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NGA CENTER FOR BEST PRACTICES RELEASES STATE "GREEN" ECONOMY PROFILES

October 5, 2009

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WASHINGTON—The National Governors Association Center for Best Practices (NGA Center) today released a series of reports analyzing emerging “green” economies in each state. The in-depth profiles of each state are available on the NGA Center Web site.

 

States’ emerging green economies are diverse and widespread. To varying degrees, the profiles show every state is witnessing growth in at least one green industry segment, and more often than not, this business growth stems from existing strengths in the state.

 

“Governors across the country have led state efforts to build green businesses, develop green jobs and enact green policy,” said John Thomasian, director of the NGA Center for Best Practices. “These profiles are a valuable tool governors and states can use to analyze their efforts and inform future green initiatives.”

 

Analyzing a state’s green economy in terms of the scope of green business activity reveals areas of comparative advantage, promising areas for workforce development and opportunities for building partnerships within and across green industry segments. This information helps states form strategies to grow green economies.

 

Additionally, the reports show the extent to which each state’s business base is poised to meet the coming demand for green technologies and products such as highly efficient appliances, renewable energy generation systems, high-efficiency building materials and low-emission fuels.  Each state green profile provides an analysis of the green business activity in the state from 2000–2007 (the latest year data is available) and patent activity from 1994–2008.

 

The NGA Center commissioned Collaborative Economics Inc. (CEI) to prepare the reports. To view the full methodology, click here.

 

 

Founded in 1908, the National Governors Association (NGA) is the collective voice of the nation’s governors and one of Washington, D.C.’s most respected public policy organizations. Its members are the governors of the 50 states, three territories and two commonwealths. NGA provides governors and their senior staff members with services that range from representing states on Capitol Hill and before the Administration on key federal issues to developing and implementing innovative solutions to public policy challenges through the NGA Center for Best Practices. For more information, go to www.nga.org.



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  Comments (1)Post a Comment
Title: Green Economy Reports


Sorry, but you folks kind of missed the boat. I live in South Dakota and it is one of the worst Green states in the USA. Here we build houses that are not or poorly inspected. We do not have a state energy code. South Dakota thinks GREEN is building more ethanol plants, growing more corn and spending lots of resources promoting ethanol. They are not intellegent enough in South Dakota to realize how much fossil fuel is used to make ethanol such as; all the oil based fertilizer used to grow corn, fuel to plant it, fuel to spray herbicides & insecticides, fuel to harvest it, fuel to transport it, the amount of natural gas burned to process corn to ethanol and finally all the fuel used to transport the stuff.

South Dakota has only one GREEN noteworthy facet, wind power and they do not make full use of that because of the strong REAs trying to fight it along with the the entites producing electricity from our hydro and coal burning plants.

Your report is also like something a grade schooler might produce and appears to be too "touchy feely". You need to do a side-by-side chart showing all the states being compared in each category.

Sorry, but to me your reports are lacking and something that is too "politically correct" to have any meaningful worthiness.


 
 


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