Sunday, August 3, 2008

Massachusetts Leapfrogs to National Energy Policy Leadership: Strong public-private collaboration sets the standard for a national clean energy policy

In a whirlwind legislative session ending last Thursday, July 31, 2008, Massachusetts legislative leaders have launched the most comprehensive and forward thinking set of clean energy policies in the nation to move rapidly toward a low-cost, secure, environmentally friendly state energy industry.

Massachusetts' suite of policies creates the nation's first "energy efficiency first" electric utility program, accelerates the state's Renewable Portfolio Standard, puts in place strong incentives and mandates for home grown, non-food based biofuels for transportation and home heating, opens the door for clean energy development in Massachusetts' wind and ocean power rich shoreline, mandates steadily decreasing state greenhouse gas emissions, and establishes the necessary innovation and training infrastructure for the state to use these policies as a catalyst to develop a world leading clean energy industry cluster.

The state that created the model for the United States' public parks, libraries, high schools, and university system has now created the model for a comprehensive clean energy policy for the nation, critical now more than ever when both 2008 presidential candidates have made strong commitments to revamp the country's failing energy policies when they take office in January 2009.

Huge kudos are in order for the visionary state leaders who have worked in strong public-private partnership to make Massachusetts' new clean energy policy a reality: Governor Deval Patrick and State Energy and Environment Secretary Ian Bowles, House Speaker Salvatore Dimasi, and Senate President Therese Murray worked tirelessly in collaboration with stakeholders in the state's rapidly emerging clean energy private sector, in large part through the facilitation of the non-profit New England Clean Energy Council that is lead by my colleague at General Catalyst Partners, Hemant Taneja (Co-founder, Chairman of the Board, and MIT alumnus), and Nick d'Arbeloff (Executive Director). The Council's Board is composed of leaders from all of the state's key clean energy private sector stakeholders, including leaders from academia, startups, venture capital, industry, utilities, financial institutions, unions, and environmental groups.

The fact that Massachusetts new clean energy policy has been largely developed over the course of the little more than the year and a half that Governor Patrick's administration has been in office is a testament to the strength of Massachusetts' leaders' unique ability to work together in strong and efficient public-private partnership.
In concert with the ongoing mobilization of Massachusetts' substantial innovation assets toward clean energy, embodied in MIT's new $100M+ Energy Initiative and the exploding number of clean energy technology firms in the state, Massachusetts' new energy policy will drive the state to a national and global clean energy leadership position.


Here's a quick run down of the state's comprehensive suite of new clean energy policies:

"Energy Efficiency First"
The Green Communities Act of 2008 enacts a first-in-the nation "energy efficiency first" policy for the state's electric and gas utilities, requiring them to invest in all cost-effective energy efficiency measures before turning to building new energy supply infrastructure. This policy is designed to finally enable the state to harvest its as-of-yet untapped gold mine of energy efficiency (often referred to as "the lowest hanging fruit" of clean energy) to eliminate the need to build new fossil fuel power plants in Massachusetts, providing up to 25% of the projected 2020 state electricity load through efficiency. Massachusetts utilities will be required to identify and employ all cost-effective energy efficiency measures, including among among others efficient lighting, cooling, and industrial processes, and will be overseen by a 12 member public-private Energy Efficiency Council.

Furthermore, the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities has enacted an electric utility "decoupling" policy that goes into effect in 2012, that will decouple utility profits from the amount of energy utilities deliver, zapping the long present perverse incentive for utilities to overlook energy efficiency investments in order to be able to sell more power.
Together, these policies will make the Commonwealth an energy efficiency power house and will foster the development of a world leading cluster of new companies in the state focused on providing energy efficiency technology solutions.

Strong, Stable Policy Support for Renewable Energy
The Green Communities Act also offers strong, stable, steadily growing support for renewable power in the Commonwealth, doubling the growth rate of the state's Renewable Portfolio Standard from 0.5%/year to 1.0%/year. This will steadily and predictably increase the required percentage of electricity supplied in the state by renewables, such as wind power, solar, and biomass power, from the required 2008 level of 4% up to 15% by 2020 and will foster the continued rapid growth of the state's emerging clean energy technology industry and bring jobs and dollars into the state while increasing Massachusetts' energy security and lowering the environmental impact of its energy use. Furthermore, the Act increases the maximum net metering cap on distributed renewable energy projects by almost a factor of 4, from 60kW to 2MW, enhancing the reliability of the state's grid through the increased development of a distributed power infrastructure. The act also provides long term support for clean energy power projects in the state by allowing Massachusetts utilities to for the first time engage in long-term power purchasing contracts from these projects, giving renewable project developers the long-term revenue certainty that is required for sustained growth of the state's renewable power sector.

In further support of renewable energy development in the state, the legislature has also passed the Massachusetts Oceans Act, which provides a clear regulatory framework for the exploration and development of Massachusetts' massive off-shore wind, wave, and tidal resources and will foster state leadership in these highly promising new emerging clean energy industries.
The Commonwealth's strong, stable, long-term policy support for renewable energy will serve as a model for the U.S. Federal government, which has until now significantly hampered the development of the U.S. renewable power industry by refusing to put in place the long-term, stable renewable energy policy support that will be required for the creation of a strong and growing domestic renewables industry and allow the U.S. to catch up to and surpass Japan and Europe in this critical rapidly growing strategic industry. (The current debacle over the extension of the Federal Renewable Production Tax Credit is seriously hampering stable investment in wind and solar in the U.S. Check out the erratic ups and downs of annual installed U.S. wind capacity for a case and point.)

Strong Support for Renewable Fuels to Displace Petroleum Imports
The Clean Energy Biofuels Act of 2008 provides strong and stable incentives to enable increasing displacement of expensive and insecure petroleum imports and to catalyze the creation of a market for the cellulosic biofuels currently under development by nearly a dozen leading Massachusetts-based companies. This policy will lay the foundation for the development of a state and national cellulosic ethanol industry by exempting cellulosic biofuels from the state's 21 cent/gallon state gasoline tax and by creating a state renewable fuels standard that mandates a steadily increasing biofuel content in diesel furel and home heating oil of 2% by 2010 up to 5% by 2013.

Capping Greenhouse Gas Emissions
The Global Warming Solutions Act of 2008 puts Massachusetts' right at the head of the pack in terms of policy leadership to address the spector of greenhouse gas driven climate change. As an active leader in the nation's first greenhouse gas cap and trade regime, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, Massachusetts' has mandated a 10-25% reduction in state greenhouse gas emissions below 1990 levels by 2020, and a long-term 80% reduction by 2050, representing the most stringent greenhouse gas cap in the nation. This policy not only serves as an example to the nation that the U.S. must take a leadership position in addressing climate change and institute a national greenhouse gas emissions price, but also will serve to spur the early development of a low-carbon energy technology industry sector in Massachusetts, setting it on a path to become a global leader in this rapidly growing multi billion dollar industry.

Fostering a Clean Energy Innovation Ecosystem
The Green Jobs Act of 2008, developed in close collaboration between the New England Clean Energy Council and the state government, lays the foundation for Massachusetts to rapidly repurpose its uniqely strong innovation ecosystem embodied in its world class universities, technologically skilled workforce, and entrepreneurial startup culture to the task of making Massachusetts' a global hub of clean energy innovation. The Green Jobs Act devotes $68 million to create the Massachusetts Clean Energy Technology Center to achieve this clean energy innovation ecosystem transformation and accelerate the region's clean energy economy.
The Massachusetts Clean Energy Technology Center will administer (1) a Clean Energy Seed Grant Program, (2) a Clean Energy Fellowship Program, and (3) a Green Jobs Initiative. The "Clean Energy Seed Grant Program" will provide seed funding to stimulate applications-focused clean energy research and development and new venture creation to deploy technologies developed at leading Massachusetts' universities, research institutions, and small businesses, filling a critical early stage funding gap and accelerating the development of technologies developed by the state's world class technical and entrepreneurial talent. The Clean Energy Fellowship Program, the pilot of which has been successfully developed and deployed this summer, addresses the critical shortage of experienced entrepreneurs in the state's clean energy startup industry by transforming successful entrepreneurs in other sectors into clean energy entrepreneurs through a 3 month clean energy entrepreneurship bootcamp. (Note: This is a very exciting program. I am a co-founder and have co-lead the development of the program's curriculum and expect a number of exciting new Massachusetts' based clean energy ventures to come out of the program in short order). The Green Jobs Initiative will focus on designing clean energy industry job training programs at area schools and training organizations to ensure the creation of a Massachusetts-wide workforce ready to take advantage of career opportunities in the state's rapidly growing clean energy industry.

Together, the Massachusetts Clean Energy Technology Center's three core programs will ready the state's world class innovation ecosystem for the massive opportunity presented by the state's rapidly emerging clean energy sector.

A State Clean Energy Policy Worthy of a Nation
Politics is often called "the art of the possible": from top to bottom, Massachusetts' new comprehensive clean energy policy shows what is possible when policies are developed through strong, productive public-private partnership. Massachusetts' new policy should serve as a beacon of what is possible for national clean energy policy and should serve as a model for whichever presidential candidate enters the Oval Office come January 2009.
In line with Massachusetts' visionary new clean energy policy, any comprehensive national clean energy policy must:

  • Be the result of a strong public-private partnership
  • Emphasize energy efficiency over new fossil fuel power
  • Provide strong, stable, and steadily growing policy support for renewable power and fuels through national Renewable Portfolio and Fuels Standards
  • Provide a transparent and fair regulatory process for the permitting, siting, and development of new forms of renewable energy
  • Create a national greenhouse gas emissions cap and trade regime
  • Provide the necessary financial and institutional support to our nation's universities, entrepreneurs, and workforce to transform the nation's world class innovation assets to tackle the challenge and opportunity coming with an impending clean energy revolution.

Massachusetts has done it. Now it's nation's turn.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

On the Shoulders of Giants

The Mentorship Program has been with the Energy Club since its inception. In the early days, as alumni began to trickle out into engaging careers as entrepreneurs and consultants, policymakers and advisors, we quickly realized the need to stay connected with leading professionals moving out from MIT. One night, past-VP Kristian Bodek took matters into his own hands. After a few hours scouring MIT’s Infinite Connection he had a lengthy list of impressive alumni working in energy: the Mentorship Program was born.

From the beginning, the program was set up to intelligently pair emerging student leaders with alumni in the energy field. Over three years, the program has connected over 150 alumni and students. From the feedback I’ve received, mentorship has opened the eyes of students to professional opportunities—and it’s forged solid relationships between the next generation of leaders and those who have gone before us.

Last Tuesday evening, we celebrated the third anniversary of the program with a Reception in MIT’s Stata Center. Students and alumni mingled together, enjoying sushi and hors d’oeuvres in a relaxed environment. Discussions weaved through energy storage technologies, lingered in renewable power and electricity markets before moving on to entrepreneurship and next-generation solutions to energy challenges.

In the midst of the event, Arunas Chesonis (’84) delivered an entertaining address on his experiences in founding the leading business telecommunications company, PAETEC, and the role of the Chesonis Family Foundation in supporting clean technology research at MIT. “Follow your passion” was his closing advice to up-and-coming energy entrepreneurs.

The bar had closed and the tables were cleared long before participants finally trickled out the doors. It was clear that the conversations would continue informally between mentors and students as they meet one-on-one over the coming weeks.

I was struck by the excitement stirred up at the reception. One alum at the event put it to me succinctly: connecting emerging student leaders with professionals is “one of the most important things that the Energy Club does”. I felt the same way last year, when Club founder Dave Danielson hosted the second Mentorship Reception; this was the event that first got me excited about being involved with the Club.

I guess it should come as no surprise that it’s the people involved in the Club, both past and present, that make it the dynamic, creative group that it is. And I’m honored to be a part of that spirit. On behalf of all of us Clubbers at MIT: thank you mentors!

p.s. Thanks as well to Melissa Webster, Katherine Dykes, our fabulous host Beth Conlin, Therese Henderson and the MIT event staff for their help with Reception.