Estimating employment from energy-efficiency investments

We develop a methodology for estimating the number and types of jobs that would result from investments in energy efficiency in homes, businesses, and industry. The methodology involves the development of input-output (I-O) bills of goods that characterize how energy-efficiency funds would be spent...

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Main Authors: Marilyn A. Brown, Anmol Soni, Yufei Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-01-01
Series:MethodsX
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016120301758
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spelling doaj-405c600d50f04ce78fb22de1a32a5a1a2021-01-02T05:10:36ZengElsevierMethodsX2215-01612020-01-017100955Estimating employment from energy-efficiency investmentsMarilyn A. Brown0Anmol Soni1Yufei Li2Corresponding author.; School of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology, 365 Cherry Street, Atlanta, GA 30332, USASchool of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology, 365 Cherry Street, Atlanta, GA 30332, USASchool of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology, 365 Cherry Street, Atlanta, GA 30332, USAWe develop a methodology for estimating the number and types of jobs that would result from investments in energy efficiency in homes, businesses, and industry. The methodology involves the development of input-output (I-O) bills of goods that characterize how energy-efficiency funds would be spent across sectors of the economy. The methodology builds on and adds greater articulation to the research conducted in prior studies of U.S. energy-efficiency policies. • The first two steps involve estimating the magnitude of investments in energy-efficient technologies and systems required to produce a unit of energy consumption reduction, and then identifying how these investments are expensed across the broad investment categories, which creates the preliminary “bills of goods” for investments in energy efficiency in homes, businesses, and industry. • The third step involves soliciting feedback on the preliminary bills of goods from experts in delivering and evaluating energy-efficiency programs, and then making necessary modifications. • In the final step we apply the input-output coefficients representing the bills of goods to estimate the direct, indirect and induced employment per million dollars of investment in energy efficiency.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016120301758Clean energy jobsEmployment impactsGreen jobsInput-output analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marilyn A. Brown
Anmol Soni
Yufei Li
spellingShingle Marilyn A. Brown
Anmol Soni
Yufei Li
Estimating employment from energy-efficiency investments
MethodsX
Clean energy jobs
Employment impacts
Green jobs
Input-output analysis
author_facet Marilyn A. Brown
Anmol Soni
Yufei Li
author_sort Marilyn A. Brown
title Estimating employment from energy-efficiency investments
title_short Estimating employment from energy-efficiency investments
title_full Estimating employment from energy-efficiency investments
title_fullStr Estimating employment from energy-efficiency investments
title_full_unstemmed Estimating employment from energy-efficiency investments
title_sort estimating employment from energy-efficiency investments
publisher Elsevier
series MethodsX
issn 2215-0161
publishDate 2020-01-01
description We develop a methodology for estimating the number and types of jobs that would result from investments in energy efficiency in homes, businesses, and industry. The methodology involves the development of input-output (I-O) bills of goods that characterize how energy-efficiency funds would be spent across sectors of the economy. The methodology builds on and adds greater articulation to the research conducted in prior studies of U.S. energy-efficiency policies. • The first two steps involve estimating the magnitude of investments in energy-efficient technologies and systems required to produce a unit of energy consumption reduction, and then identifying how these investments are expensed across the broad investment categories, which creates the preliminary “bills of goods” for investments in energy efficiency in homes, businesses, and industry. • The third step involves soliciting feedback on the preliminary bills of goods from experts in delivering and evaluating energy-efficiency programs, and then making necessary modifications. • In the final step we apply the input-output coefficients representing the bills of goods to estimate the direct, indirect and induced employment per million dollars of investment in energy efficiency.
topic Clean energy jobs
Employment impacts
Green jobs
Input-output analysis
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016120301758
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