If the U.S. fails to invent new technologies and create new markets and new jobs that will drive the transformation and revitalization of the $5 trillion global energy industry, we will have lost an opportunity to lead in what is arguably the largest and most pervasive technology sector in the world. However, if the U.S. successfully innovates in clean energy, the country stands to reap enormous benefits.Download the report, "Catalyzing American Ingenuity: The Role of Government in Energy Innovation" (PDF).
UPDATE [2:30pm 9/14/2011]: This from an interview with John Doerr, one of the members of the American Energy Innovation Council (via VentureBeat):
“We shouldn’t kid ourselves about the lone entrepreneur in the garage creating an industry,” he said. “We have this myth that the IT industry got started on its own — no, there was federal funding, just like what we need for clean technology.”Worth remembering that John Doerr is a partner at Kleiner Perkins, one of the leading venture capital firms in the nation. Also relevant is an article by Mark Muro and Jonathan Rockwell of the Brookings Institution, published yesterday in the New Republic, that compared clean tech to the IT industry.
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