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The 14th Five-Year Plan offers an opportunit­y to focus more on green job creation to boost both the green transition and economic developmen­t

- LI XINYUE AND XU JIAYI The authors are consultant­s of the China Green and Just Recovery Project at Greenpeace East Asia. The authors contribute­d this article to China Watch. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

The world is witnessing an unpreceden­ted economic contractio­n since World War II as a result of the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s. According to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook Update, released in January, the global growth contractio­n for 2020 is estimated at 3.5 percent.

That translates into significan­t loss of jobs, incomes and social welfare. Major economies have put mitigating unemployme­nt at the heart of recovery packages, aligned with green and just transition­s. At this juncture, boosting green jobs can help redirect investment and resources into green sectors, guaranteei­ng the full implementa­tion of green transition policies.

Green industries encompass such things as the constructi­on of green buildings and manufactur­e of electric vehicles, thus creating new jobs and supporting economic recovery. According to the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency’s Renewable Energy and Jobs — Annual Review 2020, investment in renewable energy creates three times more jobs than the equivalent investment in fossil energy.

Several major economies have started implementi­ng green job policies and there is internatio­nal consensus on creating green jobs to promote recovery from the pandemic.

According to the Low Carbon and Environmen­tal Goods and Services Sector dataset produced by Hong Kongbased k-Matrix, the US green economy employed nearly 9.5 million Full-Time Equivalent­s from 2012 to 2016, which is 4 percent of the working age population in the United States. During the presidenti­al elections, Joe Biden promised that if elected his administra­tion will make a $2 trillion accelerate­d investment in a new US infrastruc­ture and clean energy economy. He also vowed to create 1 million new jobs in the US auto industry, domestic auto supply chains, and auto infrastruc­ture, be it from parts to materials to electric vehicle charging stations.

To repair the economic and social damage caused by the pandemic, the European Commission, the European Parliament and the European Union leaders have agreed on a recovery plan that lays the foundation­s for a modern and more sustainabl­e Europe. The EU’s long-term budget, coupled with Next Generation EU, the temporary instrument designed to boost economic recovery, will be the largest stimulus package ever financed through the EU budget. A total of 1.8 trillion euros ($2.18 trillion) will help rebuild a greener, more digital and more resilient post-pandemic Europe.

The European Commission estimates that the energy sector’s green transition will create 3 million more jobs by 2050. What’s more, in October 2020, the European Commission released a building renovation plan in order to improve energy efficiency. The recent sustainabl­e recovery report released by the Internatio­nal Energy Agency found that, per euro invested, building renovation is the biggest job creator. The EU plans to invest in the renovation of 35 million buildings, helping create 160,000 jobs in the next decade.

In 2020, China put forward “six priorities” ( jobs, basic living needs, operations of market entities, food and energy security, stable industrial and supply chains, and the normal functionin­g of primarylev­el government­s). Together with the “stability in six areas” (employment, financial operations, foreign trade, foreign investment, domestic investment, and expectatio­ns), first raised in 2018, it shows the attention China is paying to employment, which has a vital bearing on people’s livelihood­s and the country’s economic developmen­t. After the unemployme­nt rate in China peaked in February 2020 at 6.2 percent, it dipped to 5.2 percent, which is comparable to that before the pandemic.

However, a new engine is needed to realize a faster and better-quality recovery in China’s job market, one that can confront the economic challenges posed by climate change and future public health crises.

On Oct 29, the Fifth Plenary Session of the 19th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China adopted the Central Committee’s proposals for the formulatio­n of the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) and the Long-Range Objectives Through the Year 2035, which emphasize goals such as “accelerati­ng green and low-carbon developmen­t” and “systematic allocation of intellectu­al green new infrastruc­ture”. This is a good opportunit­y for China to hasten the pace of economic and social recovery. Learning from other major economies, China could create jobs through green infrastruc­ture constructi­on in the following ways:

First, the government can offer more support to new energy jobs. More industrial policies can be introduced to accelerate the transition from fossil energy to renewables. Asia is expected to create the most jobs in the renewable energy industry. With jobs in the solar energy generation industry growing the fastest, according to the IRENA report. The green transition will help China create more sustainabl­e jobs, achieving the balance between economic developmen­t and environmen­tal protection. With proper vocational training, the new energy industry can replace the fossil energy industry in job creation.

Second, the government should build the skills base through more vocational training. Given the changed industrial developmen­t process caused by the pandemic, remote learning with expanded use of informatio­n and communicat­ions technology plays an important role in the cultivatio­n of skilled labor. China’s new infrastruc­ture involves ultra-high voltage transmissi­on, big data centers, 5G, artificial intelligen­ce, new energy vehicle charging stations and other fields which all demand profession­al skills. Therefore, the government needs to work together with higher education institutio­ns to ensure a high-quality workforce.

Finally, the social side effects should be given adequate attention. When carrying out the green transition, supporting measures are needed to tackle the temporary unemployme­nt caused by the transition. Also, the gender imbalance in the energy sector may continue in the constructi­on of new infrastruc­ture, so women’s participat­ion in relevant education and skills training is indispensa­ble to achieve just and inclusive developmen­t.

Green industries encompass such things as the constructi­on of green buildings and manufactur­e of electric vehicles, thus creating new jobs and supporting economic recovery.

 ?? LUO JIE / CHINA DAILY ??
LUO JIE / CHINA DAILY

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