So where is the legislative love for TES? While the technology lacks a serious presence on Capitol Hill, federal, state and local governments have begun to discover the cost-savings of its use. TES actually has unique potential to be a major piece of any future legislative or regulatory energy policy: a proven, non-partisan, cost-saving, renewable and clean, special interest-free technology that creates construction jobs. If the federal government continues to pursue other forms of renewable energies to build a lasting national infrastructure, it needs to do so in a responsible manner that can cut long term costs and increase reliability and efficiency. TES is about as close to a political no-brainer as it gets.
Justin Kintz is a former George W. Bush Administration appointee to the U.S. Department of the Interior, and current Manager of Special Projects at the Sudden Cardiac Arrest Association in Washington D.C.

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