¶ Intro / Opening
This is partner content from Latitude.
¶ New Mexico's Collaborative Approach to Building
There's a lot of talk right now about how to build again in America. Power lines, energy projects, transit systems, housing. It's expensive, it takes forever, and even when you have the money and the permits, something still seems to get in the way. And that's led to a bigger question. Did we just forget how to build things?
That question has turned into a lively policy debate about how to make it easier and faster to get things done again. And so I turn to two people who are not debating it, they're living it. Uh Rob Black. I am the Cabinet Secretary for the New Mexico Economic Development Department. Farm my name is Jim Kenny and I am the Cabinet Secretary for the New Mexico Environment Department. Rob and Jim have a close partnership. Rob comes from business and utilities, Jim from the EPA.
I mean, one of the things that's fun with Jem is he's an environmentalist who really wants to be an economic developer. And I'm an economic developer who's really been environmentalist. So it's created this kind of really interesting dynamic between the two of us. There's this old story in American politics that you can either protect the environment or grow the economy.
One side builds things, the other side blocks them. And that tension has shaped decades of debate over energy, manufacturing, and growth. But in New Mexico, they don't really see it that way. Yeah, I think it's deconstructing that notion that you have to choose something, right? You have to choose between public health or environmental issues or economic prosperity. I think you're not working hard enough. Especially in government if you think one of those has to win over the other of those.
At the center of their approach is something they call white glove service. It's the government as concierge, fast, personal, and hands-on. If you need a permit, someone will walk you through it. If you're visiting the state, someone might literally meet you at the airport.
My business card that I use every day has my mobile number on it. And I give that to folks because that's I want to be that accessible. An example of Jim's white glove service. We had a company coming in, the the energy company from Australia. He The cabinet secretary picked them up at the airport and drove them around. That's the level of engagement that New Mexico brings to the table. And if people are looking for government to be a verb, then that's New Mexico.
We are seeing across this country a lot of people asking how can we build better, how can we build more in America, and that it's getting harder to build things across America, whether that's permitting challenges, uh local fights, political gridlock at many levels. When you look at that picture, why is New Mexico different? Rob? We haven't been as partisan in a lot of those sort of conversations here in the state. It's about how do we actually deliver and improve people's lives.
And being whether you're a Republican, whether you're a Democrat, whether you're from an urban area or a rural area, we all tend to lean in on how to do that. I I think that is something that's culturally maybe unique to New Mexico, but it's allowed us to create unique structures like our Renewable Energy Transmission Act.
which has helped us deploy transmission much faster than other areas of the country. We've put that kind of culture into policy and I think that's why we're able to move faster. Is it that it's getting harder or are people willing to get up from the table faster when they don't get their way? And I think there's a lack of sort of meaningful engagement and willing to solve problems. And I think what Rob is saying and what we're trying to show
here out out of the environment department is we won't be the first to get up from the table. Like we have to double down and work harder when the stakes are that much higher. So if we can't provide, you know, cheap and affordable or inexpensive and affordable energy uh to communities in New Mexico, then we have to sit at the table longer and work harder to find that solution.
And that's what I think has sort of been a fleeting moment in America is that people are willing to get up from the table and not find solutions, right? And demonize each other as opposed to solve the problem. And that's not what happens at all here in New Mexico. In this episode, produced in collaboration with the New Mexico Economic Development Department,
A conversation with Rob Black and Jim Kenny about how they're making government work for the clean energy economy. We'll talk about an approach that's helping attract billion-dollar fusion projects, expand geothermal development. the state's$65 billion sovereign wealth fund directly into clean energy and deep tech. We're really focused on how do we get to yes and then what else can we do?
We don't think of government as innovative, but I will say we've cracked the code on that here in New Mexico.
¶ State Policy and Climate Goals
When did you start really pursuing the the clean energy market? And what's at stake if you don't continue to attract these companies? The path to this policy approach a around renewable energy started as a state policy really with the Energy Transition Act, uh, I believe in twenty nineteen. The governor led that as an effort to uh create a renewable portfolio standard, uh really set the stage of to
create a regulatory path for decarbonization of the electricity and energy sector. That was how we then said, here's now we're gonna we're gonna build around this and we're gonna focus on areas Both from an RD perspective, but also deployment perspective, where we're not only doing the research and development, which New Mexico has done.
really well for a hundred years. I mean when you look back to uh Sandia National Labs, Los Alamos National Labs, the things that we've built here, vision, fusion, and fracking were all invented in New Mexico. And how do we integrate that into a lower carbon energy economy? And doing it in a way where we're doing the R and D here, but also then deploying the technology here. And so that I think from a state government perspective really started in twenty nineteen.
Yeah, and and I would add what's at stake. We are in a climate crisis. We need to continue to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. And that effort does again it it doesn't have to be mutually exclusive from bringing those energy technologies to bear in New Mexico.
You can reduce carbon emissions as well as diversify your energy portfolio. And here in New Mexico, diversifying away from those hydrocarbons, but not Eliminating hydrocarbon production, but diversifying away from hydrocarbons while we continue to think about the ways in which energy will be deployed not only for your your baseload power, you know, turning the lights on, your air conditioning, your heat, those essential necessities
But what about those users of of heavy industrial applications where it's in an intermittent power source, right? So we have to be able to power those peaker plants, we have to be able to power those electric arc furnaces.
We have to be able to power anything that needs it on demand. So we really do need to be thinking about what other fuels can we bring into our portfolio and w how do we still continue it to achieve the climate reductions as well as the localized air quality impacts that often come from combustion by products. And again, none of those things are mutually exclusive.
¶ Diversified Energy Portfolio Strategy
Yeah. And as a result, you've been pretty diversified in your approach, focused on everything from fusion to geothermal to carbon capture to hydrogen. How would you characterize this overall portfolio strategy? I think we're really trying to take a practical approach at decarbonization. And understanding that you have to have energy intensity as well for certain types of manufacturing, other types of activity. That also means we've passed the strictest oil and gas
Regulatory regime, really in the country, if not the world, here in New Mexico. So we've got the lowest carbon-intense barrel of oil and unit of natural gas. Anywhere. That was where we started, because that's what the energy mix we had already. We're number two in in oil production, number three in natural gas production in the United States.
We have the only uranium enrichment plant in the United States today is in New Mexico. We have the most productive geothermal well now operating in the US happening in New Mexico. So we're looking at what are those needs around firm load in particular. Um we've done great on on wind, we do great on solar.
But also where can we invest R and D side on on deployment side that's gonna create that firm load that really creates the opportunity for reshoring for uh whether it's data centers or other heavy users that allow us to grow our economy while ensuring we're meeting our climate goals as well. Everything that can be on the table that meets our legal requirements in in terms of state law to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is on the table.
So it's all of the above within the context of our very clear climate and innovative approaches.
¶ Regulatory Certainty and Market Speed
Nationally, we're having this conversation about taking a strategic deregulatory approach to make it easier to build a wide variety of clean energy resources. How have you navigated regulation in New Mexico? to both ensure the cleanliness of the oil and gas sector as much as possible, but also to make it easier to build and deploy a wide variety of resources. How how have you navigated that in New Mexico?
Yeah, on the regulatory part, you're right. There's a there's a big deregulatory agenda going on and that's creating regulatory uncertainty. And you know, if there's one thing that industry likes and we know that in government, is that certainty is is the most powerful thing that you can provide from from a government standpoint. And when we look at that pendulum swinging between federal administrations pushing in either direction. Here's New Mexico. Steady, certain.
And and moving forward to say that we are unwavering that we're going to pursue our climate goals. We're unwavering that we're going to collaborate with the oil and gas industry and other stakeholders to build out the most uh restrictive and pragmatic oil and gas regulations. So we've put all that into our state law, into our state rules, and we've insulated ourselves in New Mexico.
by having certainty through state law that's been in place now s since the governor started in twenty nineteen and we've just continued to to chip away and build that certainty i for the regulated industry or for for industry in general. I think also the fact that we have what what I would call as like sort of anti-backsliding measures, the things that we've codified into our state law gives industry certainty that
administration to administration here at the state level, we're going to continue to have that certainty. So you know when you invest the the rug isn't going to be pulled out from under you in the next administration in New Mexico. I think those are really big points. that we've been able to weather and and promote here in New Mexico. The other thing we've done around this is is focused on um speed to market.
And, you know, regulatory certainty is very important for business, but also so is speed. So in the last legislative session we passed several pieces of legislation that one wa that create a site readiness program where we're able to pre deploy and certify a site as an economic development site, help put infrastructure in advance prior to a customer even being identified. And then uh if a utility comes to me and says, I think this site would be really good for economic development
I have sixty days to review that, certify it as an economic development site. And then if if I do, it goes to the state public regulation commission and they will review that within six months to make a decision. So we've really tightened that timeline ability to deploy infrastructure quickly. We also passed a microgrid bill that allows uh users of over twenty megawatts, so uh think large advanced manufacturing or hyperscalers
to build microgrids very quickly in the state. And so we're really doing our best. They still have to meet uh twenty forty five uh carbon emissions standards. But we're really working on how do we help people deploy quickly so that we can be part of that economic development and that that deployment of that next technology.
¶ Sovereign Wealth Fund Deep Tech Investments
And if I understand it correctly, New Mexico has the s nation's second largest sovereign wealth fund. How big is that fund and uh how how is it directly investing in like deep tech and energy innovation? Stephen, the it it's very exciting to talk about what the S I C the State Investment Council is doing. So
Uh it it it's now about sixty five billion dollars in this fund. It's it is the second largest in in the US, only behind Alaska and we think we'll probably surpass Alaska in the next three years or so. What they've done is they've taken about two billion of that and put it into a venture fund that is working with the twenty-five to thirty largest.
Deep tech venture funds in the world. Think groups like Lower Carbon, Antler, Kosla, UP, and they're investing in those areas that align with the state. strategy. Our strategy where we think we have the right to win in New Mexico is around advanced energy, advanced computing, edge computing, space and defense. These are all areas because of Sandia National Lab, Los Alamos National Lab. Air Force Research Lab all located here. Our universities
We have a unique competitive advantage. So now the State Investment Council is funding these funds who have portfolio companies who are aligned with that strategy. Think Pacific Fusion. Pacific Fusion has three different funds that are funded by the State Investment Council funding that company. And part of the direction of the State Investment Council is give us a return, but also deploy capital or create jobs in New Mexico.
There are very few places in the world that have created this dynamic and you're really thinking about Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, Singapore, and now New Mexico, where you've paired a sovereign wealth fund with targeted investments aligned to a state strategy. So I think we're creating something that's very unique.
It's also why XGS Geothermal chose to build a hundred fifty megawatt billion dollar geothermal plant in New Mexico, because they were funded by a fund funded by the State Investment Council. So we're seeing incredible deal flow around deep technologies that we think will be part of changing the world. There's about four hundred million dollars in monies available right now simply around the water space.
And one thing we know is that most energy sources have a degree of they're a little thirsty on occasions. And so we need to bring water to that energy market. Uh so that we can continue our economic development. So what we've done is put about four hundred million in and sort of set aside dollars available in different pots of money. Maybe it's to bring
brackish water to more usable water supply. So it could go into like electrolysers for hydrogen, or maybe it could go into cement for wind turbines, right? Because why should we use fresh water from our communities if we could use brackish water or other lesser valued waters in terms of building out our energy and infrastructure environment?
So i it's not about just that direct certainty and speed to market, I think it's about those flanking pieces that bring capital that increase the ability to have a robust ecosystem around economic development.
¶ Comprehensive Financial Incentives and Support
So you've got this capitalization strategy. How does that pair with Tax credits, R and D tax credits, jobs credits, equipment credits. Like how do you put this package together? That's a great question. And you if you think about what happens with the state investment council, right? They're taking state dollars, putting them into company as equity investors. So now my job is to help that company be successful in New Mexico because that's going to give us a return to our investment.
But it's also gonna create jobs, it's gonna create economic opportunity on the ground. So we we have a research and development tax credit which can pay up to ten percent on qualified research expenses. We have a high high wage jobs tax credit that's refundable at eight and a half percent of your employees' wages for four years.
We're gonna pay between fifty and ninety percent of your employees wages for the first six months through in New Mexico on new hires, depending on where you do it and the type of job. Uh and then we have industrial revenue bonds which can waive property and equipment taxes for up to thirty years.
We also will help build capital infrastructure with our Local Economic Development Act uh program, which could help you build a building, rent a building, or make improvements. So when you layer all of those things on with a capital stack That means if you leave California, you don't leave Silicon Valley Capital because we're gonna make sure those folks are paying attention to you. It creates a really robust incentive structure.
What we can do here at the environment department if Rob comes to me as he's done in the past and says we need water for this community or we need to think about treating the water from this industrial process. And what we at the environment department do we also have a financing arm.
And we can bring um low interest loans and grants to m municipalities who want to be in support of that economic development, but uh we can also bring it to the private sector. So I'm typically sitting on about a hundred million dollars or more.
in point zero one percent interest monies for municipal governments and two point three seven five percent interest rate for the private sector thirty year fixed beats beats any bond requirements typically and we have that money available that we can stack and I like the idea of of uh this short stack of pancakes kind of forming here where we can we can bring that out as a financial package not only through economic development but through the environment department.
and our tax and rev department and and sort of say here's everything that we can do, here's a financial strategy that supports your investment. So again, it's that whole of government coming together to solve a problem.
¶ Establishing New Mexico as Fusion Hub
I'm really interested to hear more about what is happening in fusion. You know, you wanna make New Mexico the center of the fusion industry. What does that vision look like through the end of the decade and what kind of activity are you seeing right now? Well we expect we we want New Mexico to be the center of fusion if not for the US, for the world. You know, we're very pleased to announce that Pacific Fusion was moving their R and D facility here.
Um, we're in conversations with a variety of other fusion companies. And again, this lay this talks a little bit about how we're doing it. So just a month ago, the state investment council created a new fund of over three hundred million dollars, part with lower carbon energy. uh to fund fusion and advanced energy projects in New Mexico. So, you know, we're bringing that equity to the table. Uh, we've got San Diego National Labs and Los Alamos National Labs.
So if you think about companies like Pacific Fusion who use magnet-based fusion technologies based off of the Z machine, uh which again was the first place to do kind of fusion here on on Oh. That alignment and that proximity to be work with those scientists is a big draw for New Mexico. Los Alamos National Labs, on the other hand, is really key to the laser-based fusion approach. So I think bringing those sort of
aspects together gives us a very powerful, unique value proposition. And then you layer that on with access to capital and New Mexico becomes very attractive. Jim, how are you approaching fusion from the environment department perspective? We r we license uh fusion facilities here in New Mexico out of the environment department. And we uh have shown with Pacific Fusion and we're in the process of doing this is
w that we can be quicker, faster and just as protective as any other state in issuing the permits. So It takes us about five to six months to maybe get one of those permits out the door and other states it's taking eighteen to twenty four months to get those permits out the door.
Part of that is um we've been very proficient in how we regulate those radioactive type based energy sources here in New Mexico and The second piece is we have such deep and vast experience here in the environment department with radioactive type uh source material, um whether that's in X-ray machines or CAT scan machines.
But we've also, you know, being that we're the birthplace of the nuclear industry, we're still dealing with some of the adverse impacts of nuclear uh issues here in New Mexico. So we recognize that the past needs to be validated, like we need to continue to work in in the past in cleaning up those nuclear type uh issues that are still plaguing New Mexico.
But we've built up such an expertise in our department around these topics and we understand the future is in cleaner energy like Pacific Fusion will be developing. And we again can regulate those and get those safe uh licenses out the door faster than most other states. So again, full full service, full touch, recognizing the past but understanding that our clean energy future is gonna be founded in in these kinds of technologies.
¶ Key Factors Attracting Companies
So we've talked about some of the building blocks. I wanna hear more about what companies are looking for. And I know it's really highly dependent on the type of company and industry we're talking about, but are there any commonalities? around what when companies are looking at a pl place to locate their facilities, their headquarters, build their businesses, what do they need? And particularly in the clean energy industry.
So they need access to to power, uh and they want green power. So again, having a r renewable portfolio standard means if you're locating a company here, you're gonna get that from in New Mexico. They need uh to be able to build and and get to market quickly. So they want sites to be ready to go.
And so that's why we've created a a site readiness strategy where we're investing in advance even before a company shows up and making sure we've got industrial sites that can be quick to market, you know, less than a year to market as opposed to two or three years out. Um we mentioned regulatory certainty. That's really important. Um if you're a renewable energy company.
We've got a demand side for you as well, right? Because you we've got we need help meeting our renewable portfolio standards. Our utilities do, our co ops do. So you've got a place to deploy in f here as well. And then I'm gonna make you the best tax deal you can in the country to manufacture your equipment. And I'm gonna give you rail infrastructure that will get you to seventy five percent of the United States population within two days.
So we've got the logistics hub, we've got the tax structure for you, and we've got a market for you. And then we layer that with capital. I think there's a couple other pieces that we're hearing from companies, and I'm hearing specifically at the environment department from companies. You know, many of the folks we're attracting to New Mexico are spending a significant amount of money on intellectual property.
Um whether that those are proprietary catalysts or they're prop proprietary processes in the manufacturing and deployment of whatever it is, it could be electrons or it could be something else. And they want to understand that that wherever they're setting up that there is value That the the state government understands the value of that IP coming to that location.
And in one instance a company said to me they were being courted by many other states and and what they found in New Mexico was a deep rooted understanding that the intellectual property that they've spent millions and millions and millions of dollars on was going to be valued here in the state not only by law and rule, but by the people that they're dealing with.
Inherent in that is we have two of the nation's uh top leading national laboratories here, uh Los Alamos National Labs and Sandia National Labs. So from state government to the laboratory setting, there's a lot of understanding about what that intellectual property means and how we can safeguard and protect it.
And I think we've created that again, that ecosystem where we're valuing the investment and we're valuing what people are bringing here and wanting to stand up to employ new Mexicans. And that's that's a great feeling. The other thing that that businesses are really looking for is a workforce.
And I think that's something that's really is unique in New Mexico. While we have the highest density of R and D spend in the US here in New Mexico, we also have the most PhDs per capita in the United States live here in New Mexico. But if you're going to do geothermal and you need to be able to drill holes really well, you won't find a better workforce for doing that.
than the Permian Basin. And that we share that with Texas here in New Mexico. And so you've got a great workforce for geothermal, We have the nuclear history here with the labs and uh your Renko waste isolation pilot plant. We have people are trained in those technologies, trained in nuclear cleanup and gym shop and uh in the private sector. Um And so we have a really deep bench for workforce as well. That's something that uh employers really want.
¶ Investing in Workforce and Livability
That brings me to another question. Uh when we think about the availability of a skilled workforce, I mean one of the challenges that you hear from manufacturers in the US is that um it can be hard to find skilled workers or they can't afford to live in the place where they need to set up the manufacturing facility. And so it brings us this to this bigger set of policies around
uh childcare, college tuition, affordable living. How are you thinking about making New Mexico a more livable place to continue to keep the kind of skilled workers that you have in the state?
It's something that we're very proud of. It's something that because of uh long-term investments in the state that help build that sovereign wealth fund. That sovereign wealth fund not only invests in companies that are helping create jobs, it also pays uh for uh us as the only state in the country that provides free two and four year college tuition for anybody who graduates from a high school in New Mexico, you can go to free free college in the state.
as well starting November first of this year. We will provide universal free childcare and early education programs for any family in the n in New Mexico, only place in the United States. So we've taken this cradle to career approach of investing in our people. And that's gonna create the workforce and frankly, those are benefits that if you're hiring people or you're bringing your people from California or New York to live in New Mexico.
that's a benefit you as a company now are giving to your employees without having to pay for it because the state's gonna pay for it for you. And so those are some of the things that we think we've created a really unique value proposition in New Mexico. coupled with the fact that it's one of the cheapest places to buy a home, own a home. Uh we have some of the lowest electricity rates in the country, uh while still having a strong renewable portfolio.
It's it's uh it's a place that allows people to thrive and you can also get up on a ski slope very fast. So there's a lot of great, beautiful things about the quality of life as well.
¶ New Mexico's Vision for the Nation
So I'm hearing that I mean there's so much thought and care that goes into this economic development strategy. What do you um want to prove to the rest of the country? I mean, there are plenty of states where the cost of living is too high, maybe infrastructure is overly politicized, there's a lot of local opposition, whatever it might be. Um, what are you what are you proving to the rest of the country in New Mexico? We can build the things we need to build.
We can do it in a way that is equitable, that achieves our climate goals and our economic goals. That you can be a yes and environment. It doesn't have to be binary. It can be a lot of people can win. Yeah, and I I'll add to that when I render it down to answer your question, Stephen, I think it's just simply this. What we're proving in New Mexico is that we're both
White collar intellectual kind of people, but blue collar wrench turners here. Like we we in government can think of the policies, get them codified, but we know how to implement. We are an action-oriented government who knows how to think, craft, and implement policy. And that translates into the results you just heard from Rob. Rob Black is New Mexico's Secretary of Economic Development. Jim Kenney is Secretary of New Mexico's Environment Department.
This episode was produced in collaboration with the New Mexico Economic Development Department, which works to expand opportunity through innovation, infrastructure, and investment across the state. To learn more, visit www.d.neumexico.gov or just visit the link in the show notes.
