| Going green may bring job boom in state
Sep 10 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Joe Napsha The Pittsburgh
Tribune-Review
Pennsylvania could gain about 86,000 jobs by investing in clean energy
technologies, according to a report released Tuesday by a coalition of labor
and environmental groups.
The report shows that the development of wind, solar and other clean energy
plants and other facilities in the state could create jobs for electricians,
carpenters, computer software personnel, installers, mechanics and metal
fabricators, said Bracken Hendricks, a senior fellow for the Center for
American Progress, a Washington think tank.
Hendricks, project manager for the report, said the jobs estimate is based
on an analysis of a suggested $100 billion investment nationwide in clean
air technologies.
United Steelworkers President Leo W. Gerard, whose 850,000-member union is
part of the coalition involved in the report, said the jobs creation by
clean technologies is a reality.
"We revived three (steel) plate mills that make plate for windmill
turbines," Gerard said yesterday in advance of a South Side town hall
meeting where he and other speakers were to discuss the report.
"Green Jobs for the Steel City" was the theme for the meeting.
The government's push to get automakers to build fuel-efficient vehicles in
the United States will help sustain a range of jobs in the steel, glass and
parts industries, Gerard said.
To reduce carbon emissions, the nation can retro-fit buildings with
American-made products, that will create "millions of jobs," Gerard said.
The USW participated in the release of the report produced by the Political
Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
Other groups involved were the Blue-Green Alliance, Sierra Club, Clean Air
Council, Union of Concerned Scientists, PennFuture and PennEnvironment.
The report's premise is that a two-year, $100 billion "green investment"
program could generate two million jobs nationwide, or nearly four times
more than if the same amount were spent in the oil industry. Work to
retrofit buildings for energy efficiency, expand mass transit and freight
rail, and build "smart" power grids, plus wind, solar and biofuels
facilities, could be funded.
The program could be paid for, the report said, with proceeds from auctions
of carbon emissions permits to industries.
Under the cap-and-trade system, companies would be given a limited number of
emissions allowances every year, and those companies could sell those
allowances to other polluters whose plants may not be in compliance. Caps
could be set to control emissions, and businesses could trade the permits.
But, the number of emission allowances would be cut every year, which would
force industries to cut emissions of carbon dioxide.
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