| State brainstorms renewable energy proposals   Feb 26 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Mark Harrington Newsday, 
    Melville, N.Y.
 A state task force on renewable energy is recommending an eightfold increase 
    in solar-energy development, offering incentives to attract green-energy 
    businesses to the state and suggesting changes in the law to encourage 
    companies to produce renewable energy on-site.
 
 All of the recommendations are aimed at increasing renewable energy sources 
    to make up 25 percent of the state's energy demand by 2013.
 
 At a meeting yesterday to announce the initiatives, Lt. Gov. David Paterson 
    said the recommendations would put New York "on a path to become part of the 
    global solution" to global warming and emissions-belching traditional power 
    sources.
 
 Increasing sources of solar energy eightfold would push energy levels 
    derived from photovoltaic cells in the state to more than 100 megawatts, the 
    renewable energy task force said in a statement.
 
 The recommendations also include development and support of a "green-collar" 
    workforce to nurture and maintain renewable energy sources. That element of 
    the plan includes coordination and expansion of green-energy training 
    programs, including in disadvantaged communities.
 
 The task force, whose members include Long Island Power Authority chief 
    executive Kevin Law, said 43,000 new jobs could be created in the state if 
    New York follows through on a proposal to require 25 percent of the state's 
    energy to come from renewable resources by 2013.
 
 Incentives to attract renewable energy companies would be aimed at building 
    "clusters" of solar, wind, biomass and other green-energy industries around 
    the state. Changes in the law to encourage on-site installation of renewable 
    energy sources at companies would include extending the net-metering law to 
    corporations, not just residences. Net metering allows a home to sell energy 
    back to the grid when it exceeds a home's requirements.
 
 "Our challenge is not a lack of renewable energy potential," Gov. Eliot 
    Spitzer said in a statement, "it is finding ways to effectively develop it 
    and create economic opportunities in our own backyard."
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