It's All About the Benjamins

 Neglect of clean energy
 hurts economy as well as environment
 http://www.grist.org/news/daily/2004/10/25/4/ 

 The lack of aggressive clean-energy policies at the
 federal level is taking its toll on the U.S. economy.
 As recently as a decade ago, U.S. companies claimed
 50 percent of the market for solar photovoltaic panels,
 but now that number is down to 10 percent, with
 Japan and Europe dominating the world market. Likewise,
 Germany passed the U.S. as the primary source of
 wind-power technology a few years ago. Tax breaks and
 subsidies for wind and solar in the U.S. are extended
 a year at a time, leading some companies seeking
 predictability and stability to head overseas.
 Meantime, the Bush administration has funneled money to
 futuristic hydrogen technology without seriously upping
 spending on currently viable renewables, leaving the
 burgeoning wind and solar markets to other countries.
 The Union of Concerned Scientists estimates that if
 Kerry's goal of getting 20 percent of U.S. electricity
 from renewables by 2020 were met, 355,000 new jobs
 would be created. And importing less oil would mean
 more favorable trade balances.

 straight to the source: Salon.com,
 Katharine Mieszkowski, 25 Oct 2004 

 How George Bush Lost the Sun 
 By Katharine Mieszkowski 
 Salon.com 
 25 Oct 2004 
 http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/102704G.shtml 
 Solar power could be a source of new jobs and an answer to
 global warming. So why has the U.S. fallen behind other
 nations in developing it?
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