August 14, 2023

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Who wins and who loses in the transition from 'dirty' to 'clean' jobs?

Credit: CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: CC0 Public Domain

New research by Wake Forest Associate Professor of Economics Mark Curtis looks at the implications for U.S. workers in the transition to a low-carbon economy.

The paper, "Workers and the Green-Energy Transition," looks at carbon-intensive industry and the transition to green . Curtis and co-authors R. Jisung Park, an assistant economics professor at the University of Pennsylvania, and Layla O'Kane, a senior economist with the group Lightcast, analyzed data on 130 million U.S. workers and their 300 million unique job transitions.

Using workers' job titles, company names and industries, the study first identifies green or "clean energy" jobs as jobs in solar, wind, renewables and electric vehicle manufacturing. It also identifies carbon-intensive or "dirty" jobs as those in fossil fuel sectors. It then examines the transitions that workers make away from dirty jobs and the transitions that workers make into "clean energy" jobs.

When it comes to shifting from dirty to green jobs, the research findings show:

These findings add to the growing body of research on green jobs and the labor market consequences of environmental policies.

"As green jobs continue to grow, we should expect an increasing number of workers in dirty jobs will move to ," said Curtis. "However, workers without a college degree and older workers are significantly more likely to remain in carbon-intensive jobs. There also may be limits to the extent that local labor markets can absorb the workers who will be displaced by the shift away from fossil fuels."

The results suggest that Electric Vehicle (EV) and are an important source of employment opportunities for dirty job workers. By 2021, half of dirty-to-green job transitions were into the EV / EV battery sector. Of workers leaving dirty jobs, approximately 30% go into manufacturing. The prevalence of dirty-to-dirty transitions in some areas of the country provides a guide to policymakers looking to identify areas of the country most at risk from the green energy transition.

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