States, Workers Can Seize Emerging Economic Opportunities in Renewable Energy

Join Pew’s webinar, ‘Unlocking Domestic U.S. Offshore Wind Supply Chain Potential: Jobs, Economic Growth, and Renewable Deployment’

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States, Workers Can Seize Emerging Economic Opportunities in Renewable Energy
A white turbine blade lies on its side, occupying the full length of a long warehouse floor, its casing narrowing to a point at the far end of the building. In the foreground is the end of the blade that connects to the turbine shaft. The attachment points—a ring of holes and pins— run around the blade’s circumference, with a metal plate in the center.
A wind turbine blade sits in a Louisiana warehouse.
The Pew Charitable Trusts

Data shows that fortifying manufacturing and investing in a skilled workforce can enable coastal U.S. states and their neighbors to capitalize on the economic and job opportunities presented by the offshore wind industry’s increasing supply chain needs.

Please join business advocates, local organizations, researchers, and The Pew Charitable Trusts for a webinar to highlight the potential economic impacts of growing the domestic offshore wind supply chain and the related opportunities for coastal states. Presenters will also discuss how a greater understanding among state policymakers of the economic possibilities associated with offshore wind is helping unlock policies that facilitate industry growth while benefitting communities, businesses, and workers.  

This webinar will explore the Louisiana Offshore Wind Supply Chain Assessment, a study released by Pew, Greater New Orleans Inc., the Southeastern Wind Coalition, the Center for Planning Excellence, and Xodus Group. The assessment shows that hundreds of Louisiana businesses and workers are well-positioned to tap into their existing expertise and infrastructure to bolster the industry, grow the state’s manufacturing sector, create good-paying jobs, and support state and national energy production goals.

Agenda:

Remarks from:

Laura Lightbody, director, The Pew Charitable Trusts’ energy modernization project

Discussion sessions

Session 1: Scaling up from a national perspective

Clean energy and business advocates alike are recognizing the mounting opportunities for the offshore wind supply chain industry. Panelists will highlight the benefits of cultivating the domestic supply chain from an industry and workforce perspective, showing how states can seize these economic growth opportunities and the potential financial boon available. The session will also feature a discussion of an analysis to quantify the economic opportunity associated with this growing sector.

Panelists:

  • John Begala, The Pew Charitable Trusts (moderator)
  • Sam Salustro, Oceantic Network
  • Brinn McDowell, National Renewable Energy Laboratory
  • Gregory B. Upton Jr., Center for Energy Studies, Louisiana State University

Session 2: Unlocking your state’s potential: Louisiana case study

Louisiana supply chain study partners Greater New Orleans Inc. and the Center for Planning Excellence will share how the report is helping to spur interest and drive tangible action to develop the capacity, jobs, and expertise necessary to tap into supply chain opportunities across the state.

Panelists:

  • Courtney Durham Shane, The Pew Charitable Trusts (moderator)
  • Cameron Poole, Greater New Orleans Inc.
  • Camille Manning-Broome, Center for Planning Excellence
  • Otto Candies IV, Otto Candies LLC
EVENT DETAILS
Date: Monday, Nov. 18 , 2024
Time: 11 a.m.-12 p.m. EST / 10-11 a.m. CT
Location: Webinar
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Two bearded men, wearing safety glasses, stand in a cavernous industrial building. In the foreground, one of the men, in a black polo shirt, operates a machine, while the man in the background, wearing a blue V-neck sweater over a white dress shirt, points at something outside the frame.
White Paper

Louisiana Businesses Positioned to Capitalize on Offshore Wind

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White Paper

A new report shows that Louisiana businesses and workers stand to benefit from the expansion of offshore wind nationally and in the Gulf of Mexico. Louisiana businesses have been instrumental in helping to build this emerging energy sector since the first U.S. offshore wind farm was constructed near Rhode Island, and this new study shows that the state has much more to offer—and to gain.

A shipyard with towers in the foreground, a barge on a river, and a blue sky in the background."
A shipyard with towers in the foreground, a barge on a river, and a blue sky in the background."
Article

Louisiana Primed to Take Helm of Offshore Wind Supply Chain

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Article

Louisiana, already renowned for its energy prowess, is poised to harness the potential of another segment of the energy industry: offshore wind. Since the first U.S. offshore wind farm came online off the Atlantic Coast in 2016, Louisiana businesses have been a pivotal part of the supply chain for offshore energy projects, helping to design and build equipment and vessels.

Video

Offshore Wind Energy: Delivers 'Endless' Jobs for States

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Video

The offshore wind industry offers enormous opportunities for communities in the United States to boost their economies by manufacturing the components and infrastructure needed to build out offshore wind power generation.