back to all publications

The costs of replacing coal plant jobs with local instead of distant wind and solar jobs across the United States

CSS Publication Number
CSS22-41
Full Publication Date
August 19, 2022
Abstract

To further a just energy transition, jobs lost at retiring coal plants could be replaced by jobs at wind and solar plants. No research quantifies the feasibility and costs of such an undertaking across the United States. Complicating such an undertaking are workers’ place-based preferences that could prevent them from moving long distances, e.g. to high renewable resource regions. We formulate a bottom-up optimization model to quantify the technical feasibility and costs of replacing coal plant jobs with local versus distant jobs in the renewables sector. For the contiguous United States, we find replacing coal generation and employment with local wind and solar investments is feasible. Siting renewables local to instead of distant from retiring coal plants increases replacement costs by 5%–33% across sub-national regions and by $83 billion, or 24%, across the United States. These costs are modest relative to overall energy transition costs.

Co-Author(s)
Bhavesh Rathod
Julian Florez
Dylan Smith
Publication Type
Journal Article
Digital Object Identifier
https://doi.org/10.1016/
Full Citation

Vanatta et al., The costs of replacing coal plant jobs with local instead of distant wind and solar jobs across the United States, iScience 25, 104817, 2022. CSS22-41