Houston Chronicle

Experts: U.S. ‘green economy’ is now worth $1.3 trillion

- By Eric Roston

If the U.S. wants to extend economic growth, it should double down on cleaning up the environmen­t and fighting climate change, which are fueling both jobs and revenue, according to a new analysis by University College London researcher­s.

“Don’t listen to the political rhetoric,” said Mark Maslin, a professor of geography and one of the authors behind the study published Tuesday. “Just look at the data and be hard-nosed about it, and say, ‘OK if we’re going to support the economy and make it grow and have lots of employment, this is where I need to invest.’”

For years, there’s been a major technical difficulty with charting progress in the “green economy:” the U.S. doesn’t measure it. Part of the blame lies with Congress, which as part of 2013 budget cuts eliminated funding for data-collection on “green goods and services.”

Ever since, analysts have tried (with increasing­ly thinner results) to read trends from aging data or invent new ways to measure green industries. Others have focused on the rise in cleanenerg­y-related jobs put out by the U.S. Department of Energy or state sources, but those fail to provide the whole picture.

That’s why Maslin and lead author Lucien Georgeson accumulate­d their own data on the U.S. green economy, drawing on hundreds of often private databases containing granular, real-world business and transactio­n statistics. They concluded that almost 9.5 million Americans, or about 4 percent of the workforce, are employed in a “green economy” that generates $1.31 trillion in annual revenue, or about 7 percent of U.S. annual GDP.

That’s about 16.5 percent of the green economy worldwide, according to the analysis published in Palgrave Communicat­ions.

The numbers rose more than 20 percent over the 2013-2016 fiscal years, led by the renewable energy sector. Growth was also seen in already establishe­d environmen­tal businesses, including air pollution, recycling and waste management, land remediatio­n and water treatment.

What the analysis calls “lowcarbon” sectors — including electric vehicles, energy efficiency, and green finance — are making an up-and-coming contributi­on as well.

The U.S. is ahead of China and other nations, but its lead may not last as other nations align national and state-level policies with green growth. Next steps for the research include updating the findings beyond 2016, and eventually applying their database-diving approach to assemble a better picture of global green trade.

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