Report
This report shows that successful climate technology innovation may come from where we least expect it – not from the private sector alone or from developed countries – but from emerging markets in developing economies.
This report evaluates current gaps in financing for emerging clean energy technologies, and potential ways to bridge those gaps.
In this new report, Clean Energy Group recommends that Congress establish a new “Clean Energy Federalism” to expand the historic role of states to fund and deploy clean energy projects, create jobs, and grow the clean energy sector.
This brief 8-page document addresses the “why” of international technology collaboration — the basic reasons why global technology policies – for product development — beyond cap and trade are needed for stabilization.
This report makes recommendations for how an international technology collaboration could be structured.
This report from Clean Energy Group and the Meridian Institute recommends that the Obama Administration should use corporate “open and distributed innovation” strategies to accelerate research and development for clean energy and climate change technologies.
This report informs states on how they can act more like retail marketers to establish the financial and energy value of solar technology for the consumer.
This paper sets out some countervailing arguments that governments and other donors should not be in the business of picking winners. The authors argue that technology-based policy and incentives are needed to address long term climate stabilization.
This report outlines a new approach to the climate innovation process.
This report describes the key policies and program strategies that have emerged as effective tools for states to advance wide-spread solar deployment.