These are tough times for the dream of clean energy and green jobs. Washington is again gridlocked and failing to act on clean energy economic development. Deficit politics and partisanship are pervasive and meanwhile the imperfect framework of federal financial and tax incentives made available through the 2009 stimulus law and elsewhere is starting to expire.
No wonder so many wise people are so worried about how the next phase of American clean energy industry growth will be financed and the next generation of cleantech technology deployed.
And yet, one source of action lies hidden in plain sight. With federal clean energy activities largely on hold, a new paper we released yesterday as part of the Brookings-Rockefeller Project on State and Metropolitan Innovation argues that U.S. states hold out tremendous promise for the continued design and implementation of smart clean energy finance solutions and economic development.
Specifically, we contend that the nearly two dozen clean energy funds (CEFs) now running in a variety of mostly northern states stand as important actors in American cleantech and offer at least one partial response to the failure of Washington to deliver a sensible clean energy development approach.
To date, over 20 states have created a varied array of these public investment vehicles to invest in clean energy pursuits with revenues often derived from small public-benefit surcharges on electric utility bills. Over the last decade, state CEFs have invested over $2.7 billion in state dollars to support renewable energy markets, counting very conservatively. Meanwhile, they have leveraged another $9.7 billion in additional federal and private sector investment, with the resulting $12 billion flowing to the deployment of over 72,000 projects in the United States ranging from solar installations on homes and businesses to wind turbines in communities to large wind farms, hydrokinetic projects in rivers, and biomass generation plants on farms.
In so doing, the funds stand well positioned -- along with state economic development and other officials -- to build on a pragmatic success and take up the challenge left by the current federal abdication of a role on clean energy economic development.
Yet here is the rub: For all the good the funds have achieved, project-only financing -- as needed as it is -- will not be sufficient to drive the growth of large and innovative new companies or to create the broader economic development taxpayers demand from public investments. Also needed will be a greater focus on the deeper-going economic development work that can help spawn whole new industries.
All of which points to the new brand of fund activity that our paper celebrates and calls for more of.
In recent years, increasingly ambitious efforts in a number of states have featured engagement on at least three major fronts somewhat different from the initial fund focus: (1) cleantech innovation support through research, development, and demonstration (RD&D) funding; (2) financial support for early-stage cleantech companies and emerging technologies, including working capital for companies; and (3) industry development support through business incubator programs, regional cluster promotion, manufacturing and export promotion, supply chain analysis and enhancement, and workforce training programs.
These new economic development efforts -- on display in California, Massachusetts, New York, and elsewhere -- show the next era of state clean energy fund leadership coming into focus. States are now poised to jumpstart a new, creative period of expanded clean energy economic development and industry creation, to complement and build upon individualistic project financing.
Such work could not be more timely at this moment of federal gridlock and market uncertainty.
Along these lines, then, our paper advances several recommendations for moving states more aggressively into this new period of clean energy economic development. We suggest that:
In addition, we think that Washington needs to recognize the strength and utility of the CEFs and actively partner with them:
In sum, our new paper proposes a much greater focus in U.S. clean energy finance on "bottom up," decentralized clean initiatives that rely on the states to catalyze regional economic development in regions. Such an approach -- which reflects the emergence of an emerging "pragmatic caucus" in U.S. economic life -- is currently demanded by federal inaction. However, it might also be the smartest, most durable way to develop the clean energy industries of the future without the partisan rancor and obtuseness that has stymied federal energy policy. State clean energy funds -- having funded thousands of individual projects -- bring significant knowledge to bear as they focus now on building whole industries. For that reason, the funds' transition from project development to industry creation should be nurtured and supported.
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Every nuke gets breaks worth 500M$ per year per reactor, coal even more. Oil gets trillion dollar wars.
That's MUST change.
Buying solar panels and turbines and installing them makes more sense than hit or miss venture capital, training that employers should fund, or research that has profits going to corporations.
Siphoning off ten percent requires substantiation to justify. No attempt at that was even made.
What we need is the proven solution of the German style feed in tariff (which singlehandedly forced PV prices down 50%) and PACE loans so that WE can install the efficiency upgrades and clean energy solutions WE want to own on OUR properties and in OUR communities. What we DON'T need is more Big Energy handouts, which has been the entire US energy policy, even in a renewables era where rooftop solar is smarter and more efficient than desert solar!
Democracy, the economy and the environment all depend heavily on decentralized, democratically-owned solutions (think "the internet") and on getting rid of the Robber Baron paradigm (think "dead end street") of centralized monopoly energy. FITs and PACE will get critical mass moving towards these goals and the innovations will follow.