WASHINGTON, May 4, 2012 - A recent
research report released by the Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for
Public Policy at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, found that
solar energy is following the same path to commercialization as
other traditional energy sources spurred by federal incentives.
The study, titled "Assessment of Incentives and Employment
Impacts of Solar Industry Deployment," also estimates that the
U.S. solar industry could employ hundreds of thousands of Americans
by the end of the decade.
Like oil, coal, natural gas, nuclear, and all other traditional
energy sources, the Baker Center finds, solar has received support
from the federal government to promote its usage in order to drive
our economy.
According to the report, diffusion of solar energy technology in
the energy markets is very similar to the paths that many American
industries have traveled to become mainstream. Unlike more mature
technologies, however, that continue to receive subsidies, solar
energy is currently in a very early phase of its growth
trajectory.
The recent report on the West Coast Clean
Economy prepared by GLOBE Advisors in
collaboration with the Center for Climate Strategies notes that
renewable energy sectors such as solar, wind, and biomass on
average produce more net jobs throughout the supply chain per
megawatt (MW) of average capacity than traditional energy sources,
such as coal and natural gas.
The University of Tennessee report finds that traditional
fuels have been subsidized for decades - some like coal and oil for
a century - and followed similar growth trajectories toward
majority adoption. According to the Baker Center report, every
significant energy resource deployed in the U.S. today has had
approximately 30 years of innovation and early adoption before
beginning rapid growth that brought about mainstream
adoption.
The report also finds that solar energy has yielded significant
public benefits in exchange for federal support. Earlier federal
energy policy has helped maintain competition, provide for national
security, promote economic development, meet public health and
environmental quality standards, and increase energy
security.
Additionally, the report points out that solar energy benefits the
U.S. energy portfolio by decreasing the impact of supply
disruptions and price volatility of other sources of energy. It is
also notes that solar power is most efficient during periods of
high demand, providing lower cost peak power rates for
consumers.
"Just like older energy sources like coal, oil, and gas, solar
energy is providing real, tangible benefits to America today,"
added Kimbis. "Policies designed to increase America's use of solar
are incredibly successful and generating benefits across the
nation. It would be a serious mistake for policymakers in
Washington, D.C., and in statehouses across the country, to walk
away from good public policy."
Today more than 100,000 Americans work at 5,600 solar energy
companies across the nation in all 50 states. The industry more
than doubled the amount of solar electricity installed in the U.S.
in 2011 compared to 2010 and growth is expected to continue in
2012.
Background Resources:
Link to SEIA fact sheet on report:
Link
to University of Tennessee report:
Facts on America's Solar Industry:
Solar companies and job profiles in all 50
states:
Solar Market Insight Report, 2011 Year in
Review: