Mail
Magazine 24
The
Green Job Myth
“We
can invest $15 billion a year
in renewable sources of energy … to create 5 million new jobs, new
energy jobs,
all across [the] country, jobs that pay well, jobs that can’t be
outsourced,” candidate
Obama promised.[i]
President
Obama spent $90 billion
of his stimulus package on green energy projects, but according to the
Labor
Department, just 9,245 people landed new jobs in the “green energy”
industry by
the end of the third quarter of last year,[ii] well short of the
200,000 jobs
that President Obama told the American people would be generated each
year. In
fact, according to the American Wind Energy Association, the wind
industry has
lost about 10,000 jobs since 2009[iii], even though it doubled its
production
since 2008.[iv]
What
are Green Energy Jobs?
The
Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) of the Department of Labor is responsible for defining green jobs
under
Title X of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, signed
into law by
President George W. Bush. According to BLS, the “definition of green
goods and
services includes jobs in businesses that produce goods and provide
services
that benefit the environment or conserve natural resources. These goods
and
services are sold to customers, and include research and development,
installation, and maintenance services.” More specifically, the term
includes
jobs generated from:
Energy
projects from renewable
sources including wind, biomass, geothermal, solar, ocean, hydropower,
and landfill
gas and municipal solid waste.
Energy
efficiency projects
including energy-efficient equipment, appliances, buildings, and
vehicles, as
well as products and services that improve the energy efficiency of
buildings
and the efficiency of energy storage and distribution, such as Smart
Grid
technologies.
Pollution
reduction and removal,
greenhouse gas reduction, and recycling and reuse projects. These are
products
and services that reduce or eliminate the creation or release of
pollutants or
toxic compounds, or remove pollutants or hazardous waste from the
environment,
reduce greenhouse gas emissions through methods other than renewable
energy
generation and energy efficiency, such as electricity generated from
nuclear
sources, reduce or eliminate the creation of waste materials; collect,
reuse,
remanufacture, recycle, or compost waste materials or wastewater.
Natural
resources conservation
projects, including organic agriculture and sustainable forestry; land
management; soil, water, or wildlife conservation; and storm water
management.
Environmental
compliance, education
and training, and public awareness projects. These are products and
services
that enforce environmental regulations, provide education and training
related
to green technologies and practices, and increase public awareness of
environmental issues.
BLS
compiled a list of 333
industries that can be classified as green, and those who are employed
in those
industries can be counted as “green workers.” Thus, the definition is
extremely
broad and includes both direct jobs and indirect jobs. Some examples of
jobs
considered to be green by this definition are[v]:
A
person who sweeps the floor in a
solar panel manufacturing facility
A
driver of a hybrid bus
A
school bus driver
An
employee who fills the bus with
fuel
An
employee involved in waste
collection or water and sewer operations
A
clerk at a bicycle repair shop
A
manufacturer of rail cars
An
oil lobbyist whose company is
engaged in environmental issues.
An
employee of an environment or science
museum.
Below
are examples of industries
that BLS has classified having “Green Goods and Services”:
Therefore,
it is not surprising
that the 2010 data (2010 is the base year) show the total “green job”
estimate
to be 3.1 million, or over 2 percent of total employment. These 3.1
million
jobs are primarily preexisting jobs that have been reclassified as
“green”.
However, what is surprising is that through three-quarters of 2011 only
9,245
new “green” jobs were generated when the White House touts generating
over
200,000 new jobs by 2010.
In
2008, Presidential Candidate
Obama promised to create 5 million green energy jobs over 10 years by
investing
in solar, wind and other renewable energy sources. According to the
White House
by the end of 2010, just 225,000 green jobs had resulted from the
stimulus
program although a record $90 billion was spent on clean energy.[vi]
Green
Job Expenditures
The
definition of green jobs matter
because money is involved in training, subsidies and other
disbursements. For
example, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act provided the Labor
Department with $500 million for grants in research and training for
green
jobs, awarded to state work force agencies, community colleges, and
nonprofits.
The grants were to train workers in green jobs such as hybrid- and
electric-car
auto mechanics, weatherization of buildings, and solar panel
installation. But
program success was not very good. For example, Jane Oates, Assistant
Secretary
at the Labor Department, reported that out of 53,000 people who
participated in
the green jobs training, only 5,400 (10.2 percent) were employed in
those
positions at the end of 2011.[vii]
Another
example is the military’s
$510 million program to develop biofuels for ships and tanks. The
biofuels are
costing the American taxpayer almost 8 times that of conventional fuels
($27
per gallon compared to $3.50 per gallon) at a time when the Department
of
Defense’s budget is being drastically cut. But, the program has created
green
jobs due to the production of these biofuels.[viii] According to
President
Obama, “We’re making new investments in the development of gasoline and
diesel
and jet fuel that’s actually made from a plant-like substance—algae.
Believe it
or not, we could replace up to 17 percent of the oil we import for
transportation with this fuel that we can grow right here in the United
States.”[ix] That may be true, but at what cost?
The
Obama administration also
provided renewable manufacturers and consumers with a number of tax
advantages.
In January 2010, the Obama administration announced it had awarded $2.3
billion
in Recovery Act Advanced Manufacturing Tax Credits to “clean”
manufacturers.
The 183 projects were to produce over 17,000 jobs and supported
industries such
as solar and wind energy, building efficiency and energy management,
and smart
grid technologies. In 2009, the federal government began offering
consumers’
tax credits up to $7,500 for purchasing electric plug-in cars, which
did little
to help the industry due to the high cost of the vehicles and problems
with
their operation–the Chevy Volt had a tendency to catch fire and the
plug-in
hybrid car’s batteries caught fire after some government crash tests.
In March
2012, General Motors announced a five-week suspension of the Volt’s
production
due to low sales numbers.[x]
The
National Renewable Energy
Laboratory (NREL) tracked the Obama Administration’s 1603 treasury
grant
program from its inception in 2009 through Nov. 10, 2011 in a report
entitled,
Preliminary Analysis of the Jobs and Economic Impacts of Renewable
Energy
Projects Supported by the 1603 Treasury Grant Program.[xi] They found
that $9
billion in economic “stimulus” funds to solar and wind projects were
distributed between 2009 and 2011 that created 910 “direct” jobs. That
means
that it cost about $9.89 million to establish each of those long-term
jobs,
covering the technologies’ 20 to 30 year life. However, adding in the
4,200 to
4,600 “indirect” jobs that NREL indicated were created, the cost is
lower–about
$1.6 million per job. According to NREL’s report, the $9 billion
covered 23,692
photovoltaic and 197 large wind projects.[xii]
Conclusion
BLS
has defined green jobs, as
directed by legislation, and many of those jobs are a reclassification
of
existing jobs. Further, the classification of a green job can be rather
murky.
For example, a corn farmer counts as a green job if he sells his
produce or a
part of it to an ethanol plant, but is not green if the produce is sold
as
food. And, according to BLS, new “green” jobs seem to be extremely few
despite
the broad definition and the hoopla from the White House regarding the
“green
jobs” that its programs have created. Further, these green jobs are
costing the
American taxpayer dearly–the 1603 grant program, for example, cost the
American
taxpayer $1.6 million per job, according to NREL, a national laboratory
of the
Department of Energy.
[i]
Washington Examiner, Green
energy jobs far short of Obama goal, May 26, 2012,
http://washingtonexaminer.com/article/1314901#.UEkQk7KPXSh
[ii]
Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Green Goods and Services employment, 2010, and third quarter 2011,
http://www.bls.gov/web/ggqcew/ggqcew_supple_2010.pdf and
http://www.bls.gov/ggs/ggqcew_supple_2011Q3.pdf
[iii]
American Wind Energy
Association, U.S. Wind Energy Annual Report, year ending 2009,
http://www.awea.org/_cs_upload/membercenter/membersecurity/documents/market_reports/15912_1.pdf
and
[iv]
Washington Examiner, Green
energy jobs far short of Obama goal, May 26, 2012,
http://washingtonexaminer.com/article/1314901#.UEkQk7KPXSh
[v]
Darrell Issa explores Obama
administration definition of Green Jobs, June 7, 2012,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0IQ_vI9WZ0&feature=youtu.be
[vi]
Business Week, Ohio’s
Gas-Fracking Boom Seen Aiding Obama in Swing State, September 4, 2012,
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-09-03/ohio-s-gas-fracking-boom-seen-aiding-obama-in-swing-state#p1
[vii]
Market Watch, The focus on
green jobs is misplaced, September 6, 2012,
http://www.marketwatch.com/STORY/THE-FOCUS-ON-GREEN-JOBS-IS-MISPLACED-2012-09-06
[viii]
Ibid.
[ix]
Manhattan Institute, The
Expensive, Elusive Green Job, September 2012,
http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/ir_20.htm#.UE5ec7KPXSh
[x]
Ibid.
[xi]
National Renewable Energy Laboratory,
Preliminary Analysis of the Jobs and Economic Impacts of Renewable
Energy
Projects Supported by the 1603 Treasury Grant Program, April 2012,
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy12osti/52739.pdf
[xii]
CNSNEWS, $9 billion in
‘Stimulus’ for Solar, Wind Projects Made 910 Final Jobs–$9.8 Million
per Job,
June 20, 2012,
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/9-billion-stimulus-solar-wind-projects-made-910-final-jobs-98-million-job
Source:
Institute for Energy
Research, IER
Read
this and other articles at Mail Magazine
24
|