By
Shawn Lesser
November 8, 2012
This post was written in collaboration with Ben Taube, BLT
Sustainable Energy, Inc.
In California it’s San Francisco. In New England, it’s Boston.
Now, 2012 is proving that Georgia is rising as the cleantech
epicenter of the South. This year we witnessed IKEA flip the switch
on two large scale solar installations and Quality Technology
Services announce a more than $1 million investment in solar for
their Atlanta and Richmond data centers. Meanwhile, Georgia
Solar Utilities emerged to propose building 90MWs of solar in
Georgia, and selling it to Georgia Power, which itself has a 50 MW
solar initiative.
Lehigh Technologies based in Tucker recently raised $5 million in an
investment for their method of recycling post-industrial rubber into
new materials. GenAgain Technologies set up shop in Lithia Springs
to convert mixed waste plastics into synthetic crude oil. If
that’s not all, Savannah Technical College started offering new
sustainable technology programs, this year, a first of their
kind in Georgia.
Another first in Georgia is the
Savannah International Clean Energy Conference (Nov 11-13). It
will play host to a prominent line-up of over 50 global cleantech
speakers and an estimated 300 international clean economy
executives. VIP speakers and participants like Governor Nathan
Deal, U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson, Savannah Mayor Edna Branch
Jackson, AGL Resources CEO John W. Somerhalder II and Southern
Company executives will all have an unprecedented opportunity to
highlight the Georgia’s sustainable accomplishments and the state’s
potential to become a major clean economy marketplace for both local
and international companies.
The Georgian clean economy 2012 accomplishments are just the tip of
the iceberg. Even during the worst parts of the Great
Recession, clean economy jobs grew at a rate of 3.7 percent. Today
they total over 83,000 jobs, more than 2 percent of Georgia’s total
workforce. However, if Georgia is to lead the Southeast in green
jobs, more must be done to ensure that companies and jobs flourish
and stay in Georgia.
Supporting the clean economy starts at the early-stage, and the
“godfather of Atlanta angel investing” Sig Moseley co-founded CTW
Venture Partners this year to fill what he and his partners see as a
critical shortage in the Southeast of seed and early-stage capital.
Standing for “Change The World” cleantech is one of the firm’s
investment focuses.
With or without seed funding, companies still need business support
and Georgia Tech has been doing an excellent job incubating and
commercializing new innovations coming out of its incubation
programs. Additionally, the
Global
Cleantech Cluster Association is fostering early and later stage
companies locally and around the world, by networking together over
40 of the world’s leading cleantech clusters. Headquartered in
Atlanta, the GCCA provides a gateway for established and emerging
cleantech companies to gain exposure to potential investors, new
markets, influential networks, innovative technologies and best
practices. The group’s annual Later Stage Awards with over 200
global companies competing for 10 winning spots, sponsored by
Deloitte and McGuire Woods, will be presented at the Savannah
International Clean Energy Conference on November 12th.
Once established, clean and green companies thrive in Georgia. The
state is home to a growing number of international solar companies
including Suniva,
Mage
Solar and the solar mounting firm
Renusol. Biomass is also winning here, as
the state was listed as third in the nation in 2011 for energy
generated by this alternative fuel source.
However, to truly rival Boston or San Francisco for cleantech
status, the state must get serious about the four critical policies
identified by The Pew Charitable Trusts that support a state’s clean
economy. Currently, Georgia offers one them, financial incentives,
which is an excellent start. The state should also encourage clean
economic development by assessing policy options such as a renewable
portfolio standard, energy efficiency resource standards, and
options to allow for power purchase agreements. Of our 50 states, 30
have mandated renewable energy standards and 7 offer voluntary
goals. In the Southeast, North Carolina mandates a clean energy
goal.
According to the report “Sizing
the Clean Economy” by the Brookings Institution, the clean
economy added more than half a million jobs, between 2003 and 2010,
nationally. Georgia is well on it’s way to solidifying it’s strong
hold in the Southeast as a cleantech leader. But it can only capture
that title, through diligent public policy and building momentum by
consistently sharing its variety of success stories with the world.
At the Savannah Clean Energy Conference, Governor Deal and others
have a pivotal opportunity to impress on the international audience
the strength of Georgia’s clean economy and its reliable potential
for successful cleantech profitability in the 21st Century.
© Copyright 1999-2012 RenewableEnergyWorld.com - All rights reserved.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/blog/post/2012/11/georgia-leading-the-charge-for-the-clean-economy-in-the-southeast?cmpid=WNL-Friday-November9-2012