The US has regained the lead in the clean energy race, investing US$48 billion last year to surpass China, which held the world’s top spending spot since 2009, a study said on Wednesday.
The US surge in private investment was a 42 percent increase over 2010 and saw Washington maintain its lead worldwide in both venture capital and research and development cash, said the Pew Charitable Trusts annual report on clean energy.
However, the US boom was largely driven by expiring tax incentives, highlighting “a persistent phenomenon in which the country fails to deploy into the marketplace the clean energy innovations it creates in the laboratory,” it said.
China, which fell to second, invested US$45.5 billion last year, a 1 percent increase over 2010, but maintained its global lead in wind energy investment and in solar manufacturing, said the report.
Experts say a key difference between the US and China is in how they attract investment — China by having solid green energy policies that reassure investors and the US by offering tax breaks for investment.
“China has been able to fuel its growth by having very consistent and long-term policies in place that really tell investors there is an opportunity for them to make a profit,” said Phyllis Cuttino, director of Pew’s Clean Energy Program.
“The United States has no renewable energy target, but they have decided to try and incentivize clean energy investment through a variety of tax incentives, tax credits, tax subsidies, loan guarantees,” she said.
Some of those programs were instituted under the administration of former US president George W. Bush and some under President Barack Obama, she said. “What we saw this year was investors really rushed into the United States to take advantage of those tax credits before they expired.”
The Pew report, which focused on private investment in G20 nations, also found that total worldwide private investment rose 6.5 percent over 2010 to a record level of US$263 billion.
“Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom and India were also among the nations that most successfully attracted private investments last year,” it said.
Germany ranked third last year after soaring to second place in 2010 as it ramped up both solar and wind power. Private investment dropped 5 percent last year compared with 2010.
“Germany now obtains more energy from renewable sources than it does from nuclear power, coal, or natural gas,” said the report, adding that Italy has also surged, surpassing Germany’s deployment of 7.4 gigawatts (GW) of solar.
Italy installed 8GW of solar energy nationwide and investments grew 38 percent to US$28 billion, offsetting declines in other parts of Europe as the region struggles with a troubling debt crisis.
“Europe has been a traditional leader, in terms of attracting private investment. Last year they attracted US$99 billion in private investment as a region,” Cuttino said. “But Asia and Oceania is a region of the world that is quickly growing, so we keep thinking the center of the clean energy economy is moving to this region.”
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