CBS Evening News on China’s Lead in the Clean Energy Race
March 10, 2010
July 28, 2009 | Devon Swezey,
On Monday, Joe Romm of
Climate Progress publicly attacked the Breakthrough Institute for publishing
an op-ed in the San Francisco Chronicle -- called
"Will America lose the clean energy race?" -- which urged Congress
to fully fund President Obama's energy education initiative and scale
up direct pubic investments in clean energy to boost U.S. economic competitiveness
and accelerate the nation's transition to a clean energy economy.
Romm never mentioned the central focus of the op-ed -- President Obama's energy education program (RE-ENERGYSE) and the Breakthrough Institute's efforts to rally support behind this program -- and instead attacked it for what he calls "willfully misleading nonsense" about Asian countries' planned investments in clean energy, while apparently defending the smaller investments in the proposed Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act.
Romm asserts that the op-ed "attacks" President Obama and Democratic
leaders, when in fact the op-ed is aimed at supporting the President's
RE-ENERGYSE program and calling for larger public investment in clean
energy to compete with Asian challengers. The RE-ENERGYSE initiative
is currently in danger of being cut by Congress at a time when the U.S.
is severely lagging in energy science and technology education, and
last week the Breakthrough Institute organized over 100 universities, student groups and other organizations to submit a letter urging Congress to fully fund the initiative.
Romm makes several factually
incorrect statements about Asia's plans for clean energy investment
that contradict research in publicly accessible reports and analyses,
including those by the Center for American Progress (which employs Romm).
Here is a fact check to correct Romm's misstatements
and clarify the details of investment plans in Asia:
1. The op-ed states, "China alone is reportedly investing $440 billion to $660 billion in its clean-energy industries over 10 years."
Romm's response:
"the China figure -- while it is certainly impressive and definitely should motivate U.S. action (as I have argued) -- is "reported" and cumulative over 10 years. It is part of their stimulus and NOT just R&D, but an investment in clean-energy industries broadly defined"
Facts: China's planned investment of $440-$660 billion over 10 years is indeed part of an economic stimulus package, but not the original $586 billion stimulus that is passed late last year, as Romm implies. The new investment, according to a recent paper by Andrew Light and Julian Wong of the Center for American Progress (CAP), is part of a planned second stimulus package that is "dedicated solely to new energy development over the next decade, including generous investments in wind, solar and hydropower." China is planning to make a sustained commitment to clean energy investment by building on the clean energy investments in their first stimulus package rather than being content with a one-time investment.
China's massive clean energy investment plan is indeed "reported," or planned. A top source for Breakthrough Institute's figures are analysts at CAP, who have repeatedly published the same figures, including recently in Congressional testimony. These numbers were reported early by the AFP and have since been republished several times, including recently by the Washington Post in an article similar to Norris' and Jenkins' op-ed, titled "Asian Nations Could Outpace U.S. in Developing Clean Energy."
The Breakthrough Institute has never suggested that China's investment is centered solely around R&D, nor have we suggested that U.S. clean energy investments should be solely focused on R&D, despite Romm's ongoing effort to misrepresent our position, which strongly supports direct public deployment of clean energy technology (see here for a summary of Breakthrough's clean energy investment policy recommendations).
2. The op-ed states: "South Korea is investing a full 2 percent of its gross domestic product in a Green New Deal."
Romm's statement:
"Note that South Korea's Green New Deal -- $38 billion cumulative over the next four years--
is a stimulus bill covering all environmental projects (not just
clean energy) and includes, for instance, 'More than 2,500 miles of
bicycle expressways.' As the Guardian reported in April, the SK
government promises to spend only about $1.8 billion 'on research into
low-carbon technologies' and 'the renewable energy spending share of
South Korea's green new deal is a disappointingly low £80m [$120
million] mostly on solar-powered homes, photovoltaic heating and
geothermal power sources for apartment blocks.'"
Fact:
As Romm writes, the South Korean government announced a "Green New
Deal" stimulus bill in January that totaled $38 billion, $30.8 billion
of which was set aside for "green" investments, according
to the investment house HSBC. However, a smaller portion of that
spending, $1.8 billion, will go towards "renewable energy."
What
Romm seems to have completely missed, however, is that South Korea has since announced
an even larger investment of $85 billion over 5 years, or close to 2
percent of its 2008 GDP each year, dedicated to a "green growth" strategy primarily centered around clean technologies and industries. As Reuters reported
on July 6, the new investment is "mainly for encouraging green growth
industries and technologies such as renewable energy, LEDs
(light-emitting diodes), smart power grids and hybrid cars, is expected
to create up to 1.81 million jobs."
While it is unclear if the $85
billion includes, or is in addition to, the original $30.8 billion in
"green" investment, the plan still represents at least a doubling of
South Korea's commitment to creating a clean energy economy, with a
primary focus on clean energy investment. It should also be noted that
South Korea's economy is about 1/14th the size of the U.S. economy, and
a "green investment" representing a comparable share of the U.S.
economy would be in the range of $285 billion per year.
3.
The op-ed states: "Japan is redoubling incentives for solar, aiming for
a 20-fold expansion in installed solar energy by 2020."
Romm's statement:
"Note that Japan's investment is also from an expected "new stimulus plan," as Reuters explainedFact: While the green portion of
in April article with the less than ominous headline, 'Japan solar
subsidies lure fewer users than planned.' Note also the use of the key
word 'aiming' for a 20-fold expansion. In fact, as Reuters explains 'A
top economic and fiscal policy advisory committee said last month that
Japan should increase its solar power capacity 20-fold by 2020 from
2005 levels.'"
Comments
The Chinese government has full authority over utilities and wields a strong hand in many investment decisions. That is not the case in the US, so here the amount of government spending isn't the key. The Waxman-Markey bill has emissions targets and a host of policy provisions. The private investments which they'll generate will be worth many times what the bill sets aside for the government to spend. Your piece frets that apples are not oranges; both can be used to make a fruit salad.
By jay alt on 2009 07 31