Here’s what happens to workers when coal-fired power plants close. It isn’t good

When Australia’s dirtiest coal-fired power plant, Hazelwood in Victoria, closed in 2017, Australian authorities were blind to the collateral damage.

Closing a plant that accounted for a fair chunk of Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions would help bring emissions down, but the costs to the displaced workers were unknowable.

How many of them would lose income, and for how long? How many of them would earn mere fractions of what they used to earn years into the future?

Twelve coal-fired plants closed between 2010 and 2020, and now a deep dive into the tax records of workers in that industry provides us with the first systematic insight into what happened.

The study we carried out for the e61 Institute along with colleague Lachlan Vass examined taxation microdata to track the earnings trajectories of Australians who received redundancy payments between 2010 and 2020 by industry.

Our study, published this morning, finds that on average across all industries the workers made redundant earned around 43% less in the following year.



Incomes plummet by two-thirds​

But workers made redundant in coal-fired power plants did much worse than the overall average. They earned 69% less in the year after they lost their jobs, earning a mere third of what they had.

Some of the loss would have been due to earning less in new jobs, and some of it would have been due to working fewer hours in new jobs. The tax data doesn’t enable us to tell which is which. Both would be important.

And for workers who lost jobs in coal-fired power plants, the effects lingered.

Four years after being made redundant, the workers in coal-fired power plants earned 50% less. On average across all industries, the workers made redundant earned only 29% less.

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Why power stations workers do badly​

There are at least four reasons why the incomes of displaced coal-fired power station workers are likely to be lower than the incomes of other displaced workers.

One is that many coal-fired power plant workers possess highly job-specific skills (related to operating specialist equipment) that aren’t readily transferable to other jobs, or at least not to other jobs in that location.

Another is that many coal-fired power plant workers derive high wages from strong union representation, meaning they are likely to earn less if they switch to less-unionised sectors.

Yet another is that coal-fired power plants are often a major source of local employment and provide support to other employers, meaning that when they close the overall unemployment rate in their region increases, making it hard for the workers they displace to get good jobs unless they move.

And another is that they are usually older. Bureau of Statistics data suggests that in 2010 55% of workers in coal-fired power plants were aged 45 or older compared to 35% in the economy at large.

Workers aged 40 and over do much worse after redundancies than younger workers, and workers in coal-fired power plants even more so.

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The case for special support​

Another 18 coal-fired power plants are set to close in coming decades. Our study suggests that while these closures will benefit the nation as a whole, helping fight the existential threat of global warming, they may impose foreseeable and long-lasting costs on an identifiable group of workers.

Half a century ago when Prime Minister Gough Whitlam slashed tariffs on imports by 25% in an effort to fight the lesser threat of double-digit inflation, he extended special support to those the decision would put out of work.

Whitlam offered every displaced worker retraining and “a weekly amount equal to his [sic] average wage in the previous six months until he obtains or is found suitable alternative employment”.

Opponents of this sort of targeted support point out that the number of workers set to lose jobs from coal-fired plant closures is minuscule compared to the millions of workers who leave jobs for other reasons every year.

But there is something different about losing a job when it is the result of a government decision, especially one that targets a particular geographic region.

We now need a national conversation on whether special support is warranted for those we know the move to net zero will hurt.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Dan Andrews, Visiting Fellow and Director – Micro heterogeneity and Macroeconomic Performance program, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University, Elyse Dwyer, Researcher, Department of Economics, Macquarie University

 
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Do you know how much Carbon Dioxide (which is required for plants to grow) is in the atmosphere? I'll repeat how Alan Jones explains it, "Carbon Dioxide CO2 accounts for 0.04% of the Atmosphere and humans are responsible for 3% of that 0.04%. It's like saying there is a granule of sugar on the Harbour Bridge. Clean the Bridge, it's dirty."
I know all that, I have a science background..only need a tiny imbalance and we are in trouble...Alan Jones is a shock jock journalist, not a scientist of any kind! ps I am also a farmer (Vetiver Grass), look it up, great soil , water bio and phytoremediator and carbon sequester as well as natures nails for stabilising slopes, dams, and we sell it to industry for putting around their tailings dams for removing heavy the metals..
 
who should take over? Leg of Mutton Dutton? Morrison lost the election and they've squealed ever since.
The problem lies in everyone believing it's a 2 party system. It's not vote independents in and let them form a government. Since the second world war it has been dominated by 2 parties, but it doesn't have to be that way. Elect the people that will look after the people. Do not elect people who want to please their parties.
 
There are seven under the Kyoto protocol, the two main ones of course are Carbon Dioxide, and Methane. These gases have always been in our atmosphere but have increased exponentially since the industrial revolution and increase in human population and the need for us to all be fed..😁
Sulphur hexafluoride is one of those "brutal" greenhouse gases with an atmospheric concentration of 11.02 parts per trillion or 0.0028% of the concentration of carbon dioxide at sea level. Too bad it has a density of 6.17 g per mL, compared to air at approximately 1.2 g per mL. This gas will actually hug the ground!

Looking at nitrogen trifluoride, another greenhouse "nasty", runs at a concentration of around 2 parts per trillion or 0.0005% that of carbon dioxide. At a density of 3.003 g per mL, it also a ground hugger.

The Kyoto clowns and their IPCC cronies should just rot in hell. What they fail to mention is that water vapour is also a greenhouse gas, responsible for HALF of the greenhouse gas effect!

We won't talk about that though. It's not man made.... :mad:
 
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