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Trump delivers profanity, below-the-belt digs at Catholic charity banquet; Poll finds Harris leads among Black voters in key states; Puerto Rican parish leverages solar power to build climate resilience hub; TN expands SNAP assistance to residents post-Helene; New report offers solutions for CT's 'disconnected' youth.

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Longtime GOP members are supporting Kamala Harris over Donald Trump. Israel has killed the top Hamas leader in Gaza. And farmers debate how the election could impact agriculture.

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New rural hospitals are becoming a reality in Wyoming and Kansas, a person who once served time in San Quentin has launched a media project at California prisons, and a Colorado church is having a 'Rocky Mountain High.'

Report: US Lags in Clean Energy; Illinois Keeping Pace

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Wednesday, March 30, 2011   

CHICAGO - While the green industry continues to bloom around the world, a new report finds the United States as a whole is falling behind in the global clean-energy race.

A record $243 billion was invested around the world in clean energy last year, according to research by the Pew Charitable Trusts. While the United States saw a 51 percent increase in clean-energy investments last year,
Phyllis Cuttino, director of Pew Clean Energy Programs, says it slipped down a notch in competitive position.

"The United States, which had dropped from first to second in 2009, has slipped even further down the ladder to No. 3 behind both China and Germany."

Cuttino says nations without clear energy policies lost investors, but the United States stayed in the game thanks in part to 30 states, including Illinois, which passed their own energy standards. Illinois law requires utilities to produce 25 percent of their electricity with renewables by 2025.

Cuttino says state laws can encourage investment but more needs to be done on the national level.

"What's keeping the United States in the game? This patchwork of state policies, 30 renewable electricity standards at the state level. That's what's keeping America in the game, but that's not enough over the long term."

The United States pioneered much of solar technology and once exported 40 percent of the world's solar panels, she says, but now it imports more than half of our solar panels from China.

Mark Burger, president of the Illinois Solar Energy Association, says Illinois is making some progress when it comes to clean-energy investment.

"Things get done on kind of a piecemeal basis, almost if not haphazard. It almost happens not because of, but in spite of."

Burger says new policies in Illinois have helped somewhat.

"Illinois is one of the top 10 states in large-scale wind power. They are not in the top 10 in solar or small-scale wind."

While the United States came in second in wind-energy capacity worldwide, the study says, it installed 50 percent fewer gigawatts of wind power last year than in 2009.


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