• Reasonable People
    • Joe Bast
    • Jim Lakely
    • David Applegate
    • Kendall Antekeier
    • Diane Carol Bast
    • Drew Banks
    • Andrew Barr
    • Bruno Behrend
    • Ben Boychuk
    • Alan Caruba
    • Edmund Contoski
    • Peter Ferrara
    • Matthew Glans
    • Jim Johnston
    • Jay Lehr
    • Maureen Martin
    • John Nothdurft
    • Joy Pullmann
    • James H. Rust
    • Harrison Schmitt
    • Taylor Smith
    • James M. Taylor
    • Rich Trzupek
    • Bruce Edward Walker
  • The Heartland Institute
  • Heartlander Magazine

Somewhat Reasonable

  • FacebookFacebook
  • TwitterTwitter
  • YoutubeYoutube
  • RSSRSS
  • itunesitunes
  • Budgets/Taxes
  • Environment/Energy
  • Education
  • Finance/Insurance/Real Estate
  • Health Care
  • Internet/Telecom
  • Legal Affairs

0

Environment/Energy

Taxpayer-Supported Fisker Looking to China, Like A123

  • by Paul Chesser
  • February 23, 2013
Tweet

fiskercarStimulus déjà vu-lishness lurks: Another “green” tech company that received hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars is financially troubled, seeks a buyer (or their preferred term – a “partner”), and China is ready to swoop in and buy up the remains on the cheap.

And the same two Republican senators who slammed the last deal that went down like this are sickened again.

The first time this happened it was electric car battery maker A123 Systems that set up a deal to get $249 million (plus other multimillion dollar grants) from U.S. taxpayers, who then got left holding the bag when executives ran the company into bankruptcy, made off with some sweet bonuses, and left the techno-carcass for China’s Wanxiang Group to buy and learn about American battery innovation from.

The potential repeat scenario that appears to be playing out features Fisker Automotive, which once was A123’s top customer and received $193 million from taxpayers to build an extended-range electric luxury car, the Karma. The U.S. Department of Energy halted payouts to Fisker under a $529 million loan guarantee it had granted due to the company’s shortcomings in producing the $102,000 electric vehicle. A123 also had partial ownership of Fisker that contributed to its own losses, when the Massachusetts battery maker had to take an $11.6 million write-down of its stake in the 4th quarter of 2011.

NLPC reported in December that Fisker had hired investment bank Evercore Partners, which according to the Wall Street Journal, often is hired to help companies through bankruptcy protection. Fisker officials said they enlisted the advisors to help them find a “strategic partner” or investors, and bristled (including a call from Henrik Fisker to NLPC) at the Journal’s suggestion that a bankruptcy option was internally discussed. Spokesman Roger Ormisher told Fortune that Fisker had hired Evercore to find a partner, and not to find a buyer.

Now the business news world is rife with reports that Fisker has offers under consideration for an ownership stake – at least two of them, and maybe three, from Chinese companies, according to numerous media stories.

“We can only confirm that the company has received detailed proposals from multiple parties in different continents, which are now being evaluated by the Company and its advisors,” said a Fisker statement.

The favored bid, according to a Reuters report, is from China’s Geely Holding Group, which bought Volvo from Ford Motor Company for $1.8 billion in 2010. The value of that offer is said to be between $200 million and $300 million.

Another – which the Wall Street Journal says is the leader – is said to come from Chinese state-owned company Dongfeng Motor Group, which seeks 80- to 85-percent ownership of Fisker for $350 million. And Wanxiang Group, the buyer of A123, is said to be involved.

“It’s in our interest if we can help Fisker, in any way we could,” said Wanxiang America President Pin Ni to Bloomberg news at the end of January. “They’re a customer so it will be in our best interest to support them, as a vendor or possibly in a strategic alliance.”

Reuters reported there is interest from South Korean and European companies as well, but the firm offers under consideration from the Chinese companies were said to be the result of an Asia trip by CEO Tony Posawatz (formerly in charge of the Chevy Volt for General Motors) and other top executives.

The prospect that U.S. taxpayer-supported technology and business stimulation would end up in the hands of its top economic rival was too much (again) for Republican Sens. Charles Grassley (Iowa) and John Thune (South Dakota) to remain silent. Both sharply criticized the Obama administration over its poor judgment, lack of oversight and seeming indifference towards A123’s critical battery technology going to Wanxiang, and now are speaking up about the fate of Fisker.

“Senator Thune and I asked the Energy Department about potential foreign ownership of Fisker in June 2012,” Grassley said in a statement issued Tuesday. “When we raised concerns about taxpayers supporting a company with foreign ownership, the Energy Department waved those concerns away. Now, those concerns may soon become a reality.”

As for Thune, he said, “Obama’s green energy investments appear to be nothing more than venture capital for eventual Chinese acquisitions…. After stimulus-funded A123 was just acquired by a Chinese-based company, it’s troubling to see that yet another struggling taxpayer-backed company might be purchased under duress by a Chinese company.”

The comparatively low dollars being discussed in exchange for such a big chunk of ownership, if true, would make a lot of people involved with Fisker look even more foolish than they already do. For example, what happened to the already (some say far) more than $1 billion in private equity the company says it raised? One reason for Fisker’s cash problems may be – as NLPC reported a year ago – that the math indicates the $193 million taxpayer money broke down to about $250,000 in subsidies for each “green” Fisker job. That’s not very efficient.

Even the crony capitalism practices haven’t paid off very well. Silicon Valley investment firm Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield and Byers, where former Vice President (and Karma owner) Al Gore is a partner, is heavily invested in Fisker, and executives with the firm have contributed more than $1 million over the last two decades to mostly Democratic candidates and causes. And Fisker’s top private money raiser, Advanced Equities, Inc., was run out of business over ethical challenges.

As for the production of the vehicle itself, most of the assembly has been done in Finland, and the Karma has had heaps of problems since including fires, recalls, an unfulfilled promise to build cars in Delaware, and an extremely bad review from Consumer Reports, among other things.

Among them all the Obama administration comes off looking the worst, with the decision to award millions of dollars to start-up companies like Fisker with unproven technologies and management.

Not that they ever cared. Whether it’s alternative energy schemes or electric vehicles, the president has often cited the need to invest taxpayer money in order to not lose out to China or India on the technological front, whether it made economic sense or not.

“We used to have 2 percent of the market for advanced batteries that go into electric cars,” he said in April 2011. “We are going to have 40 percent in five years because of the investments we made with the Recovery Act.”

It was all part of Obama’s plan to put one million electric cars on the road by 2015. China must be saying if this is what U.S. “competition” is, then bring more of it on.

Paul Chesser is an associate fellow for the National Legal and Policy Center and publishes CarolinaPlottHound.com, an aggregator of North Carolina news.

[First posted at National Legal and Policy Center.]

Tags: A123Advanced EquitiesBarack-ObamabatteriesCharles GrassleyChevy VoltChinaConsumer ReportsDongfeng Motor GroupFiskerFordGeely Holding GroupGeneral MotorsGMgreen energygreen techJohn ThuneNLPCstimulusWanxiang America

— Paul Chesser

  • Previous story When Scientists Behave Badly
  • Next story As The Economy Recesses, Obama’s Global Warming Delusions Are Truly Cruel

    Related Posts

  • A Good Day for a Fiscal Cliff Hanging — and Defending Grover Norquist A Good Day for a Fiscal Cliff Hanging — and Defending Grover Norquist November 30, 2012
  • Heartland Symposium: The Second Presidential Debate Heartland Symposium: The Second Presidential Debate October 17, 2012
  • electoralcollege_tout1 Progressive Keynesian Myths Debunked: The Coming Redistribution of Political and Economic Power Among the States April 17, 2013
  • ObamaEnergy The Overwhelming Judgment of Science Rejects Obama’s Global Warming Claims January 28, 2013
  • Reasonable People

    Publisher/PresidentEditor-in-Chief
    Joe BastJim Lakely
    Contributors
    David ApplegateRalf Mangual
    Dave BanksMaureen Martin
    Diane Carol BastSeton Motley
    Alan CarubaJohn Nothdurft
    Paul ChesserJoy Pullmann
    Edmund ContoskiJames H. Rust
    Benjamin DomenechHarrison Schmitt
    Peter FerraraAlexandra Shanahan
    Matthew GlansTaylor Smith
    Jim JohnstonSteve Stanek
    Jay LehrJames M. Taylor
    S.T. KarnickBruce Edward Walker
  • HeartlandDonate2
  • Heartland on YouTube

    • Joseph Bast & Herbert Walberg: Education and Capitalism
      Joseph Bast & Herbert Walberg: Education and Capitalism
    • John Lott: At the Brink: Will Obama Push Us Over the Edge?
      John Lott: At the Brink: Will Obama Push Us Over the Edge?
    • Heartland
      Heartland's Jay Lehr on the Today Show: C02 Emissions (400 ppm)
  • RSS Somewhat Readable Links

    • iPencil | National Review Online
    • Eagle Scout Faces Felony for Honest Mistake
    • James Bovard: A Brief History of IRS Political Targeting - WSJ.com
    • The IRS Scandal: the Future of Big Government Is Now « Commentary Magazine
    • Lessons from the IRS scandal | Power Line
    • On the AP-Justice Department Story - Ricochet.com
    • Emptyage — Generation X Doesn't Want to Hear It
  • Obamacare Disaster
  • Tag Cloud

    2012 election al gore Barack-Obama budget California Chicago climate change climategate Congress debt ceiling economics economy education energy policy environment environmental protection agency EPA FCC federal budget federal communications commission fracking global warming green energy health care Heartland Institute internet liberty Medicaid Medicare Mitt Romney Obama Obamacare Paul Ryan politics Public Unions regulation school-reform scott walker Supreme Court Taxes teachers unions tea party unions Wisconsin Wisconsin protests
  • Heartland Websites

    The Heartland Institute
    The Heartlander
    Climate Conferences
    ClimateWiki
    Policybot
    The Parent Trigger
    Fakegate (Peter Gleick)

  • Heartland News

    Budget and Tax News
    Environment and Climate News
    FIRE Policy News
    Health Care News
    Infotech and Telecom News
    School Reform News
    Lawsuit Abuse

  • Get Reasonable

    About Us
    DONATE
    Facebook
    Twitter
    Youtube

  • Budgets/Taxes
  • Environment/Energy
  • Education
  • FIRE
  • Health Care
  • Internet/Telecom
  • Legal Affairs
  • FacebookFacebook
  • TwitterTwitter
  • YoutubeYoutube
  • RSSRSS
  • itunesitunes

Copyright The Heartland Institute