NEWS New report on green jobs in Africa from UNIDO, LNBL, and RAEL
Download the report from UNIDO, LBNL, and RAEL here and access the larger Green Jobs research program here.
Abstract:
The ongoing debate over the cost-effectiveness of renewable energy (RE) and energy efficiency
(EE) deployment often hinges on the current cost of incumbent fossil-fuel technologies versus
the long-term benefit of clean energy alternatives. This debate is often focused on mature or
‘industrialized’ economies and externalities such as job creation. In many ways, however, the
situation in developing economies is at least as or even more interesting due to the generally
faster current rate of economic growth and of infrastructure deployment. On the one hand, RE
and EE could help decarbonize economies in developing countries, but on the other hand, higher
upfront costs of RE and EE could hamper short-term growth. The methodology developed in
this paper confirms the existence of this trade-off for some scenarios, yet at the same time
provides considerable evidence about the positive impact of EE and RE from a job creation and
employment perspective. By extending and adopting a methodology for Africa designed to
calculate employment from electricity generation in the U.S., this study finds that energy savings
and the conversion of the electricity supply mix to renewable energy generates employment
compared to a reference scenario. It also concludes that the costs per additional job created tend
to decrease with increasing levels of both EE adoption and RE shares.
Project partners:
Climate Policy and Networks Division, United Nations Industrial Development Organization
Energy Technologies Area, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory