FRIDAY 06 FEBRUARY, 2009 |

Wind Energy Industry Employing More Than Coal Mining
A recent
item
on CNN has highlighted a very interesting and important statistic - the wind
power industry now employs more people than coal mining in the USA.
Wind energy industry jobs increased to 85,000 in 2008, representing a 70%
increase on 2007, according to a report from the
American
Wind Energy Association. Coal mining currently employs about 81,000 people
in the United States.
The global wind power industry overall
enjoyed
a bumper 2008 and the USA is now the global leader after a 50%
increase in installed wind capacity during the year; enough to power 2 million
homes. Wind capacity brought online in 2008 accounted for approximately
42% of all new power-producing capacity added in the USA last year, and will
avoid nearly 44 million tons of carbon emissions being generated; which is the
equivalent of taking over 7 million cars off of the road.
Results such as the USA is experiencing in wind energy employment is calling
into question coal industry supporters' claims of massive unemployment resulting
from a phase out of coal mining and coal fired power generation to cleaner
technologies such as
solar
power and
wind
energy. A similar "sky is falling" scenario was forecast in the
early stages of the computer revolution, which never eventuated; in fact, the
information technology boom created many more jobs, markets and opportunities.
As was the case with the rapid uptake of computer systems and the embracing of
the Internet, renewable energy proponents believe all that is needed is for
those coal workers affected by a similar development is adequate community
assistance and government support in re-skilling and re-training, so those
people can
make the switch from their fossil fuel focused employment to fulfilling careers
in renewable energy.
If the USA is able to achieve such a result just from the wind sector, the
potential for job generation from all renewable energy technology sources and
associated infrastructure could be quite staggering, not to mention the massive
reduction of greenhouse gas emissions that could be achieved by such a switch in
energy focus.
News for Thursday 05 February, 2009
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