The US is failing its green tech ‘Sputnik moment’ - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 绿色经济

The US is failing its green tech ‘Sputnik moment’

Prejudice and protectionism are dismantling Joe Biden’s environmental legacy
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":7.29,"text":"At least the Soviet Union only produced one “Sputnik moment”, when the launch of its orbiting satellite in 1957 administered a galvanising shock to the US scientific and defence establishment. America’s current superpower rival, China, is claiming them on a regular basis, the launch of the DeepSeek AI large language models being one among several. But for an array of green technologies, notably batteries and electric vehicles, the US seems content to shrug and let China win."}],[{"start":41.93,"text":"The green spending in Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which expanded federal spending and tax credits for technologies including hydrogen, solar and wind power and clean fuel production had two goals. One was to get Biden re-elected by creating jobs, the second to challenge Chinese supremacy and establish US autonomy in green tech. It failed on the first, and its initial gains on the second are in severe jeopardy."}],[{"start":74.87,"text":"By creating jobs in Republican-voting states and congressional districts, the IRA was designed to be Trump-proof, and it did cause a jump in investment in sectors like batteries and electric vehicles. But in practice ideology is now winning over economic pragmatism, with environmental principles barely even in the game."}],[{"start":null,"text":"

"}],[{"start":98.95,"text":"The green spending is up for grabs in Donald Trump’s “one big beautiful bill”, currently bouncing around Capitol Hill. The House of Representatives wanted an end to clean-energy tax credits; the Senate wants to maintain them for everything except wind and solar. There’s also a potential wrecker in the form of a clause that denies any kind of tax credit to companies with Chinese components in their supply chains, however small."}],[{"start":127.79,"text":"Whatever finally emerges, it’s clear that the tax credits for purchasing EVs have few friends in the White House. Republicans often say that only coastal elites buy them, and hence they don’t need subsidising. At the high prices US EVs sell at, there’s some truth in that. It’s a long-standing weakness in the US green transition that the insistence on producing the goods at home makes them expensive. Protecting the domestic industry with tariffs may be politically necessary to get products like solar panels subsidised and sold at all, but it is clearly a constraint in getting them adopted."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":167.08,"text":"Many in Congress dislike China and EVs more than they like technological advance. In an act of pure spite, the Senate recently attempted to stop the US Postal Service from using new state-of-the-art electric delivery trucks — a move that fortunately failed on a technicality."}],[{"start":187.77,"text":"The US’s record in squandering leads in green technology is now becoming embarrassing. Scientists at the University of Texas invented the lithium-iron-phosphate battery, which is becoming a standard for EVs, in 1996, but the US ceded the commercial advantage to Chinese companies, which were supported by lavish state subsidies. Elon Musk’s Tesla had a great start in EVs, but until very recently Musk actually opposed the US tax credits because they would have helped his competitors. He preferred consolidating his position in the US market to expanding it."}],[{"start":226.01000000000002,"text":"No rich-country car company except Tesla saw the EV revolution coming and got to the front of it the way China did. But at least European producers like Volkswagen have done their best to catch up with the help of official subsidies combined with temporary and calibrated EU anti-subsidy duties on imports. By contrast, the indigenous American manufacturers, which have for decades skulked behind the US 25 per cent tariff on pick-up trucks, have apparently forgotten how to innovate outside that part of the market."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":262.11,"text":"Despite (or because of) being protected by 100 per cent tariffs on EVs imposed by Biden, Detroit has been slow to expand production and develop budget models. The US EV market remains much smaller than the EU one, let alone China, which will soon sell more EVs than the US sells all cars put together. In the meantime, tariff uncertainty is putting much battery and EV production on hold. The REPEAT Project at Princeton University, which evaluates federal energy and climate policy, says that withdrawing the credits will cause huge overcapacity in the US battery and EV market."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":304.85,"text":"If you had to design an example of how interlocking political and economic pathologies among policymakers were weakening the US from within, its decision to give up on supporting the green transition and particularly EVs and batteries would be a great one. Climate change denial, mindless prejudice against a perceived elite, a nuance-free abhorrence of China and an addiction to protectionism have squandered its technological advantage."}],[{"start":337.69000000000005,"text":"The Sputnik satellite fired up US enthusiasm for scientific advance: 12 years later, an American walked on the moon. If Trump and the current Congress had been in charge back then, they would presumably have decided to let the Soviets do space exploration and concentrated instead on building jumbo jets and big cars with fins."}],[{"start":363.63000000000005,"text":"It’s hard to see how the trend away from green tech will get reversed as long as Trump is in the White House and the Republicans occupy both houses of Congress. It’s an incredible own goal, rivalling Brexit in self-destructive folly, and the impact will reverberate for many years to come."}],[{"start":393.07000000000005,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1751025453_2103.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

从温泉到米饼:海湾能源危机重创日本小企业

对进口燃料的依赖正在扼住全球第五大经济体的喉咙,暴露了作为其经济核心的小企业的脆弱性。

软银追加300亿美元OpenAI投资,考验自身借贷上限

孙正义将巨额资金投入人工智能领域,需要面对投资者的不安情绪。

特朗普能否与伊朗达成协议?

任何结束战争的外交努力都面临重重障碍。

特朗普因新关税计划面临法律挑战

在最高法院裁定先前关税非法后,美国总统转而援引一些鲜为人知的法律。

整顿还是圈地?印尼领导人瞄准资源公司

印尼总统普拉博沃•苏比延多誓言将对违反环境法规的资源企业采取强硬措施。

伊朗战争威胁海湾资金的全球流动

海合会六个成员国数十年来已集体成长为全球金融领域最具影响力的力量之一,投资足迹遍及全球。世界对中东资本的依赖程度比许多人意识到的更深。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×