By
ecoRI News staff
“Empowering New England
with Clean Energy” is an original white paper that outlines a vision for the
potential for renewable-energy growth and notes energy policies that the next
governors must support to ensure that the renewable-energy sector continues on
its current path to becoming New England’s next dominant industry.
Renewable
energy has grown substantially in New England in the past five years, through
both deployment of renewable energy and energy efficiency across the region.
However, the success of New England’s renewable-energy sector is at a tipping
point and the policies set by the next governors are crucial to the continued
success of the economic engine that has already created more than a 100,000
jobs in the region in recent years, according to the report.
With
hundreds of companies developing next-generation energy technologies that will
enter the marketplace in the coming decade, New England states need consistent
policies that will enable companies to grow and deploy their technologies here,
Rothstein said.
Blessed
with the intellectual, financial and human capital strengths that have made the
region a leader in the development of renewable-energy technologies, products
and services, New England’s future should be as a leader in the global
clean-energy market, which in 2013 was valued at $1.1 trillion — as big as
pharmaceuticals worldwide, according to the seven-page report.
“Empowering
New England with Clean Energy” lays out policy recommendations for the next
governors in the areas of renewable energy, energy efficiency, innovation and
regional competitiveness.
Among the policies recommended, NECEC calls for the
next administrations to expand each state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard and
energy demand reduction goals through 2025, to support state programs to fund
renewable-energy research, early-stage companies and demonstration projects for
new technologies, to commit to advancing the modernization of the electricity
system, and to expand the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) through
2030.
“The
New England region has been a leader in creating energy policies that empower
customers to manage their energy more intelligently, saving billions of dollars
and increasing business productivity,” said David Brewster, president of
Boston-based EnerNOC.
“Reaping even greater savings and maintaining a leadership position will
require policies that encourage reductions in peak demand and create
market-based mechanisms to incentivize more cost-effective energy use.”