12/16/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 12/16/2024 10:47
December 16, 2024
C40's Good, Green Jobs and Just Transition peer group includes representatives of 14 global megacities - from Accra in Ghana to Vancouver in Canada. Over the last two years, the group has showcased how climate action can drive equitable, sustainable and secure local green jobs to support a just transition to net zero.
The group exchanges solutions and shares knowledge to create a more just, resilient economy for its 60 million residents in diverse urban centres around the world. The group's work shows that cities can achieve more success when they work together. Many of the group's local actions have influenced policies that are shaping our shared future.
In 2022, C40 mayors committed to help create 50 million good green jobs worldwide by 2030. Good green jobs are found across most sectors of the economy, including construction, transportation, energy, waste management, healthcare, and emerging industries. Green jobs provide fair wages, safe working conditions, and stable employment. By bolstering the local economy, developing local green jobs can also ensure climate justice and increase public support for climate policy.
A just transition means that employment and training opportunities are available to everyone and that there are pathways in place to mitigate potential job losses. Cities are becoming green job creation hubs and are able to bridge the skills gap by working together with other stakeholders (businesses, unions, and training institutions). Many of the sectors that provide the most green jobs are in industries that are strongly influenced by local policy, such as construction, transport, or waste management.
In 2022, C40 responded to cities' determination to tackle some of the most challenging issues associated with the green economy and transition to net zero - from how to encourage departments to work together to create equitable employment opportunities, to tracking green jobs data. Supported by C40, the city's peer group was formed under the Inclusive Climate Action (ICA) Forum, a networking platform to exchange knowledge and best practices to drive policy change. Some of the member cities are also part of the Global Green New Deal programme, which is delivering inclusive climate action in practice and showing how to achieve a just transition.
Over the past two years, the group participated in 16 virtual meetings. City representatives shared their challenges, best practices, and practical workforce examples. They exchanged ideas on how to quantify green employment and ensure better access to decent green employment and workforce development.
The meetings helped cities focus on shared objectives. For example, only 13% of the global workforce have the skills needed for green jobs. Cities' participants are committed to addressing barriers and inequalities to make the workforce more inclusive for vulnerable groups such as young people and migrants. They also want to work with sectors that have historically had barriers to entry - such as women finding work in the construction industry.
Other meeting sessions covered youth engagement and inclusion in the green workforce, decent employment, and cross-departmental collaboration.
"[A key takeaway is] how critical social dialogue and both deep and wide ranges of partnerships are. Without a community behind you, it's impossible to move this work forward." - George Benson, Former Senior Manager of Economic Transformation Decarbonization and the Just Transition at Vancouver Economic Commission (Current ZEIC Senior Manager, Economic Development and Market Transformation)
The virtual sessions led to an Academy event where city officials met in person to examine ways to create and support good green jobs. This event helped local governments share ideas on emerging issues and solutions to adapt to local contexts.
"Thanks to the exercise carried out at the Academy and the exchange of experiences from the group, this has provided input and inspiration for the creation of the first proposal for measuring green jobs in Bogotá, where the city can continue its process of just transition and good green jobs." - Anyela Guerrero, Specialist, District Secretariat for Economic Development, city of Bogotá, Colombia
The Good, Green Jobs and Just Transition peer group provides practical examples of how cities are advancing climate and social goals together. They are showing the power of collaboration by creating sustainable employment, building skills and re-skilling opportunities.
By working with local communities, some cities have identified the need for public investment in workforce initiatives that protect socially and economically vulnerable workers, such as those exiting the fossil-based industries. By engaging them in the transition process and re-skilling pathways, a just transition opens up the opportunity to bring these experienced and committed employees into the green workforce, enriching the sector further. From Los Angeles, where oil workers are being actively engaged, to Salvador, Bogotá or London, where more women are receiving training in sectors traditionally underrepresented, to Accra, where efforts are on improving working conditions of informal workers, see below how cities are paving the way.
The 14 participant cities are: Accra, Bogotá, Buenos Aires, Ekurhuleni, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, Milan, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, São Paulo, Seattle, Tshwane, and Vancouver.
Over 75% of city respondents have been able to implement green jobs programming following these sessions.
Hear from cities involved in the programme:
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Ekurhuleni launched South Africa's first local Just Transition Forumthrough its Building Resilience and Working Towards Just Transition forum. The new forum enables dialogue to ensure that all voices, including communities, workers, businesses, government, youth, and academia, are considered in local just transition planning. The consultations also assessed the impact of the just transition on economic growth and the local labour market.
London is supporting adult learning, workforce development and inclusion to meet the needs of the green sector. The Mayor's Green Skills Academiesand Skills Bootcamps bring together employers and training providers to deliver industry relevant training to ensure Londoners have the skills they need to enter good green work. While the Workforce Integration Network works with green employers to support them to create pathways for underrepresented groups into the workplace, particularly for residents who may have traditionally been excluded from these opportunities, such as women and Londoners from Black, Asian, and minority ethnic backgrounds.
The City of Seattle, led by the Department of Finance and Administrative Services and the Office of Sustainability and Environment is pioneering an integrated approach to economic equity and climate justice through its Green and Climate Careers Citywide Strategy. The city connects workforce development with environmental initiatives, particularly through its policy like the new Building Emissions Performance Standardswhich is anticipated to reduce climate pollution from buildings and increase demand for a green workforce. These efforts leverage the Priority Hire Program,which prioritises hiring from economically distressed areas and creates opportunities for women, people of colour, and disadvantaged communities.
São Paulo is collecting green jobs data to better inform how to support their residents to secure quality employment opportunities in green sectors, such as food systems, while supporting unemployed, informal, and other vulnerable workers in the community.
Taking a participatory approach, the City of Accra is building trust and stronger collaboration with the informal waste sector, creating more resilient livelihoods for informal waste workers and improving waste management services in the city. A recent social insurance scheme served as a pilot to demonstrate the effectiveness of social insurance in bolstering informal workers' socioeconomic resilience, and their potential in mitigating the impacts of climate action.
Bogotá is refining its tools for measuring green jobs and closely monitoring decent employment indicators to assess working conditions and labour standards for workers. The city is also supporting workforce development and providing green job opportunities for residents who often do not receive such opportunities. For example, La Rolita recruits and trains women to become e-bus drivers, and fosters an inclusive and healthy working environment through wellbeing support.
Buenos Aires completed a collaborative process involving cities, academia, the private sector, and civil society organisations to produce reliable data on green jobs for the city's Registry of Green Employment. Their public platform for green job indicators includes an open methodology that can be accessed by other municipalities. The data includes equity and inclusion metrics such as the number of women employed in climate-related jobs.
Johannesburg is actively engaging its youth in green jobs, such as through their Green Jobs Youth Expo held in 2024. The Expo brought together high school and college students, introducing them to green career skills and pathways and valuable networking opportunities. The city is also training staff on green skills to support green building policy implementation.
The Mayor's Office of Energy and Sustainability works closely with the City's Economic & Workforce Development Department (EWDD) to prepare Angelenos for the sustainability jobs of the future. It has established a new partnership with the Youth Development Department to highlight green jobs in a new jobs portal. In partnership with the Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator (LACI), the office has also launched the Green Jobs Regional Partnership, furthering relationships with industry stakeholders, labour unions, and academic institutions to ensure 600,000 good green jobs are created in Los Angeles County by 2050. As part of its Just Transition Task Force with the County of Los Angeles, the City is developing a Workers Advisory Council to gather input and feedback from oil workers during the phase-out process.
Recognising the care sector's contribution to an inclusive transition to a green economy and resilient city, the City of Milan developed two pilot training sessions to identify energy poverty and build climate resilience for more than 30 social workers. Some have been taught to replicate the training modules with their peers. This is a step forward on Milan's path to developing their plan against energy poverty: Towards Common Energy Wellbeing.
Rio de Janeiro has been a pioneer in measuring green jobs over time and is now looking at how to improve green jobs data collection. The city has recently implemented a new sustainable buildings code that includes green jobs, and is addressing the needs of informal workers in green jobs through projects such as the Recicla Comunidade programme.
Salvador has included a green jobs strategy in its Strategic Planning for 2025-2028, with the aim of integrating quality green jobs into existing municipal projects. To this end, the city will focus specifically on the production chains of solar energy, construction and agroecology. In addition, with a focus on developing green skills for the population, it has launched new training courses, some specifically for women, in areas such as the assembly of photovoltaic systems and the construction of green façades, in collaboration with the private sector.
Tshwane trained its residents and offered secure employment opportunities through the Public Employment Programme, which provides more than 20,000 jobs in technical fields such as energy and wastewater management. The city also prioritised staff training in net-zero techniques as part of their new green building policy.
Many cities share similar priorities including tackling increasing inequality, the impacts of the climate crisis, high rates of informal employment and youth unemployment. They have identified a particular need for further investments in skills development. This includes addressing potential job losses (such as workers exiting fossil-based industries) and bringing their skills and experience to green sectors.
Further action is needed to help cities go further and faster towards a fairer future that improves quality of life and economic opportunities for all residents. The next step is to scale practical solutions, replicate these initiatives in other countries, and continue working together towards a green and just transition. Recommendations emerging from the peer group include:
C40's work on good green jobs supports cities in creating equitable, sustainable employment opportunities through collaboration, research, data analysis, and tailored support.
Visit our interactive dashboard for more city success stories.
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