In Where Did All The Green Jobs Go? I expressed considerable scepticism about the oft-repeated claims of green jobs connected to Net Zero in this country. In comments below that article I have also drawn attention to the sacrifice of manufacturing jobs in the UK on the Net Zero altar and the failure of the promised jobs to replace them. In addition, there is now of course an ongoing discussion of, inter alia, the effect on jobs in the North Sea oil and gas exploration sector of Labour’s proposed ban on new exploration and extraction licences there. The SNP, having originally planned to fund independence by using the taxes generated by North Sea oil and gas, then decided it was evil and that we had to put “saving the planet” before Scottish jobs. Now, with the general election tomorrow, they have changed course and now say that Labour’s plans will destroy Scottish jobs, and that this is rather important after all. Of course Labour’s plans to throw money at the “green transition” pale almost into insignificance when compared to the huge sums of money spent by President Biden’s administration under the strangely-named Inflation Reduction Act (“IRA”) (strangely-named, since the one thing that is guaranteed when governments borrow money to spend in huge amounts is that it will increase, rather than reduce, inflation).

Given all of the above, it strikes me as an appropriate time to see how things are going in the USA. Has the extraordinary expenditure of federal government funds on the “green economy” lived up to the claims made on behalf of the Act? Earlier this week a BBC article asked a similar question, with this heading: “Will Biden’s green jobs policy help him win votes?” Interestingly, when I clicked on it the heading changed to “‘Only latte liberals care about green energy round here’”, which might suggest that the working class at the sharp end of Washington DC politics aren’t much interested or impressed. Let’s see what the BBC makes of it.

The BBC seems perplexed by the lack of interest, given what it clearly sees as a superbly beneficial policy. In fact the thumbs up could hardly have been more enthusiastic if it had been written by Democrat party presidential campaigners. According to the BBC, the Act:

offered hundreds of billions of dollars in tax incentives, credits and loans to stimulate American manufacturing in clean energy.

The most ambitious climate legislation in US history has generated a tsunami of private sector investments, with big implications for the rest of the world. And Georgia – a state President Biden hopes is in play in this year’s presidential election – has been a big beneficiary.

But with four months before the president goes head-to-head against Donald Trump, the billions of dollars of new investment in this key battleground state doesn’t appear to have lifted the incumbent’s support.

President Biden’s pitch is that solving the climate problem is also good for jobs. Since the law was passed, more than 300,000 clean energy jobs have been created in the US, according to the advocacy group Climate Power.

And there’s no doubt it’s creating opportunities in places like Dalton. Here you see Bidenomics in action – foreign and government money being used to fight climate change and build an economy from the middle out.

And yet something doesn’t add up. Despite the fact that much of this money has quite deliberately been directed to states such as Georgia that the Democrats hope to take from the Republicans in November’s Presidential election, the “message either isn’t getting through or simply isn’t resonating with locals – not even local Democrats”. The problem seems to be that they resent the fact that such jobs as are being created aren’t jobs created by US-owned businesses. On the contrary, locals resent it:

The business community resents the fact that we have a company from South Korea coming in this area with government subsidies, while they themselves get nothing from the government,” says Mr Pourquoi, who identified as a Republican before switching parties following Trump’s election in 2016.

Perhaps Burns was right when he said the best laid schemes o’ mice an’ men gang aft a-gley. And yet the BBC is very clear in uncritically accepting (no need for a fact-check by BBC Verify here) the figures offered by “advocacy group Climate Power” as referred to above. If, as they claim, “CLEAN ENERGY BOOM SOARS PAST 300,000 JOBS: 312,900 NEW CLEAN ENERGY JOBS NOW AT RISK FROM TRUMP AND BIG OIL’S REPEAL CRUSADE”, how on earth could anyone contemplate voting against Biden and for Trump? (Personally I think it’s more poignant than that – I have no idea how anybody could contemplate voting for either of them, but I digress). It’s worth, I think, taking a look at the report from Climate Power, since the BBC didn’t trouble to interrogate the claims they made.

I think it’s fair to say that even if the report is accurate (on which I express no opinion), it’s rather brief. It runs to 21 pages, of which at best perhaps six pages represent analysis, and the rest comprises appendices presenting the data by state and by Congressional Districts. The first thing that jumps out at me is the breakdown of the claimed jobs: 4% in the wind industry; 18.2% solar; 3.5% hydrogen; 3.8% grids; 14.7% electric vehicles; 14.2% “clean tech”; and a whopping 46.1% batteries. While it’s certainly true that if the US is to become dependent on renewable energy, batteries will be in great demand. However, putting 46.1% of your “green” job creation in a basket where China controls most of the necessary raw materials might not be the wisest strategy.

Then there is the cost of the jobs. I take at face value the claim that the jobs are skilled and well-paid. A deeper analysis might find something to question in that claim, but for present purposes I take it as read. In any event, the jobs had better be well-paid, given the costs associated with them. Space doesn’t permit a line-by-line analysis, but some headlines might be of interest. Let’s concentrate on the ten states which it is claimed benefit from the majority of new jobs:

Georgia – 41 projects, 30,661 new jobs, $23.88Bn investment (remember, it’s always an investment, never a cost). That equates to $778,839 per job.

New York – 23 projects, 28,934 jobs, $115.45Bn. That equates to a staggering $3,990,115 per job.

Texas – 46 projects, 23,146 jobs, $16.45Bn = $710,705 per job.

Michigan – 58 projects, 21,490 jobs, $25.38Bn = $1,181,014 per job.

Kansas – 5 projects, 21,077 jobs, $4.24Bn = $201,167 per job.

Nevada – 16 projects, 20,098 jobs, $14.5Bn = $721,464 per job.

South Carolina – 31 projects, 17,865 jobs, $15.01Bn = $840,190 per job.

New Mexico – 7 projects, 16,625 jobs, $2.99Bn = $179,849 per job.

Arizona – 20 projects, 15,570 jobs, $11.24Bn = $721,901 per job.

Ohio – 27 projects, 13,669 jobs, $10.43Bn = $763,040 per job.

North Carolina – 26 projects, 12,090 jobs, $19.18BN = $1,586,435 per job.

Perhaps the lesson is to invest in Kansas and New Mexico, as they represent better value than investments in New York, Michigan and North Carolina. Taking the total money spent and the total jobs claimed to be created, a spend of over $361Bn to create 312,900 new jobs equates to a cost per job of $1,153,723. In UK terms, at today’s exchange rate, that equates to £905,520 per job.

I have not considered whether any part of the policy underlying the Act has cost jobs. Even if we accept that it’s unalloyed good news, with high-quality well-paid jobs being created and none lost, it’s still an extraordinarily expensive policy.

Returning to the BBC article, however, the most telling statistics relate to China. China dominates world markets in these areas. As we are often told by those who tut when sceptics point to China’s continually rising greenhouse gas emissions, in 2024 it is expected to invest $359Bn in renewable power, while the figures for the EU are $106Bn and for the USA are $85Bn. At least the table in the BBC article says its $359Bn in China, but in the following paragraph it refers to an International Energy Agency Report, which instead claims a figure of $675Bn. Also, China controls 80% of the world’s solar panel supply chain.

The object of the Inflation Reduction Act, the BBC tells us, is to deny China any more of an opening into the US renewables market. And yet if one looks at the “Clean Energy Boom Report” cited by Climate Power in its brief analysis, Chinese and other Asian company names feature regularly when it comes to jobs that it claims are created thanks to the federal government’s largesse. Donghee America is a subsidiary of a South Korean company. Hyundai Mobis is also South Korean, as are Samkee Corp and Seohan Group, Daesol Ausys, Kia, Seoyan E-Hwa, Hanwha, Hwashin, Woory Industrial, Jaewon Industrial, SungEel HiTech and (no surprise here) NVH Korea. JA Solar is Chinese, as are Jinko Solar, Daechang Seat, Fuyao, and Sewong America is a subsidiary of a Chinese company. Bekaert is Belgian, as is Syensqo. Standard Lithium is Canadian. RWE Offshore Wind is German, as is Bosch. Canigou Group is based in Hong Kong. Panacea Global Energy is French-owned. Rayzon Solar is Indian. And so on. You get the picture. Yes, lots of US companies are seeing benefit, but so are companies based in Asian “developing” countries with massive greenhouse gas emissions, even if the companies themselves usually claim to be committed to Net Zero by some date or other. The US taxpayer is digging deep for the benefit of lots of foreign companies. It all begins to make sense. Remember the quote above:

The business community resents the fact that we have a company from South Korea coming in this area with government subsidies, while they themselves get nothing from the government…

Sir Keir Starmer and Mr Miliband: you are probably going to achieve a huge majority at this general election, but be careful what you do with it. Use it unwisely and you may well regret it.

17 Comments

  1. Perhaps the advent of one very recent SCOTUS decision may cut across the tenor of this essay, although I found it very heartening.

    SCOTUS has severely limited the capability of various US bureaucracies to write, implement and enforce regulations by destroying the “Chevron Deference”.

    As an example (from QoL): Biden’s Department of Energy had halted via regulation the construction of a Texas gas-export terminal. America’s top court has just rendered impotent that ruling …

    Good !! In my view, it’s an excellent start.

    Like

  2. I should, perhaps, have made the point that while it is unsurprising that “advocacy group” Climate Power isn’t interested in discussing the staggering cost of “green” jobs created as a result of the astonishing amounts of money thrown around under the Inflation Reduction Act, I do think that the BBC should have discussed it.

    We are constantly being told that the costs of Net Zero represent an important investment in our future, and that the costs of doing nothing would be even greater. A serious media organisation should interrogate such claims, rather than merely parrot the claims of a partisan advocacy group.

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Mark,

    I don’t know if they’ll regret it, but the rest of us certainly will. And why no UK companies benefitting from the Inflation Reduction Act? I thought we were leading the world out of the crisis.

    Like

  4. John,

    It’s possible some UK companies are milking the hundreds of billions of dollars being scattered around like confetti by the Biden administration, but they didn’t leap off the page when I was looking at it.

    Like

  5. Thank you Mark. You have prompted me to read a bit about the Inflation Induction Act, so that I can comment from a position not of complete ignorance. I particularly want to be clear on what the rules of origin are exactly.

    [If anyone knows, then do save me the bother of researching it. I could not find an instant answer when searching the internet this morning.]

    Like

  6. The idea that green jobs can be created in western countries just by wishful thinking has been around for about 25 years. Many governments have “invested” with the best intentions but most of the green jobs in the past two decades have ended up in China. With Labour winning the election the question that should be asked is what will they do differently to avoid making the same mistakes all over again. Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

    Liked by 2 people

  7. “Stock markets plunge as weak US jobs fuel fears”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c7202xvpwn5o

    Stock markets were hit by a global sell-off on Friday as weak US jobs growth stoked fears of a sudden downturn in the world’s largest economy.

    The tech-heavy Nasdaq index dropped by more than 2.4%, dragged lower by Intel and Amazon, after the companies reported disappointing results.

    Official data showed employers added 114,000 jobs in July, far fewer than expected, while the unemployment rate rose to its highest level in nearly three years. [my emphasis].

    The figures suggested the long-running jobs boom in the US might be coming to an end...

    Like

  8. “Tax credits in Biden’s landmark climate law disproportionately benefit well-off

    Analysis of Inflation Reduction Act suggests working-class Americans missing out on renewable energy transition”

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/aug/16/biden-inflation-reduction-act-tax-benefit-wealthy

    ...Of all filers making less than $100,000, just 0.7% claimed the clean energy tax credit, and just 0.9% claimed the efficiency incentive. In the over-$100,000 bracket, those percentages rose to 1.6% and a stunningly high 4.0%.

    This dynamic, said Huber, was predictable. Tax credit programs can be difficult to navigate, especially for families who can’t afford to hire tax accountants, he said.

    Further, though tax credits can make upgrades more affordable, they may not bring them into reach for Americans with lower incomes, especially because the programs come with spending caps for each household.

    “Most working-class Americans, living paycheck to paycheck, do not have the savings or credit to buy a new heating/cooling system … even with a complicated incentive to do so,” he said.

    The tax incentives also favor those with higher tax burdens.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Richard,

    It’s still in favour of the IRA, of course. The criticism is that it benefits rich people more than poor people. I fear the author won’t recognise that one of the constant refrains of sceptics is that the whole net zero agenda hurts the poorest in society, and constant talk (without action) of a just transition doesn’t cut the mustard.

    The strange thing about the Guardian is that occasionally there is a chink of light, a faint glimmer of understanding, but they always shy away from it for fear of where following the logic will take them.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. From the DT’s business feed today:

    One of Europe’s largest solar panel manufacturers has announced it will cut about 200 jobs as it battles to return to profitability amid stiff competition from China.

    Meyer Burger said its chief executive is leaving the company as it announced plans to reduce its global workforce from about 1,050 to 850 by the end of 2025, predominantly in Europe, as it focuses operations on the US.

    Meyer Burger reported a loss of 292m Swiss francs for 2023, which it blamed on “severe price undercutting in the European solar market”.

    It comes amid a flood of Chinese products onto the European market.

    DT link

    Like

  11. This is slightly O/T on this thread, but since it’s my thread, that’s OK. 🙂

    It always feels more than a little uncomfortable seeking to make a point out of a tragedy, but there is a very real geopolitical point behind this tragedy:

    “Blast kills two Chinese near Pakistan’s Karachi airport”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0r84p0dp1jo

    Those greenies who always let China off the hook while beating up the rest, really do need to pay more attention to what China is up to all around the world. What the Chinese are doing in Pakistan is just one part of their global master-plan:

    ...The Chinese embassy said that the engineers were part of the Chinese-funded enterprise Port Qasim Power Generation Co Ltd, which aims to build two coal power plants at Port Qasim, near Karachi.

    Thousands of Chinese workers are in Pakistan, many of them involved in creating an economic corridor between the two countries as part of Beijing’s multibillion dollar Belt and Road Initiative.

    The Port Qasim plant is part of the corridor, along with a number of infrastructure and energy projects in Pakistan’s Balochistan province, which has a rich supply of natural resources, including gas and minerals.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Occasionally journalists at the Guardian write insightful pieces. I think this is one of them:

    “Trump tariffs are coming, but some Chinese companies may already know how to avoid them

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/nov/20/donald-trump-tariffs-plan-china-imports-companies-impact-ntwnfb

    …China all but owns the global solar market. Its share in every stage of the solar panel manufacturing chain exceeds 80%, according to the International Energy Agency. Last year it exported a record high of 227 gigawatts (GW) of solar panels – more than the entire installed solar capacity of the United States….

    …although less than 1% of the US’s solar imports come from China, more than 80% of them come from four countries in south-east Asia: Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam. Last year, the US Commerce Department concluded that certain Chinese photovoltaic (PV) companies had been re-routing their supply chains through those countries in order to avoid US tariffs….

    …The game of whack-a-mole now seems to be spreading to other parts of south-east Asia, such as Laos and Indonesia. In the first eight months of this year, US imports of solar goods from Indonesia reportedly nearly doubled to $246m, while shipments from Laos have also been surging….

    …Tongwei, China’s biggest solar company, said in its annual report that many Chinese photovoltaic companies have “started exploring new avenues for growth, including establishing manufacturing facilities overseas”, citing the US, the Middle East and Vietnam as examples, without elaborating on the company’s own plans….

    Like

  13. “Miliband’s net zero promises are false, Tony Blair’s think tank warns”

    In summary, the green jobs Miliband promised aren’t coming, but we should continue to allow China to dump cheap EVs on the UK. TBI agrees Net Zero is the growth opportunity of the 21st century, but we’re doing it all wrong. Invest in gigafactories (LOL).

    The image of a large snake trying to find its way out of a tied Hessian sack comes to mind, for some reason.

    Telegraph link.

    Like

  14. Jit, thanks for the link. I despair, especially of things like this:

    As well as pouring more money into EVs, the TBI argued Britain should vigorously court Chinese manufacturers, encouraging them to set up plants in the UK as traditional internal combustion carmakers struggle to adapt to the new market.

    Like

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