At Nick Smith’s recent Blue Green convention they were all agog at the concept of green jobs, green economies and green technology. Smith was busy spending taxpayer funds on businesses he thought were good ideas. What puzzles me about these kind of initiatives is that there seems to be such limited discussion. Its as if suddenly someone has an idea, that idea grows like a big inflatable balloon, and then it flys and its out there before anyone’s had a chance to study it fully or apply cost benefits or look at alternatives. Its a trend. People in the cronyist government/ private sector power structures that exist today decide that the future is X, and from this self fulfilling prophecy we get a sort of lower case x that never actually fulfills its promise and in the end drifts away, and its place is taken by Concept Y and the cycle starts over again.
The Copenhagen Consensus Center asked Gürcan Gülen, a senior energy economist at the Center for Energy Economics, Bureau of Economic Geology at the University of Texas at Austin, to assess the “state of the science” in defining, measuring, and predicting the creation of green jobs. Gülen concluded that job creation “cannot be defended as another benefit” of well-meaning green policies. In fact, the number of jobs that these policies create is likely to be offset – or worse – by the number of jobs that they destroy.
On the face of it, green-job creation seems straightforward. Deploying more wind turbines and solar panels creates a need for more builders, technicians, tradespeople, and specialist employees. Voilà: simply by investing in green policies, we have not only helped the climate, but also lowered unemployment. Indeed, this is the essence of many studies that politicians are eagerly citing. So what did those analyses get wrong?
In some cases, Gülen finds that proponents of green jobs have not distinguished between construction jobs (building the wind turbines), which are temporary, and longer-term operational jobs (keeping the wind turbines going), which are more permanent. Moreover, sometimes advocates have assumed, without justification, that the new jobs would pay more than careers in conventional energy.
In other cases, the definition of a “green” job is so fuzzy that it becomes virtually useless. If a sustainability adviser quits a concrete factory and goes to work instead for a renewable energy project, can we really conclude that the number of green jobs has actually increased?
More disturbing is Gülen’s finding that some claims of job creation have rested on assumptions of green-energy production that go far beyond reputable estimates. Of course, if you assume that vast swaths of the countryside will be covered in wind turbines and solar panels, you will inevitably predict that a large number of construction jobs will be required.
But the biggest problem in these analyses is that they often fail to recognize the higher costs or job losses that these policies will cause. Alternative energy sources such as solar and wind create significantly more expensive fuel and electricity than traditional energy sources. Increasing the cost of electricity and fuel will hurt productivity, reduce overall employment, and cut the amount of disposable income that people have. Yet many studies used by advocates of green jobs have not addressed these costs at all – overlooking both the cost of investment and the price hikes to be faced by end users.
The companies calling for political intervention to create green jobs tend to be those that stand to gain from subsidies and tariffs. But, because these policies increase the cost of fuel and electricity, they imply layoffs elsewhere, across many different economic sectors.
Once these effects are taken into account, the purported increase in jobs is typically wiped out, and some economic models show lower overall employment. Despite a significant outlay, government efforts to create green jobs could end up resulting in net job losses.
Even if that is true, proponents might argue, investment in green jobs is nonetheless a good way to stimulate a sluggish economy. But Gülen shows that there are many other economic sectors, such as healthcare, that could actually create more jobs for the same amount of government investment.
[..] In the meantime, the public should be cautious of politicians’ claims that deploying today’s inefficient, expensive technology will result in windfall benefits at no cost.
Damn right we need to be cautious. From an article by Bjorn Lomborg.

3 responses to “Are You Listening Mr. Smith?”
Of course Smith is not listening. He knows full well his mission: to undermine the systen from within the goernment’s cabinet, with full support from his boss shonKey.
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Has there ever, and I do mean EVER, been a Green Initiative which has provided an overall net positive effect for society?
As far as I’m concerned this (Green Technology/Environmentalism) is just another tool in the arsenal to implement the Socialist dream – that being the establishment of the Global Socialist/Marxist State.
This is just another TAX to fund those ends.
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I seem to remember a study that claimed for every 1 ‘green’ job created 2.2 ‘real’ jobs were destroyed…
Politicans certainly prey on the fact that most people don’t understand the ‘broken windows fallacy’…
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