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Making Green Jobs Work for Ohio March 3, 2011 Ohio Farm Bureau Federation . Amanda Weinstein Swank Program in Rural-Urban Policy http://aede.osu.edu/programs/swank/. Introduction. Motivation Ohio Energy Profile Green Energy and Employment Agriculture and Alternative Energy
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Making Green Jobs Work for OhioMarch 3, 2011Ohio Farm Bureau Federation Amanda Weinstein Swank Program in Rural-Urban Policy http://aede.osu.edu/programs/swank/
Introduction • Motivation • Ohio Energy Profile • Green Energy and Employment • Agriculture and Alternative Energy • Green Energy Strategy • Conclusion
Motivation • Ohio’s Senate Bill 221 requires 25% of the state’s electricity to be generated from alternative energy and at least half of that from renewable sources such as solar or wind by 2025 • In his State of the Union address, President Obama stated a national goal of obtaining 80% of our electricity from clean energy sources by 2035 • In the green energy race, Ohio is definitely starting off behind and other states won’t be waiting for Ohio to catch up
Renewable Energy Breakdown • Ohio generates far less renewable energy as a percentage than the U.S. as a whole • Additionally, Ohio’s distribution of the renewable energy generation looks very different from the U.S.
Replacing Coal with Wind • Our previous paper showed that replacing 25% of Ohio’s electricity with electricity generated from wind would decrease carbon emissions by approximately 58 billion pounds • It would also increase energy costs for consumers by about $1.4 billion • Ohio would gain at most 6,000 net jobs, and at worst, lose 1,000 net jobs. • Energy generation is capital intensive not labor intensive • There are significant displacement effects • Although green energy jobs have been experiencing significant growth, the energy sector isn’t that large to begin with
Cost by Energy Source • The average levelized cost is the present value of all costs including building and operating the plants. • Ohio’s lower energy costs are in part due to the significance of coal in energy generation (also implies that the demand for energy efficient products will be lower)
Green Jobs • In 2007, Ohio had approximately 35,257 clean jobs • From 1998 to 2007 clean jobs experienced a growth rate of 7.7% (0.85% annualized) while Ohio’s total economy experienced a growth rate of -2.2% over this time frame • Most green jobs are not in green energy
Ohio Green Jobs • With a declining manufacturing industry, Ohio employment has been struggling. • Unemployment is still approximately 9.3% • Total number of jobs in Ohio is 6,304,302. • Although growing at an annualized rate of 0.85%, only 0.56% of jobs are clean in Ohio
Carbon Emissions • Life cycle emissions rates include the total aggregated emissions over the life cycle of the fuel to include extraction, production, distribution, and use. • Also implies that buying an electric car is less “green” in Ohio and demand will be lower
Agriculture and Alternative Energy • Although the employment effects may not be large, alternative energy has the potential to be very good for agriculture • Wind energy- it may look different but something about it fits – lifestyle, continue farming, additional income, etc. • Wind concerns–some consider it an eyesore, noise, bats, birds, and other wildlife effects to consider
Agriculture and Biofuel • Alternative energy from biomass can also be a natural fit for Ohio • Ohio climate is clearly conducive to growing corn which can be used in corn-based ethanol, algae used to make algae oil, and producing other biofuels • Some biofuel concerns - raises price of corn affecting other agriculture sectors and food prices
Advantages of Ohio Alternative Energy • Ohio has some often overlooked advantages when it comes to alternative energy • Established transmission lines – population and manufacturing centers, significance of coal • A recent article calls transmission lines “the missing link in energy evolution.” • Because wind and solar are more land intensive, renewable energy must be located away from population centers (even farther than coal power plants) requiring significant power lines for transmission. • To keep this an advantage need to continue to maintain and upgrade transmission lines and establish smart grid
U.S. Population Density • The Dayton/Columbus region is one of two “centroids” in the U.S. because of its proximity to a large share of the U.S. population and manufacturing centers
Ohio’s Disadvantages • It’s important to look at Ohio’s resources especially compared to other areas • Solar is just not one of Ohio’s resources especially compared to other areas such as Arizona and California and the southwest region in general
Economically Strategic • Just because lacking solar resources doesn’t mean there’s not a place for Ohio in the green economy • We need to be economically strategic when considering our green jobs strategy • It’s important that we don’t just play follow the leader, but consider Ohio’s unique resources and find where Ohio fits into the green economy • Use Ohio’s strengths while considering the strengths of other states competing for green jobs and businesses • We need to find out how our strengths can fill green energy gaps
Taking Strategic Action • More manufacturing experience than the U.S. • Build energy efficient products for households, businesses, and the alternative energy industry • First Solar in Perrysburg, OH largest producer of thin film solar panels • Meters and advanced instrumentation • Help with intermittent nature of alternative energy • Update energy grid and invest in a smart grid • Columbus, Cincinnati, and Cleveland are all experimenting with new smart meters • Innovation and R&D in alternative energy • Energy storage and transmission (battery patents)
Conclusion • Continue to support: • Alternative energy research and development and innovation • Renewable energy projects • Energy efficiency • Conservation and pollution mitigation • Increase attention and support for: • Environmentally friendly production and manufacturing • Transmission and storage of renewable energy