WASHINGTON (By Matthew Wheeland, (BusinessGreen) July 2, 2009
― Two new reports on the impacts of moving to a
low-carbon economy show putting money toward energy efficiency, building
retrofits and renewable energy projects can create 1.7 million new jobs,
significantly more than the same investment in fossil fuel industries.
New reports argue
investment in low carbon technologies can create four times more jobs than
same level of spending in fossil fuel industries
The reports were released yesterday in tandem by four groups: Green for All,
the Natural Resources Defense Council and the University of Massachusetts at
Amherst's Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) worked together on a
study entitled Green Prosperity, investigating how green investments can
raise living standards, while PERI also worked with the Center for American
Progress on a report investigating the Economic Benefits of low carbon
technologies.
Together, the reports show the economic, environmental and social impacts of
investing about $150 billion per year in energy efficiency and clean energy
technologies; that number includes funding from the federal stimulus package
signed into law in February as well as the proposals in the Waxman-Markey
climate bill that is currently making its way through Congress.
"Investing [$1m] in clean energy... will generate 16.7 jobs;
correspondingly, investing in fossil fuels generates about 5.3 jobs,"
explained Robert Pollin, the co-director of PERI and the lead author of both
studies, in a press conference yesterday. "When you net the two things out,
you're going to get about 12 incremental jobs per million in spending by
investing in clean energy. "
In addition to creating these new jobs - enough to cut the current
unemployment levels in the US by one per cent, from the current 9.4 per cent
- and trimming the country's carbon footprint, the investment proposed in
the reports will also make well paid labour available on a large scale to
working-class, blue-collar and less-educated workers.
Phaedra Ellis-Lampkin, the chief executive of Green for All, explained that
almost 900,000 of the estimated 1.7 million jobs created through these
investments would be accessible to people with high school educations or
less. The new clean economy jobs would offer a solid job ladder for workers
to steadily improve their wages as they grow their skills.
"This is an opportunity" to change how our economy works, Ellis-Lampkin
explained, "and it's our obligation to put policies in place to allow this
economy to grow differently."
Importantly, Ellis-Lampkin and Peter Lehner, the executive director of the
NRDC, both highlighted the fact that these job-growth estimates are net
gains, factoring in jobs displaced in the fossil fuel industries as the
economy shifts to renewables. The loss of existing jobs is a regular
criticism of green-collar jobs proposals.
There are three prongs to where these investments should occur, Pollin said.
The biggest and most immediately beneficial is energy efficiency retrofits
for existing buildings: those projects make up 40 per cent of the funding in
the $150 billion annual programme.
"Retrofits right now is a known technology," Pollin said, one that "creates
fast returns with low risk, creates a lot of jobs in a construction industry
that is flat on its back".
Making homes, schools and workplaces more energy efficient also offers a
significant boon to residents and business owners: Ellis-Lampkin estimates
that boosting energy efficiency will decrease the cost of living for
low-income households by three to four per cent per year as energy bills
shrink.
The report calculates that an average-sized single-family home in the United
States would require an investment of as little as $2,500 in
energy-efficiency retrofits to produce a cost savings in the range of 30
percent per year.
Similarly, the reports claim public transportation investments should allow
municipalities to get more for their dollar: Pollin said that every mile
traveled on public transit produces half the greenhouse gases than in a
private vehicle, and costs about half the amount to travel the same distance
in a private vehicle.
"In the immediate term, energy efficiency is going to be the best
investment, " Pollin said. "Then, for the next decade we're going to see the
creation of the clean energy economy."
Because these investments originate primarily from the private sector, the
groups cited the importance of federal policy to shift the markets toward
low-carbon technologies.
"This is not a question of whether the private sector spends the money, it's
a question of if we spend it smart or stupid," said Peter Lehner, executive
director of the Natural Resources Defense Council. "If we spend it well it
will have tremendous impacts throughout the economy."