1 / 23

Making Green Jobs Work for Ohio March 3, 2011 Ohio Farm Bureau Federation

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

nydia
Download Presentation

Making Green Jobs Work for Ohio March 3, 2011 Ohio Farm Bureau Federation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 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/

  2. Introduction • Motivation • Ohio Energy Profile • Green Energy and Employment • Agriculture and Alternative Energy • Green Energy Strategy • Conclusion

  3. 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

  4. 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.

  5. 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

  6. Employment by Energy Source

  7. 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)

  8. 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

  9. 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

  10. 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

  11. 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

  12. Ohio’s Wind Potential

  13. 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

  14. Ohio’s Biofuel Potential

  15. 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

  16. 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

  17. U.S. Energy Grid

  18. 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

  19. 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

  20. 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)

  21. Ohio’s Current Green Energy Strategy

  22. 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

  23. Questions

More Related