Tackling climate
change is good for the economy, good for business and good for people. This is
the narrative often pushed out by campaigners, researchers and governments
around the world.
But while measures to
curb emissions and reduce the impacts of rising temperatures will be good for
the many, the few who work in industries affected by climate policies risk
losing their livelihoods as the economy leans increasingly upon renewable energy.
Around the world,
there is a growing movement demanding a “just transition” for the workforce, so
that workers are not left in the cold as fossil fuels become consigned to the
past.
Peabody and the Navajo tribe
Arizona’s Navajo tribe
is one example of a community already fighting for a just transition. This
Native American group signed a lease in 1964 allowing Peabody Energy, America’s
largest coal company, to mine for coal on reservation lands. Now, 50 years
later, many are battling against the impacts of this deal.
When they signed the lease, the company agreed to “employ Navajo Indians when available in all positions for which…they are qualified”. Since then, Peabody has been a major employer of tribe members — 90% of the 430-person workforce of its Kayenta mine are native people.
Yet, while Peabody has provided jobs and money, poverty rates on the Navajo Nation
Reservation are more than twice as high as the Arizona state average, and benefits have come at
the expense of the local environment.
The Navajo tribe has
seen their water sources dwindle as Peabody has used the reservation’s aquifer
to turn coal into slurry and pump it down a pipeline.
Coal plants
surrounding the reservation have polluted the air, clouding the view of the nearby Grand Canyon and
other national parks. It is also a source of CO2, the primary contributor of
human-caused climate change.
EDITOR’S NOTE: I spent nine years as director of
the Citizens Coal Council and visited the Navajo Nation often to work with
native activists who fought to get Peabody Coal to at least follow existing
mining regulations. I can attest to the author’s descriptions. – W. Collette
Members of the Navajo
tribe, alongside the Hopi tribe that also lives in the area, are calling for a
“just transition” away from coal — one that will see old jobs tied to the
polluting coal industry replaced with clean and profitable work.
One group, the Black Mesa Water
Coalition, is trying to create
economic opportunities that will help to release the community from its
reliance on coal. For instance, they have tried to revive the traditional
Navajo wool market, developing partnerships with wool buyers and organizing an
annual Wool Buy.
It has also started a
solar project, which aims to install a series of 20MW to 200MW solar
installations on abandoned coal mining land, transforming the reservation’s old
role as an energy provider.
The idea has gone
global. In Ghana, for instance, the government has developed a program to plant
more trees, simultaneously improving the landscape, providing jobs, and
offering a diversified source of livelihoods for farmers. Peasant farmers and
the rural unemployed were involved in planting species such as teak,
eucalyptus, cassia and mahogany, generating 12,595 full-time jobs.
In Port Augusta, a
town of 14,000 people in South Australia, there is a plan underway
to install a solar thermal plant to replace the town’s coal industry. This
became even more urgent after the Alinta power station announced that it
would close,
potentially putting 250 jobs at risk.
A ‘just transition’
Worried communities
and environmentalists are not the biggest threats facing coal companies. The
price of coal has fallen thanks to a combination of market forces, including the explosion of cheap shale gas onto the scene,
and government regulations aimed at pushing it out of the energy
mix.
Earlier last year,
Peabody filed for bankruptcy. It joined around 50 coal producers that have already crumbled under the
increasing pressures facing the industry since 2012, including Arch Coal, Alpha
Natural Resources, Patriot Coal Corp and Walter Energy Inc.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Coal operators routinely declare
bankruptcy during market downturns. It helps them evade financial
responsibilities for mine workers’ health insurance and pensions.
If emissions targets
are to be met, coal has to go. From the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign to President Obama’s
anti-coal policies, efforts to fight climate change often hinge
on dismantling the industry.
Even if there is
sudden and rapid progress on carbon capture
and storage (CCS), sometimes
seen as coal’s lifeline technology, the industry looks set to to continue on
its long-term downward trend as long as efforts to tackle warming continue to
be scaled up. CCS has so far struggled to get off the ground. And in the face
of market forces and global policies, even Donald Trump’s pledge to revive the industry has been met
with raised eyebrows.
The human impact of
this decline is often overlooked. The long-term slump in the US coal industry
has led to unemployment, poverty and fragmented communities — and it is a pattern being repeated around the world.
Men and women who have
spent their lives working in the fossil fuel industry may not have the skills
to take part in emerging professions; these jobs may not be available in the
same places that jobs were lost; and they will not necessarily materialize at
the same time as workers find themselves out of work.
As concerns grow that
the livelihoods of miners and other laborers could be lost, the volume has been
raised on calls for a “just transition” for workers. This is where old jobs in
dying industries are replaced by new jobs that offer security and quality of
life, while not compromising the health of the planet, with safety nets in
place to minimize hardship in the meantime.
EDITOR’S NOTE: My friend Tony Mazzocchi (who
died in 2002) was a leader in the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union. He
could see the hand-writing on the wall and starting in the early 1980s started
calling for a “Superfund for Workers.”
Noting that billions were spent to clean up toxic waste, but nothing for workers displaced by phasing out polluting industries, Tony argued that “we should treat the workers at least as good as we treat the dirt.” – W. Collette
Noting that billions were spent to clean up toxic waste, but nothing for workers displaced by phasing out polluting industries, Tony argued that “we should treat the workers at least as good as we treat the dirt.” – W. Collette
Teresa Ribera, Spain’s
former secretary of state for climate change, and now director of IDDRI, a Paris-based think-tank, tells Carbon
Brief:
“If you are serious about climate transformation, you need radical changes, and radical changes mean you’re anticipating there are some things you don’t need anymore. For a very long time we have been insisting on the point that the transformation was good for business. But there may be many people who think about their personal concerns, their families, their jobs, and don’t care about profits of business.”
In China, for
instance, around 1.3 million people are set to lose their jobs, thanks to government plans to
close thousands of coalmines in an attempt to address overcapacity and tackle
climate change.
And while coal is the
obvious example, the impacts of climate change and policies will stretch across
various sectors of the economy.
A report by the Labor Network
for Sustainability suggests
that jobs in Maryland’s tourism industry in the US could be threatened by
higher temperatures, and along with it the jobs that rely on the activities and
revenue it brings. Healthcare workers could come under more pressure as air
quality deteriorates and short term changes in temperature cause harm to the
elderly and vulnerable.
History
This is not the first
time that the world’s economy has been subject to transformation, with the
potential for mass dislocation of workers. History offers numerous examples of
a transition from one way of working to another.
Following World War
II, millions of soldiers were demobilized and returned home. In the US, this
was a process that had gone badly a couple of decades before. The end of World War I left
many veterans were poor and unemployed throughout the Great Depression, as they
were unable to collect the financial compensation awarded by Congress until
1945.
This time around, President
Roosevelt determined that the transition to a peacetime economy should be
smoother and fairer, and signed a bill to provide benefits to war veterans,
commonly known as the GI Bill of
Rights.
A similar pattern is
now emerging with climate change. The workers who, for decades, have provided
the energy that has allowed society to develop face losing their jobs as the
source of this energy changes.
So far, it has been
trade unions at the vanguard of the movement to ensure that these employees are
not left out in the cold. Their work continues a long history of the unions fighting for improved environmental
conditions for their workers.
Walter Reuther, the
first president of the United Auto Workers Union, delivered a speech in 1962
where he emphasized the link between a healthy planet and the welfare of
workers.
“The labor movement is
about that problem we face tomorrow morning. Damn right! But to make that the
sole purpose of the labor movement is to miss the main target,” he said.
“I mean, what good is
a dollar an hour more in wages if your neighborhood is burning down? What good is
another week’s vacation if the lake you used to go to is polluted and you can’t
swim in it and the kids can’t play in it? What good is another $100 in pension
if the world goes up in atomic smoke?”
Many unions are now
also realizing that climate change and its impacts also affect workers. The
International Trade Union Confederation recently established a Just Transition
Centre to push for
workers’ rights. Its leader, Sam Smith, tells Carbon Brief:
“Let’s face it, it doesn’t really help us to solve climate change in a way that creates massive economic and social disruption. At the end of this, we want to come out not only with a world where emissions are down, but actually people have decent and better lives.”
The UN’s climate body,
the UNFCCC, is also working on the issue. Questions on how to create a
fairer future for the workforce emerged from an older discussion – called the
“response measures forum” in UN-speak – on how to ensure that countries did not
suffer unduly from their efforts to implement climate mitigation actions.
In the past, there has
been some skepticism about this endeavor, as talks often provided cover for
oil-producing countries, such as Saudi Arabia, to demand compensation for loss of income as oil demand shrinks. But the
discussion has now evolved to include just transitions, recognizing that the
negative impacts of climate action may not only be economic, but also social.
Practically, these
talks are limited, yet they have become a sounding board for detailed ideas on
what a just transition might look like, filling an information gap on what is
still a relatively new subject. Recently, for example, the UN has released
a technical paper on just transitions and held workshops on the topic.
Andrei Marcu, who
leads the response measures talks at the UN, tells Carbon Brief:
“To me, it’s not a movement right now. It’s very isolated, and very specialized. It’s not mainstream. Has it got into people’s habits, into procedures we have to do? The answer is clearly no.“What the UN system can do, when it gets out of the political mode and into practical, is start to create a body of knowledge, some order and discipline, in how you can recognize the mitigation actions that impact people, how you measure them, how you model them. I think it’s very much about knowledge building, capacity building, and finding common solutions.”
The International Labor
Organization (ILO), a specialized
UN agency for protecting the workforce, has also released non-binding guidelines on how to shift to a sustainable economy without harming
workers.
Resistance
This is EXACTLY the dilemma for many workers in polluting industries. |
The construction of
the Keystone XL Pipeline, designed to bring carbon-intensive oil from
Canada’s tar sands to the US, was a recent lodestone of the battle between
workers and environmentalists.
After Obama rejected the pipeline, several unions came out in support of the decision, saying that the president had “acted
wisely”, and stressing the importance of tackling climate change. Others have
been less impressed over the hesitation to build the pipeline.
The Laborers’
International Union of North America said it would “unlock good,
family-supporting jobs for America,” and accused the government of “caving to
fringe extremists”.
The US government has
poured millions of dollars into helping out former coalminers, but that apparently
didn’t help them to feel any less disenfranchised in the most recent US
election.
Many saw Donald Trump’s promises to bring back the coal industry as a
final lifeline, while Hillary Clinton’s promise to bring new opportunities to
areas affected by coalmine closures was interpreted as a threat.
At the recent round of
UN climate talks in Marrakech, Jochen Flasbarth, state secretary at the German
Environment Ministry, said:
“If you organize the transition in a way people feel ‘I’m left behind’, they will follow illiberal forces we see all over the world.”
The election result was testament to his words, with Trump’s
shouts of a revival resonating more convincingly around coal country than
Clinton’s promises to bring clean, sustainable jobs to the area.
“This election
outcome is more than West Virginia’s coal industry could have hoped for,” said Bill
Raney, president of the West Virginia Coal Association, following Trump’s
unexpected victory.
With many expressing doubt that Trump can reverse coal’s misfortunes, a just
transition could yet be the industry’s best hope.