Occupational Safety Implications of the Changing Energy Mix

Jeremy M. Gernand
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Abstract

Renewable energy and natural gas are displacing coal and nuclear power in many parts of the world as sources of electricity. While, the environmental benefits of such changes seem clear, the impact on worker safety, especially in developed nations is less clear. Coal mining is a relatively dangerous occupation, though one that has grown significantly safer in recent decades. Manufacturing and installation of solar photovoltaic (PV) power may pose less risk to workers on a per hour basis, but the number of worker hours necessary to generate a Megawatt-hour of electricity is currently higher for solar PV than it is for coal-generated power. The implications for the overall occupational burden of accidental deaths and injuries has not been previously detailed. This paper presents the results of a Monte Carlo sensitivity analysis for changes in total worker injuries and injury rates under different assumptions for the future energy mix in developed nations. Projections from the Energy Information Agency (EIA) and other organizations together with documented productivity gains for the various energy industries provide test cases for this analysis. The analysis indicates that future occupational fatality and injury burden of the energy sector is highly dependent on improvements in safety in the expanding industries, while specific projections on the share of specific technologies is less critical. This result highlights the need to invest in occupational risk mitigation in these industries.
能源结构变化对职业安全的影响
在世界许多地方,可再生能源和天然气正在取代煤炭和核能成为电力来源。虽然这些变化对环境的好处似乎很明显,但对工人安全的影响却不那么明显,尤其是在发达国家。煤矿开采是一个相对危险的职业,尽管近几十年来安全程度显著提高。按小时计算,制造和安装太阳能光伏发电(PV)可能对工人造成的风险较小,但目前太阳能光伏发电生产一兆瓦时电力所需的工人小时数高于煤炭发电。意外死亡和伤害对总体职业负担的影响以前没有详细说明。本文提出了蒙特卡洛敏感性分析的结果,在不同的假设下,工伤总数和工伤率的变化在发达国家的未来能源结构。来自能源信息署(EIA)和其他组织的预测,以及各种能源行业的生产率增长记录,为这种分析提供了测试用例。分析表明,能源部门未来的职业死亡和伤害负担高度取决于不断扩大的工业在安全方面的改进,而对具体技术所占份额的具体预测则不那么重要。这一结果凸显了在这些行业投资降低职业风险的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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