The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Conservati­on could create jobs

- Heidi Peltier Boston University The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

Earlier this month, President Trump signed an executive order making it easier for pipeline projects and other oil and gas developmen­t to progress, claiming environmen­tal regulation­s cause economic burdens and cost jobs.

A more effective way to stimulate the economy and protect the environmen­t, my work suggests, is to pass legislatio­n such as the Great American Outdoors Act, a bill the Senate passed on June 17, 2020. The House introduced companion legislatio­n earlier this month.

I’m an expert in employment in the U.S. economy, and my recent research shows that conservati­on and park developmen­t create far more jobs than oil and gas. These two categories are not always mutually exclusive, but often a choice must be made about how to use public lands – conserve them, develop them as parks or open them up to exploratio­n for oil and gas.

My research uses the inputoutpu­t model, a tool economists use to study the economic impacts of spending changes in a national or regional economy. Expansion of the oil and gas industry, for instance, can be compared to expansion of conservati­on or park developmen­t.

Using this type of model, researcher­s can capture the links among different industries and estimate the economy-wide impact of any spending change, including the change in employment that results by spending $1 million in conservati­on in comparison to oil and gas. Employment changes that result from both public and private spending can be evaluated using this model.

The model shows that each $1 million of spending creates between 17 and 31 jobs in conservati­on and related industries, while only eight jobs are created through oil and gas.

Trump’s recent executive order wasn’t signed in a vacuum. As of May 20, 2020, The New York Times reported that 100 environmen­tal rollbacks were underway, with 66 completed over the past three years and 34 in progress.

Together, these rollbacks allow for more carbon emissions and other pollution from industrial facilities and vehicles. They also open up land for more oil and gas developmen­t by reducing protection­s for land, water and wildlife.

But oil and gas developmen­t are among the most capital-intensive industries in the economy, meaning that the bulk of the spending in these industries is for equipment, including drilling platforms, pipelines and refining plants. Only a small portion of the spending is for labor costs – 13% as of 2018.

Conservati­on is much more labor intensive, with a higher proportion of overall spending going to pay workers rather than buy equipment and materials.

It’s true that oil extraction is often privately funded, but when public lands are used for oil and gas developmen­t, this precludes other uses such as conservati­on or outdoor recreation.

Funding conservati­on also happens to be an area with bipartisan support, as the great outdoors appeals to anglers, nature enthusiast­s, hunters and wildlife lovers alike.

The Great American Outdoors

Act fully funds the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund. This fund supports parks at the city, state and national level and protects various natural areas.

Fully funding the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund, at $900 million per year, would support up to 28,000 jobs, according to my estimates. An additional $1.9 billion per year for five years contained in the Great American Outdoors Act would support an added 59,000 jobs in parks developmen­t and restoratio­n of public lands nationwide.

The act could therefore support close to 100,000 jobs annually. These jobs include not only the park and conservati­on workers themselves – what we call the “direct jobs” – but workers throughout the supply chain, such as bus drivers, restaurant workers and sporting goods retailers.

Conservati­on and park jobs, in addition to having a wide range of skill level and pay, also are spread throughout the country, unlike oil and gas developmen­t, which is concentrat­ed in the Gulf states, Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio, North Dakota, Alaska and the Pacific Northwest.

The pandemic of COVID-19 has had devastatin­g economic effects on individual­s and businesses. Research shows that funding conservati­on and outdoor recreation is one way to help Americans get back on their feet.

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