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- Xref: sparky misc.activism.progressive:9648 alt.activism:19863 sci.energy:6483 talk.environment:5263
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!naughty-peahen
- From: Greenpeace via Jym Dyer <jym@mica.berkeley.edu>
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.activism,sci.energy,talk.environment
- Subject: NEWS: Call for Clean Energy Transition with Worker Protection
- Followup-To: sci.energy,talk.environment
- Date: 29 Dec 1992 01:19:56 GMT
- Organization: The Naughty Peahen Party Line
- Lines: 88
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Message-ID: <Greenpeace.28Dec1992.1719@naughty-peahen>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: remarque.berkeley.edu
- Keywords: energy environment press
-
- [Greenpeace Press Release from Greenbase -- Redistribute Freely]
-
- CONTACT: Steve Kretzmann, Tom Lent, Greenpeace, 202/462-1177
- Rod Rogers, Tony Mazzocchi, OCAW, 303/987-2229
-
- GREENPEACE, OCAW TAKE ON JOBS VS. ENVIRONMENT CONFLICT;
- CALL FOR CLEAN ENERGY TRANSITION WITH WORKER PROTECTION
-
- WASHINGTON DC, November 23, 1992 (GP) Signalling a new
- partnership of labor and environmental concerns, Greenpeace
- and the Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers Union (OCAW) today
- announced their intention to work jointly towards the resolution
- of the jobs vs. environment conflict. Greenpeace called on
- President-elect Clinton to shift 5% (about $15 billion) of
- current annual defense spending into a national priority
- program to create jobs in clean energy technologies, while
- OCAW emphasized the need to provide a Worker's Superfund to
- serve as a transformative economic agenda.
-
- The Greenpeace Energy for Employment proposal recommends
- dramatically increasing the nation's use of energy efficient
- and renewable energy technologies. It focuses on improving the
- ability of the market by providing renewable production tax
- credits, low interest financing, government materials purchases,
- revenue sharing, and incentives to state and local governments.
- During the last 12 years, Federal funding for clean energy
- technologies has fallen by 90%. Current subsidies to the
- fossil fuel and nuclear industries total over $50 billion/year,
- while subsidies to energy efficiency, renewable energy, and
- conservation measures combined are just $1 billion/year.
-
- The Energy for Employment proposal uses Department of Commerce
- economic models to project a net employment gain of more
- than a million new jobs. "Clean energy technologies create
- significantly more jobs than conventional sources such as oil,
- gas, coal and nuclear," said Energy for Employment author Tom
- Lent. "But no conversion as fundamental as this will come
- without pain we need to be aware of these challenges, and meet
- the issue of worker displacement head on, rather than sweeping
- it under the rug."
-
- Tony Mazzocchi, representing OCAW, noted that any proposal to
- make broad based changes in the nation's energy policies will
- ultimately cause the dislocation of thousands of workers. To
- address this conflict between jobs and the environment, OCAW
- has proposed a Superfund for Workers which is modeled after
- the GI Bill of Rights and the concept of "polluter pays" in the
- Superfund for abandoned toxic sites. Similar to the G.I. Bill
- for vets returning from World War II, the Worker Superfund calls
- for workers to receive education with full income support as an
- alternative to unemployment, poverty, or welfare.
-
- "The intellectual capital for the post WWII boom was fueled by
- the G.I. Bill," commented Mazzocchi, who benefitted from the GI
- Bill when he returned from Europe along with 14 million other
- vets from around the world. "We need to recall the time when
- this nation made its most successful economic transition from
- war time to peace time and be guided today by that same vision
- in the post Cold War era as we contemplate a green growth
- economy."
-
- Mazzocchi added, "Few workers can advocate for the elimination
- of their jobs, no matter how concerned they are for their
- environment and public health." Recent US Department of Labor
- statistics revealed that only 25% of industrial workers who lost
- their jobs in the last 5 years found new jobs with the same or
- higher pay. Thirty-one percent were forced into lower paying
- jobs and 36% were still unemployed as of January 1992. When
- you add it up over 2/3 suffered a decline in their standard of
- living.
-
- "We believe the Superfund for Workers must become a central
- principle for making transitions and not merely a peripheral
- consideration whether we're considering toxics reduction, global
- warming, ancient forest protection, deindustrialization, or the
- military builddown," stated Mazzocchi.
-
- "The U.S. economy and environment desperately need both these
- measures," said Steve Kretzmann, Director of Greenpeace's Energy
- Campaign. "Other countries already recognize that the fossil
- fuel age is over, and are rushing to gain the competitive edge
- in clean energy. The transition to a clean energy economy is
- inevitable we need to ensure that it occurs in a way that is
- both environmentally and socially sound."
-
- Greenpeace has 1.8 million supporters in the U.S, and over 4
- million worldwide. The Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers Union
- represents approximately 100,000 workers in the U.S.
-