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Home Politics American Politics

Building Back Better: Job Creation through Green Recovery Stimulus Investments

by Change Oracle
September 7, 2020
in American Politics, Other, Politics
0

Investing in the low carbon economy is a good investment that will supply jobs, cut costs and reduce pollution all while combating climate change. Covid-19 has helped to increase support for a green stimulus. This pandemic has augured an economic crisis and exposed the fault lines in our economy and our social structures. Investing in a more sustainable economy addresses a wide range of issues including the increasingly imminent threat of climate change. We have seen the return of 7.9 million jobs since June but many of the 11.5 million jobs lost since February may be gone for good. According to recent Labor Department data cited by CNN, the US economy is down 4.7 million jobs since 2017. A green infrastructure-focused recovery could create millions of jobs and dollar-for-dollar this type of stimulus spending has proven to be the best way to create jobs.

Investing in the low carbon economy will capitalize on a large and growing low carbon economy. This includes investments in renewables, power storage, the energy grid, building retrofits, electric vehicles, charging networks, job training, research, and development. The number of green jobs has been steadily outpacing the traditional economy and this is a trend that is expected to accelerate. According to an analysis from Environmental Entrepreneurs (E2), the clean energy sector has seen a 10.4 percent increase in jobs since 2010. It currently employs 3.3 million Americans and is one of the fastest-growing sectors in the country.

Last year the energy efficiency sector employed 2.4 million people. According to a WRI, fact sheet building retrofits could add millions more jobs. WRI also states that modernizing the electric grid could create 150,000 to 200,000 jobs each year and investing $12-16 billion in the grid annually could lead to $30-40 billion in economic activity each year. Investing in the transportation industry including electric vehicles could provide hundreds of thousands of jobs. According to the WRI for every $1 billion invested in public transportation 50,000 jobs could be created. Investing in tree restoration could create more than 150,000 jobs each year.

Clean energy investments offer many benefits. It is by far the largest investment opportunity and the most important way of reducing climate change-causing greenhouse gas emissions. Transitioning to renewables is a win-win that offers a cheaper, more reliable, and more resilient form of energy. Even before the global outbreak of the coronavirus, renewables were on track to replace fossil fuels. While the entire energy industry has been hit hard by the virus there is good reason to believe that renewables are in a far better position than fossil fuels.

A study by Cameron Hepburn, Brian O’Callaghan, Nicholas Stern, Joseph Stiglitz, and Dimitri Zenghelis titled, “Will COVID-19 fiscal recovery packages accelerate or retard progress on climate change?” reviewed more than 700 economic stimulus packages and surveyed 231 experts from 53 countries. This research indicates that stimulus spending on new green energy creates more than twice as many jobs per dollar than investments in fossil fuels. Their modeling suggests that 7.49 jobs are created for every $1 million invested in green energy projects. The same money invested in the dirty energy industry would create only 2.65 jobs. A 2009 report from the Department of Economics and Political Economy Research Institute shows that on average investments in clean energy created 2.8 times the number of jobs as the same money spent on the oil and gas industry.

Investments in renewable energy not only create jobs they reduce operating costs. We have already seen massive declines in the price of solar (85% in the last decade), wind (49% in the last decade), and battery storage. In most of the world wind and solar are now the least expensive forms of energy and the cost of clean energy will continue to decline as it is scaled.

Green infrastructure investment helps vulnerable lower-income communities by reducing costs and making them more energy secure. Clean energy investments would go a long way toward addressing environmental racism. Communities of color are more likely to be situated near sources of pollution from fossil fuel infrastructure. Replacing things like coal power plants and oil refineries with clean energy infrastructure would reduce the incidence of pollution-related death and disease in these communities. This would also decrease the disease and deaths associated with the coronavirus which has been exacerbated by the federal government’s systemic racism and elimination of environmental protections. Strategically investing in the green economy could also help to address the disparity that currently exists in the distribution of clean energy jobs.

However, to realize the job creation potential of the low carbon economy Congress must do far more than extend and expand federal clean energy investment tax credits. We need to see legislation like the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act which leveraged investments in clean energy and helped to power the economic recovery. The $90 billion that was invested in clean energy helped to create almost a million jobs and spawned hundreds of new companies. However, with the president and Republicans continuing their support of dirty energy there is no reason to believe we will see such legislation until there is a change in leadership.

Investing in the green economy will create jobs, slash costs and reduce pollution while making the energy grid, buildings, and communities more resilient. Failing to act is certain to push us past tipping points from which we may not be able to recover while prioritizing low-carbon infrastructure projects could pull us back from the brink of a climate catastrophe.

Related
Will We Learn from COVID-19 or Will We Go Back to Business-as-Usual?
Decarbonization Through Electrification Creates Jobs
Energy Job Losses in the US Due to COVID-19

Support for a Green Deal Increasing in the Wake of Covid-19
Net Economic Gains from Climate Action
Renewable Energy is Vital to our Future
The Booming Green Economy: The Number of Renewable Energy Jobs Crush Fossil Fuels

Renewable Energy is Driving the Green Jobs Boom
Green Jobs and Sustainability-Focused Employment Opportunities

The Trump Administration is Hurting US Renewables and Imperiling the Planet
Clean Energy is Essential for More than Just Climate Action


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Richard Matthews is a researcher, writer, journalist, consultant, and change activist. He has published thousands of articles and contributed to reports for policymakers including a United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) publication. His critical, interdisciplinary analyses have been cited by a wide array of academic publications. His research interests include carbon removal, nuclear power, and disinformation. He is currently spearheading Change Oracle’s Polycrisis Project (COPP).

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