VP Biden’s Recovery Act Report Cites GTM Research

According to the report, the enormous funding directed at energy is lowering the price of solar, batteries, electric vehicles and doubling renewable energy generation capacity.

The office of Vice President Joe Biden just released its report on the impacts of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).  Here's a link to a PDF of the 50-page report.

Please forgive our immodesty and allow us to guide you to page 20 of the report (page 22 of the PDF) where you will find Greentech Media (GTM) Research's Shyam Mehta and his solar manufacturing data cited (see chart below).

The only non-DOE or non-EIA cited data in the report belongs to Mr. Mehta and his 2009 report: PV Manufacturing in the United States: Market Outlook, Incentives and Supply Chain Opportunities

We are proud to be included in the report and proud of Shyam, and we hope that Shyam will remember to be kind to the little people at GTM who made his fame possible.  More of Mehta's work and the work of some of our less famous analysts can be found here in our solar, smart grid and biofuels research library.

We'll try to delve deeper into the report, but for now, here are some of the energy-related highlights:

THE RECOVERY ACT: TRANSFORMING THE AMERICAN ECONOMY THROUGH INNOVATION



According to this analysis, the U.S. is now on track to achieve these major energy innovation breakthroughs thanks to Recovery Act investments:

Goal: Double U.S. renewable energy generation capacity and U.S. renewable manufacturing capacity by 2012.



We’re now on track to hit our target to double renewable energy generation by 2012, something that would not have been possible without Recovery Act investments.

 

 

Goal: Cutting the cost of solar power in half by 2015

Goal: Cut the cost of batteries for electric vehicles by 70 percent between 2009 and 2015



Recovery Act investments have now put us on track to cut the cost of batteries for autos by 70% between 2009 and 2015. This means that the cost of batteries for the typical all-electric vehicle will fall from $33,000 to $10,000, and the cost of typical plug-in hybrid batteries will drop from $13,000 to $4,000.

Feel free to weigh-in with your thoughts on whether this is the way to jump-start an economy and if it's governments role to fund innovation. Or if you think the free-market would have done this more efficienctly.

 



Vice President Joe Biden (right) and GTM Research Senior Solar Analyst Shyam Mehta (left)