| US Renewable Energy Market Reports Record Year 
    in 2007   Jan 25, 2008 -- Voice of America News/ContentWorks
 Last year was a record year for the renewable energy industry in the United 
    States. The development and sale of power from wind, solar, geothermal, 
    biomass and other renewable sources in 2007 infused $20 billion into the 
    U.S. economy and created tens of thousands of jobs. But as VOA's Rosanne 
    Skirble reports, industry leaders fear that growth could be stalled because 
    of the failure of the U.S. Congress to ensure long-term support for 
    renewable energy projects.
 
 Renewable energy in the United States is growing at breakneck speed. "It was 
    the third record year in a row for the wind industry," says American Wind 
    Association executive director Randy Swisher. Citing an increase of 5,244 
    megawatts of electrical generating capacity (more than twice the largest 
    prior record), Swisher calls 2007 "a blowout year." He says new wind 
    projects accounted for 30 percent of all new energy generating capacity in 
    2007.
 
 It was also a record year for solar power says Rhone Resch, president of the 
    Solar Energy Industries Association. He says 314 megawatts of new solar were 
    installed in the United States last year, an increase in energy of 125 
    percent over 2006.
 
 Geothermal energy, that uses the steam and hot water produced inside the 
    earth to generate electricity, showed a 40 percent gain in new projects over 
    2006. And hydropower from dams and other water driven systems saw increases 
    in investments, jobs and resources in every region of the country.
 
 Industry analysts say the rapid development of renewable energy has been 
    driven by state policies that require renewables in the overall energy mix, 
    and by federal tax credits that have helped lower the costs of renewable 
    energy enterprises.
 
 In addition, the rising price of oil and natural gas has helped boost the 
    prospects for renewables, according to Chris Flavin, President of Worldwatch 
    Institute, a research group that follows global energy and environmental 
    trends.
 
 "Electric utilities, which had been basically putting all of their 
    investment into new [natural] gas plants, are now looking to diversify," he 
    says, adding utilities are turning to wind. "It allows them to not only meet 
    their state regulatory requirements, but in many cases it is now arguably 
    less expensive, certainly when the tax credit is included in the equation, 
    than gas-fired power."
 
 The U.S. Congress cut renewable energy tax credits from the recent 2007 
    energy bill. Solar Energy Industries Association president Rhone Resch says 
    if the investment tax credit for solar energy is not extended and expanded 
    early in 2008 solar could face a net job loss of over 40,000 by 2009.
 
 "Very quickly we go from becoming an economic engine to becoming part of the 
    industries in this country that are suffering," he adds.
 
 The Solar Energy Industries Association, the American Wind Energy 
    Association and other trade groups released a joint statement this week 
    calling on Congress and the American public to help save their industries.
 
 "There is a range of interest groups that share our vision," says Swisher, 
    "ranging from the environmental community to the electric utility industry 
    to the venture capital association. It is a wide and growing array of 
    interests that share this agenda."
 
 Chris Flavin expects that Congress will act, either as a short-term fix in 
    the economic stimulus bill now before Congress or in a new tax law. Flavin 
    hopes the tax credit can be adjusted, in the long run, as renewable energy 
    industries continue to grow.
 
 "Some of these technologies may not need tax credits four or five years from 
    now, so maybe there should be an effort to phase them down," Flavin says, 
    "Other technologies are just getting into the market. Solar thermal power 
    may need even a greater incentive than they have today."
 
 Flavin believes that solar, wind and other renewable energy technologies 
    will soon be competitive with fossil fuels, and eventually replace them in 
    the marketplace.
 
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