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Winning the Race 2012: #8 Clean Energy

Winning the Race 2012: #8 Clean Energy

Full Title: Winning the Race 2012: #8 Clean Energy
Author(s): The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
Publisher(s): The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
Publication Date: October 1, 2012
Full Text: Download Resource
Description (excerpt):

Winning the Race 2012 is a series of ten policy briefs that lay out broad principles and actionable ideas for the next administration to embrace to help the United States win the race for global innovation advantage. The following is the 8th of the 10 policy briefs, focusing on Clean Energy.

Developing and deploying affordable, high‐performance clean energy technologies are one of the great challenges of our time. It’s central to reducing global greenhouse gas emissions, improving the U.S. balance of trade, and bolstering national security. And yet over the last 40  years, U.S. energy policy has been marked by government underinvestment in R&D and prolonged policy debates on what would have ultimately proved to be ineffective carbon pricing schemes. And the recent temporary spike in clean energy investment through the Stimulus was focused too much on deploying  uncompetitive  existing  generations of technologies instead of working to develop better transformative technologies. But implementing new clean energy policy has never felt so far from reality. Political gridlock is   fueled in part by high‐profile bankruptcies of government‐supported clean energy firms that weren’t ready for prime‐time and/or were undercut by Chinese green mercantilist policies. Many on the left have doubled down on their  “green  jobs” narrative by supporting the renewal of subsidies for low‐risk uncompetitive technologies. Many also remain steadfast in support for carbon caps, although some grudgingly have accepted carbon pricing as a second‐best solution.  Meanwhile, many  on  the right insist the private sector will develop cheap energy technologies and that  government  intervention, with perhaps the  exception of a modest, revenue neutral carbon tax, is doomed for failure. The next administration needs to put aside these obsolete assumptions and recognize that transformative, next‐generation clean energy innovation is not going to arise from a price on   carbon, subsidizing what are essentially today’s clean energy “Edsels,” or even the profit motive of an expected $2 trillion‐dollar a year global clean energy market. Instead, developing the needed clean energy breakthroughs requires a national strategy, with significant public investments in R&D and cohesive policies to unleash private sector innovation.

All statements and/or propositions in discussion prompts are meant exclusively to stimulate discussion and do not represent the views of OurEnergyPolicy.org, its Partners, Topic Directors or Experts, nor of any individual or organization. Comments by and opinions of Expert participants are their own.

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