48°F
weather icon Cloudy
Ad 320x50 | 728x90 | 1200x70

Clean-energy market filled with job prospects, senator says

Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., wants to change the old electoral axiom: “As Ohio goes, so goes the nation.”

After listening to a panel of energy experts at UNLV discuss the future of green energy, Cantwell has a new twist on the traditional saying.

“As Nevada goes, so goes the nation,” she said as the audience applauded.

The clean-energy market is a $6 trillion global market, Cantwell said, and that means major job opportunities for the Silver State and the rest of the country.

Cantwell highlighted the remarks of UNLV professor Keith Schwer, who directs the university’s Center for Business and Economic Research.

“As professor Schwer said, you can not only produce enough energy for us here in the United States, but some of that can help make the United States a leader in energy technology that we can export to other countries,” she said.

Cantwell also referred to earlier remarks from oilman T. Boone Pickens, who spoke of the national security boost the nation could receive if it switched trucks from diesel fuel to natural gas.

Transitioning 6.5 million 18-wheelers to natural-gas fuel would cut in half the need for oil imported from Venezuela and other countries sometimes unfriendly to the United States, Pickens said. A law before Congress now would mandate the change, which could happen within the decade, Pickens said.

Observed Cantwell: “When an oilman from Texas says we need to get off of oil, it can’t be any clearer.”

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
Nevada lithium mine gets $2.26B Department of Energy loan

A lithium company has closed on a federal loan from the Biden-Harris Administration for $2.26 billion in an effort to expand EV manufacturing and increase high-paying jobs.

BLM moves full steam ahead on geothermal energy in Nevada

The federal agency leased 217,000 acres of Nevada’s public lands for geothermal energy development and is making an effort to speed up permitting timelines.