Amid all the negative publicity that Solyndra’s failure has
brought to the Administration’s cleantech efforts, one cleantech program has
received broad bipartisan support: DOE’s Advanced Research Projects Agency –
Energy (ARPA-e). In 2012, ARPA-e will receive $275 million, a
53% increase from the prior year with both the House and the Senate supporting
significant funding for the agency’s third year of operations.
ARPA-e is modeled after the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA), which
for over 50 years has funded early-stage research projects that show the
potential to develop technologies that could yield disruptive advances for the
military. DARPA’s projects have resulted
in major leaps including, but definitely not limited to, the Internet, stealth
technology and the Global Positioning System.
Both agencies operate by soliciting proposals from companies,
universities, and labs within broad thematic areas and select the most
promising proposals for grant awards.
Readers of my blog know that I am not
a big fan of some of the Administration’s cleantech efforts. ARPA-e is at least one exception. Authorized in the last year of the Bush
Administration and initially funded through the Obama Administration’s American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), the ARPA-e program may be one government
program that can help seed the disruptive advances needed in our energy
economy.
Why, given the negative publicity around government funding for
cleantech projects, has ARPA-e been able to win bipartisan support?
Focus on early
stage R&D
Government-funded R&D has long been an area of
bipartisan support. Most members of
Congress believe (as do I) that the government has a role in funding early-stage
research and innovation in areas of public interest where the private sector is
unable to economically justify conducting such R&D given the high degree of
risk. Unlike the DOE loan program that funded Solyndra’s factories, the purpose
of the ARPA-e grants are to fund high-risk, high-reward R&D projects that
industry alone cannot support, but whose success could dramatically benefit the
nation.
Grants (of
reasonable size) not investments (of enormous size)
The bulk of the Administration’s cleantech investments were
funded through the ARRA including the initial funding for ARPA-e. Since ARRA’s purpose was to stimulate the
economy, government agencies, including DOE needed to get funds out the door as
quickly as possible (unfortunately
this failed). That led to many
extremely large awards of both grants and loan guarantees. Just a few high
profile examples -- $527 million to Solyndra (bankrupt), $465 million to Tesla,
$249 million to A123, $76 million to Range Fuels (bankrupt), $43 million to
Beacon Power (bankrupt) and $25 million to Amyris. Some of these awards were grants; others were
loans where the government hoped to get a return on its investment.
Unlike many other programs handing money out for cleantech
related efforts, ARPA-e’s awards have all been grants made with the clear understanding
that they are for high-risk R&D that often will not work out. In no case is there an expectation of a
financial return to the government.
Anytime a government program expects to make a return on investment it
is, in my opinion, likely
to fail both because the government is inherently flawed at making good
business decisions and because politics usually won’t allow for even a single
failed investment.
ARPA-e grants to date have averaged $2.9 million and have
gone to 180
different projects. As a result, ARPA-e
largely avoids the minefield of government trying to play businessman as well
as the negative PR fall-out from large project failures. In addition, while politics can play a role
in any grant process, the smaller the awards the less potential for political
influence to outweigh project merit.
Energy Independence
& Global Warming
ARPA-e’s guiding legislative
mandate is to enhance the economic and energy security of the United States
through the development of technologies that reduce energy imports, reduce
energy-related emissions including greenhouse gases, and improve energy efficiency
in all economic sectors. By combining
the goal of energy independence with reduced greenhouse gas emissions the
program is able to appeal to a much broader array of elected officials. If the program only focused on reducing greenhouse
gases, I strongly suspect there would be much less support from
Republicans. By avoiding the polarizing
nature of focusing only on global warming or only on energy independence,
ARPA-e is able to appeal to a broad audience.
One of the best ways to help solve our energy challenges is
through disruptive energy technologies.
If ARPA-e can deliver for energy technology even close to how well DARPA
has delivered for defense technologies it will ultimately have a large impact
on the economy, energy security and the environment. To achieve this, ARPA-e must remain nimble
and avoid being sucked into the massive DOE bureaucracy. If it is able to do so, I suspect it will
continue to have bipartisan support and will be a long-term shining star in
the Administration’s cleantech efforts.
(Note: ARPA-e will hold their annual Innovation Summit February
27-29)
1 comment:
It is interesting to note the distinction between what makes for successful support and a flaming disaster. Successful stimulus appears to occur at either end of the spectrum, that is, support for technology development (aka R&D) or deployment/project development. In the latter case, we at least have a productive asset at the end of the day. The questionable support has generally involved throwing money at equipment/factories to manufacture a product for which there is little evidence the market will adopt… i.e. Solyndra, Tesla, Beacon. This is akin to building the most efficient, gleaming factory to manufacture buggy whips — even high tech ones. There is no demand for the product. Sadly, Solyndra is set apart from most others not only in the magnitude of the failure but in the decision to provide massive support for a product with questionable characteristics.
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