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November 17, 2009

Mainstream Visions

by Ken Silverstein, Editor-in-Chief, EnergyBiz Insider
Washington, D.C. United States [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]

The green revolution goes beyond financing research and development. It is also helping to create a robust national market for existing technologies and shovel-ready projects.

"Our vision is that solar can be mainstream for every city."

-- Hannah Muller, Solar Energy Technologies Program, DOE

Federal stewardship in conjunction with some creative state and local programs are serving to inspire all kinds of renewable energy deals. As the initiatives go forward, private investors, who must ultimately sustain them, will join in increasing numbers.

Solar energy is now the focal point, which the U.S. Department of Energy says that can be applied around the country and through local communities. To that end, the federal agency is establishing programs with some cities to overcome barriers to development and to help create more solar projects. To get there, DOE is allocating nearly $87 million to support the development of new solar energy technologies and the rapid deployment of available carbon-free solar energy systems.

"Our vision is that solar can be mainstream for every city," says Hannah Muller with the Department of Energy's Solar Energy Technologies Program. "The focus is now on 25 cities and to help them figure out the best way to integrate solar energy. The purpose of the guide is to help community leaders drive economic development, grow a green collar workforce and build a renewable energy infrastructure."

Through the DOE's Solar America Cities partnership with Denver, Colo., Boulder County, Colo. has worked to make solar more affordable by allowing homeowners and businesses to pay for development through a long-term assessment on their property. Muller says that the interest payments are reasonable and that the obligations transfer if the property is sold.

Similarly, Tucson, Ariz. has created an innovative financing program using clean energy renewable bonds (CREBs). Investors who buy such bonds receive a tax credit from the federal government, all to enable the building of solar facilities on city buildings. Portland, Ore., meanwhile, is working with the federal program to streamline its permitting and siting procedures while the Madison, Wis. is trying is trying to educate its citizens.

Perhaps the most daunting task, says Muller, is interconnecting solar capacity to the grid and particularly in high-density areas. In New York City, for instance, Con Edison had shunned solar. Now, though, it has learned new and effective ways to connect solar to local grids without jeopardizing reliability, she says.

"The money is going directly to the cities," says Muller. "They can dole it out to stakeholders if they see fit. This is about market transformation."

It's also about jobs. Research firm Clean Edge says that the top places in the country are the San Francisco Bay area, Greater Boston, Denver and northern Colorado as well as Austin and Detroit-Ann Arbor. The beauty of green energy development, the group says, is that it is benefiting a wide swath of American communities — from the high-tech capitals to the hard-hit regions that now make wind mills and solar panels.

New Stage

Certainly, the long-term prognosis for both the economy and green markets in particular is positive. Overall, the national trend is one of supporting the policies necessary to clean the environment and to take steps to battle climate change. As a result, federal and state policies are integral to the effort with the former offering production tax credits and the latter — in the case of about 26 jurisdictions — mandating renewable portfolio standards.

To reach the stated goals will require a two-pronged approach. The first — and the one most often overlooked — is to engage the local communities, teaching them how to set ordinances and to create financial and technical incentives. The second — and perhaps the most challenging in today's economic climate — is to attract investment.

"Green industries such as solar have a unique potential to create jobs and wealth," says Frank Van Mierlo, president of 1366 Technologies. "Governments can spur solar market development by streamlining permits, opening up transmission, and providing incentives such as rebates. If smart, responsive policies are put in place then private investment will inevitably flow."

The Obama administration has determined that its dual role is to facilitate the next generation of clean energy technologies while at the same time lift the economy out of a deep recession. To the chagrin of some leading political and economic figures, it has plowed billions into research and development as well as shovel-ready projects. And under bills now pending in the House and Senate, federal lawmakers want to see renewable energy comprise 20 percent of the electricity mix by 2020.

The idea is that the federal government would work in tandem with those programs already set up by the states. Oregon, for example, provides a tax credit equal to 35 percent of an eligible project's capital cost, up to a maximum of $10 million. If a deal is properly structured, it can provide an attractive long-term return, the state says.

The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities, furthermore, announced that the state now has over 100 megawatts of solar capacity with more than 4,340 projects statewide. The growth has been financed in part by the buying and selling of certificates that provide solar system owners a revenue source that can help them offset the cost of installation.

The state is "continually looking to efficiently increase our renewable energy generation while reducing greenhouse gas emissions," says Jeanne Fox, president of the state's utility commission. She says that the financing model it uses "combined with federal tax credits and New Jersey's Renewable Energy Portfolio requirements provide the incentives needed to continue to spur New Jersey's solar growth."

It's about integrating solar power and other renewable energy into fabric of the American market system. Creative programs such as the Solar America Cities Special Projects and those sponsored by certain states are setting up a new stage and one where green technologies will help accelerate economic expansion.

Ken Silverstein is an award-winning journalist who is the editor-in-chief of Energy Central's publication, EnergyBiz Insider. With a background in economics and public policy, he has spent several years writing about the issues that touch the energy and financial sectors, and his work has been published in more than 100 periodicals.

Republished with permission from CyberTech, Inc. EnergyBiz Insider is published three days a week by Energy Central. For more information about Energy Central, or to subscribe to EnergyBiz Insider, other e-newsletters and EnergyBiz magazine, please go to http://www.energycentral.com/.

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Reader Comments (16)
 
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November 17, 2009
The US will soon be unable to continue to give preferential mandates and subsidies to high-cost clean energy technologies (like intermittent windpower, solar, corn ethanol and cellulosics). The nation is broke and getting more broke. Obama will not be able to continue conning Asians into financing the debt by just claiming he wants a strong dollar. They will see the light while the dollar keeps collapsing and an even weaker dollar, and thus lower wages, is needed to stave off massive unemployment. Soon, our company will commercialize our renewable energy technology overseas and this nation will have a choice of either giving low-cost renewable energies a chance against the energy monopolies or allowing them to build only fossil and nuclear fuels.
Comment 1 of 16
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November 18, 2009
Mike,

Costs for clean energy are decreasing,
while costs for fossil fuel increase.

By giving these preferential mandates and subsidies,
the US is attracting investors and finance,
this is accelerating the development of clean energy,
and is a good way for economic growth.
Comment 2 of 16
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November 18, 2009
Without subsidies, "nothing" would get started, however, Mike has a point. Why subsidize anything that is unattainable towards the truly sustainable and unlimited goals of future power requirements.

Wind, solar and possibly (or not because of unknown "sinkhole" like dangers), geothermal, are basically the only RE worth considering on the multi terrawatt scale. If we don't robotically mass produce solar and wind on an exponential scale,
then,
it seems,
we would lose to the country that does.

Clean energy will give the world the potential to overcome its vast debt through its unlimited jobs such that an increase of energy costs (at first) will be more than made up for.

Is anyone out there an economist who agrees or disagrees?
Thanks
Comment 3 of 16
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November 18, 2009
Algae is another one worth considering since it grows exponentially (without robotized platform). The LiFePO4 battery needs waaay more funding than conventional biofuels cause the materials are available on the terrawatt scale and because they last for over 8,000 partial charges (as with utility use). Below is a link that kinda like proves it.
http://www.thierry-lequeu.fr/data/SAND2008-5583.pdf

Imagine a totally solid state and green grid!
Comment 4 of 16
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November 18, 2009
The US could very easily make up the green money by simply lowering the subsidies to the oil companies. Shame mike-holly-17241 doesn't realise this --- oil already gets tons of cash, if the green movement were to be given as much support, the US would be green in no time.
Comment 5 of 16
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November 18, 2009
Shame belcat doesn't realize windpower, solar and ethanol get far more subsidies per unit of energy (than fossil fuels), are not competitive (to fossil fuels) and cannot be commercialized on a large scale without bankrupting the nation.
Comment 6 of 16
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November 19, 2009
Mike-holly-17241,

Do not worry about bankrupting the nation,
as global warming will have faster and bigger impact.

I am interested to learn where the - per unit of energy - calculation
is from.
Comment 7 of 16
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November 19, 2009
ynot

You must be oblivious to the national debt, because if you were following it, you would realize it is far ahead of global warming. Just how long do you think the nation can string $2 trillion annual debts?

Every study I have seen shows more total subsidies for fossil fuels but far less on a per unit basis. If you can show me otherwise, I will spend my time rounding up my subsidies data for you.

There are renewable energies that could solve global warming without raising energy costs if the US would just get rid of its energy monopolies. Hint: small hydro, geothermal and biomass cogen.
Comment 8 of 16
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November 19, 2009
Mike,
It is the natural course of humanity's evolution to exponentiate the solar infrastructure. We already have robot machinery making cars, albeit not on an exponential scale.

If given the funding, the science behind growing by orders of magnitude will allow solar to dwarf any fossil fueled civilization!

Therefore, don't fund Evergreen, but do fund the scholars that can build the next generation of robotic machinery needed to mass produce solar energy cheaply enough to be number 1
Comment 9 of 16
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November 19, 2009
Small hydro and biomass is very limited (unless the human race suffers a massive dieoff due to post oil unpreparedness and GW). Only deep geothermal, algae, and wind could (possibly?) compete with robotically produced solar.
Comment 10 of 16
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November 19, 2009
Fire

You are the typical American with limited knowledge trying to pick winners and losers before the technologies can be developed by others. Plants have as much potential as algae, including yields.

America

Get rid of your monopolies that block all new technologies.
Comment 11 of 16
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November 19, 2009
Do the math, land based plants are far less efficient than even todays solar and what's this, I thought you liked solar?
Anyways, the earths heat and the sun can only surpass todays monopolies by orders of magnitudes. Typical Americans don't understand this...

I don't think you even understand the concept of exponential growth (read above) so don't stereotype me (and rag this thread!)
Comment 12 of 16
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November 19, 2009
I, myself, vision it as staggering (exponential growth of renewable energy)!
Comment 13 of 16
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November 19, 2009
Like I said, limited knowledge. Land based plants are limited by their environment, not efficiencies. Think greenhouses, etc.

Sounds like drugs: "the earths heat and the sun can only surpass todays monopolies by orders of magnitudes."

I don't have to stereotype you. You have proven yourself to pick winners and losers as if you know everything. Let the market decide.
Comment 14 of 16
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November 19, 2009
Edit, I erased everything but
You have proven your own limitations
Comment 15 of 16
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November 24, 2009
First all of the data is cooked by zealots as was demonstrated this week.

Second at the renewable energy conference this week the President of the US Steelworkers was forced to admit that there are no manufacturing facilities that exist in the US that can make the parts necessary for Solar and wind energy on a scale that can take advantage of widespread switching to alternate energy. The reason? was that large manufacturing facilities would take 10 years to get the Government permits.

Then the other panelist was forced to admit that the US electric grid ahs not been up graded in 40 years or more and that resistence to new construction in local communities and Federal government overal resistence was to blame.

Our insane > policies will make us ripe for a complete meltdon in our ability to get anything done
Comment 16 of 16
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