Thursday, September 08, 2011

Where the jobs aren't: Green energy

For candidate Barack Obama it must have seemed so simple. Create jobs by harnessing the power of green energy. But economics and science got in the way. Last week a California solar power manufacturer that collected $535 million in federal funds filed for bankruptcy. And that's just the tip of the fix-global-warming iceberg:

From David Brooks in the New York Times:

With the economy stagnating and unemployment high, where are the jobs of the future going to come from? A few years ago, it seemed as though the Green Economy could be a big part of the answer.

New clean-energy sources could address environmental, economic and national security problems all at once. In his 2008 convention speech, Barack Obama promised to create five million green economy jobs. The U.S. Conference of Mayors estimated in April 2009 that green jobs could account for 10 percent of new job growth over the next 30 years.

Alas, it was not to be. The gigantic public investments in green energy may be stimulating innovation and helping the environment. But they are not evidence that the government knows how to create private-sector jobs.

Recently, Aaron Glantz reported in The Times on some of the disappointments. California was awarded $186 million in federal stimulus money to weatherize homes. So far, the program has created the equivalent of only 538 full-time jobs. A $59 million effort to train people for green jobs in California produced only 719 job placements.
Brooks gives additional examples of green brownouts, such as the $186 million in stimulus funds California received for home weatherization--which created a paltry 538 jobs. And $59 million in government funds was spent to train Californians for green careers. That plan did a little bit better, creating 738 positions--which is still a rotten return on taxpayer investment.

Related post:

Obama solar power stimulus "success" eclipsed by regulations--will file for bankruptcy

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