2. The Pew Clean Energy Program
The goal is to accelerate the clean energy
economy for its national security, economic
and environmental benefits.
The program promotes the
adoption of key changes to U.S.
energy policy in four sectors:
• Industry
• Utilities
• Transportation
• Research and Development
5. 2012: A Year of Change
• Investment , while Deployment
• Investment Moving from West East
• Investment Moving from Wind Solar
• Financial Innovation Drives Small Project
Investment
• Investment in Developing Nations
6. Worldwide Investment Declines
In global investment from 2011
Global public & private
investment in 2012
In investments in emerging markets
In investments in G-20 nations
7. Clean Energy Sector Remains Resilient
The incremental average
increase in global investment per
triennial
8. Falling Prices Lead to Increased Installed Capacity
Total solar added globally in
2012, a record
Total clean energy added globally
in 2012
Of new generating capacity in the
U.S. was from renewable
sources. In the E.U. that figure
was 70% for the second year
9. Investment Moving from West to East
Investment in Asia & Oceania, an
increase of 16%
Investment in Europe, the Middle
East & Africa, a decline of 22%
Investment in the Americas, a
decline of 31%
10. Investment Shifting to Solar
Investment in solar, 58% of the
G-20 total
Investment in wind, a decline of
14 percent, but enough to spur
record deployment globally
12. China is World’s Clean Energy Leader
Likely to remain at the top for foreseeable future.
In China clean energy investment
from 2011
Of G-20 solar energy investment
Of G-20 total investment
Of G-20 wind energy investment
Of G-20 small hydro, geothermal, marine, and
biomass investment
13. United States Stumbles in Clean Energy Race
Sector rose and fell like a roller coaster
In U.S. clean energy investment
from 2011
Record wind energy installed
Of all new electric generating
capacity was renewable
Record solar energy installed --
Still less than half of what some
E.U. markets saw in recent years
0.3
2.5
6.0
2.0
3.0
2.0
2
10.3
4.5
6.5
13.6
2.8
8
3
4
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013e 2014e 2015e 2016e
Commissioned Financing secured/under construction
Permitted Announced/planning begun
To be announced
-56% 44% 109% -79% 186% -63% 33%
US wind capacity by status assuming no PTC extension,
2009-16e (GW)
Source: Bloomberg New Energy Finance
16. Methodology & Sources
• U.S.-China clean energy trade
in 3 key sectors – solar, wind,
energy smart technology
• 2011 data for exports and trade
by U.S. and Chinese
companies operating overseas
• Sources included BNEF
Industry Intelligence Desktop,
U.S. government databases
(ITC DataWeb), public company
financial data, BNEF analyst
interviews
22. U.S. – China Smart Technologies Trade Flows, 2011
(in millions of U.S. dollars)
23. Total U.S. – China Clean Energy Trade Flows, 2011
(in millions of U.S. dollars)
U.S. China
Source: Bloomberg New Energy Finance
24. U.S. – China Trade Relationship Conclusions
• America’s strength is
innovation and advanced
manufacturing/materials
• U.S. firms have a larger global
footprint
• China’s strength is high-volume
assembly
25.
26. Introduction and Background
• Qualitative Research: Roundtable discussions and
consultation with industry experts on the strengths,
weaknesses and opportunities facing U.S. clean energy
businesses
• Quantitative Analysis by Pike Research
27. Nationwide Roundtables
• New York City, New York – Finance
• Columbus, Ohio – Manufacturing
• Golden, Colorado – Innovation
• Atlanta, Georgia – Deployment/Solar
• Jackson, Mississippi – Deployment/Biomass
• Washington, DC – Summit
28. Challenges
• Policy uncertainty
• Global oversupply
• International competition
• Access to credit
• Not a level playing field in the
energy marketplace
30. Policy Initiatives
• Establish National Clean Energy Standard
• Invest in U.S. energy innovation
• Reinforce incentives for private investment
• Level the energy playing field
• Support American manufacturing
• Expand markets for U.S. goods and services
31. Conclusion: We’re at the Crossroad
Consistent policies give nations a
global competitive advantage, helping
them:
Develop new technologies
Attract manufacturing and jobs
Export clean energy
technologies
Compete globally
While the U.S. leads in some areas,
without policy, that lead will diminish
and in areas where we are behind,
and the gap will continue to grow.