New Next 10 report seeks to better understand California’s cap-and-trade program and different alternatives for how the state can use the allowance value created under the cap-and-trade program.
The 2012 California Green Innovation Index, the 4th edition, documents how clean technology investment and innovation are helping drive growth in California’s overall economy.
New Next 10 report provides a comprehensive, bottom-up accounting of California’s Core Green Economy, systematically tracking the most recent available data on employment and business establishments across California’s green sectors and regions.
New research tracks key indicators to assess opportunities and obstacles for California in the electric vehicle (EV) sector and finds California captures 69 percent of global EV investment in 2011, ranks first in nation in EV patents, and EV jobs increased during the economic downturn while total employment fell.
New study released by Next 10 finds that strong fuel economy standards and vehicle emissions standards will drive economic growth—and the stronger the standard, the greater the growth.
New Next 10 report provides the most comprehensive green jobs accounting to date, systematically tracking the most recent available data on green companies, job type, location and growth across every sector and region of California.
Next 10 commissioned a set of five research papers from leading academic experts to address the multibillion dollar issue of how California should distribute greenhouse gas (GHG) allowances and the resulting revenue.
The 3rd edition of the California Green Innovation Index documents California’s increasing global leadership in green innovation, cleantech venture capital investment, and energy productivity, despite the economic downturn. New data also show that more businesses are opening in California than are closing or leaving.
New Next 10 study identifies commercial buildings as a stealth energy drain and a huge untapped resource that could provide significant savings for California businesses and state government, reduce the need to build new power plants, and cut global warming pollution while generating jobs and economic growth.
New report released today shows that California green businesses have increased 45 percent in number and 36 percent in employment from 1995 to 2008 while total jobs in California only expanded 13 percent.