// Begin Rich Text Tags and Categories // End Rich Text Tags and Categories
Home » American Clean Energy and Security Act You are browsing entries tagged with “American Clean Energy and Security Act”

Majority Favors Clean Energy Bill and Wants Senate to Take Action

Majority Favors Clean Energy Bill and Wants Senate to Take Action

A majority of likely voters – 71% – favors the American Clean Energy and Security Act recently passed by the House of Representatives, and two-thirds (67%) believe Congress is either doing the right amount (22%) or should be doing more (45%) to address global warming, new Zogby International telephone poll shows. Just 28% believe that Congress is doing too much.

August 12 2009 | Posted in Policy | Read More »

Clean Energy Investments Can Create 1.7 Million Jobs and Jumpstart The Economy

Clean Energy Investments Can Create 1.7 Million Jobs and Jumpstart The Economy

As clean energy and climate legislation works its way through Congress, new data shows that a $150 billion investment in clean energy could create a net increase of 1.7 million American jobs and significantly lower the national unemployment rate. According to the analysis, shifting to a clean-energy economy will help millions of low-income Americans by creating more accessible job opportunities — with the potential for advancement — and by lowering utility bills and transportation costs.

July 20 2009 | Posted in Green Jobs & Careers, Policy | Read More »

An Analysis of Three Myths Regarding The Green Jobs Programs of Spain and The US

An Analysis of Three Myths Regarding The Green Jobs Programs of Spain and The US

Dr. Gabriel Alvarez from King Juan Carlos University authored a May 2009 study entitled “Study of the effects on employment of public aid to renewable energy sources” (KJCU Study). Dr. Alvarez has tried repeatedly to correlate the Spanish investment and experience with Renewable Energy technologies (RETs) with that of the U.S. However, even cursory analyses of the Spanish public policies that have been employed over the past decade reveal significant and dramatic differences from the current and proposed domestic (U.S.) approach to RET deployment, and thereby obviate any implied correlation between the negative conclusions of the KJCU Study and the impact of the domestic RET investment. Additionally, included within the KJCU Study are several assumptions with respect to the economics of the U.S. investment inRETs that are fundamentally incorrect.

May 28 2009 | Posted in Green Jobs & Careers, Policy | Read More »