t r u t h o u t | 01.05
http://www.truthout.org/010509O
Why Obama's Green Jobs Plan Might Work
Sunday 04 January 2009
by: Marla Dickerson, The
Some states - including
Hemlock,
This is the home of Hemlock Semiconductor Corp. It makes a material crucial for constructing photovoltaic panels. And that has turned this snow-covered hamlet into an unlikely hotbed for solar energy.
On Dec. 15, the same week that General Motors Corp. and Chrysler begged $17.4 billion from taxpayers to stave off collapse, Hemlock announced a $3-billion expansion that could create hundreds of jobs. It's a rare piece of good news for this battered Rust Belt state, whose 9.6% unemployment rate is the nation's highest.
In contrast to
Hemlock has been deluged with applications from idle factory hands such as former autoworker Don Sloboda. The 50-year-old
"It looks like the future to me," Sloboda said.
Whether clean energy can pull
President-elect Barack Obama wants to spend $150 billion over the next decade to promote energy from the sun, wind and other renewable sources as well as energy conservation. Plans include raising vehicle fuel-economy standards and subsidizing consumer purchases of plug-in hybrids. Obama wants to weatherize 1 million homes annually and upgrade the nation's creaky electrical grid. His team has talked of providing tax credits and loan guarantees to clean-energy companies.
His goals: create 5 million new jobs repowering
"Breaking our oil addiction ... is going to take nothing less than the complete transformation of our economy," Obama said during a campaign stop in
Americans have heard it before. Every president since Richard Nixon has touted energy independence, yet the goal remains elusive. The
Skeptics fear that the president-elect's Green New Deal will do little but waste taxpayers' money. The government squandered billions on the Jimmy Carter-era synthetic-fuels program, a failed effort to create vehicle fuel from coal.
Corn-based ethanol - the latest recipient of fat subsidies - is loathed by many environmentalists, who say it is an inefficient fuel that gobbles precious cropland and helps to drive up food prices.
Better to let the market decide, not the state, said Donald Boudreaux, chairman of the economics department at
"The history of government picking winners in the
Renewable-energy proponents such as former California Treasurer Phil Angelides say stupidity would be to stick with current
Angelides heads the Apollo Alliance, a coalition promoting clean industries as a means of rebuilding
"It's the best path to recovery and the best chance of creating jobs that can't be outsourced," he said.
Although Angelides' organization takes its name from the space program that put Americans on the moon, creating green jobs isn't rocket science, said
Jones said Obama's proposal to weatherize homes would pay for itself through energy savings while putting legions of unemployed construction workers back on the job. A $100-billion investment in a green recovery could create 2 million jobs within two years, a good chunk of them in retrofitting, according to a recent
"You can employ a lot of people very quickly with off-the-shelf technology like caulk guns," said Jones, founder of Green for All, an economic development group. "This isn't George Jetson stuff."
No one knows precisely how many green jobs exist in the
Worldwide, investors poured a record $117.2 billion into alternative energy in 2007, according to
But the industry slowed in late 2008 as the
That strategy has worked for
The irony, say American solar executives, is that the
The
"We need to reclaim our birthright."
Many state and local governments aren't waiting for
Tough state mandates to cut greenhouse gases and boost the use of renewable energy have turned
Trained wind workers are in such demand that General Electric Co., a maker of turbines, has promised to hire every Mesalands graduate for the next three years.
"If we can bend sheet metal for car fenders, we can bend it for windmills," said Ken Horn, a Republican state representative from hard-hit
A tavern owner, Horn said his regulars had been buzzing about green energy - a sign that the industry was no longer considered fringe or radical.
Hemlock Semiconductor is a joint venture of two Japanese firms and Midland, Mich.-based Dow Corning Corp., which owns a majority stake.
It is expanding its rural campus not far from
The exacting chemical process begins with the mining of quartz and ends with huge, gray, U-shaped bars of polycrystalline silicon wheeled to an assembly line at Hemlock's
Most of the product is sent to Asia and
Snow and ice couldn't keep Rich Steudemann from sliding into work on a recent morning. A mechanical engineer with more than two decades in the auto industry, Steudemann jumped at the chance to join Hemlock last fall as a quality-control expert.
"This is like the era of Henry Ford," said Steudemann, 45. "This industry is just starting to take off."
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