| Clean Energy Taking Root In Connecticut
Aug 19 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Rinker Buck The Hartford
Courant, Conn.
Early next month, when the students of Avon Old Farms School return for
their fall semester, an image of a new Connecticut will greet them as
they arrive on campus.
There, covering almost the entire south roof of the Jennings Fairchild
hockey rink, students will see a $1.4 million array of solar panels --
one of the largest on any school in New England -- that two
renewable-energy firms built at Old Farms. The school estimates that the
project will save about $250,000 a year in electrical bills and provide
about 75 percent of the school's needs on its main campus.
But Avon Old Farms is just the beginning. From the grounds of a working
dairy farm in Torrington, where an innovative wind turbine is going up
this fall, to a new mixed-use manufacturing and retail building in
Ashford, which will be powered by photovoltaic solar panels, the
skyscape of Connecticut is rapidly being altered by the rush toward
renewable energy.
These Connecticut green energy projects speak to the optimism of the
administration of Barack Obama, who promised while running for president
last year to invest $150 billion over 10 years in renewable energy and
energy-efficient growth, producing more than 5 million new "green
collar" jobs nationwide.
Perhaps more significant, the Avon, Torrington and Ashford projects were
built by Connecticut-based companies and thus concentrated the promised
benefits of the green-collar revolution here in the state.
Connecticut has already received more than $120 million in the first
round of federal stimulus money distributed this year, which is expected
to be an additional catalyst in the sector. On Tuesday, Gov. M. Jodi
Rell announced that Connecticut has formed a consortium with seven other
Northeast states to apply for an additional $3.9 million in stimulus
funds to identify opportunities for green jobs, establish training
programs and create a website with a "green job bank" for interested
workers.
"Connecticut has a number of things going for it that has placed us
ahead of other states in renewable energy," said Kim Stevenson, the
manager of new technologies for the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund, which
was created in 2000 to invest in clean energy projects, funded by a
surcharge on the state's electric ratepayers.
"We have an educated workforce, a strong high-tech industry, and have
spent the last eight years putting in place government programs that
fund innovation in industry," Stevenson said. This has positioned us
well to receive the early federal stimulus money designated for
renewable energy and energy-efficiency projects."
A study prepared for the Clean Energy Fund this spring calculated that
Connecticut companies -- from major corporations like United
Technologies Corp. to entrepreneurial startups -- have already created
more than 4,500 direct jobs in renewable energy and energy conservation.
An additional 7,200 indirect jobs have been created because of green
energy spending. Experts can't predict how many additional green collar
jobs will be created in the future. Economists are generally most
encouraged by small company growth, considering it the engine of
business that powers tomorrow's new jobs. By this standard, Connecticut
might be considered a promising little green giant.
Alteris Renewables Inc., the Wilton company that installed the solar
panels at Avon Old Farms, typifies this growth.
Alteris was formed by the consolidation of three solar and thermal
energy companies since 2006, and is now considered one of the leading
clean energy companies in the Northeast, ranked No. 205 on Inc.
magazine's list of America's 500 fastest-growing companies. In addition
to the Avon Old Farms project, the company has just completed the
installation of solar panels to power the new "green headquarters" of
container manufacturer Pith Products on Route 74 in Ashford. Earlier
this year, Alteris completed a $2.5 million installation of solar panels
outside the headquarters of the Timex Group USA in Middletown, one of
the largest solar arrays in the Northeast. The project was supported by
a $920,000 grant from the Clean Energy Fund. EOS Ventures of Hancock,
Mass., has partnered with Old Farms to run the solar project.
Ron French, president of Alteris' solar division, said the company,
which now has 105 employees, has experienced job growth of between 20
and 30 percent a year. Its revenues have climbed from $4 million three
years ago to $36 million this year.
"Connecticut is one of the leading states in the country for renewable
energy in large part because the Clean Energy Fund established a strong
infrastructure to make projects happen," French said. "But you have to
remember how important a point this is. Solar power is still a small
industry, trying to make it on its own, and there's no giant like Exxon
out there with the capital to make big investments. The technology will
get much cheaper over time and prices are already coming down, but to
get started, you need that government funding."
Another company, Optiwind, was founded in Torrington in 2006 to take
advantage of an unserved niche in the wind energy market -- relatively
small-powered, low-maintenance turbines that can be located on the
properties of schools, hospitals or factories to provide most of their
needs. The company's tube-shaped towers are designed to accelerate light
winds to power a cluster of small turbines. Optiwind has grown from two
to 20 employees in two years and estimates it will grow to 100 employees
in three years. The company will install its first test turbine on the
Klug dairy on the west side of Torrington this fall, providing all the
electricity for the 167-acre farm.
"The wind is a crop that the Klugs always had since founding their farm
in 1899, and now we're going to be able to harvest that," said David
Hurwitt, Optiwind's vice president. "This is an ideal application for us
and typical for Connecticut and many other parts of New England."
That's because the region has a lot of winds between 5 and 12 mph and
some of the highest utility costs in the U.S., he said.
Connecticut's Fortune 500 giants are also active in the booming
renewable energy field. Three companies -- General Electric, Duracell
and United Technologies -- are competing in the exploding global
business of fuel cells, which chemically produce electricity without
producing harmful exhausts and gases. General Electric has also become a
leading producer of wind turbines. United Technology's Otis Elevator
unit is now marketing elevators that convert the energy of a descending
elevator back into electrical power for the building, and its UTC Power
division is installing fuel cells at a new Whole Foods supermarket in
Massachusetts that will power most of the building.
Although many of these clean power products are made elsewhere in the
country or overseas, much of the design and engineering work is done in
Connecticut.
But it is Connecticut's location -- in the cold, energy-dependent
Northeast, with high electric rates -- that will generate the greatest
demand for green jobs.
"The economics for renewable energy make sense in Connecticut for a
simple reason," Hurwitt said. "You always locate your business in the
heart of your best market."
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