Letter to the U.S. Senate / September 23, 2009
Washington, DC, September
23, 2009 — On the heels of President Obama’s September 22 speech before the
United Nations Climate Change Summit and with Congress debating legislation,
sixty-nine private industry executives, investors, and business leaders from
the clean technology sector have delivered a letter to the United States Senate
calling for swift congressional action on an American Clean Energy &
Security Act.
New federal polices will
create over a million jobs here at home, help the United States catch up in an
increasingly competitive clean tech global market, and wean our nation off its
dependence on foreign oil.
“We have a rare opportunity
to accelerate the growth of a new economic engine that supports long-term
national growth and offers a sustainable path for the future,” said Donnie
Fowler, lead organizer of the ACES Act Clean Tech Business Coalition. “Clean
technology offers the same economic promise to this country that the
transcontinental railroad, the interstate highway system, and the broadband
revolution did when they were young industries.”
The signers comprise a wide
range of leaders within the clean tech community, from established veterans
such as venture capitalist Vinod Khosla and Rhone Resch, CEO of Solar Energy
Industry Association, to newer entrepreneurs like Matt Golden of home remodeler
Sustainable Spaces and Christian Okonsky of electric motor developer KLD Energy.
- - -
-----------------------------------
September
23, 2009
Dear
Senators:
We write
you as the entrepreneurs, innovators, and investors of the growing clean technology
economy to urge your support for the American Clean Energy and Security (ACES) Act
of 2009 passed June 26 in the House of Representatives. As new energy business leaders from across the
country, we fully support the legislation’s goals: to create clean energy jobs,
achieve energy independence, reduce global warming pollution and transition to
a clean energy economy.
A New Economic Engine & Jobs at
Home.
Only
occasionally does Congress have the opportunity to shape a brand new economy
and spark long-lasting nationwide growth. The federal government has done it
before – by building the transcontinental railroad in the middle of the Civil
War, through the Marshall Plan after World War II, and by sparking the
broadband Internet revolution in the 1990s. In the midst of the current
recession and with billions of private dollars waiting to invest in the clean
tech economy,[1]
your vote to pass ACES will free up capital,[2]
generate more than one million new jobs[3] in
every part of the United States (including your home state)[4], and
create a new economic engine.[5]
A Competitive Necessity.
Our
competitors are not waiting on us to make the first move, having already
adopted national policies and incentives like those in the ACES Act.[6]
A National Security Imperative.
Every year,
the
As business
leaders in the clean energy economy, we ask respectfully for your decisive
support to pass the American Clean Energy and Security Act this year. The ACES
Act will create non-outsourceable jobs, serve our national security interests,
and keep us competitive in the increasingly challenging international
marketplace. It is imperative that our national leaders take action now in
order to achieve these benefits and to ensure American leadership on this
issue.
Sincerely,
Sincerely,
Clean Tech Entrepreneurs, Investors, Companies, and Advocates
Omar
Ahmad
CEO,
SynCH Energy, Inc.
Bruce Anderson
CEO, Wilson TurboPower, Inc.
Jared
Asch
General
Manager, Efficiency First
John
Balbach
Founder
& Managing Partner, Global Alliances
David
Bangs
President,
Home Performance Washington
Josh
Becker
Founder
& General Partner, New Cycle Capital
Yobie
Benjamin
Founder,
True Carbon Inc.
Ben
Bentley
CEO,
The LeverEdge, Inc.
Erik
Blachford
CEO,
TerraPass
Julie
Blackwell
Senior
Director, Team Earth, Conservation International
Jon
Bonanno
Chairman,
Principle Power, Inc.
Tobin
Booth
CEO,
Blue Oak Energy, Inc.
Adam
Boucher
Founder,
Ethos Fund
Adam
Browning
Executive
Director, VoteSolar
Warren
Byrne
President
and CEO, Foresight Wind Energy, Inc.
Bob
Cart
Founder
& Executive Chairman, GreenVolts, Inc.
Barry
Cinnamon
Founder & CEO, Akeena Solar, Inc.
Terry
Clark
CEO,
Finelite, Inc.
Wade
Crowfoot
West
Coast Political Director, Environmental Defense Fund
Michael
Davis
President,
US Pure Water Corporation
Frank
deRosa
CEO,
NextLight, Inc.
Cisco
DeVries
President,
Renewable Funding
David
Ellington
Managing
Partner, Emory Capital Group
Rob
Ferber
CEO
and Co-Founder, ElectronVault, Inc.
Bob
Fishman
President
and CEO, Ausra, Inc.
Paul
Fox
Principal,
CalCEF Clean Energy Angel Fund
Zach
Gentry
CEO,
Adura Technology, Inc.
T.J.
Glauthier
Chairman,
EPV Solar, Inc.
Matt
Golden
President,
Sustainable Places, Inc.
Harry
Hagaman
President,
Green Design Systems
Tim
Healy
CEO,
EnerNOC, Inc.
David
Hochschild
Vice
President of External Relations, Solaria, Inc.
Danny
Kennedy
President,
Sungevity , Inc.
Vinod
Khosla
Founder,
Khosla Ventures
Felix
Kramer
Founder,
CalCars
Craig
Lewis
Founding
Principal, RightCycle, Inc.
Richard
Lowenthal
CEO,
Coulomb Technologies, Inc.
Tim
Ludwig
Partner,
Ohana Capital
Linda
Maepa
Co-Founder
and COO, ElectronVault, Inc.
Tom
McCalmont
Chair,
SolarTech; CEO, Real Goods Solar, Inc.
Ed
Murray, Ph.D.
Principal,
Clean Tech Consulting
Rex
Northen
Executive
Director, Clean Tech Open
Genevieve
Nowicki
Director
of Government Relations, Solar Power Partners
Christian
Okonsky
CEO,
KLD Energy, Inc.
Fergal
O’Moore
Vice
President of Marketing and Business Development, OCS Energy, Inc.
Jack
Oswald
CEO,
SynGest, Inc.
Bruce
Pasternack
Venture
Partner, CMEA Capital
Sunil
Paul
Founder,
Spring Ventures
Doug
Payne
Executive
Director (acting),
SolarTech
Consortium
Field
Pickering
Managing
Director, North America, Cool NRG International
Kim
Polese
CEO,
SparkSource, Inc.
Melanie
Putnam Chief Operating Officer, Green
Vehicles, Inc.
Stacey
Reineccius
Chairman,
Powergetics, Inc.
Rhone
Resch
President
& CEO, Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA)
Dr.
Steffen Rochel
Alan
Salzman
CEO,
Vantage Point Venture Partners
Kamran
Shamsavari
President
& CEO, Xandex, Inc.
Daniel
Sherwood
President,
3 Prong Power, Inc.
Karl
Simmons
CEO,
GridSpeak, Inc.
Aaron
Singer
CEO,
Pacific Carbon Exchange
Ann
Stovel
Vice-President
of Business Development & Marketing, Synergy Conscious
Kevin
Surace
President
& CEO, Serious Materials
Brian
Thompson
CEO,
Powergetics, Inc.
Jeanne
Trombly
Managing
Director, Plug In
Tom
Van Dyck, CIMA
Senior
Vice President & Financial Consultant, SRI Wealth Management Group &
RBC Wealth Management
Robert Walsh
CEO,
Aurora Biofuels, Inc.
Dan
Whaley
Founder
& CEO, Climos, Inc.
Jason
Wolf
North
America Business Development Director, Better Place
Jonathan
Wolfson
CEO,
Solazyme, Inc
September 2009
ENDNOTES
[1] “The Economic Benefits of Investing in Clean Energy,” Political Economy Research Institute (University of Massachusetts – Amherst) and the Center for American Progress, June 2009, pp.7, 12, 15-20 <www.americanprogress.org/issues/2009/06/pdf/peri_report.pdf> (“PERI / CAP Clean Energy Economics Report”); National Venture Capital Association Yearbook 2009, p.38 (the number of clean tech venture deals tripled and the dollars invested increased 7.5 times from 2005 to 2008).
[2] PERI / CAP Clean Energy Economics Report, pp.7, 12, 15-20; see also, “VC Group’s Heesen Says Clean Tech Still Hot,” Reuters, June 2, 2009 (“in the not too distant future this sector will be the largest sector for venture investment”).
[3] PERI / CAP Clean Energy Economics Report, pp.2, 27-34.
[4] Ditto, Appendix 2.
[5] Ditto, pp.40-42.
[6] “Green Power Takes Root in the Chinese Desert,” New York Times, July 2, 2009 (While Congress debates a requirement that American utilities generate more of their power from renewable sources, “China imposed such a requirement almost two years ago.”).
[7] “China’s Clean Revolution II,” The Climate Group, August 2009; “China Racing Ahead of U.S. in Drive to Go Solar,” New York Times, August 25, 2009; “Green Power Takes Root in the Chinese Desert,” New York Times, July 2, 2009 (“China … is investing billions of dollars to remake itself into a green superpower [and will] invest more money in renewable energy and nuclear power between now and 2020 than in coal-fired and oil-fired electricity.”).
[8] “VC Group’s Heesen Says Clean Tech Still Hot,” Reuters, June 2, 2009 (“When you look at the Germans and the Spaniards, particularly in solar energy, they have been very much more advanced that we have”).
[9] “Can
Cleantech China Teach the West How to be Green?,” CNN.com, November 2, 2008
(“[O]ne factor that may dampen innovation in
[10]Energy
Information Administration, “Crude Oil and Petroleum Imports Top 15 Countries,”
May 2009; Robert Wisner, “US Crude Oil Production, Use and Import Trends,”
[11] Ditto.