U.S. Tops 2011 Clean Energy Investments: ReportEERE Network News - January 18, 2012
The United States topped China for the first time since 2008 as global clean energy investment reached a new record of $260 billion in 2011, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. The analysis company reported on January 12 that the total was up 5% over 2010, as solar spending outpaced investments in wind. Last year's highlights include the United States retaking first place, with total investment surging to nearly $56 billion, up 33%; China saw investment rise just 1% to $47 billion. The report noted that a major portion of the U.S. increase was due to the now expired federal loan progam, and that another contributor, the production tax credit for renewables, is set to expire at the end of 2012. Overall, solar technology investments surged 36% to almost
$137 billion. This nearly doubled the $75 billion spent on wind
power, which was down 17%. Other categories surveyed included
energy-smart technologies, including smart grid, power storage,
efficiency and advanced transport. The report also tallied
smaller renewable energy sectors: biofuels saw total investment
edge up from $8.6 to $9 billion; biomass and waste-to-energy
dropped 18% to about $11 billion; geothermal slipped from $3.2
to $2.8 billion; and small hydropower fell 25% to $3 billion.
See the Bloomberg New Energy Finance press release: *EERE Network News is funded by DOE's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) and is also available on the EERE Web site: http://apps1.eere.energy.gov/news/enn.cfm
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