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Racing for Clean-Tech Jobs: Why America Needs an Energy Education Strategy
Teryn Norris
In the aftermath of the Great Recession, the United States faces
serious questions about the future of its economy and jobs market.
Where will the good jobs of the future come from, how do we prepare
the American workforce, and what is our strategy to maintain economic
leadership in an increasingly competitive world?
A growing consensus suggests that clean tech will be one of our
generation’s largest growth sectors. The global clean-tech market is
expected to surpass $1 trillion in value within the next few years,
and a perfect storm of factors – from the inevitability of a
carbon-constrained world, to skyrocketing global energy demand, to
long-term oil price hikes – will drive global demand for clean-energy
technologies.
That is why the national debate about global clean-tech
competitiveness is so important, sparked by the rapid entry of China
and other nations. My colleagues and I recently contributed to the
discussion with "Rising Tigers, Sleeping Giant," a large
report providing the first comprehensive analysis of competitive
positions among the U.S. and key Asian challengers. In order to
compete, we found, "U.S. energy policy must include large, direct and
coordinated investments in clean-technology R&D, manufacturing,
deployment, and infrastructure."
But even if the United States adopts a real industrial policy for
clean energy, there is little evidence that our workforce is skilled
enough to compete. Unfortunately, according to the Department of Energy, "The U.S.
ranks behind other major nations in making the transitions required to
educate students for emerging energy trades, research efforts and
other professions to support the future energy technology mix."
A competitive energy workforce requires much more than technicians and
building retrofitters. Scientists, engineers, high-tech
entrepreneurs, and advanced manufacturers will play a critical role,
just as they have in strategic sectors like infotech, aerospace, and
biotech. The federal government has started to address the need for
green technician and efficiency retrofit training, such as with the
Green Jobs Act, but it has not implemented an education strategy to
keep the U.S. at the leading edge of energy science, technology, and
entrepreneurship.
Unfortunately, the majority of our colleges and universities lack
degree programs focused on energy, and the U.S. power engineering
education system is on the decline. Over the next five years, 45
percent of electric utility engineers will be eligible for retirement,
along with 40 percent of key power engineering faculty at U.S.
universities, according to a report by IEEE.
"Engineering workforce shortages are already occurring," the report
concludes. "We need more electrical engineers to solve industry
challenges, and to build the 21st century electric power grid… Meeting
these needs requires long-term investment now."
Meanwhile, other countries are producing a substantially larger
portion of scientists, engineers, and researchers that will benefit
their clean-tech industries. Science and engineering make up only
about one-third of U.S. bachelor's degrees, compared to 63 percent in
Japan, 53 percent in China and 51 percent in Singapore, and the number
of Chinese researchers is now on par with the United States (though
some have pointed out that the quality of these
graduates and researchers is not always comparable). "Over time,"
stated a recent report by the National Science
Board, "the United States has fallen from one of the top countries
in terms of its ratio of natural science and engineering degrees to
the college-age population to near the bottom of the 23 countries for
which data are available."
The energy workforce deficit and STEM education gap will substantially
limit the nation’s ability to lead the clean-tech industry and
accelerate clean energy development. As Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman put it, "If you had to explain America's
economic success with one word, that word would be 'education.'" In
order to succeed in the clean-tech industry, the U.S. must develop an
energy education strategy to develop tens of thousands of advanced
energy scientists, engineers, and entrepreneurs, as well as
technicians.
Recognizing these trends, several experts have called for federal
programs to develop our advanced energy workforce. In April 2009,
President Obama took up these recommendations by announcing the first
nationwide initiative to inspire and train young Americans "to tackle
the single most important challenge of their generation -- the need to
develop cheap, abundant, clean energy and accelerate the transition to
a low-carbon economy."
The proposal, called
RE-ENERGYSE (Regaining our Energy Science and Engineering Edge),
is part of the administration's 2011 budget request, which will be
considered by Congress in the months ahead. With oversight from the
Department of Energy and National Science Foundation, it would educate
thousands of clean-energy scientists and engineers, beginning with $74
million for energy-related programs at universities, community and
technical colleges and K-12 schools, with the largest component
focusing on higher education.
RE-ENERGYSE is an important step toward creating a competitive U.S.
clean-energy workforce – that is why thousands of students and dozens
of professional associations want it to
succeed, and that is why Congress should fund it at the full
budget request. Beyond RE-ENERGYSE, the federal government should
work to expand these programs into a clean-energy education strategy
on par with the National Defense Education
Act of 1958, which helped reposition the U.S. in the space race
and achieve revolutions in information technology.
The global clean-energy race represents one of the greatest challenges
for American leadership in a generation, and now is a critical moment.
If we do not immediately implement a national strategy for energy
leadership – including smart investments to educate the energy
generation – we will miss a historic economic opportunity. American
students are willing to rise to this national challenge, and we need
the support of our government to succeed.
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Teryn Norris is Director of Americans for Energy Leadership, Senior
Advisor at the Breakthrough Institute, and a Public Policy student at
Stanford University.