The transition from high to low carbon energy infrastructure will deliver a
net increase in global employment of 2.7 million jobs by 2030, despite the
inevitable loss of jobs in declining fossil fuel industries.
That is the conclusion of a
major
new study released yesterday by Greenpeace and the European Renewable Energy
Council, which predicts that fast-expanding renewable energy industries, as well
as energy efficiency programmes, will prove more labour intensive than the
conventional energy technologies they replace, helping to boost employment
worldwide.
The report is partly based on research from the Institute for Sustainable
Futures at the University of Technology, Sydney and a low carbon scenario set
out by Greenpeace last year which outlined how the world could deliver a
nine-fold increase in renewable energy supplies by 2030.
It calculates that a global switch to renewable energy technologies would
save 10 billion tons of carbon emissions and create 2.7 million more jobs by
2030, when compared to the business-as-usual scenario adopted by the
International Energy Agency (IEA).
The report predicts that favourable policy measures and a meaningful
international climate change agreement could result in employment across the
renewable energy sector rising from 1.9 million currently to 6.9 million people
worldwide by 2030, while energy efficiency programmes could result in a further
1.1 million jobs. It added that the wind energy sector alone could employ over
two million people within the next 20 years.
It also warns that even under the business-as-usual scenario the number of
people employed by energy industry would fall by half a million by 2030,
primarily as a result of a 1.4 million contraction in the number of people
employed by the coal industry as a result of increased mechanisation.
Christine Lins, secretary general of EREC, said the report provided further
evidence that the renewable energy sector could play a key role in tackling
rising unemployment caused by the global recession. “There are already 450,000
people working in the renewable energy industry in Europe, representing a
turnover of more than €45 billion,” she observed. “This research proves that
renewable energy is key to tackling both the climate and economic crises.”
Her comments were echoed by Guy Ryder, general secretary of the International
Trade Union Confederation, who said that governments now had a responsibility to
put in place plans to ensure a “just transition” from high to low carbon jobs.
“The union movement, as well as the authors of this report, believe ambitious
climate action by world leaders can and must be a driver for sustainable
economic growth and social progress,” he added.
Author: James Murray
Website: http://businessgreen.com
Link: http://feeds.businessgreen.com/c/554/f/7118/s/6231458/l/0L0Sbusinessgreen0N0Cbusiness0Egreen0Cnews0C22494430Creport0Eswitch0Elow0Ecarbon0Eenergy/story01.htm




No comments yet
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL
Leave a comment