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The Clean-Energy Investment Agenda

By Guest Blogger on Sep 21st, 2009 at 4:33 pm

The Clean-Energy Investment Agenda

Our guest bloggers are Center for American Progress CEO John Podesta, Vice President for Energy Policy Kate Gordon, Senior Fellow Bracken Hendricks, and Policy Analyst Benjamin Goldstein.

Clean Energy for AmericaThe United States is having the wrong public debate about global warming. We are asking important questions about pollution caps and timetables, carbon markets and allocations, but we have lost sight of our principal objective: building a robust and prosperous clean energy economy. This is a fundamentally affirmative agenda, rather than a restrictive one. Moving beyond pollution from fossil fuels will involve exciting work, new opportunities, new products and innovation, and stronger communities. Our current national discussion about constraints, limits, and the costs of transition misses the real excitement in this proposition. It is as if, on the cusp of an Internet and telecommunications revolution, debate centered only on the cost of fiber optic cable. We are missing the big picture here.

Let’s be clear: Solving global warming means investment. Retooling the energy systems that fuel our economy will involve rebuilding our nation’s infrastructure. We will create millions of middle-class jobs along the way, revitalize our manufacturing sector, increase American competitiveness, reduce our dependence on oil, and boost technological innovation. These investments in the foundation of our economy can also provide an opportunity for more broadly shared prosperity through better training, stronger local economies, and new career ladders into the middle class. Reducing greenhouse gas pollution is critical to solving global warming, but it is only one part of the work ahead. Building a robust economy that grows more vibrant as we move beyond the Carbon Age is the greater and more inspiring challenge.

Reducing greenhouse gas emissions to avert dangerous global warming is an environmental challenge, but it is also an economic, national security, societal, and moral imperative. The “cap and trade” provisions, which will set limits on pollution and create a market for emissions reductions that will ultimately drive down the cost of renewable energy and fuel, represent a very important first step and a major component in the mix of policies that will help build the coming low-carbon economy. But limiting emissions and establishing a price on pollution is not the goal in itself, and we will fall short if that is all we set out to do. Rather, cap and trade is one key step to reach the broader goal of catalyzing the transformation to an efficient and sustainable low-carbon economy. With unemployment at 9.5 percent, and oil and energy price volatility driving businesses into the ground, we cannot afford to wait any longer. It is time for a legislative debate over a comprehensive clean-energy investment plan. We need far more than cap and trade alone.

Importantly, many elements of this positive clean-energy investment framework are already codified within existing legislation such as the American Clean Energy and Security Act, passed by House of Representatives earlier this year. But with all the attention given to limiting carbon, too little attention has been placed on what will replace it. These critical pieces of America’s clean-energy strategy should be elevated in the policy agenda and political debate as we move forward into the Senate, and used to help move legislation forward that advances a proactive investment and economic revitalization strategy for the nation.

Read the Center for American Progress report, The Clean-Energy Investment Agenda.






3 Responses to “The Clean-Energy Investment Agenda”

  1. ray in hayward Says:

    I’m curious that discussion/news of IFR (integral fast reactor) technology gets so little attention. Seemingly, just making the nuclear waste problem a several hundred year vs 100k year issue should be enough to get Argonne re-activated.

    http://bravenewclimate.com/integral-fast-reactor-ifr-nuclear-power/


  2. EdgeOnIt Says:

    Our political structure including fifty states, has engendered geo-social variations, as needed!

    However, our regulated, capitalistic economy tends to indescriminately, and regionally aggragate goods and services, up to but not including failure-producing monopolies.

    IMO, it may be useful to ‘focus’ a particular ‘agenda’ on a particular region, or area?


  3. Mike johnston Says:

    The key to unlocking a green energy future is to put in place a legal framework which allows development of emerging energy sources without excessive restriction. If green energy sources focus on becoming cost competitive with traditional sources and achieve that goal and if consumers are allowed to choose their electric service provider based on rates and source at any time, just as they can now with phone service, the green economy will evolve naturally on it’s own. Almost everyone, when given a choice where cost is not a factor, will choose green energy. That is the necessary end result which we have to focus on now when crafting legislation related to the green economy.



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