We talk a lot about the need for America to lead the world in green  manufacturing, and with good reason: a strong green manufacturing sector  will create good, domestic jobs and boost exports, all while helping us  reduce carbon emissions and break our dependence on foreign oil. But it’s not just talk. We’re taking action to re-establish that  leadership, and what’s happening today, down in Louisville, Kentucky, is  a perfect example of how we’re going to do it. Vice President Biden was in Louisville today to visit  a General Electric facility called Appliance Park, where GE is  investing $600 million to expand their manufacturing of energy-efficient  appliances.
 
But they’re not doing it alone – their investment is being  supported by $24.8 million in Recovery Act funds through a program  called the Section 48C Advanced Energy Manufacturing Tax Credit, or  “48C” for short. We’ve written  about this program before, because it’s one of our favorite  programs here at the Middle Class Task Force – it uses Recovery Act  dollars to spur private-sector investments in the clean energy and  energy efficiency technologies we need to tackle our energy  challenges. And those investments create good jobs now, while planting  the seeds for vibrant new industries in the future.
Down in Louisville, they’re having another great effect – they’re  bringing green manufacturing back to America. Right now, GE makes  energy-efficient water heaters in China, but thanks in part to this  Recovery Act program, they’re moving production back to the states.
That’s a big turnaround. In fact, these energy-efficient water  heaters are the first new product line at Appliance Park in the last 50  years, and the return of all this green manufacturing to the US is going  to mean hundreds of new, high-quality jobs down in Louisville.This is just one of the many success stories we’ve heard from the 48C  program, which is leveraging private-sector investment to create good,  middle-class jobs and build a domestic clean energy manufacturing  sector. Our administration has proposed to build on that success by  expanding the 48C program, and the Middle Class Task Force has made  that expansion a priority.We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again – it’s time for Congress  to enact our proposed expansion of 48C, because programs like this are  the only way we’re going to keep getting changes like what’s happening  down in Louisville. And that’s how we’re going to lead the world in  green manufacturing.
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