ENERGY
& ENVIRONMENT
Biden's green energy plans clash with pledge to
create union jobs
Labor groups are cautioning that the president's plan
to hitch the jobs recovery to massive green energy investment could backfire.
By REBECCA
RAINEY and ERIC WOLFF
04/02/2021
06:55 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/04/02/biden-green-jobs-plan-unions-478986
President
Joe Biden touted his $2 trillion infrastructure plan as a
"once-in-a-generation" effort to tackle climate change while creating
millions of "good paying jobs." Some unions warn that it may
ultimately cost a lot of jobs, too.
Labor
groups, echoed by Republicans in Congress, are cautioning that Biden's plan to
hitch the jobs recovery to massive green energy investment could backfire
because of the quality of employment it will create and the economic
devastation it could cause on rural communities.
The
president's push to decarbonize the economy will mean eliminating the kind of
steady, fixed-location jobs that come with coal mines or fossil fuel power
plants. The Biden plan would require the construction of vast numbers of solar,
wind and battery projects, along with potentially new pipelines for carbon
dioxide and hydrogen. But construction jobs are temporary and require mobility,
and once those projects are complete, they'll need few workers to maintain them
and keep them operating.
"The
jobs that he talked about yesterday were construction jobs," said Phil
Smith, a spokesman for the United Mine Workers of America, a day after the
Biden speech. "We're not seeing anything concrete that our members can
look at and say, 'OK, that's where I'm gonna fit in.'"
The complaints
underscore the difficulty Biden will have in pursuing his two most ambitious
goals: reviving the labor market by generating millions of jobs for unions —
which traditionally thrive in old-line industries — and transforming the U.S.
into a clean economy where electric vehicles and battery storage replace coal,
natural gas and oil as energy sources.
Environmentalists
defend the plan as a necessary move away from old technologies to battle
climate change. And others say Biden's plan does include tax incentives for
manufacturing and a vision for developing a supply chain that could provide the
kind of blue-collar, high-skill jobs that used to be in power plants.
“My
American Jobs Plan will put hundreds of thousands of people to work ... paying
the same exact rate that a union man or woman would get,” Biden said from a union
hall in Pittsburgh on Wednesday when announcing his proposal. “It also works to
level the playing field, empower workers and ensure that the new jobs are good
jobs that you can raise a family on, and ensure free and fair choice to
organize and bargain collectively.”
While
unions are strongly supportive of the administration's pro-labor stance, they
worry that the end-goal — if not executed properly — could have devastating
effects on their members.
“From our
perspective, if the jobs aren't there when the mine closes, this plan
fails," Smith said. "There's a very large disconnect between what the
aspirations are here and what's going to end up actually happening on the
ground.”
Biden
fought to bring white, blue-collar workers back into the Democratic fold after
the party lost them to Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential race, and the
administration is seeking to prove that this can be both the most pro-labor and
anti-carbon presidency in history. But the reality may prove troublesome. Once
the build-out of no-carbon power sources is complete, the steady jobs in power
plants will have largely vanished.
Power
generation jobs have declined 50 percent in the last 20 years, as renewable
technologies have taken hold, according to data from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. Renewable power in that time rose to 18 percent of the energy mix
from 6 percent, while labor-intensive coal generation went from half of all
generation to 18 percent, according to data from the Energy Information
Administration.
"Right
now, if you're looking at traditional renewables, you know, it hasn't
historically been a hopeful place for American workers to go into these sectors
of the economy to work, to have family-sustaining jobs," said Roxanne
Brown, international vice president for the United Steelworkers. "That has
not been the American story — yet."
Some labor
economists say that because of the long-term nature of Biden’s plan —
investments are to be spread out over eight years — the interruption won’t be
as abrupt.
“If we do a
serious level of transformation needed to really decarbonize the economy,
that's not something that gets done in five years, that’s a decades long thing,
and so we're going to be building new things all the time,” said Josh Bivens,
director of research at the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute.
Bivens said
the more pressing concern should be the quality of jobs created as a result of
the infrastructure push.
“Basically
the fossil fuel sector has historically been pretty unionized; it's been a
place that has provided quite good jobs, especially for the types of workers in
it,” he said.
Biden’s
infrastructure proposal tries to address these worries by creating incentives
to bring manufacturing to the U.S. Offshore wind components come to the U.S.
from Europe, and most of the battery and solar panel supply chains are in China
and Southeast Asia. The president hopes to persuade companies to build new
factories through a series of tax incentives, particularly an expanded
manufacturing credit initiated by Sens. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) and Joe
Manchin (D-W.Va.) that would encourage companies to build on the site of
shuttered coal mines and coal plants.
The
administration is aiming to keep union support by tying labor standards to
these and other clean energy tax credits, and by offering full-throated support
for the Protecting the Right to Organize Act, which would smooth the path for
workers trying to unionize. Officials say labor will be part of an ongoing
conversation about policy.
"The
labor movement has been and will continue to be a partner when it comes to the
policy initiatives prioritized by the administration," said an
administration official. "The policy and goals are crafted in partnership
and in conjunction with a variety of stakeholders, including labor. There is
continuous engagement about the impacts of these proposals. And the jobs plan's
ability to create good paying union jobs across the board has been very
key."
And some
unions do back the plan, particularly those poised to build out the no-carbon
grid.
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“The
American Jobs Plan would make good on Joe Biden’s promise to the American union
worker," Lonnie Stephenson, international president of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, said in a statement.
But some of
Biden's most pro-labor policies are vehemently opposed by the business lobby
and Republicans — who say they are restrictive to workers’ free choice and
harmful to companies — and are likely to spur a contentious fight in Congress.
Already
Republicans are slamming the proposal as a new Green New Deal, and trying to
move the administration toward a narrower, bipartisan bill.
"President
Biden’s so-called ‘jobs’ proposal is a clear attempt to transform the economy
by advancing progressive priorities in an unprecedented way. The proposal would
aggressively drive down the use of traditional energy resources and eliminate
good-paying jobs in West Virginia and across the country," Sen. Shelley
Moore Capito (R-W. Va.), the top Republican on the Environment and Public Works
Committee, said in a statement. "I stand ready to be a partner in
advancing infrastructure legislation in a bipartisan way—just as we have in the
past."
Environmentalists
say that looking beyond the coming boom is getting ahead of the problem. There
are still millions more unemployed Americans than before the pandemic struck,
and the short-term spending built into the package is intended to get the
economy rolling again. But even in the long term, the package aims to spur an
overhaul of the economy, including providing incentives to construct offshore
wind and battery supply chains in the U.S.
"The
main technology story of the 21st century is the enormous shift that the global
economy is undergoing to decarbonize, and driving the innovations on the new
technology that will get us there," said Nat Keohane, senior vice
president at the Environmental Defense Fund. "The economy is not made up
of a fixed number of sectors. The economy is incredibly dynamic and the economy
of 2030, 2040, 2050 will look very different. And so the question is, are we
positioning the U.S. economy to compete, or not?"


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