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Archived RebuttalThis is the archived Intermediate rebuttal to the climate myth "Renewable energy investment kills jobs". Click here to view the latest rebuttal. What the science says...
A study published by a Spanish economist claims that investment in renewable energy will result in a net job loss:
This study was authored by Gabriel Calzada Álvarez, who happens to be the founder of one libertarian think tank and a fellow of a second, which in recent years received funding from Exxon Mobil. But of course despite this potential conflict of interest, we will evaluate the study's claims on their own merits (or more accurately as we will see, the lack thereof). Underestimating Green Job CreationOne key flaw in the Calzada study is in its estimate of green job creation through renewable energy projects. Obviously when evaluating the net effect on Spanish employment, this is a key figure to get right. According to Calzada (page 25),
However, his reference for this figure is unclear. Calzada cites an Instituto Sindical de Trabajo, Ambiente y Salud (ISTAS) study for the beakdown of those jobs (percentage of construction, maintenance, administration, etc.), but not for the 50,200 job claim itself. The number seems to stem from estimated predictions made in 2003 of what the renewable energy job creation would turn out to be, rather than recent estimates of what the numbers did turn out to be. In reality, as noted by a United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) study, the ISTAS actually estimates that 188,000 green jobs have been created in Spain, the majority since 2000. Getting this figure so wrong invalidates Calzada's conclusions by itself. Falling Unemployment in NavarreNavarre is a region in Spain which has invested heavily in renewable energy, currently obtaining 65% of its energy from renewable sources including 993 megawatts (MW) of wind and almost 100 MW of solar photovoltaic power. So if Calzada's argument is correct and investing in renewable energy kills jobs, we would expect to see high unemployment in this region. The Regional Minister of Innovation, Enterprise and Employment for the Government of Navarre, José María Roig Aldasoro, wrote a letter in response to Calzada's study, in which he noted:
Aldasoro went on to note that in 1994, when the first wind farm was erected in Navarre, unemployment in the region was at 12.8%. As more and more renewable energy was installed and worker training centers were opened, the unemployment rate consistently dropped, reaching a level of under 5% in 2007. Navarre provides a real-world example which is hard to jive with Calzada's claims of job destruction. CherrypickingAnother letter was published in response to the Calzada report by Jesús Caldera, the vice president of the IDEAS Foundation and former minister for public works, and Carlos Mulas-Granados, the executive director of the IDEAS Foundation and former economic advisor to Prime Minister Zapatero. Caldera and Mulas-Granados note that the Calzada report suffers from a common tactic which Skeptical Science readers will recognize: cherrypicking.
Faulty TheoryThe Calzada report explains the theory behind its faulty numbers on page 37:
In short, Calzada argues that government investment "crowds out" private investment, which he claims is more efficient at job creation, and thus any public investment in renewable energy must necessarily result in job destruction. In reality, there are only a few circumstances in which this "crowding out" argument holds true; generally when the economy's resources are being fully utilized, which is rarely the case. It's certainly not true in today's stagnant economic conditions, when private investment and growth is low. Under these conditions, public investment provide jobs to the unemployed without "crowding out" private investment. The study also fails to take infrastructure improvements into account, which improves private-sector performance by raising average productivity. Flawed MethodologyA white paper from the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) describes the many fundamental flaws in the Calzada paper methodologies, summarizing the study as follows:
The NREL paper also provides a list of recent studies in Europe as a whole (including Spain) and Germany in particular have found that public investment in renewable energy development results in a net positive impact on employment.
Renewable Energy Creates More Jobs than Fossil FuelsCalzada's argument is also directly contradicted by reality, because renewable energy investment and development tends to create more jobs than fossil fuel energy because a larger share of renewable energy expenditures go to manufacturing equipment, installation, and maintenance, all of which are typically Indeed a 2004 UC Berkeley study concluded:
The study found that implementing a Renewable Portfolio Standard and investing in various types of renewable energy would create approximately twice as many jobs in the USA by 2020 as investing in coal and natural gas. Similarly, a 2001 Renewable Energy Policy Project report found that wind and solar photovoltaic investments lead to at least 40% more jobs per dollar than coal. It's a complicated comparison, because renewable energy sources tend to be more expensive than fossil fuel energy. Thus hypothetically, the extra money invested in renewable energy could have been spent elsewhere to create new jobs in a different sector of the economy. However, fossil fuel energy is also artificially cheap because its price does not account for various external costs like climate change and impacts on public health. When accounting for all factors, it's likely that renewable energy results in more jobs per dollar invested than fossil fuels. Calzada is WrongAs shown above, the Calzada paper is flawed in almost every conceivable way: it relies on incorrect numbers, cherrypicked dates, faulty theory, flawed methodology, and is disproven by real-world examples. In reality, investment in renewable energy results in a net positive effect on employment. Updated on 2011-06-13 by dana1981. |
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