The green view based on small sources and market power will give way to one based on scale and subsidies. The winds of economic destruction are flattening not just retirement accounts but also naive visions for a green economy. Public support for costly new green mandates is weakening, and government budgets to fund them are bleeding red ink. Plummeting prices of oil and other fossil fuels have made it harder for green to compete in the marketplace. IPOs of firms working on ‘clean tech’ green energy that have fueled fantasies of the coming energy revolution have crashed to a halt. In all the bad economic news, a new face of green is coming into focus. Whereas the old view of green tech was based on many small, decentralized sources of power and a green economy that harnessed the power of the marketplace, the new version will rely more heavily on regulation and subsidies. It will also embrace the wisdom, true in most of the energy business, that bigger is better for weathering economic storms. The market, it’s now clear, is not a reliable force for driving the adoption of green technologies. Just as the role of government is rising […]
Sunday, November 30th, 2008
The New Greens Like It Big
Author: DAVID VICTOR
Source: Newsweek
Publication Date: Nov 29, 2008 From the magazine issue dated Dec 8, 2008
Link: The New Greens Like It Big
Source: Newsweek
Publication Date: Nov 29, 2008 From the magazine issue dated Dec 8, 2008
Link: The New Greens Like It Big
Stephan: David Victor is professor at Stanford Law School and director of the Program on Energy and Sustainable Development.