Recovery Bill is Breakthrough on Clean Energy, Good Jobs
In signing the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act today President Barack Obama ensured that $113.5 billion will be spent over the next two years on developing clean fuels, modernizing rail transit, pursuing energy efficiency, developing high-mileage electric vehicles, and scaling up electrical generating stations powered by the wind, sun, and heat of the earth.
The magnitude of the clean energy investment - consistent with the sums spent to launch the Interstate Highway System in the late 1950s, and to put a man on the Moon in the 1960s - is intended by President Obama and Congressional leaders to begin charting a new national economic development strategy that is based on much different priorities than those that preceded it.
Instead of consuming more energy, land, and natural resources the clean energy provisions in the stimulus bill are aimed at conserving energy and sharply improving efficiency. Instead of reaching deep into the earth and far overseas to secure increasingly scarce and insecure oil reserves, the president looks to harness the abundant sun, wind, and geo-thermal resources within America’s boundaries.
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For More Information Clean Energy Provisions of the Stimulus |
In place of adding more carbon dioxide and other climate change pollution to the atmosphere, the clean energy provisions of the stimulus bill will spur non-polluting sources of energy. And President Obama and Congressional leaders have set in place investments in research, development, and training in a bid to ensure that more of the parts of the clean energy economy are invented and installed in America by American workers.
President Obama signed the bill during a ceremony in Denver at the Museum of Nature and Science, which generates a portion of its power from a solar array of 465 photovoltaic panels on its roof. The president was introduced by a solar industry executive, Blake Jones, the president of Namaste Solar Electric.
The president said the clean energy provisions of the recovery bill are “an investment that will double the amount of renewable energy produced over the next three years.” He said the clean energy provisions would help “transform the way we use energy.” And he introduced a new Web site, Recovery.gov, to enable Americans to track the bill’s progress.
“Our American story is not — and has never been — about things coming easy,” the president said. “It’s about rising to the moment when the moment is hard, converting crisis into opportunity, and seeing to it that we emerge from whatever trials we face stronger than we were before.”
He added: “I hope this investment will ignite our imagination once more in science, medicine, and energy and make our economy stronger, our nation more secure, and our planet safer for our children.”
The $113.5 billion that the president and Congress directed to clean energy and green-collar job generation and training make up one of the largest portions of the $505 billion that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act authorizes in spending. The balance of the $787 billion stimulus bill - $282 billion - is for tax cuts.
In order to qualify for federal investments, the law requires states and cities to develop criteria for stimulus projects that gives priority to energy efficiency, repairing roads and bridges rather than building new capacity, green-collar job training, family-supporting jobs that include job quality standards, and access to stimulus jobs for low-income people.
President Barack Obama’s Remarks On Clean Energy“Because we know we can’t power America’s future on energy that’s controlled by foreign dictators, we are taking a big step down the road to energy independence, and laying the groundwork for a new, green energy economy that can create countless well-paying jobs. It’s an investment that will double the amount of renewable energy produced over the next three years, and provide tax credits and loan guarantees to companies like Namaste Solar, a company that will be expanding, instead of laying people off, as a result of the plan I am signing. In the process, we will transform the way we use energy. Today, the electricity we use is carried along a grid of lines and wires that dates back to Thomas Edison - a grid that can’t support the demands of clean energy. This means we’re using 19th and 20th century technologies to battle 21st century problems like climate change and energy security. It also means that places like North Dakota can produce a lot of wind energy, but can’t deliver it to communities that want it, leading to a gap between how much clean energy we are using and how much we could be using. The investment we are making today will create a newer, smarter electric grid that will allow for the broader use of alternative energy. We will build on the work that’s being done in places like Boulder, Colorado - a community that is on pace to be the world’s first Smart Grid city. This investment will place Smart Meters in homes to make our energy bills lower, make outages less likely, and make it easier to use clean energy. It’s an investment that will save taxpayers over one billion dollars by slashing energy costs in our federal buildings by 25% and save working families hundreds of dollars a year on their energy bills by weatherizing over one million homes. And it’s an investment that takes the important first step towards a nationwide transmission superhighway that will connect our cities to the windy plains of the Dakotas and the sunny deserts of the Southwest.” |
A Plan For A New American Century
In both the scale of the spending directed to clean energy and good jobs programs, and in its specific goals the stimulus bill reflects years of work by the national Apollo Alliance coalition of labor, environmental, business, and social justice organizations.
“This is the largest investment in clean energy development in our history,” said Phil Angelides, a California businessman and chairman of the Apollo Alliance. “It represents the focused work of labor, business, environmental and social justice organizations who developed a clear strategy about where the nation needed to go, and worked together to achieve it. President Obama and members of Congress deserve the nation’s appreciation for taking this important step to guide the country down this new and essential economic path. But this is only the start of the economic transformation that America must undertake to ensure prosperity and provide for good family-supporting, green-collar jobs. More needs to be accomplished in the months ahead to accelerate development in the clean energy sector to limit oil imports, reduce the threat of climate change, and rebuild the American middle class.”
Among the clean energy investments in the stimulus are $10.9 billion to build a state-of-the art national energy grid, $6 billion in loan guarantees for renewable energy, $2 billion for advanced battery manufacturing, $5 billion for home weatherization, $3.2 billion for state energy efficiency and clean energy grants, and $17.7 billion to modernize and expand rail transit.
James K. Gailbraith, an economist and professor of government at the University of Texas LBJ School of Public Affairs, also commended the Obama administration and Congress for the speed in drafting and passing the stimulus bill. But Galbraith, like other leading economists, said in an interview that the just-approved stimulus should be followed by more spending measures of similar scale.
“The policy needs to be bigger and we should be prepared for the crisis to go on longer,” he said. “That point is important for the Apollo Alliance. It is legitimate and important to have strong elements in the program that can spend out over a period, and on which you can build.”
“The reason why you want a program which builds for the long-term on energy and the environmental front is because that is the direction that the public and private economies want to take,” said Galbraith. “You can build an industrial sector on clean energy for the U.S. economy and it can serve as an export sector.”
“To me, the stimulus is a first step,” he said. “But we don’t know what scale we need. We need to be on a scale sufficiently large to make a decisive impact reasonably soon. If we don’t do that the bad news just keeps flowing in.”
More Action Needed
The Apollo Alliance is heeding that lesson. The Alliance’s national, state, and local organizations are preparing to be deeply involved in upcoming Congressional consideration of major investments in energy, manufacturing to make the components and parts for the clean energy sector, and in capping climate change gases and generating investment revenue for clean energy and green-collar jobs.
Today Congressional lawmakers and public interest leaders paused to consider the importance of the stimulus bill and the role played by the Apollo Alliance to gain its passage.
“This legislation is the first step in building a clean energy economy that creates jobs and moves us closer to solving our enormous energy and environmental challenges,” said Senator Harry Reid, the Nevada Democrat and Senate Majority Leader. “We’ve talked about moving forward on these ideas for decades. The Apollo Alliance has been an important factor in helping us develop and execute a strategy that makes great progress on these goals and in motivating the public to support them.”
“President Obama and Congress made a huge investment to expand clean energy efforts,” said Dan Weiss, senior fellow and director of climate security at the Center For American Progress, a progressive think tank in Washington. “The economy, national security, and our planet mandate that we become more efficient and cleaner. The Apollo Alliance understood this and worked with labor, business, social justice and environmental organizations to support an economic transition that will put people back to work, save families money, and reduce oil use. The Alliance deserves applause for its efforts to help shape and pass this bill.”
Apollo’s Vision Realized In Part
To be sure, the clean energy provisions in the stimulus bill reflect the sound idea first introduced by the Apollo Alliance in 2003, when the group was launched. In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, the founders of the Apollo Alliance steadily gained support for a message that distilled more than 30 years of conversation in the environmental and business communities about the relationship of the environment to the economy. The Apollo Alliance, named for and inspired by the American space mission, cut through the complexity by arguing that the United States could simultaneously solve the energy crisis, the climate crisis, and the jobs crisis if it pursued clean energy development.
In its widely read New Energy For America report in January 2004, the Alliance called for a “new Apollo Project” to invest $300 billion over ten years in the clean energy sector to “revitalize our manufacturing capacity, rebuild neglected infrastructure, close the growing technology gap with foreign competitors, preserve the environment, and generate good jobs for America’s working families.” The report estimated that such an investment would generate 3 million jobs.
Many of the provisions of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act are consistent with recommendations that the Apollo Alliance made in its two reports last year.
In September 2008, the Apollo Alliance published The New Apollo Program, a comprehensive investment strategy and implementation plan that called for the federal government to make a $500 billion, 10-year commitment to clean energy development to generate 5 million jobs. In December 2008, the Alliance published the Apollo Economic Recovery Act that recommended a one-year, $50 billion investment to create or retain 650,000 direct jobs and 1.3 million more indirect jobs in communities across the country.
“The signing of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan marks a fundamental shift in our nation’s economic and energy policy - a shift toward energy independence, climate stability and broadly shared prosperity,” said Angelides, in a press statement today. “Across the nation, business, labor, environmental and community organizations have come together to create an unstoppable momentum that is making good green-collar jobs the focal point of America’s economic recovery. We must now turn our attention to the energy and climate initiatives that are needed this year to bring our critical mission to rebuild America’s economy from launching point to full speed.”








There’s a lot of politically-motivated talk these days about creating green jobs, green-collar jobs, green industries, even a green economy. Sounds great, but many people wonder if we can do it, how will we do it, and what is the answer. The answer is, we’re already doing it. The US is currently a global powerhouse in the greenest of green industries, and it is not some short term “feel good” category like pouring concrete to make windmills. It is SOFTWARE. Computer software is as green as it gets. Programs that do amazing things that are created from thoughts and good processes. No by-products, no carbon (except maybe the exhalation of engineers), no pollution, not even plastic discs or cardboard boxes anymore (think downloads). This is the greenest industry the planet has ever seen and may be the greenest ever. Yet, where is the software targeted stimulus, the special treatment for immigrants that are programmers, the incentive for college kids to study computer science, the “earmarks” and the special programs? It seems ridiculous that as the world’s leading technology innovator, we don’t prioritize investing heavily in our nation’s software programming assets – and help grow the industry to three times its current size. Or 300 times, for that matter.
Software is currently, or soon will be, as pervasive as plastic and steel — embedded in every product and service offered the world over. Consider the iPhone — a great product and ground-breaking invention. Sure, it’s got a sleek and sexy interface and feels great in your hand, but its bigger value lies in the software that downloads and plays your music, maps locations via GPS, and even allows you to do online banking. What was once just a mobile phone has now become a sophisticated software platform for next-generation application development, opening new doors of revenue opportunity and convenience for people around the world.
The list goes on. From automobiles, airplanes and power plants, to farming, banking and health care, software permeates every aspect of our lives.
Are we so shortsighted and beholden to the special interests of “old industry” that we would rather create a generation of ditch diggers and concrete pourers, than a generation of knowledge workers and software specialists? Hold on, I know what you’re saying, “We can’t all excel in math and programming to be in the software industry.” That’s ridiculous. I have never written a line of code in my life and I have been in the software industry since 1983. Yes, we need programmers, but there are hundreds of other job roles that support the software industry. That’s like saying that only aeronautical engineers work in the airplane and airline industries. Every industry now relies on software. I am not talking about just Microsoft, Oracle and Google. There are thousands of software jobs in banking, in transportation, in construction, in shipping, in (place any industry name here). Most of the world’s software actually ISN’T from the likes of Microsoft. As I said earlier, it is pervasive.
So write your Senator, send an email, comment on a blog. Whatever you do, spread the word. The answer to the green job problem is right in front of us — and it’s SOFTWARE.
Here is another way to look at efficiency, the amount of GDP generated by the amount of electricity used in a state.
http://ert.rmi.org/cgu/index.html
Source: Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI)
I found it interesting that three of the four states whose Republican governors are considering “refusing” stimulus funds from the federal government (at least as of February 20, 2009) are ranked as follows:
Louisiana = Governor Bobby Jindal Ranks #34
South Carolina = Governor Mark Sanford Ranks #47
Mississippi = Governor Haley Barbour Ranks #50
A large part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is for “energy” expenditures ($65 billion in tax incentives and expenditures). Maybe these governors dislike saving energy as much as they dislike taking money that will help their citizens.
Read more at http://endependence.info
[...] company is convinced the slowdown is temporary. Some of that confidence is the result of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, signed into law by President Barack Obama on February 17, 2009, which calls for investing $2.5 [...]
[...] company is convinced the slowdown is temporary. Some of that confidence is the result of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, signed into law by President Barack Obama on February 17, 2009, which calls for investing $2.5 [...]
[...] the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, Congress and the president committed to spending $113 billion over the next two years on clean energy development and generating good green-collar [...]
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