Focus AreasEconomic diversification/restructuring > Economic development plans, Infrastructure investmentEmployment > Job creation and/or equality, Skills, Social protectionsGovernment intervention > RegulationInequality and/or poverty > OtherResilience Keywordssocial and economic transition risksfossil fuel subsidy reformtrade unions ByJesse Burton, Laura Merrill, Heidi Peltier, Ulrike Lehr, Lucy Stone, Catherine Saget, Dunja Krause, Maciej Bukowski, Jan Witajewski-BaltvilksPublishing OrganizationClimate StrategiesAcademic/research institution or journal
SummaryThis brief consists of short papers prepared for a breakout session of the 24th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP24) in March 2018. The papers examine various just transitions efforts around the world, including different approaches to green transitions, a case study of distributional impacts in Germany, and a summary of green coalitions and movements in the United States.
Several of the authors emphasize implementing social protections and promoting inclusion to ensure a just transition to a low-carbon economy. The document calls on countries to take urgent action to train workers in the skills needed for a greener economy and to provide them with social protections to facilitate the transition to new jobs. One author argues that a truly just transition cannot focus solely on unionized coal miners but must consider informal workers or service providers as well. Another essay classifies just transitions approaches in terms of their inclusiveness and ambition, offering a useful taxonomy for assessing them. Another author argues in favor of a “systems approach” to just transitions that would use not only sectoral data but also microeconomic, demographic, and social survey data to create a more holistic view of societies in transition.