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percent while overall jobs declined 2.2 percentr in the state between 1998 and according to new research bythe . Ohio was part of a nationap trend that saw job growth in the clean energyy economy outperforming overall job growth in 38 states and the Distric of Columbia between 1998and 2007. Nationally, jobs in the cleanj energy economy grew at a rateof 9.1 percenyt while total jobs grew by only 3.7 percent over the same In 2007, there were more than 35,250 jobs in Ohio’s clean energy economy – about the same as at , the state’ws largest employer. Pew’s reporty is titled “The Clean Energy Economy: Repowering Jobs, Businesses and Investments Acroses America.
” It attempts to present a cleadr definition of the clean energy economy and conduct a countg across all 50 states ofthe jobs, companies and venturr capital investments that supply it. “Ohio’s clean energy sectort has been a bright spot in an otherwisdedifficult economy,” said Tom Bullock, Ohio representativde for the Pew Environment Group, in a presse release. He added that Ohio attracted morethan $74 millioh in clean technology venture capital in the last three years.
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