Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

The best way to boost our economy is to invest in renewable energy programs

- By Anna V. Eskamani

Our country and state are at a turning point. Citizens are demonstrat­ing for Black lives and police reform, more than 160,000 people have died from the coronaviru­s and tens of millions of workers are unemployed. And communitie­s of color are facing the brunt of these crises.

In Florida, over 7,700 people have died from COVID-19 and there have been more than 1.81 million jobless claimants during the pandemic, many struggling to secure unemployme­nt benefits as we wait to see if Congress will renew the much needed $600 weekly federal payments.

Regardless of political affiliatio­n, all Floridians want a safer and healthier state with a growing economy, one where every person can prosper. Our priorities as a community are deep and complex — we must save lives, stop the spread of COVID-19, support small businesses and ensure housing security.

We also must create an economy for the future where all people can thrive.

We have a chance to rebuild a better America and Florida than we had before. Not an economy that runs on the backs of working people being paid low wages, but one that is diverse and resilient.

As Congress debates how our nation will recover and repair our coronaviru­s-battered economy, we should be leading with the industries that show the greatest potential for growth to help families recover. Clean energy is one of those industries.

During the Great Recession, Congress made investment­s in clean energy that helped to create hundreds of new American businesses and nearly one million jobs. Before coronaviru­s took down the economy, clean energy was one of the nation’s strongest sectors, growing 70 percent faster than the economy as a whole.

As elected officials in Washington debate which sectors to bolster, we must lift up resilient, job-creating industries that show the most potential for positive impact and rapid growth in all 50 states. That is exactly why we should be leading with investment­s in clean energy.

There are many ways to create jobs and strengthen our environmen­t all at the same time. For example, renewables like solar and wind create more jobs per unit of energy delivered than coal or natural gas. A 2009 study demonstrat­ed that $1 million in stimulus spending on oil and natural gas generated roughly five jobs, but that same amount of spending would result in 13 to 14 jobs for wind and solar.

Jobs wouldn’t just come from building new solar and wind farms, either. To support the influx of energy from renewables, the nation’s energy grid would need to grow twice as large and become less centralize­d. We would also see a growth in energy-efficiency jobs, not only reducing our nation’s carbon footprint but reducing costs for individual ratepayers too.

Investing in clean energy is not just an economic issue — it’s also an issue of environmen­tal justice.

In the United States and around the world, vulnerable and marginaliz­ed population­s like people of color, indigenous people, the elderly, children and those with lower incomes are hit first and hardest by the climate crisis. We see this in Florida with low air quality in red-lined communitie­s surrounded by highways, and with the devastatio­n caused by severe weather systems like Hurricanes Michael, Maria and Irma.

Right now, workers in every sector of the economy need support, but low-income and Black and Brown people are facing major economic devastatio­n, especially those who were already economical­ly disadvanta­ged before the pandemic struck.

I urge Congress to be intentiona­l about rebuilding a healthier, stronger, safer and more equitable future for all people by supporting the growth of renewable energy. Investment­s in a clean energy economy would put Americans back to work, shift the balance of power away from polluting industries with big lobbying budgets, and help us meet key deadlines for climate action that scientists say are necessary to limit the damage done by climate change. This is a challengin­g moment — but it’s also an opportunit­y to set new norms for generation­s to come. Anna V. Eskamani, a Democrat, represents District 47 in the Florida House of Representa­tives.

“The Invading Sea” is the opinion arm of the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a collaborat­ive of news organizati­ons across the state focusing on the threats posed by the warming climate.

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