(Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

By Don Hopey, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Oct. 20--Clean energy and the "green jobs" attached to it enjoyed wide
support in testimony at a U.S. Senate hearing in Pittsburgh yesterday, but
differences remain about how and how quickly federal policies should push
those goals.
Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa., who hosted the hearing, acknowledged those
tensions between "competing interests" in Pennsylvania coal, natural gas and
alternative energy industries as the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee began work on legislation titled "Clean Energy Jobs and American
Power Act," introduced earlier this month.
Michael Peck, North American spokesman for Gamesa USA, a Spanish wind
turbine manufacturer with factories and 850 employees in Pennsylvania, urged
establishment of a national standard mandating 12 percent renewable energy by
2012. That would send a strong message to investors and boost demand and job
creation, he said.
"We're predicting a 40 percent drop in new wind projects this year and
the recession has crippled demand. Our factories are idle," Mr. Peck said.
"The U.S. is at the brink of losing manufacturing jobs to India and China and
implementation of a near-term renewable energy standard would send a strong
message and would do the most to boost demand."
Jason Walsh, representing Green For All, a national organization
supportive of "green" economic growth, and Holly Childs, executive director of
the Green Building Alliance of Western Pennsylvania, said up to 13,000 new
blue-collar jobs could be created in the Pittsburgh region by federal training
programs included in the draft legislation under consideration.
But greenhouse gas emissions reductions of 20 percent by 2020 are
unrealistic, said Daniel Kane, United Mine Workers secretary-treasurer,
because that doesn't allow enough time to install carbon capture technology on
new or existing coal-fired power plants.
"We don't want to see climate legislation transformed into a mechanism
for transferring jobs overseas," Mr. Kane said.
Sounding a similar job-loss theme, Stan Johnson, secretary-treasurer of
the United Steelworkers international executive board, said the union supports
caps on carbon emissions under discussion in Congress but only if the program
contains strong protections to prevent job loss to nations that don't enact
pollution controls.
Steven Winberg, vice president for research and development for Consol
Energy, the state's biggest coal mining company, said the legislation should
provide increased funding for development of carbon capture and storage
technology, contain costs, and establish federal standards and limit liability
for using the new technology.
He said if the government forces reductions it will have a negative
impact on existing coal-fired power plants, increase power costs and put the
coal and power industries at a competitive disadvantage.
Also yesterday, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released a new
report on home retrofitting that tied green job creation to home retrofits
that can help families reduce energy bills by up to 30 percent or more than
$700 a year.
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