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The Next Frontier for States and Cities: Building Clean Energy Industries and Green Jobs
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Professor
Receives NSF Grant To Develop National Study That Identifies
the Best Practices and Policies of States and Cities Focused on
Businesses That Create Green Jobs
Today, as state and local governments seek to integrate
environmental and energy policies with job creation, a
first-of-its kind national study has found that only a few
states and cities have policies in place to create green
jobs.
Developed by a Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute professor
and a team of eight graduate students from several U.S.
universities, the full report – Building Clean-Energy
Industries and Green Jobs, is set for release on August
1.
“Today’s policy-makers are increasingly driven by a new
question: how can environmental and energy policies be
configured to create new businesses and generate green jobs
with maximum impact and minimal expenditure?,” said David J.
Hess, professor of science and technology studies at
Rensselaer.
Hess’ research focuses on the social and policy studies of
science, technology, health, and the environment, with an
emphasis on the role of civil society and social movements. His
interest in localism is prompted by his earlier research on the
relationships between social movements and industrial
innovation.
“There are many studies of state and local government energy
policy that focus on policies that drive ‘demand’ for energy
efficiency and renewable energy products,” Hess said. “This
research report is different because it looks at the emerging
suite of ‘supply’ policies needed to create the businesses that
will provide green jobs.”
Hess received a $249,000 National Science Foundation (NSF)
grant to support a 10-week graduate training seminar and
additional research sponsored by the organization’s Science and
Technology Studies Program. Eight graduate student assistants
were recruited from around the country to participate in the
seminar. Each student conducted interviews and field research
to develop a detailed case study of a city and state. Based on
a survey of 30 state governments and 25 cities, the study
identifies 15 best practices and policies for each of the
states and cities.
The study explores the full range of green jobs, from
weatherization jobs to manufacturing to research, development,
and business start-ups. It also focuses on policies that help
to promote five clean-energy industries: bio-fuels, smart-grid
and buildings technologies, solar, transportation and energy
storage, and wind.
The Results
According to the study, California, Massachusetts,
Michigan, New York, and Ohio are among the states that have a
strong set of policies that support green-business creation.
The findings also feature the cities that have sought to create
a full range of green jobs, including jobs in manufacturing and
technology.
Examples include: Austin, Texas; Boulder, Colo.; Cleveland,
Ohio; Los Angeles, Calif., and the San Francisco Bay area
cities; and Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn. Additionally, Newark,
N.J., and several cities in California including – Los Angeles,
Oakland, and San Francisco – have been successful in creating
green jobs that provide living wages.
“Many cities and states are claiming to become the ‘capital’
of green technology, but only a few really have strong,
proactive policies in place to make that claim stick in order
to create the highly paid green jobs,” Hess said. “During our
research, we found that only some states and cities were able
to bring together the research and innovation side with support
for funding, technology transfer, business development, and
green jobs training.”
“Every state and city is different. They all have their
unique industry strengths, socioeconomic concerns, and
geographical constraints. But some have done better at
addressing their needs than others,” said Jaime D. Ewalt, a
researcher on the team and Ph.D. candidate in the chemistry and
environmental science department at New Jersey Institute of
Technology.
“Already we are seeing that some states and cities have
moved ahead to become leaders in the new industries,” Hess
said. “Our findings suggest that if policymakers are serious
about getting and keeping the upper-end green jobs in
manufacturing and innovation, they need to be serious about the
suite of policies that need to be in place.”
“We have some of the best students of the next generation of
environmental studies and policy that have worked with me to
develop this study,” Hess added. “Our research provides
successful examples of existing initiatives that may offer
other state and city governments with potential ideas that they
may consider when implementing their strategies in order to
connect energy policies with job creation and business
development.
The graduate students involved in project are: David A.
Banks, Joseph Datko, and Logan D.A. Williams from the science
and technology studies department at Rensselaer; Bob Darrow
from the science and technology studies department at Virginia
Tech; Rebecca Gresh from the sociology department at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Matthew Hoffman
from the sociology department at Loyola University; and Anthony
M. Sarkis from the environmental studies department at Antioch
University New England.
Throughout the summer and into the fall, Hess and several of
the students will be presenting their findings to state and
city governments and at advocacy organizations. They have
already delivered presentations in New York and Pennsylvania
with additional presentations planned for New Jersey, Ohio, and
Vermont.
Connecting the Dots: Research Intersections
Hess has been working on a multi-volume series that
explores the intersections of social movements, industry,
sustainability, and justice in the United States. According to
Hess, the specific problem is to find points of entry where
countervailing forces exist to the “brown” industries, that is,
industries that actively attempt to delay the policy transition
to a greener economy.
Hess is working on the third volume. The book examines state
and local government policies that are encouraging the
development of clean tech and green businesses. Preliminary
finding suggest that the growing clean-tech sector promises to
provide a third counterweight in favor of more rapid policy
transitions to a greener economy.
In 2007, Hess published the first volume,
Alternative Pathways in Science and Industry
(MIT Press). One of the central arguments of the book
is that social movements play a generative role in scientific
and technological change, rather than merely a role of opposing
some new forms of technology or demanding access to others. He
also explored the limitations of social movements and the
tendency for the movements for sustainability and/or justice in
the United States to achieve partial victories.
In 2009, he published the second volume, Localist
Movements in a Global Economy: Sustainability, Justice, and
Urban Development in the United States (MIT Press).
The book examines the social and environmental aspects of the
“localist movement” of advocacy for increased local ownership,
such as in “buy local” campaigns. The book also examines the
potential of the green small business sector as an additional
counterweight to the political power of the anti-environmental
industries. The first two volumes were completed with support
from the Science and Technology Studies (STS) Program of the
National Science Foundation.
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Published
July 29,
2010 |
Contact: Jessica Otitigbe
Phone: (518) 276-6050
E-mail: otitij@rpi.edu |
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