Felix Zaussinger , Tobias S. Schmidt , Florian Egli
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引用次数: 0
摘要
向低碳经济转型会导致劳动力市场的转变。然而,目前对面临风险的职业、技能概况及其区域和部门分布的知识差距限制了对这种转变的有效政策反应。本文基于一种新的职业暴露分类,涵盖了3,008种职业和13,500种技能,我们利用细致的劳动力调查,绘制了欧洲各地区和部门的劳动力市场对低碳转型的暴露图。我们发现,与低碳或中性工作相比,缺乏行业脱碳选择的高碳工作(风险工作)的工人技能明显更少,他们的技能更不横向,这可能会抑制向需求职业的转变。此外,区域和部门之间的差异很大。例如,虽然高风险工作在采矿业的相对频率最高(11%),但制造业受绝对影响最大(0.9 M)。至关重要的是,我们的方法表明,有效部署工业脱碳方案有助于将高风险工人的数量从6.2 M减少到2.3 M。德国和匈牙利面临着一个特别的挑战,它们面临风险的劳动力比例高得不成比例,加上欧盟公正过渡基金(EU Just Transition Fund)提供的公众支持很低。应对这些国家和地区劳动力市场的影响对于避免政策反弹至关重要。
Skills-based and regionally explicit labor market exposure to the low-carbon transition in Europe
Transitioning to a low-carbon economy leads to shifts in the labor market. Yet, an effective policy response to such shifts is currently limited by knowledge gaps on the occupations at risk, their skill profiles, and their regional and sectoral distributions. Here, based on a novel classification of occupational exposure covering 3,008 occupations and 13,500 skills, we map the labor market exposure to the low-carbon transition across European regions and sectors using granular labor force surveys. We find that workers in high-carbon jobs lacking industry decarbonization options (at-risk jobs) have significantly fewer skills and that their skills are less transversal compared with low-carbon or neutral jobs, which may inhibit switching to in-demand occupations. Moreover, large variations between regions and sectors can be expected. For example, while at-risk jobs are most frequent in the mining sector in relative terms (11%), the manufacturing sector is most affected in absolute terms (0.9 M). Crucially, our approach shows that effective deployment of industry decarbonization options helps reduce the number of at-risk workers from 6.2 to 2.3 M. Finally, we show that, among European countries with available data, Germany and Hungary face a particular challenge with a disproportionately high share of their workforce at risk, combined with low public support via the EU Just Transition Fund. Responding to these national and regional labor market impacts is critical to avoid policy backlash.
期刊介绍:
Joule is a sister journal to Cell that focuses on research, analysis, and ideas related to sustainable energy. It aims to address the global challenge of the need for more sustainable energy solutions. Joule is a forward-looking journal that bridges disciplines and scales of energy research. It connects researchers and analysts working on scientific, technical, economic, policy, and social challenges related to sustainable energy. The journal covers a wide range of energy research, from fundamental laboratory studies on energy conversion and storage to global-level analysis. Joule aims to highlight and amplify the implications, challenges, and opportunities of novel energy research for different groups in the field.