SPECIAL FEATURES:
Obama’s new stimulus package creates jobs through green investments
More updates on Obama's green stimulus ideas.
Tue, Mar 24 2009 at 1:12 PM
Related Topics:
Last week, we brought you news of Obama’s goal of creating 2.5 million jobs through green investments. Today, a few hazy details from the president elect’s plan were revealed.
From today’s New York Times:
"The details and cost of the so-called green-jobs program are still unclear, but a senior Obama aide, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a work in progress, said it would probably include the weatherizing of hundreds of thousands of homes, the installation of “smart meters” to monitor and reduce home energy use, and billions of dollars in grants to state and local governments for mass transit and infrastructure projects."
Obama’s green stimulus package will also likely include tax breaks for clean tech projects like solar panels, wind farms, biofuels, and carbon capture and sequestration. The green elements of the plan will be part of a broader economic stimulus plan, expected to cost somewhere in the realm of $400 billion to $500 billion. Green investments will total about $15 billion per year, perhaps more.
Other specifics haven’t been released yet, but the eco-minded plan hopes to boost the economy while also improving the environment, which have some referring to Obama’s initiatives as a kind of “Green New Deal” modeled after FDR’s public works programs under the New Deal. The package is also intended to create or save about 2.5 million American jobs over the next two years.
Obama’s critics are skeptical that renewables can be applied on such a large scale, and balk at the plan’s huge pricetag, suggesting that economic recovery should take precedence over environmental concerns. But other folks believe that investing in green job creation is the only way to really save the environment and spur economic growth—in other words, a green jobs program would cure two of America’s ills with a single shot.
Van Jones, president of non-profit Green for All and author of the book The Green Collar Economy, falls into the latter category. The goal should be to “retrofit and repower America,” he says. “Each wind turbine needs 8,000 machined parts. You could put all of Detroit back to work making them. We need to get back to building things here in the US, not borrowing them from overseas. You can’t build a national economy on credit cards. But you can on green power.”
Additional reporting by Vince Beiser. This story originally appeared in "Plenty" in December 2008.
Copyright Environ Press 2008
You might also like:
Sign in with one of these accounts to add your comment.

Thanks
Nov 04 2009 at 6:11 PM
Recently, Washington, D. C passed a law, according to which russian american dating are obliged to notify possible foreign brides of the existing convictions or unsuccessful experiences with foreign wives of the man, whom the Best Russian girls is about to wed. This is done, as the measure of avoidance of the criminal cases, happened with such scaring regularity.
Second essential difficulty that ladies russian dating website can run into by going abroad is of course - relationship with their future
.... More
spouses. According to the statistic Hot Russian girls big part of the men, willing to tie a knot with Russian women are over forty years and still incapable to buy a dwelling or to achieve something in life russian dating tour.
- Log in or register to post comments
- Report This Post

Brian J. Donovan
Mar 11 2009 at 9:18 AM
Louisiana will create jobs by growing ethanol demand, specifically hydrous ethanol demand, beyond the 10% blend market.
Governor Bobby Jindal has signed into law the Advanced Biofuel Industry Development Initiative, Act 382, the most comprehensive and far-reaching state legislation in the nation enacted to develop a statewide advanced biofuel industry. The legislature found that the proper development of an advanced biofuel industry in Louisiana requires implementation of the comprehensive “field-to-pump”
.... More
strategy:
(1) Feedstock other than corn;
(2) Decentralized network of small advanced biofuel manufacturing facilities;
(3) Variable blending pumps, in lieu of splash blending, will offer the consumer E10, E20, E30 and E85; and
(4) Hydrous ethanol.
"Field-to-Pump" is a unique strategy created by Renergie, Inc. to locally produce and market advanced biofuel (“non-corn ethanol”) via a network of small advanced biofuel manufacturing facilities. The purpose of “field-to-pump” is to maximize rural development and job creation while minimizing feedstock supply risk and the burden on local water supplies.
For more information, feel free to visit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field-to-Pump
- Log in or register to post comments
- Report This Post

Email







Join the conversation