says the incentives Michigan has offered definitely have people talking out there in California.

DruidCity
08-31-2009, 06:59 PM
Here's another article about Xtreme Power's plans in Michigan:
http://www.statesman.com/business/content/business/stories/other/2009/08/27/0827xtreme.html

LMich
09-01-2009, 03:24 AM
Sweet Jeebus, did Granholm really want this:

Powers said that company officials told him that Michigan's incentives offer to the company is worth more than $200 million. In addition, the state will help the company to seek another $500 million in loan guarantees. The company told Powers that Granholm has pledged to accompany Xtreme officials to the White House to meet President Barack Obama as part of its effort to seek loan guarantees.

She's really serious about this 'green economy' thing, which may be the only thing worth any note in her eight years.

hudkina
09-01-2009, 05:27 AM
I think its funny how so many people put her down for the state's economy. She's done about as good as you can get when it comes to governing a state that has been losing jobs for practically her entire tenure.

LMich
09-01-2009, 09:47 AM
I don't put her down because of the shape of the economy; she's simply a poor executive and administrator. She's got the Head of State thing down pat, it's the Head of Government thingy she never quite understood. She'd make an great senator, but as a governor, she's been about as laissez faire, aloof, an ineffectual as they come. Perhaps, average and aloof would have been acceptable in better times; but it was something we simply couldn't afford this decade, and it's exactly what we got. Whether it's been budget negotiations or hot-button social issues, she very rarely has an opinion until someone else does. She has no courage for much of anything, following more often than leading.

subterranean
09-01-2009, 04:20 PM
I don't put her down because of the shape of the economy; she's simply a poor executive and administrator. She's got the Head of State thing down pat, it's the Head of Government thingy she never quite understood. She'd make an great senator, but as a governor, she's been about as laissez faire, aloof, an ineffectual as they come. Perhaps, average and aloof would have been acceptable in better times; but it was something we simply couldn't afford this decade, and it's exactly what we got. Whether it's been budget negotiations or hot-button social issues, she very rarely has an opinion until someone else does. She has no courage for much of anything, following more often than leading.

Sorry, but I need to respectfully disagree with you. Between inheriting a post-industrial nightmare, her relentless scouting for businesses, both domestic and abroad, the best film incentives in the nation, green energy and consumer incentives, making difficult state budget and employee cuts, her aggressive stimulus lobbying, No Worker Left Behind funding, the Great Lakes Compact, and her determination in the area of high-speed rail, creative programs for revitalizing downtowns and attracting talent--I'd say we're not likely to see a Governor this in tune with reality--ever again in our lifetime. Laissez faire is an incredible misnomer. No one is perfect, but this woman has hit the pavement and hit it harder than anyone in recent memory.

LMich
09-02-2009, 06:04 AM
I'll simply end my opinion with the point that it's been clear during much of her two terms that from the outside looking in, no one knew who the boss was in this state despite her being the governor, and that was no one's fault but her own.

Word around Lansing, for years, is that she's routinely missing in action, both figuratively and literally, when needed the most having delegated all of her responsibilities to her cabinent members and agency directors. Personal working relationships are very important in politics, and its not a secret here in Lansing that she doesn't have any kind of working relationship with either Andy Dillion or Mike Bishop, relationships that would have paid off dividends in getting important legislation passed sooner, easier, and/or at all.

Yes, for the sake of her legacy, she better be getting things done; she should be getting things done, anyway. Unfortunately for Michigan, her biggest fault was that she never realized and utilized her true power as governor. She's certainly better than any of the choices we've had over the last few decades, but I guess that shows how stagnant and uninspiring both state parties are here in Michigan. This choices in the upcoming gubernatorial election simply highlight what has been a dirth of good talent for many years, now. Come on; Cherry? Hoestrak? Land? Cox? Stick a fork in us; we're done. Let's just say that if Michigan does make it out of all of this, and will have been in spite of our political class, not because of it. My faith is now in our tireless start-ups and persistent/dogged-when-they-probably-shouldn't-be entrepreneurs.



State House poised to OK $100M in tax credits for Wixom battery project (http://www.detnews.com/article/20090901/BIZ/909010419/)

Karen Bouffard / Detroit News Lansing Bureau

September 1, 2009

Lansing --About $100 million in tax credits would go to a Texas company to make advanced batteries at Ford Motor Co.'s abandoned Wixom plant under legislation expected to pass in the House Wednesday, Speaker Andy Dillon announced this afternoon.

The legislation, sponsored by Rep. Lisa Brown, D-West Bloomfield Township, would extend the tax credits over four years to Xtreme Power, a leading manufacturer of large-scale commercial batteries for energy storage.

The bill likely will pass in the Senate along with measures to ensure greater scrutiny by the Legislature to make sure such credits go to worthy projects that create jobs, according to Sen. Nancy Cassis, chair of the Senate Finance Committee.

"This builds on what we're saying is the future for Michigan," said Dillon, D-Redford Township. "We're building on our strengths and taking advantage of infrastructure we have here in Michigan."

Dillon said company officials told him they get an 18-month advantage by doing the project in Michigan because of the infrastructure that is in place here. "This tells me there is a bright future ahead for Michigan."

The legislation is part of a larger effort to attract $725 million in investment to redevelop the 318-acre Wixom site. Democrats said the project, if completed, would create up to 6,600 jobs. But Cassis said there must be transparency to ensure companies receiving tax credits fulfill their promises to Michigan of job creation.

"It's important to have transparency and that means reporting back to the Legislature to make sure we're getting high powered projects like the Wixom project, and not just twittering (the credits) away on projects that are not going to come to fruition or that have highly inflated (job creation potential)," Cassis said.

Redeveloping Wixom is part of a push to make Michigan a hub for alternative energy development, something that will be discussed at a meeting in Saginaw today hosted by Gov. Jennifer Granholm. The Regional Clean Energy Economy Forum will include U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and Ed Montgomery, the director of Recovery for Auto Workers and Communities.

The Wixom effort has also drawn interest from Clairvoyant Energy of Santa Barbara, Calif., which hopes to win federal loans and state tax breaks to move into the plant. Clairvoyant also could establish a North American headquarters for Oerlikon Solar, a Switzerland-based leader in thin-film solar technology.

Clairvoyant Energy is working with Oerlikon to bring the Swiss company's solar manufacturing technology to the United States. Clairvoyant plans to make utility-size solar panels at the site.

Legislation that would expand Michigan Business Tax credits to attract Clairvoyant and other solar energy companies to the state passed in the House and is awaiting action in the state Senate.

The companies plan to apply for federal stimulus money and are considering sites in other states. They will select a site before Sept. 14, the deadline for applying for a federal loan.

Granholm has made growth in renewable energy a cornerstone of diversifying Michigan's auto-centric economy. Last month, Michigan and Detroit's Big Three automakers won more than $1.3 billion in federal grants to support the next generation of batteries and electric vehicles.

Michigan's plans dovetail with President Barack Obama's vision for a comprehensive energy plan to jump-start the American clean-energy sector and create millions of new jobs, according to a White House release announcing the regional forum.

kbouffard@detnews.com (517) 371-3660 Detroit News Staff Writer Mark Hornbeck contributed.



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