Solar Power helps reinvent Toledo.
By Judy Keen
The mission is being led by an unusual partnership of business, academia and
government that could be a model for other aging industrial cities. "We are
ready to do anything; we are ready to try anything," says University of Toledo
President Lloyd Jacobs.
Like many manufacturing cities, Toledo has struggled with the loss of jobs and
tax revenue, but it has taken pieces of its past as the glass capital to create
a new future in solar energy.
The payoff so far: At least 6,000 people work in the area's solar industry.
First Solar
(FSLR), which makes solar panels, was founded here and employs more than
1,000 at its 900,000-square-foot plant here. There are more than a dozen
solar-related start-up companies in the area. The University of Toledo is home
to top solar researchers and has a business incubator that provides business
services to solar entrepreneurs. It has graduated four solar companies and is
working with six more.
Owens Community
College, which had 13 students in its first solar class in 2004, has trained
255 solar installers.
"In the solar world, Toledo is a hot spot," says Xunming Deng, a physics
professor on leave from the University of Toledo. He's developing Xunlight, the
company he founded here in 2002 to produce thin, flexible solar panels. It has
about 100 employees.
"Toledo is really emerging as a hotbed of activity for the solar industry," says
Monique Hanis of the Solar Energy Industries Association, a trade group based in
Washington. She compares Toledo's solar commitment to that of New Mexico and
California. In California, an initiative was started in 2006 to steer $3 billion
in incentives to solar projects by 2016. New Mexico offers tax credits to solar
generators and has made expanding clean-energy jobs and exports a priority.
Toledo's evolution as a center of the solar industry is the result of a unique,
communitywide effort that includes representatives of the city, Lucas County,
Rep.>Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio,
economic development groups, the university and community college — with money
from the state and federal governments.
The impetus for collaboration came when Toledo's per-capita income, in the
nation's top 10 in the 1970s, sank to the bottom 10 by 2000, says Rick Stansley,
chairman of the board of the University of Toledo's Innovation Enterprises,
which helps companies turn university research into commercial products.
The officials from government, academia and business who are steering Toledo's
transformation call themselves "the partners" and meet monthly.
The partners decided about two years ago that the only way to revive the area's
economy as manufacturing jobs in the glass and auto parts industries disappeared
was to bring its major institutions together to think boldly and share
responsibility for creating jobs. Before then, Stansley says, "We didn't have a
common vision. People were parochial."
In the 1990s, says Ford Weber, president of the Lucas County Improvement Corp.,
community leaders were focused on keeping major employers in the city. "While we
were doing that, we really couldn't reinvent our economy," he says.
Stansley, one of the partners, says, "You can argue for incremental change if
things are good enough. Until they get bad enough, you can't talk about
transformational change."
Once things got bad enough — the unemployment rate was 3.6% in December 2000 and
12.1% in April — the effort to remake Toledo took root.
The university recruited renowned solar researchers. It tore down the
traditional separation between institutions of higher education and the cities
in which they're located, offering to share its expertise. "We belong to the
community, and our fate is linked inextricably to the community," Jacobs says.
"We're working daily to create jobs. In fact, it is our single most important
motivator."
A history of manufacturing
After it was founded in 1833 on the western edge of Lake Erie, Toledo became a
crossroads for railroads and a center for factories that made furniture,
carriages and glass. Owens Corning, Libbey Glass and other glass companies
originated here, giving Toledo its nickname: Glass City. Auto parts makers and
auto assembly plants followed. As jobs in those traditional manufacturing
industries receded in the 1980s, interest in solar energy was growing. Today,
Toledo still has glass factories, including a giant Libbey plant on the edge of
downtown, but there are plenty of unused warehouses and closed manufacturing
plants.
Frank Calzonetti, the university's vice president for research and economic
development, says the seeds of Toledo's solar industry germinated in the late
Harold McMaster's basement laboratory.
McMaster, a physicist, founded Glasstech Solar in 1984, then Solar Cells, which
explored with University of Toledo scientists ways to produce solar energy with
thin, lightweight and flexible film. The raw materials used in thin-film solar
products are cheaper and more versatile than those made from silicon. In 1999,
McMaster's company was sold and became First Solar.
McMaster's collaboration with the university, fueled by research grants and
focused on thin-film technology, was the foundation for today's team approach to
the solar industry here, says Al Compaan, a recently retired chairman of the
university's Department of Physics and Astronomy. Turning solar research into
jobs was "in the back of people's minds for most of this process," he says.
When First Solar went public in 2006 with an initial public offering of $20 a
share, Calzonetti says, it was "a defining moment. People said, 'Wow, this is
big.' " (The stock closed at $107.53 a share Monday, even though it's down
nearly 21% this year.) Since then, all of "the partners" have worked to put the
people, programs and policies in place to make this a birthplace and destination
for companies that make, design and install solar energy:
•The university has a School of Solar and Advanced Renewable Energy, a Center
for Photovoltaics Innovation and Commercialization, and a team of nationally
renowned researchers. This fall, it will offer the equivalent of an MBA for
students in physics and engineering who want to run solar companies. Its Scott
Park Campus is devoted to — and powered by — alternative energy, including the
state's largest array of linked solar panels.
"We start with education, we have research, we have incubation, we have
commercialization and we go all the way to economic development," says Nina
McClelland, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
•The Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority is spending millions of dollars to
double in size, improve railroad access and buy two mobile cargo cranes to make
it easier for solar manufacturers to ship their products, says President Paul
Toth.
•The Regional Growth Partnership has a venture fund that has helped spawn 68
companies, about a third of them in solar and other alternative-energy fields,
says President Steve Weathers.
•Owens Community College tailors its solar programs to meet the specific needs
of new companies and retraining workers who once worked in other industries.
Students range in age from "18 to 50 and beyond," says Joe Peschel, who works
with companies to devise customized training.
Dan Klear, 57, retired in 2008 from a
General Motors plant
after 37 years. He had always been intrigued by solar power: 26 years ago he
installed a solar thermal collector in his home. He took a solar class at Owens
and with two partners founded Superior Energy Solutions, which designs and
installs solar, wind and other sustainable energy systems.
In the next five to 10 years, Klear predicts, solar and wind power will become
"standard fare for a new home."
For some people here, advancing solar technology isn't just a job — it's a moral
imperative. Rosa Zartman, 23, a 2009 University of Toledo graduate with a degree
in applied physics, works in the school's solar lab. She says she's honored to
be "part of the solution to reduce humanity's impact on the world."
Working hand in hand
John Witte 56, is another beneficiary of Toledo's experiment in reinvention.
Advanced Distributed Generation, the solar design and installation company he
founded with two partners, was shaped in the University of Toledo incubator and
is still headquartered there.
Witte worked for companies in Arizona and Colorado that tested solar systems
before he went back to school for an engineering degree and founded his own
company. Now he can quiz scientists on campus about the technology he uses. The
business school did some marketing research for him. His company installed four
of the university's solar facilities. He's seeking a grant that would fund
research on smart grids. He often puts students from Owens Community College to
work so they can get on-the-job training.
Witte has 10 employees and hopes to add more soon. "We started as two men and a
truck," he says. "We just opened an office in Michigan and are about to open one
in Florida."
Deng says his company probably wouldn't exist without the collective commitment
to solar energy. It's rare, he says, for a university to put so much emphasis on
commercialization of its research, and unusual for one to give a faculty member
a five-year leave to build his own company.
Deng is principal investigator of a university group that is using a $1.4
million
Department of Energy
grant to find ways to make photovoltaic energy more affordable. If that's
successful, he says, Toledo could become an even more important player in solar.
The partners know their work won't ever really end. April's 12.1% unemployment
rate, though better than January's 13.6%, is a sign that old-style manufacturing
jobs are being lost in this city of 293,000 faster than green jobs are being
created.
Patrick McLean, the city's finance director, says the city income tax that makes
up about three-fourths of its general fund was $141 million last year — down
from a peak of $169 million in 2007 — and is projected to drop to $138 million
this year.
"Declining jobs mean declining income tax revenues, and declining revenues mean
declining city services," McLean says.
That adds urgency to Toledo's bid to redefine how industries mature by combining
forces to shove solar to the forefront, Stansley says. "We're taking something
that has typically been evolutionary and we're trying to artificially accelerate
it," he says.
If it works, he says, the creation of jobs in the solar industry will help solve
short-term problems, "but the most important thing we can do is create a culture
of innovation in our community."
Larry McDougle, president of Owens Community College, sees signs that both goals
can be met. "Solar is putting Toledo on the map," he says. "We used to be the
Glass City. We're becoming the Solar City."