Wind and Solar Energy: Renewable Energy to
Create Thousands of New Jobs WASHINGTON, Oct 26, 2007 --
BUSINESS WIRE
Rhone Resch, President of the Solar Energy Industries Association, and Randy
Swisher, President of the American Wind Energy Association, guests at
separate Executive News Roundtables sponsored by Energy Policy TV, said the
renewable energy industries will be large creators of new jobs in the U.S.
in the coming years. Videos of their appearances are available at no cost on
Energy Policy TV's Solar and Wind Channels, respectively.
The solar industry's Resch told Energy Policy TV that 55,000 new jobs could
be created if the Energy Bill passes with the hoped-for eight-year extension
of tax credits. He said that even more jobs could be created if solar
continues to grow at its current rate, forecasting as many as 150,000 to
200,000 new jobs over the next decade in solar manufacturing, in efficiency
and other ancillary roles and in the supply chain.
Resch said that the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW)
is considering retraining its members so they can work in the solar
industry. Currently, whole communities of solar homes are being built in
California, the leading solar energy state after New Jersey. "Silicon
Valley," he said, "is being renamed as 'Solar Valley' (because) those
companies are making the transition over to solar as the next great
high-tech growth industry and we have an opportunity to keep that industry
here in the United States."
The wind association's Swisher said that governors and other state officials
recognize the job potential for wind energy, and they are actively courting
manufacturers and others in the supply chain to capture those activities.
Swisher said that installed wind capacity will grow by at least 50 percent
this year and perhaps substantially more with about 6,000 megawatts of
capacity currently under construction. He said wind "has been the
second-largest contributor (of) new installed capacity behind gas for the
last three years." He also said that future turbines are likely to produce
more power, citing one manufacturer that is working on a 7.5 megawatt
machine and noting that much of the investment in the industry is driving
innovation "towards the scaling up process."
Swisher also cited Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) as an important
driver of growth for the industry, "not just in terms of megawatts
themselves," but as a "tremendous educational tool." Utilities in Texas, for
example over-complied with the wind mandates because it was cost-effective
to do so and those lessons have "spilled over" to states that do not have
RPS.
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SOURCE: Energy Policy TV
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