Clean energy's "Valley of Death"
Friday, May 8, 2009

Last week the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources discussed ways to bridge the Valley of Death. The Committee held a significant hearing that addressed a proposal to create a new federal agency to help finance higher-risk clean energy projects that will deploy breakthrough technologies. I testified last week and also last summer to the Committee in support of this idea. Google.org's RE<C initiative is focused on creating renewable electricity, at utility-scale, that is cheaper than coal. The only way to achieve this goal is to move technologies from small pilot projects to full-scale commercial plants.
I'm pleased to note that last Friday the Chairman of the Senate Energy Committee, Senator Bingaman, and the top Republican on the Committee, Senator Murkowski, introduced legislation to assist clean energy technologies in securing sufficient funding to cross the Valley of Death. The bill was also introduced in the House by Congressmen Inslee and Dingell. The legislation would initially provide $10 billion in federal funding, which would leverage many times that in private finance for renewable, efficiency, and other clean energy projects deploying breakthrough technologies. We're throwing our strong support behind this bill, and we'll continue to work with others in clean energy finance, technology, and policy to advance efforts to build sorely-needed clean energy projects.
I can't think of an issue more important than this one. It takes a Google to help drive this past the lobbies and bad policies that have kept us on the wrong road all these years.
ReplyDeleteThank you to all at Google for fighting the good fight.
Ken Evoy
Founder, SiteSell.com
Finally some common sense. Hopefully this leads somewhere. Dr Robert Carl Parisien Natick MA
ReplyDeleteGreat to see Google is using its influential position to leverage some political courage. The status quo is always cheaper in the short run, but short term thinking can lead to long term catastrophe.
ReplyDeleteNow the clean energy business just needs to make one critical piece of hardware in every member of congress' district just like the defense industry, and they'll get all the votes they need.