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Rebuilding Our Economy On a Foundation Of Clean Energy
New Report Lays out Blueprint for Economic Recovery and
Environmental Protection
CHICAGO,
IL - As President Elect Obama and a
new Congress prepare to meet today’s economic and environment challenges,
Environment Illinois released a report that lays out a blueprint for how we can
power America for the 21st century, protecting our environment while
revitalizing our economy.
“The slumping economy is taking its
toll and Americans are hurting. President-elect Obama defied conventional
wisdom and swept the Midwest on the promise of using clean energy to revitalize
the economy,” said Environment Illinois Staff Attorney and Clean Energy
Advocate Brian Granahan.“Now voters
will be looking to the new president and Congress to deliver energy savings,
new green jobs, and environmental benefits by boosting wind and solar power as
well putting us on the path for independence from oil.”
The Environment Illinois report
makes the case that America has enough renewable potential to power the country
several times over, providing the following examples:
The
space available on America’s rooftops alone could host enough solar panels
to meet about 70 percent of our current electricity needs.
Concentrating
solar power, also known as solar thermal power, on just 9 percent of the
land area of Nevada could produce enough
electricity to power the entire United States.
The
wind blowing over just five U.S.
states – North Dakota, South
Dakota, Kansas, Montana and Texas –
could produce enough electricity to power the entire United States.
America’s Atlantic, Pacific and Great Lakes coastlines could
host enough wind turbines to nearly match the capacity of all of America’s
current electricity generators combined.
Geothermal
energy, heat from below the earth’s surface, has the potential to meet
about half the total electricity production capacity in the United States
today.
The group also points out that
energy efficiency is one of America’s
largest untapped energy sources. By adopting energy efficiency measures that
pay for themselves in energy savings over time, our homes, businesses and
factories can cut their energy use by at least 25 percent.
“When you add it all together:
energy efficiency, wind, solar and geothermal power, with an assist from other
renewable sources like biomass, tidal, and wave energy, and you have an
equation that can power our homes and businesses, drive our economy, and protect
our environment,” said Granahan.
Switching America over to 100 percent clean
electricity was one of three goals laid out in the report, Renewing America: A Blueprint for Economic Recovery.The second goal, cutting America’s oil consumption in half, requires a
different set of policies because transportation accounts for 70 percent of America’s
oil consumption.
While Americans have been cutting
back on driving, with transit ridership at a 50 year high, 85 percent of
transit systems are experiencing capacity problems and 65 percent lack the
revenue they need to increase service.In addition to funding transportation options, Environment Illinois
pointed out that increasing auto-efficiency with already available technologies
would dramatically reduce our oil dependence and take a significant bite out of
the $400 billion Americans spend on gasoline annually.
“Clean energy in America is not some distant
dream.We have the technology, the
tools, and the know-how to use energy more wisely and get more of our energy
from clean, renewable sources,” said Granahan. “What’s more, clean energy can
be produced right here at home, creating new jobs in all sectors of the
nation’s economy – including many jobs that can never be outsourced.”
Environment Illinois summarized
several studies that found dramatic employment opportunities created by
investing in clean energy.One study by
economists at the University
of Massachusetts for the
Center for American Progress found that investing in clean energy infrastructure
would provide four times as many jobs as investing that same money in the oil
industry.
The U.S. Conference of Mayors
estimates that there are already 750,000 “green jobs” in the United States directly or
indirectly supporting clean, renewable energy.American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy estimates that energy
efficiency currently supports 1.63 million jobs nationwide. Laid-off workers in
the nation’s “Rust Belt” are getting back to work building wind turbines and
solar panels; farmers in the Midwest are
supplementing their incomes with royalties from wind farms; and residents of
economically distressed inner cities are learning how to install solar panels
and weatherize homes for greater energy efficiency.
“To turn this trickle of green jobs
into a torrent of new economic opportunities, we need to act boldly – and fast.
America can and must switch to 100 percent clean power and cut our oil
consumption in half – and create millions of new jobs doing it,” said Granahan.“There is much President-elect Obama and
our new Congress can do. First off, investing in energy efficiency, wind and
solar power, and public transit must be a cornerstone of any economic recovery
plan,” he concluded.