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Micro-boosting Weatherization Programs

February 24th, 2010 by jspaziano in Green Business

We are the weatherization nation – and so much the better for it. Last year, the Obama Administration injected $8 billion of stimulus funding into the weatherization industry, with a lofty tripartite objective: create green un-exportable jobs, save energy consumers cash, and make the environment happy.

But what happens when government money is injected into a system that doesn’t exist? Community, government, and for-profit groups scramble to create the infrastructure. After much “building”, what has been made clear is that “there are currently not enough skilled workers and green entrepreneurs to expand weatherization and efficiency retrofit programs on a national scale,” as Vice President Biden concluded in a recent task force report on the subject.

Contractors need loans for items like blower doors, which are used to check a building’s insulation.
Contractors need loans for items like blower doors, which are used to check a building’s insulation.

ACCION USA is currently talking with groups in Massachusetts and New York about leveraging microlending to help contractors jump into weatherization and/or aid those already in the game to expand to meet growing the demand. While many states have used government funding to provide incentives for weatherization, many of these incentives are rebates. And without the money to front the cost, many contractors are opting out.

By incorporating a microlending component into weatherization programs, contractors will be able to move quickly – reacting to the market. Once they’ve taken hold of the weatherization opportunity, these businesses will continue to flourish, in large part due to the education and credit training received with their microloans. So even after the nation has been duly weatherized, contractors will continue to employ and grow.

Do you think microlending has a part to play in weatherization?

One Response to “Micro-boosting Weatherization Programs”

  1. Chloe Tribich Says:

    The Center for Working Families is helping to implement an exciting new energy efficiency program, Green Jobs/ Green NY in NYS now. Microlending seems crucial to this program’s success — it would address many of the concerns we’ve heard from small contractors, such as inability to front costs of equipment and certification classes and exams.

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