Breaking down Obama’s ‘$90 billion’ green investment
In last night's debate, Mitt Romney said the president gave $90 billion to the green energy world. That $90 billion number? That's right, sort of.
In response to President Obama’s calls to end oil company subsidies last night, Mitt Romney said the president gave a hefty chunk of green to green energy, “in one year, you provided $90 billion in breaks to the green energy world,” said Romney.
That $90 billion number? That’s right, sort of. It’s the amount the White House made available to “lay the foundation of the clean energy economy” in the 2009 Recovery Act. That included a host of programs, covering energy efficiency to nuclear cleanup to job training, and, yes, some government investment.
Shayle Kann, who studies clean energy for Green Tech Media, says, “‘breaks’ is, I think, a pretty stretched definition of it.” He says the $90 billion covers many years, not one year, and it hasn’t all been spent. Some of the money is from programs approved by President Bush, though only activated under Obama.
Romney also said that about half the companies that received government money for clean energy had gone bankrupt. Kann says, no way, “I was thinking about it this morning, and I can come up with less than ten companies that’ve gone bankrupt since then.” Less than ten, he says, out of thousands of companies that took advantage of clean energy initiatives.