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The Coming Clean Tech Crash
The clean tech sector is headed for a major crash, as the subsidies required to make clean energy artificially cheaper are becoming unsustainable. Avoiding future crashes will require reorienting our energy policies to drive innovation, rather than simply deploying existing technologies that can't compete without subsidy.

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The global clean energy industry is set for a major crash. The reason is simple. Clean energy is still much more expensive and less reliable than coal or gas, and in an era of heightened budget austerity the subsidies required to make clean energy artificially cheaper are becoming unsustainable.

Clean tech crashes are nothing new. The U.S. wind energy industry has collapsed three times before, first in the mid 1990s and most recently in 2002 and 2004 when Congress failed to extend the tax credit that made it profitable. But the impact and magnitude of the coming clean tech crash will far outstrip those of past years.

As part of its effort to combat the economic recession, the federal government pumped nearly $80 billion in direct investment and tax credits into the clean energy sector, catalyzing an unprecedented industry expansion. Solar energy, for example, grew 67% in the United States in 2010. The U.S. wind energy industry also experienced unprecedented growth as a result of the generous Section 1603 clean energy stimulus program. The industry grew by 40% and added 10 GW of new turbines in 2009. Yet many of the federal subsidies that have driven such rapid growth are set to expire in the next few years, and clean energy remains unable to compete without them.

The crash won't be limited to the United States. In many European countries, clean energy subsidies have become budget casualties as governments attempt to curb mounting deficits. Spain, Germany, France, Italy and the Czech Republic have all announced cuts to clean energy subsidies.

Such cuts are not universal, however. China, flush with cash, is bucking the trend, committing $760 billion over 10 years for clean energy projects. China is continuing to invest in low-carbon energy as a way of meeting its voracious energy demand, diversifying its electricity supply, and alleviating some of the negative health consequences of its reliance on fossil energy.

If U.S. and European clean energy markets collapse while investment continues to ramp up in China, the short-term consequences will likely be a migration of much of the industry to Asia. As we wrote in our 2009 report, "Rising Tigers, Sleeping Giant," this would have significant economic consequences for the United States, as the jobs, revenues and other benefits of clean tech growth accrue overseas.

In the long-term, however, clean energy must become much cheaper and more reliable if it is to widely displace fossil fuels on the scale of national economies and become a commercially viable industry.

Breaking the Boom-Bust Cycle

Why is the United States still locked in this self-perpetuating boom-bust cycle in clean energy? The problem, according to a new essay by energy experts David Victor and Kassia Yanosek in this week's Foreign Affairs, is that our system of clean energy subsidization is jury-rigged to support the deployment of only the least-risky and most mature clean energy technologies, while lacking clear incentives for continual innovation that could make clean energy competitive on cost with conventional energy sources. Rather, we should "invest in more innovative technologies that stand a better chance of competing with conventional energy sources over the long haul." According to Victor and Yanosek, nearly seven-eighths of global clean energy investment goes toward deploying existing technologies that aren't competitive without subsidy, while only a small share goes to encouraging innovation in existing technologies or developing new ones.

This must change. Rather than simply subsidize production of current technologies, we need a comprehensive energy innovation strategy to develop, manufacture, and deploy riskier but more promising clean energy technologies that may eventually compete with fossil energy at scale. Instead of rewarding companies for building the same product, we should reward companies who continuously improve designs and cut costs over time.

Such a federal strategy will require major federal investments, but of a different kind than the subsidies that have driven the clean tech industry in years past. For starters, we must dramatically ramp up funding for early-stage clean energy research and development. A growing bipartisan group of think tanks and business leaders have pushed an investment of at least $15 billion annually in energy R&D, up from its current $4 billion level. Targeted funding is needed to solve technology challenges and ensure that innovative technologies can develop and improve. One key program that helps fulfill this need is ARPA-E, which funds a portfolio of innovative technology companies and helps connect them with private investors. But ARPA-E's budget has continually been under assault in budget negotiations, hampering its ability to catalyze innovation in the energy sector and limiting its impact.

We also need to invest in cutting-edge advanced manufacturing capabilities and shared technology infrastructure that would help U.S. companies cut costs and improve manufacturing processes. As the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology wrote in a report released last week, manufacturing is vital to innovation, "because of the synergies created by locating production processes and design processes near to each other." Furthermore, bringing down manufacturing costs, such as by supporting shared infrastructure for small firms, or offering financing for the adoption of innovative technologies in manufacturing, will be a key component of reducing the costs of new clean energy innovations.

Lastly, the nation's hodgepodge of energy deployment subsidies is in dire need of reform. As Breakthrough and colleagues wrote in "Post-Partisan Power," we need an energy deployment regime that demands and rewards innovation, rather than just supporting more of the same. Brookings' Mark Muro (a co-author or PPP) expands, "targeted and competitive deployment incentives could be created for various classes of energy technologies that would ensure that each has a chance to mature even as each is challenged to innovate and locate price declines." Rather than create permanently subsidized industries, such investments would "provide the opportunity for opportunity for all emerging low-carbon energy technologies to demonstrate progress toward competitive costs," while speeding commercialization.

It is clear that the current budgetary environment in the United States presents challenges to the viability of the fast-growing clean energy industry. But it also presents an opportunity. By repurposing existing clean energy policies and investing in clean energy innovation, the United States can be the first country to make clean energy cheap and reliable, a distinction that is sure to bring major economic benefits in a multi-trillion dollar energy market.

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TrackBacks (0) 8 COMMENTS:

well I don't know about the US, but here in germany the goal is still 35% renewables in 2020 - and thats only the goal of the conservatives, who will be voted out of office in 2013. so... i'd be very surprised to see a crash of renewables here - quite the opposite. this is to an extend also true for europe in general:

http://www.offshorewind.biz/2011/07/03/europe-to-triple-its-installed-wind-energy-capacity-by-2020-says-ewea-belgium/

Thanks for the link to the Victor and Yanosek piece in Foreign Affairs. It reinforces what Fareed Zakaria says about why the problem is not how much we spend, but what we spend it on, for cleantech development. ARPA-E was touted as an early stage technology development effort, but, due to ARPA-E's 20% cost sharing requirement, early stage companies are disqualified by their poverty. ARPA-E is only interested in funding big projects (in the $1-5 million range) and is not about encouraging a swarm of new small projects, so only corporate giants and universities need apply.

"Small business" assistance in other programs like SBIR also has a tendency to wind up as corporate welfare because the federal government defines a "small business" as one having fewer than 500 employees. Cleantech startups must struggle through the Valley of Death with no government assistance.

Wasteful deployment of unsuitable solutions follows from the premise that "we have all the technologies we need." This battlecry of ignorance was frequently heard during the cap-and-trade debate and it remains an article of faith among liberals. Without any technology assessment being done by DOE, despite the urging of the GAO, this demonstrably false claim endures as the cornerstone of federal cleantech policy. We are still trying to deploy what was conceived 30 years ago. So early stage development of new technology lags, and follies (such as CO2 sequestration, chemical and membrane CO2 capture, corn ethanol, hot fusion, and baseload wind and solar) get the money that could and should have gone to find new and scalable technologies for making clean energy cheap.

Thie article contains a much repeated generalization that is simply untrue:

" Clean energy is still much more expensive and less reliable than coal or gas, and in an era of heightened budget austerity the subsidies required to make clean energy artificially cheaper are becoming unsustainable."

This is hardly the case. For starters, wind generation without subsidies is already cheaper. Second, if we consider subsidies of oil, which globally are 12x that of clean renewables as a whole, then it's questionable claim at best.

The problem is not that clean energy is expensive. Rather, that for developed countires with an existing inventory of fossil fuel power plants, changing to clean energy requires new investment.

So the question is whehther this investment is whorthwhile.

If we take the short-term view perhaps many would conclude not, but this is not only short-sighted in terms of continuing to pour money down the drain with consumption of fossil fuels, but misses the opportunity eonomic growth of domestic industries while continuing to ship money by the boatload to oil producing nations - some of whome are begining to mae their own clesn energy investments thank you very much.

Most certianly clean energy should be approached in s stratigic fashion with bational plans and rational energy diversity, which by definition will include a mix of clean energy and fossil fuel for years to come, hich also negates the implicit assumptions that clean energy technology is not ready for prime time of that it is an all or nothing proposition.

Fewer oil company talking points and more facts and reason would make a more convincing arguement.

The two comments above show exactly why government ought to be out of the game and let free enterprise develop the solution. Don't believe it? Just watch. That's where its coming from.

Regarding The Coming Clean Tech Crash,

I am in TOTAL agreement with the comment by xiao-zi. Comparing energy from clean technologies with energy from coal and also natural gas ignores the pollution from these fossil fuel systems. Please add the entire cost associated with CO2 capture and sequestration to the cost of energy from these fossil fuel systems with the clean tech systems and the results are far more competitive. Furthermore, sustainable energy systems from US manufactured systems offer greater employment opportunities while also improving our balance of trade and greatly improving our overall energy independence.

Rather than invest in 19th century fuels, why shouldn't the US invest in 21st century clean energy solutions that create jobs, clean the air, reduce global warming gasses, improve energy independence, improve balance of trade and help to avoid future wars of petroleum. I fear that with the above referenced article, the "Era of Small Thinking Is Still With Us".

Regarding The Coming Clean Tech Crash,

I am in TOTAL agreement with the comment by xiao-zi. Comparing energy from clean technologies with energy from coal and also natural gas ignores the pollution from these fossil fuel systems. Please add the entire cost associated with CO2 capture and sequestration to the cost of energy from these fossil fuel systems with the clean tech systems and the results are far more competitive. Furthermore, sustainable energy systems from US manufactured systems offer greater employment opportunities while also improving our balance of trade and greatly improving our overall energy independence.

Rather than invest in 19th century fuels, why shouldn't the US invest in 21st century clean energy solutions that create jobs, clean the air, reduce global warming gasses, improve energy independence, improve balance of trade and help to avoid future wars of petroleum. I fear that with the above referenced article, the "Era of Small Thinking Is Still With Us".

Excellent strategy.Must make clean tech ecnomically viable via innovation rather than depend on its success on subsides.Eliminate the dependence of clean tech industry on political cycles and whims.

DR.Tapan Munroe

This seems a very USA-centred point of view. Complaining about subsidies that cause cycles of boom and bust. The FITs in Germany are designed to encourage the scaling up of innovative technologies, while making sure that current investments will pay back in the long run. There is a cycle, but without too large crashes.

I think this article also assumes that renewable energy can be made cheap only by funding the basic research for the high-tech components, like e.g. finding the cheapest Photovoltaic materials.

However: once you start scaling up any new technology, you'll find that a large fraction of the cost is for all the 'low tech' stuff holding it together, making it work. In the case of Photovoltaic electricity, this is 'simply' how the photovoltaic material is built into modules, connected with electronics, how the power can be sold back to the grid, how the grid itself has the capacity to absorb this production, or be 'smart' in the way power is transported.

Cost-reducing innovation of the not-so-high-tech parts can only happen by actually having the technology scale up, and then being forced to reduce prices all over, in the next 'bust cycle'. Boom & bust are an essential part of the process of scaling up. It is however a good idea to try and prevent the busts from becoming a total crash, in stead of just periodic cost-reducing redesign-phase.

If we hear that we have reached a point where the variability of wind and solar energy may become a problem for the grid .. that is good news: we have reached a next stage in the innovation cycle. That grid will need to be improved, and made smarter. Maybe regulations need to be addapted to distributed power production too. It isn't as if these problems cannot be solved. It is just that we rarely really solve a problem before we reach the stage where it becomes necessary.

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