Submitted by kickresume t3_yq0n0i in dataisbeautiful
Comments
dec7td t1_ivnc97c wrote
Renewables are being constructed at an extremely rapid rate. Installing millions (billions?) of solar panels requires a ton of people. I suspect most of these job numbers are in construction, not operations like it is for fossil generation. The article states 70% of the clean energy jobs are in "building out" the projects.
MBunnyKiller t1_ivo55x2 wrote
Yeah and growing rapidly. Just got hired at a Dutch firm making smart grid/battery/car chargers etc. They grow about 50% a year. It's not just Tesla growing at this rate
[deleted] t1_ivoqaek wrote
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paulwesterberg t1_ivq5lk7 wrote
Any electric transport company able to grow at that rate will.
meme_slave_ t1_ivmh9py wrote
If they provide 56% of the jobs while providing 20% of the worlds total energy, i wonder how many jobs would be created if the industry got 5 times larger lol.
(156 million jobs if it scaled linearly)
Spring-Dance t1_ivmm26v wrote
It's fueled by government subsidies so it completely depends on if subsidies are increased and will completely collapse if removed
cromstantinople t1_ivnj1s3 wrote
‘Fossil Fuels Received $5.9 Trillion In Subsidies in 2020, Report Finds’
https://e360.yale.edu/digest/fossil-fuels-received-5-9-trillion-in-subsidies-in-2020-report-finds
Uncle00Buck t1_ivonltg wrote
According to the article, the lion's share is environmental impact (estimated), such as a carbon tax that no one pays. That is not a subsidy.
cromstantinople t1_ivpsuz4 wrote
I disagree since it's usually taxpayer-funded projects that have to deal with that impact. We all pay a carbon tax in terms of air quality and premature deaths. The idea being that externalized costs aren't taken into consideration and they most certainly should. The price of fossil fuels are kept low because they externalize cost in addition to getting billions a year in direct government subsidies.
Uncle00Buck t1_ivr4e5r wrote
Are we discussing the definition of subsidy or what you think is right? There are substantial societal benefits to fossil fuels as well as negative environmental impact. Do we subtract that portion? Defining value and burden are not black and white. I'm also not in favor of poor folks having to pay more for gas when it represents a chunk of their income. The best solution is that no one should get subsidies and let the market push ripe alternative energy technology.
cromstantinople t1_ivrf2i3 wrote
Subsidy, n: a sum of money granted by the government or a public body to assist an industry or business so that the price of a commodity or service may remain low or competitive.
From the IMF report: "Underpricing fossil fuels not only undermines domestic and global environmental objectives but is a highly inefficient policy for helping low- income households2 and has a sizable fiscal cost—too little revenue is raised from fuel taxes, implying other taxes or government deficits must be higher or public spending lower."
The subsidy is that we, as taxpayers and breathers of air, are paying is in higher taxes or lower spending elsewhere or by increased debt/deficits. So, because their costs are externalized, the price of the commodity is kept low thereby forcing governments to pay those costs.
[deleted] t1_ivogn25 wrote
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_11_ t1_ivnpc57 wrote
I mean. Okay. So is U.S. agriculture. Nobody ever brings that up. Roughly 20% of net farm income is due to government subsidies and our current farming model will completely collapse if they're removed.
Subsidies are used as a way to encourage industries to thrive despite low initial or ongoing profit margins in sectors that are important to the population at large. They're not inherently bad and their use isn't an indicator of worthiness or lack thereof.
DirectDire t1_ivnr61k wrote
What if you ignore corn, corn is such bullshit its not good for making fuel and corn syrup is just used in junk food. Corn is a huge scam in the US, heavily subsidized but no real benefit to society. Eating corn normally is fine.
MasterBot98 t1_ivoargl wrote
Reminds me about dat corn
InspectorG-007 t1_ivmnwtn wrote
Government could do that for the jobs numbers. And the companies receiving said subsidies likely won't have to produce much in return.
Beast_Mstr_64 t1_ivnsat8 wrote
Oh you meant that under the coal comment np
xelIent t1_ivnm6cy wrote
We will collapse if we keep relying on fossil fuels though
btrain96007 t1_ivoboqi wrote
I wonder how many would go without heat in the winter? Lol
[deleted] t1_ivm5fdx wrote
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[deleted] t1_ivmdlaa wrote
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cerebralsexer t1_ivq7ile wrote
Means more people working is not good news
genericness t1_ivo1mzs wrote
Electricity, maybe. Heating and lighting, no way.
You know the bright thing up in the sky during the day...
[deleted] t1_ivo0omn wrote
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smellsfishie t1_ivq7maw wrote
There's corruption everywhere, even in fossil fuels.
[deleted] t1_ivm634g wrote
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ClemClem510 t1_ivnirh1 wrote
Is it? One is a massively growing industry, the other is an established one. What else should people be expecting?
[deleted] t1_ivnjou5 wrote
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randomacceptablename t1_ivnlzk5 wrote
The EU? Certain countries are perfectly fine. It is the fact that some countries decided to become completely dependent on Russian energy supplies. Countries that did not aren't doing badly at all.
thejesiah t1_ivnymvr wrote
This is so embarrassing for you.
685327592 t1_ivlwjdc wrote
Employing a lot of people isn't really a sign of progress. You'd prefer a new industry to require less human labor, not more. I feel like a lot of people misunderstand this.
dec7td t1_ivncgwb wrote
Renewables, especially solar, is a lot more labor up front (one time at construction) but a lot less labor during operations. Over a 20-30 year life of the plant that breaks even pretty easily. Levelized cost of energy.
UnCommonCommonSens t1_ivo1r4w wrote
I prefer an industry that spends it’s money in the local labor market over an industry that spends it’s money in foreign dictatorships any day!
Staeff t1_ivnmo4d wrote
I think this is more about that not phasing out fossils to protect jobs is not a valid argument, if renewables provide even more jobs..
taggedandgagged t1_ivoqt8g wrote
How about the fact that fossil fuels require many fewer jobs to provide the world with enough energy to sustain
vjx99 t1_ivoxzbf wrote
Yet they're still the cheaper form of energy production. Which means the money is going to workers instead of oligarchs.
taggedandgagged t1_ivoye2l wrote
No they are not? Wtf are you talkin about. They are much more expensive for the output you get
vjx99 t1_ivozabl wrote
[Renewables are now significantly undercutting fossil fuels as the world’s cheapest source of energy, according to a new report.
Of the wind, solar and other renewables that came on stream in 2020, nearly two-thirds – 62% – were cheaper than the cheapest new fossil fuel, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA).
](https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/07/renewables-cheapest-energy-source/)
Staeff t1_ivoyt3p wrote
The required labor of renewables gets less over the lifetime of an installation as you don't need to keep a whole mining/drilling/shipping operation going to provide fuel.
But besides that what would it matter that you need more labor? As long as it's cheaper overall to produce renewable energy the number of jobs doesn't really mean anything.
taggedandgagged t1_ivoz1xf wrote
Its not cheaper overall and has so many more employees because of the necessary human labor to get anything within a magnitude of fossil fuel production. Or we could just go nuclear green and get over the shitty wind turbines already
Staeff t1_ivozdrt wrote
https://www.irena.org/publications/2022/Jul/Renewable-Power-Generation-Costs-in-2021
>The lifetime cost per kWh of new solar and wind capacity added in Europe in 2021 will average at least four to six times less than the marginal generating costs of fossil fuels in 2022.
>
>Globally, new renewable capacity added in 2021 could reduce electricity generation costs in 2022 by at least USD 55 billion.
>
>Between January and May 2022 in Europe, solar and wind generation, alone, avoided fossil fuel imports of at least USD 50 billion.
barlog123 t1_ivo5bi7 wrote
They can't just be jobs they need to be productive jobs that add value otherwise you're subsidizing waste and inefficiency
Staeff t1_ivo6hoe wrote
Look, I don't know what to tell you, renewables are already the cheapest way to produce energy in many countries and states and they have the benefit of not further advancing climate change, both of which adds value to the economy.
[deleted] t1_ivpofhb wrote
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barlog123 t1_ivo6s41 wrote
How? They all have to be backed up with gas and coal because they're unreliable so it's renewable + gas/coal which isn't very green
Staeff t1_ivo6un7 wrote
Are you arguing that being fully fossil is more green than renewables with fossil backup?
barlog123 t1_ivo8uny wrote
Yeah, why not.
- The production and demand just shifts to other places so going green does very little in the grand scheme of things.
- Creates reliance on outdated unclean oil/gas/coal infrastructure and rouge nations especially in the case of an emergency.
- The net total reduction is minimalized by the need for backup until the battery tech is there.
Staeff t1_ivo9sbc wrote
If that's what you choose to tell yourself to rationalize not going green then please stick to it, you are beyond being argued with...
inactiveuser247 t1_ivnadhk wrote
You would prefer it, but one of the features of disruptive technologies is that initially they won’t beat the existing tech in every metric. Over time they might, but that’s not the point.
Fossil fuels are pretty efficient now because we’ve had hundreds of years to perfect their extraction and build up their scale. If we were still reliant on people mining coal with picks and shovels and drilling for oil with tiny little drill rigs on land then that labour efficiency would tank.
BillyShears2015 t1_ivonivy wrote
Relative to its competition (whale oil, burning logs, etc.) when it was still nascent, fossil fuels were still leaps and bounds more efficient in labor input vs. energy output, that’s why they became and remain dominant. Renewable’s competitive advantage going forward will be their distributed nature that increases system resiliency and reliability.
COZRUN t1_ivm0p6j wrote
Yes, all it means is there's a shit ton of money flowing into "clean" energy. That doesn't mean it will be well spent.
kickresume OP t1_ivnthv7 wrote
> there's a shit ton of money flowing into "clean" energy
There's much more money flowing into fossil energy https://www.reddit.com/r/dataisbeautiful/comments/yq0n0i/comment/ivnj1s3/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3
slashseven t1_ivnm1tl wrote
Is it possible thats the rub? Float companies until they work, then rugpull their subsidies and let your mates "aquire" them?
nathan555 t1_ivml545 wrote
Apples to Oranges comparison. If all other costs are equal, the company/industry with less labor has lower cost to produce the same good. But if solar costs less than coal per kwh even though it hires more people- that's because it has a different business model with different costs.
xelah1 t1_ivokxg8 wrote
It'll also depend on past vs present investment. Industries which invested a lot in creating assets in the past now have large capital costs to pay. Industries investing now are going to be paying for more labour.
Then there are the external costs, but they're not included in the price and that's a whole other topic.
xpersuader t1_ivnfrpw wrote
You misunderstood it when you called hydro “new”.
randomacceptablename t1_ivnm865 wrote
Well it is useless information to begin with. But to your point new industries like solar do require less human labour not more then legacy ones. The disparity is in building out capacity. The construction is capital intensive.
overlordpotatoe t1_ivnr2r4 wrote
I think it's just one of the weird side effects of capitalism. People need jobs in order to survive, so we can't view greater efficiency as something purely positive as it ideally should be.
40for60 t1_ivph975 wrote
Its what happens when things are starting out, how many people worked on the railroads to haul the coal? or pipelines?
How dumb are you?
knowitallz t1_ivne1vf wrote
B Gates has a startup that has robots assembling solar farms
kickresume OP t1_ivntkw2 wrote
He also has a new generation of a nuclear reactors. It's called TerraPower, I think.
Turtley13 t1_ivm7hif wrote
But isn't the whole point of capitalism to create jobs!?
/s
685327592 t1_ivm8r2q wrote
You want productivity to be high. If more jobs are needed to produce less energy that doesn't bode well.
meme_slave_ t1_ivmhi5s wrote
Thats not how that works, even with all the upfront cost added (that includes employee salary) solar energy still costs the same per kilowatt as coal.
Thats not even including the literal millions of lives that could be saved by switching.
chuckmckinnon t1_ivmkrtj wrote
I see the sarcasm, but it's worth an answer anyway: no. If you're primarily concerned with job creation then the last thing you want are "labour-saving devices." You want people doing everything manually -- think of digging ditches with spoons instead of backhoes.
For people to prosper -- for the standard of living to go up -- you need more productivity, or more stuff produced per unit of input. Increased productivity means that last decade's innovative thing gets better understood and the process of making it more reproducible, and now making that thing becomes a well-understood process needing fewer people.
Now people need to find new jobs, but that also means that we're producing more things with less effort than when we started. We aren't able to disconnect "innovation" from "creative destruction." Whole companies get created, flourish, and die because of this lifecycle.
Understanding this made me a lot less resentful about my career, and helped me to better anticipate my next moves.
_newsalt_ t1_ivmw7i6 wrote
This is a great answer.
Capitalism is all about adding value. More output for less input increases wealth for everyone.
Imagine if grain still had to be harvested by hand. Each person harvesting would only be able to do say 1 acre per day. Then have to thresh by hand after. Which you cold maybe do 5 acres a day with a horse and then haul to a bin.
So 12 hours cut plus 3 hours thresh plus 1 hour transport per acre
A modern custom operation charges about $25 per acre for harvesting service.
So if done by hand the labour would only be worth $1.6 per hour.
[deleted] t1_ivni5ng wrote
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ArvinaDystopia t1_ivoeyja wrote
> Understanding this made me a lot less resentful about my career
Same. I'm not automating jobs away, I'm improving productivity. It's the fault of politicians and businessmen that that excess productivity is not put to improving working conditions.
The solution to growing inequality is to regulate profits/tax them rather than oppose technological improvements.
saintjimmy43 t1_ivmobvl wrote
Regardless of how anyone wants to interpret this, if you think the solution to anything is to stick with oil youre not smart.
ArvinaDystopia t1_ivof7ms wrote
> youre not smart
Delicious irony.
wheresmyflan t1_ivonlcj wrote
How is that irony?
RichardNoggins t1_ivozdhc wrote
Forgot the punctuation, I assume.
123xyz321Z t1_ivmuxoj wrote
“If you don’t agree with me, you’re stupid. I don’t care what the facts are.” There fixed it for ya.
commit_bat t1_ivntyup wrote
Have you considered the facts are what lead to this person's opinion in the first place
saintjimmy43 t1_ivmwtad wrote
My brother in christ you just admitted you think the world should be powered by oil indefinitely. Now you have to marry your mother in law.
ChunkyMooseKnuckle t1_ivn0amo wrote
He didn't actually say anything about that though.
palmtreevibes t1_ivnb921 wrote
What a disingenuous comment. He mocks the anti oil statement, therefore he's pro oil. It's that fucking simple.
afl3x t1_ivnfapp wrote
He mocked a snooty comment. Didn't mention pro or anti oil, you snoot.
palmtreevibes t1_ivqw1b9 wrote
Oh yeah I forgot that people never have intentions beneath what they openly state. My bad.
ChunkyMooseKnuckle t1_ivo3p0b wrote
People like you crack me up. "If you're not with me you're against me!" It must be nice to have such a shallow view on the world.
bass9045 t1_ivnetl4 wrote
I really hated stacked graphs for info like this. Just makes the comparison really difficult to conceptualize
boo_lion t1_ivo1v5l wrote
did i accidentally sort by controversial? what's going on here?
bozitybozitybopzebop t1_ivoyglx wrote
Will Big Clean Energy come take Big Oil's congressional representation someday?
MetaDragon11 t1_ivo6wvv wrote
And how many are jobs are associated with nuclear?
[deleted] t1_ivpnzu8 wrote
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Aquaticbadger t1_ivnr1ty wrote
Wouldn't that be a negative given the returns?
Fishschtick t1_ivnun2o wrote
Only takes a handful of people to run a petrochemicals plant.
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Snoo9704 t1_ivq77to wrote
Yet it's still more expensive for me even after a 3x price increase on fossil fuels.
What the hell.
[deleted] t1_ivq9p40 wrote
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gnarlium t1_ivqeusj wrote
This is not beautiful. Lacking a legend, it's barely even a graph.
Miserable-Ad-2539 t1_ivr3lzj wrote
It’s only because clean energy is government backed
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Rivera437 t1_ix72q4o wrote
It's true - more people are employed in clean energy than in fossil fuels.
In fact, many new technologies are emerging in the clean energy field, such as using boron to improve solar cell efficiency. So it's an exciting time to be involved in this industry!
HauserAspen t1_ivnean1 wrote
That's how they get big profits!
xpersuader t1_ivnfoqr wrote
Hydro folks, big chunk is probably hydro.
kickresume OP t1_ivntyt4 wrote
I would bet for solar.
zaputo t1_ivo7h7e wrote
This really highlights why oil is so popular. It's insanely cheap and energy dense. Like, by workers, it's 5x to 6x more effective than renewables, if you go by kwh per employee.
There is a criminal level of disinformation around "clean energy". Germany has been long touted as a clean energy pioneer, yet they are still absolutely hooked on fossil fuels for their grid. France on the other hand, less than 10 percent of their power is from fossil fuels.
The bottom will fall out of the clean tech / renewables energy market at some point. It makes sense for certain areas, certain places, etc. But right now, you can't fly a plane with batteries, they aren't energy dense enough. It's just physics.
I hope to see a massive nuclear Renaissance in our lifetimes. It is a bird in the hand solution to decarbonizing our grid, and now. Not like, in ten years when X Y Z battery breakthrough will save us.
Narabedla t1_ivofcg5 wrote
Hold up, who touted germany as a clean energy pioneer ever since they completely murdered their solar sector by suddenly just completely ripping all subsidation (which ended in china buying out local companies, taking trade secrets and then closing them)?
The (relative to german politics) conservative CDU had the power for like close to two decades and essentially just fcked over anything not coal, because coal lobby is paying well. (Looking at RWE specifically).
At least in germany i haven't found people who think germany is doing well at all in terms of renewable energy lol.
thetreecycle t1_ivpfag2 wrote
Where are you getting the kWh per employee data from?
zaputo t1_ivptkl0 wrote
Math. 80 percent of energy is from fossil fuels and 10 percent more workers in clean than fossil
Pieownage t1_ivpd4r0 wrote
so this is why gas is so expensive thanks Biden
Hollix89 t1_ivm7zhh wrote
It's nice that this industry is creating jobs but this doesn't look very efficient.
SpiderFarter t1_ivotxyw wrote
Amazing what massive government subsidies produces
COZRUN t1_ivm0bfc wrote
And yet fossil fuels provide 80% of the world's energy.