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breadcrumb: ["Appendix E: Submissions & Feedback", "45. Building Resilience Coalition"]
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# 45. Building Resilience Coalition

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## TL;DR  *(generated · confidence: high)*

The Building Resilience Coalition, a statewide coalition of climate, business, labor, and community organizations, urges the Prosperity Council to integrate building electrification, energy efficiency, and community resilience into Oregon's economic development strategy across all three priorities. They frame these as economic policies—not environmental add-ons—that reduce household and business energy costs, create 9,200–16,500 new skilled trades jobs by 2035, and add $2.5 billion annually to GDP by 2050. Key asks: modernize workforce development, prioritize efficiency for low-income and rural communities, and adopt new economic tools like building performance standards and microgrid incentives.

**Key points** *(each cites a PDF page)*:

- Building Resilience Coalition submits brief 'Smarter Buildings for a Stronger Oregon Economy' urging integration of building electrification and energy efficiency into Council's Business Climate, Workforce, and Tools for Growth priorities as economic development strategies. ([p. 383](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=383))
- Oregon's 500,000 heat pumps by 2030 target will deliver median savings of $300 to $650 annually for 92–100% of 49 million homes analyzed; reduces household energy burden and consumer spending suppression. ([p. 384](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=384))
- Oregon employed 57,860 clean energy workers in 2025, comprising 59.2% of state's total energy workforce and ranking 8th nationally; clean energy jobs grew 11.2% since 2020. ([p. 384](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=384))
- Oregon Energy Strategy projects 9,200–16,500 net new energy sector jobs by 2035, with buildings sector jobs growing 9–12% (4,500–5,500 new jobs) concentrated in HVAC and construction subsectors. ([p. 384](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=384))
- Eastern Oregon projected to gain 6,500 new energy jobs by 2035 (33% increase from 2024 baseline), representing proportionally larger rural development opportunity than Portland metro area. ([p. 387](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=387))
- Clean energy transition modeling estimates $2.5 billion annual GDP addition by 2050 with $49 billion in cumulative economic benefits; independent analysis from Energy Innovation and ODOE. ([p. 384](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=384))
- 2021 Heatdome killed more than 100 people with economic impacts of $1.3–$4.6 billion; smoke-related productivity losses cost Oregon up to $1 billion in annual GDP during heavy smoke years. ([p. 385](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=385))
- ODOE awarded $2 million in workforce grants in 2025 to six organizations including Warm Springs Construction Enterprise, Klamath Community College, and Northwest Native Chamber; $12 million invested in microgrids, solar, and storage including $1M Warm Springs grant. ([p. 387](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=387))
- Oregon ranked #9 nationally for energy efficiency (ACEEE State Energy Efficiency Scorecard 2025); Building Performance Standard and energy codes create competitive advantage for businesses prioritizing ESG and operating cost certainty. ([p. 386](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=386))
- HB 2065 and HB 2066 (2025) passed with bipartisan support to create microgrid development frameworks; $1 billion transmission investment supports 13,000 FTE-years of employment and $2.4 billion in economic activity. ([p. 389](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=389))

Amounts: $19.5 billion on energy in 2022 · $8.5 billion spent on energy to power homes, businesses, and industries · ~$12,000 per year in income from greenhouse gas emissions · 500,000 heat pumps by 2030 · $300 to $650 a year median savings · 57,860 clean energy workers · 59.2% of state's total energy workforce · 8th nationally · Dates/FTE: 2022 · 2020 · 2021 · 2024 · Programs: Oregon Energy Strategy · Executive Order 25-29 · Climate Protection Program · Community Climate Investments · Climate Resilience Superfund · Building Performance Standard · Parties: Building Resilience Coalition · Governor's Prosperity Council · ODOE · Oregon Department of Energy

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> **Source:** PDF [pp. 383-392](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=383) · raw: [383](../../.extracted/pages/page-0383.txt) · [384](../../.extracted/pages/page-0384.txt) · [385](../../.extracted/pages/page-0385.txt) · [386](../../.extracted/pages/page-0386.txt) · [387](../../.extracted/pages/page-0387.txt) · [388](../../.extracted/pages/page-0388.txt) · [389](../../.extracted/pages/page-0389.txt) · [390](../../.extracted/pages/page-0390.txt) · [391](../../.extracted/pages/page-0391.txt) · [392](../../.extracted/pages/page-0392.txt)

Breadcrumb: Appendix E: Submissions & Feedback > 45. Building Resilience Coalition

---
Dear Members of the Governor’s Prosperity Council,
On behalf of Building Resilience, a statewide coalition of climate justice and public health, business and labor, faith and
frontline communities, environmental, family, and youth organizations, and thousands of individual Oregonians, we share
the attached brief, Smarter Buildings for a Stronger Oregon Economy, as a resource for the Council’s work.
It is our deeply held belief that prosperity is not a number on a balance sheet. It cannot be measured by GDP, the profits
of our largest industries, or Oregon's ranking on a business climate index. Enterprise, sustainable innovation, and
economic growth have their place in measuring prosperity. Prosperity in the long-term is investments that broaden
opportunity for all Oregonians and strengthen our long-term trajectory, not trading away our health, safety, and joy in the
pursuit of more profit for the few.
Oregon’s prosperity is measured by the experience of our residents. It is felt in whether a family can afford to live in a
home in the community where they work, whether families can afford their utility bills, whether a parent has access to
quality childcare so they can contribute fully to their community, and whether the infrastructure of daily life– homes,
buildings, schools, roads, public health– is strong enough and clean enough to support a thriving society. A truly thriving
state is not simply a cheap state or one that myopically proposes tax breaks for corporations and the most wealthy — it is
an affordable one for all Oregonians, and a capable one, with an educated workforce, resilient communities, and a quality
of life that attracts the most talented people and the most innovative firms.
This Council’s work offers an important opportunity to connect Oregon’s economic strategy with its homes and
businesses. The following brief pulls from multiple sources of recent research and demonstrates the need to prioritize
investments in:
● Business Climate: Reducing Costs, Increasing Competitiveness, and Protecting Oregon Businesses from Energy
Volatility
● Workforce: Building the Trades Pipeline for Oregon's Fastest-Growing Energy Sector
● Equity, Resilience, and a Managed Transition: Ensuring the Economic Benefits Are Broadly Shared
● Tools for Growth: Incentives, Land Use, and Economic Development Tools for the Electrification Era
Policies that advance healthy, affordable, resilient homes and buildings that run on renewable energy are not
separate, and should not be separate from economic policy; they are economic policy. The quality, efficiency, and
resilience of our buildings directly affect the strength and success of our people and economy.
Sincerely,
The Building Resilience Steering Committee

Smarter Investing in Buildings
for a Stronger Oregon Economy
Executive Summary
Core thesis: The policies the Building Resilience coalition advocates for — energy efficiency in buildings,
strategic electrification, and community resilience infrastructure — are not environmental policies with
economic side effects. They are economic policies with environmental co-benefits. They reduce household and
business energy costs, create high-road in-state jobs, expand Oregon's tax base, improve workforce
participation, and strengthen Oregon's competitive position at a moment when the national clean energy
economy is undergoing a structural transformation.
Central ask to the Prosperity Council: Integrate building electrification, energy efficiency, and community
resilience into the Council's recommendations on all three strategic priorities — Business Climate, Workforce,
and Tools for Growth — as fundamental economic development strategies. We have included some ideas for
funding these priorities below, through existing policies like the Climate Protection Program and passing a
Climate Resilience Superfund.
Statistics of note:
- Oregonians spent $19.5 billion on energy in 2022, with roughly $8.5 billion spent on energy to power
homes, businesses, and industries. (ODOE Biennial Energy Report, 2024)
- The average Oregonian could lose ~$12,000 per year in income from the effects of greenhouse gas
emissions under a business-as-usual scenario (Oregon Energy Strategy, 2025)
- Oregon’s goal of installing 500,000 heat pumps by 2030 will deliver median savings of $300 to $650 a
year, depending on heat pump efficiency, for 92 - 100% of the 49 million homes analyzed. (ODOE 2025
Biennial Heat Pump Report)
- Oregon employed 57,860 clean energy workers in 2025, with clean energy accounting for 59.2% of
the state's total energy workforce — ranking Oregon 8th nationally (E2 Clean Jobs America, 2025)
- The Oregon Energy Strategy projects 9,200 to 16,500 net new energy sector jobs by 2035, driven
primarily by efficiency and electrification investments, with buildings’ jobs projected to grow 9–12%
(ODOE, Oregon Energy Strategy Jobs Analysis, 2025)
- Independent modeling estimates Oregon's clean energy transition will add $2.5 billion annually to
GDP by 2050, with $49 billion in cumulative economic benefits (Energy Innovation, 2022)
Policies of note:
- The Oregon Energy Strategy establishes the least-cost pathways for Oregon's economy and
finds that it runs through efficiency and electrification. The Governor’s Executive Order 25-29
directs agencies to take action on Energy Strategy recommendations. A delay in implementing these
least-cost approaches risks higher costs and economic burdens for businesses, families, and the
government.
- The Climate Protection Program (‘CPP’) is a business-minded solution, developed over years of
public process with considerable industry input. By providing a predictable, flexible path for reducing
1

emissions, the CPP will accelerate innovation, cut costs for consumers, and create thousands of jobs in
the clean economy. Moreover, Community Climate Investments as a component of the CPP can
help fund projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Oregon's environmental justice
communities.
- Heatwaves, like the 2021 Heatdome, killed more than 100 people and had economic impacts
between $1.3 billion and $4.6 billion due to mortality and health effects. The economic ripple effects
of smoke-related health issues and lost productivity are estimated to cost Oregon up to $1 billion in
GDP during heavy smoke years. (Economic Costs of Climate Change in Oregon, 2024)
- The state must pass a sustainable revenue and funding measure for heat pumps, community resilience
hubs, and other public safety and wildfire mitigation and adaptation solutions to address urgent
and growing climate damages. Policy solutions like Climate Resilience Superfund legislation can
create a sustained revenue source from multinational oil and gas companies - not local Oregon
businesses nor taxpayers - to pay for the pollution and damages these companies have caused.
SECTION 1: BUSINESS CLIMATE
Reducing Costs, Increasing Competitiveness, and Protecting Oregon Businesses from
Energy Volatility
Prosperity Council Goal: Explore and recommend strategies for regulatory streamlining and potential
changes in tax policy that would stimulate GDP growth and long-term tax revenue.
Core argument: Volatile fossil fuel costs are a structural drag on Oregon's business climate. Buildings that run
on efficient electric systems insulate businesses and households from energy price shocks, reduce operating
costs, and free up capital for other investments. Strategic regulatory frameworks — Building Performance
Standards, updated energy codes, and incentives for heat pumps and other efficiency measures — can reduce
costs and deliver certainty for businesses planning capital upgrades.
1.1 Renewable Energy and Efficiency as Smart Economic Policy
- Renewable electricity and electrification are not just cheaper on average — they are more
price-stable, insulating businesses from the global commodity price swings that have destabilized
energy costs since 2020. (Oregon Energy Strategy, 2025)
- The Oregon Energy Strategy found that the least-cost pathway for Oregon's entire economy
depends on high levels of energy efficiency and electrification. Delaying building and transportation
electrification increases statewide costs and strands capital. (ODOE Oregon Energy Strategy, 2025)
- Buildings account for nearly 20% of energy use in Oregon's commercial sector. Oregon's new
Building Performance Standard (BPS), launched in 2025, creates a structured compliance pathway for
large commercial buildings — a regulatory certainty tool for business owners planning capital
investments. (ODOE, 2025)
2

1.2 The Cost of Energy Burden and Why Efficiency Is Fiscal Policy
- High energy burden reduces household disposable income and suppresses local economic activity — it
is both a social equity issue and a drag on consumer spending in local economies.
- Weatherization delivers significant returns: for every dollar invested in home weatherization, $0.90 to
$1.40 is gained in direct energy benefits — before counting health, productivity, and avoided-cost
benefits (Brookings Institution, 2024)
- Oregon's BPS program and Building Energy Codes establish a performance floor that reduces long-run
operating costs for building owners, increases asset values, and reduces tenant energy burden — all
markers of a stronger commercial real estate sector.
1.3 Regulatory Streamlining: Permitting, Codes, and Incentive Certainty
- Streamlined permitting for heat pump installations and building energy upgrades reduces contractor
costs and increases project throughput — a regulatory reform that stimulates private investment without
public subsidy.
- Consistent, predictable energy codes give builders and manufacturers the market certainty to invest in
training, equipment, and supply chains — the Prosperity Council's stated interest in "tools that reflect
today's business ecosystem."
- Oregon ranked #9 nationally for energy efficiency in ACEEE's State Energy Efficiency Scorecard
(2025), recognizing the BPS program and equity-focused efficiency policies — a competitive advantage
for attracting businesses that prioritize ESG and operating cost certainty (ODOE, 2025 Year in Review)
SECTION 2: WORKFORCE
Building the Trades Pipeline for Oregon's Fastest-Growing Energy Sector
Prosperity Council Goal: Explore and recommend opportunities to modernize Oregon's workforce
development systems to improve the effectiveness and relevance of training programs for our workforce and
employers in growing sectors.
Core argument: The clean energy transition in buildings — heat pump installation, weatherization, EV
charging, grid upgrades, microgrid development — is creating a large, durable, and geographically distributed
surge in demand for skilled trades workers. Oregon's workforce development systems must align with this
demand now, or cede those jobs to workers from other states. A truly prosperous Oregon is one where
Oregon families have dignified labor and high-road jobs and opportunities that allow their families to
thrive.
2.1 The Occupations Oregon Needs Right Now
- The Oregon Energy Strategy's jobs analysis identifies electricians, construction laborers, and
HVAC/refrigeration mechanics as the occupations projected to see the greatest number of new
employees by 2035 (ODOE Jobs Analysis, 2025)
3

- Buildings sector jobs are projected to grow between 4,500 and 5,500 by 2035 (9–12% growth from
2024), with gains concentrated in commercial HVAC, residential HVAC, and related construction
subsectors (ODOE Jobs Analysis, 2025)
2.2 Geographic Equity: Eastern Oregon and Rural Communities
- The Oregon Energy Strategy projects roughly 6,500 new energy sector jobs in Eastern Oregon by
2035 — a 33% increase from the 2024 baseline — driven by clean electricity generation,
transmission, and electrification (ODOE Jobs Analysis, 2025)
- This represents a proportionally larger opportunity for rural communities than for the Portland metro
area, making workforce alignment a geographic equity and rural development imperative.
- Rural communities along the electrical trades pipeline (electricians, lineworkers, HVAC technicians)
stand to gain substantially — but only if training programs are accessible and proximate to where
workers live.
2.3 The Workforce Gap: A Policy Risk for Oregon
- The ODOE Jobs Analysis explicitly warns: "If an adequate workforce is unavailable and the pipelines
for training and developing the workforce are not sufficient, this could create a significant barrier to
meeting our state's energy goals or to ensuring that Oregonians capture those in-state job
opportunities." (ODOE Jobs Analysis, 2025)
- Oregon clean energy jobs grew nearly 2% in 2024 and 11.2% since 2020, but workforce development
programs have not kept pace with demand. (E2 Clean Jobs America, 2025)
- ODOE awarded $2 million in workforce grants in 2025 to six organizations, including Warm Springs
Construction Enterprise, Klamath Community College, and Northwest Native Chamber —
demonstrating that geographically targeted, community-based training works. (ODOE, 2025)
2.4 Recommendations for Workforce Development Modernization
- Align community college curricula with projected occupational demand in HVAC, electrical work,
weatherization, and grid infrastructure — using Oregon Energy Strategy job projections as a planning
baseline.
- Expand registered apprenticeship pathways in the clean building trades, with wage standards that
reflect the "living wage" tier ($33–$48/hour) that energy sector jobs already cluster in. (ODOE Jobs
Analysis, 2025)
- Fund location-based training programs in rural Oregon and Tribal communities where energy sector
job growth as a share of baseline will be highest — preventing in-state opportunities from flowing to
out-of-state contractors.
- Co-locate training with deployment: Programs attached to weatherization, heat pump, and EV
charging deployment create immediate employment as training progresses
- Establish a Clean Buildings Trades Pipeline: coordinate across ODOE, Oregon Department of
Community Colleges and Workforce Development, and industry partners to create a unified workforce
signal aligned with building code upgrade cycles and utility electrification programs.
4

SECTION 3: EQUITY, RESILIENCE, AND THE MANAGED TRANSITION
Ensuring the Economic Benefits Are Broadly Shared
Core argument: A managed transition that prioritizes low-income households, rural communities, and Tribal
nations for energy efficiency upgrades and resilience investments is both an equity imperative and an
economic efficiency strategy — it reduces the risk of stranded assets, prevents energy burden from deepening
economic inequality, and ensures Oregon's workforce pipeline draws from its full talent pool.
3.1 Energy Burden is an Economic Drag
- High-energy-burden households — those spending more than 6% of income on home energy — are
disproportionately concentrated in communities already facing economic hardship.
- An unmanaged transition that leaves low-income and rural households on an aging, increasingly
expensive fossil fuel system as other customers electrify will increase energy burden for the most
vulnerable and reduce their economic participation.
- Prioritizing energy efficiency upgrades and electrification assistance for high-burden households
converts a fiscal liability into a recurring household income gain.
3.2 Tribal Nations: Energy Sovereignty as Economic Development
- Oregon's nine federally recognized Tribes have identified energy sovereignty — the ability to control
and determine their own energy infrastructure — as essential to self-determination and long-term
resilience. (Oregon Energy Strategy, 2025)
- Community-scale solar, battery storage, and microgrid investments on Tribal lands create local
economic activity, reduce outflow of energy dollars from reservation communities, and strengthen
resilience during grid outages and climate events.
- Oregon's $1M grant to Warm Springs for solar and battery storage at three community sites (permanent
supportive housing, affordable housing, and a community center) is a model of integrated economic
and resilience investment. (ODOE/Microgrid Knowledge, 2026)
3.3 The Just Transition Workforce Dimension
- Building Resilience coalition advocacy explicitly seeks "high-road jobs" — jobs with living wages,
benefits, and advancement pathways — in the clean energy economy.
- ODOE's Jobs Analysis found that energy sector employment growth spans all wage tiers, with the
distribution remaining essentially stable — but intentional program design can tilt toward living-wage
outcomes.
- Workforce programs prioritizing BIPOC communities, rural workers, and returning workers can help
Oregon ensure the economic gains of the clean energy transition do not simply replicate existing
patterns of inequality.
5

SECTION 4: TOOLS FOR GROWTH
Incentives, Land Use, and Economic Development Tools for the Electrification Era
Prosperity Council Goal: Ranging from incentives to land use, explore and recommend updates to economic
development tools that reflect and support today's business ecosystem.
Core argument: Oregon's economic development toolkit was largely built for a fossil-fuel economy. Heat pump
rebates, building performance standards, community resilience hubs, microgrids, and clean energy
manufacturing incentives are not climate programs bolted onto economic development — they are the updated
economic development tools of the 21st century. Orienting Oregon's incentive structures, land use frameworks,
and infrastructure investment programs around building electrification and community resilience will produce
durable, geographically broad economic benefits.
4.1 Energy Efficiency and Electrification Incentives as Economic Development Tools
- Household-level savings from building and transportation energy efficiency and electrification function
as recurring wage increases for working Oregonians, particularly those in lower income brackets who
spend the highest share of income on energy.
- Incentives and services from providers like Energy Trust of Oregon create economic development
opportunities for employing energy efficiency and electrification contractors and installers -
especially in rural and other communities with higher-than-average unemployment rates.
4.2 Community Resilience as Economic Infrastructure
- The Building Resilience Coalition's work centers on the recognition that homes and buildings are
Oregon's first line of defense against climate disruption — and that an unmanaged transition leaves the
most vulnerable communities exposed.
- Community Resilience Hubs (physical spaces with backup power, cooling/heating capacity, and
community services) function as economic anchors during climate disruptions — reducing the
economic toll of wildfires, heat waves, ice storms, and grid outages on local business activity and
workforce participation.
- Oregon's community clean energy grant program, established under HB 2021, explicitly defines
Community-Based Renewable Energy projects as those that "result in increased resiliency or
community stability, local jobs, economic development, or direct energy cost savings to families and
small businesses." (Pacific Power/HB 2021, 2021)
- Oregon has invested $12 million in microgrids, solar, and storage to power wells, schools, and
Tribal facilities — including a $1M grant to Warm Springs for solar and battery storage at three
community sites. (Microgrid Knowledge, 2026)
- HB 2065 and HB 2066 (2025) created new frameworks for microgrid development across Oregon,
passing with bipartisan support — a signal that energy resilience is understood as a broadly shared
economic interest, not a partisan one. (Sustainable Northwest, 2025)
- Grid transmission investment delivers broad economic returns: each $1 billion of transmission
investment supports about 13,000 FTE-years of employment and $2.4 billion in economic
activity. (Brattle Group, cited in Move Oregon Forward report, 2025)
6

4.3 Land Use: Compact, Connected Development Reduces Energy Costs and
Infrastructure Burdens
- Energy-efficient buildings in well-connected, walkable neighborhoods reduce both energy consumption
and transportation costs — the two largest household expenses after food.
- Oregon's existing Housing + Transportation cost burden data (ODOT, 2022) shows combined spending
of 56% of household income — a structural affordability crisis that land use and building policy can
address in tandem.
- Buildings that meet high energy efficiency standards tend to have higher assessed values,
contributing to the property tax base and supporting long-term tax revenue — a direct Prosperity
Council interest.
4.4 Federal Transition Risk and Oregon's Opportunity
- The federal government's rollback of IRA clean energy incentives creates short-term market
uncertainty, but the structural transformation of global energy markets is already irreversible.
Moreover, the Trump Administration’s War in Iran has led to a surge in fuel prices in Oregon and states
across the country.
- State-level incentive continuity — heat pump rebates, building upgrade incentives, clean vehicle
credits, weatherization programs — fills the gap left by federal retrenchment and sends a durable
market signal to manufacturers, investors, and workforce trainers like unions.
CONCLUSION
The Building Resilience Coalition's agenda — energy efficient buildings, strategic electrification, community
resilience — maps directly onto every dimension of the Prosperity Council's economic mandate. We can
reduce the cost of living and doing business in Oregon through upgrades to homes and buildings. The work
creates a large, durable pathway for skilled trades jobs distributed across the state, including in rural
communities. We must deploy modern economic development tools — building performance standards,
resilience incentives, workforce pipelines — that fit the economy Oregon is building, not the one it is leaving
behind.
The Oregon Energy Strategy establishes the least-cost pathway for Oregon's economy and finds that it runs
through efficiency and electrification. A delay in implementing these least-cost approaches risks higher costs
and economic burdens for businesses, families, and the government. The Prosperity Council has the
opportunity to give that pathway economic teeth — to ensure that Oregon's businesses, workers, and
communities benefit from the structural transformation already underway in global energy markets, rather than
being left behind by it.
Building resilience is economic policy. It is time to treat it that way.
7

APPENDIX: KEY SOURCES AND LINKS
Source Relevance Link
Oregon Energy Strategy (ODOE, 2025) Least-cost pathway, job projections, https://www.oregon.gov/energy/Data-and-
household cost analysis Reports/Documents/Oregon-Energy-Strat
egy.pdf
OES Jobs Analysis Key Findings (ODOE, 9,200–16,500 net new jobs by 2035; https://www.oregon.gov/energy/Data-and-
2025) occupation-level projections Reports/Documents/OES-Jobs-Analysis-K
ey-Findings.pdf
E2 Clean Jobs America (2025) 57,860 Oregon clean energy workers; https://cleanjobsamerica.e2.org/wp-conten
Oregon 8th nationally t/uploads/2025/09/E2-2025-Clean-Jobs-A
merica-2025_final.pdf
Energy Innovation Oregon Modeling 10,000 jobs + $2.5B/yr GDP by 2050 from https://energyinnovation.org/2022/03/10/n
(2022) existing policies ew-oregon-energy-policy-simulator-modell
ing-shows-major-benefits-of-accelerating-
climate-policies/
Oregon Clean Tech Task Force (2024) $4–8B investment, 9,000–18,000 https://apps.oregon.gov/oregon-newsroom
manufacturing jobs potential /OR/GOV/Posts/Post/governor-kotek-rele
ases-clean-tech-manufacturing-task-force-
recommendations
ODOE Biennial Energy Report (2024) $19.5B Oregon energy spend https://energyinfo.oregon.gov/ber-energy-
numbers-2024
U.S. DOE Energy & Employment Report National clean energy job growth 4.2% https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2
(2024) 024-08/2024%20USEER%20FINAL.pdf
Brookings: Weatherization (2024) $0.90–$1.40 energy benefit per dollar https://www.brookings.edu/articles/the-u-s
invested -needs-better-more-accessible-home-wea
therization-programs/
Oregon HB 2065/2066 Microgrid Laws Bipartisan microgrid/resilience framework https://www.sustainablenorthwest.org/blog
(2025) /microgrids-oregon-4-2025
ODOT Oregon Transit and Housing Study 56% combined housing + transportation https://www.oregon.gov/odot/Planning/Do
(2022) cost burden cuments/ODOT_Transit_%26_Housing_St
udy_Final_Report.pdf
Brattle Group: Transmission Investment $1B transmission = 13,000 FTE-years, https://www.brattle.com/wp-content/upload
(2011) $2.4B economic activity s/2017/10/8209_employment_and_econo
mic_benefits_of_transmission_infrastructu
re_investmt_pfeifenberger_hou_may_201
1_wires.pdf
ODOE Biennial Heat Pump Report (2025) Median savings of $300 to $650 a year, https://www.oregon.gov/energy/data-and-r
depending on heat pump efficiency, for 92 eports/Documents/2025-Biennial-Oregon-
percent to 100 percent of the 49 million Heat-Pump-Report.pdf
homes analyzed
8

Source Relevance Link
The Economic Costs of Climate Change Heatwaves, like the 2021 Heatdome, https://www.sustainable-economy.org/eco
for Oregonians. A First Look. (2024) killed more than 100 people, and had nomic-costs-of-climate-change-in-oregon-
economic impacts between $1.3 billion a-first-look
and $4.6 billion due to mortality and health
effects. The economic ripple effects of
smoke-related health issues and lost
productivity are estimated to cost Oregon
up to $1 billion in GDP during heavy
smoke years.
9

---

Parent: [Appendix E: Submissions & Feedback](./INDEX.md) · PDF: [pp. 383-392](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=383)
