The government has today committed to working with businesses to nurture the
next generation of "green collar" workers as the UK seeks to tap into a global
green business sector estimated to be worth £350bn a year by the end of the
decade.
The commitment forms part of the government's
published
response to last year's
Commission
on Environmental Markets and Economic Performance (CEMEP) report, which
recommended a range of policy measures designed to accelerate the transition to
a low carbon economy.
The response outlines government plans to develop a "consistent long-term
policy framework" that provide business with the confidence to invest in clean
technologies and better foster the development of the skills required to build a
low carbon economy.
A spokeswoman for Defra said that while the report offered no new green
policy commitments it would serve as the "roadmap" guiding government attempts
to drive investment in low carbon technologies and business models.
Business Secretary John Hutton said there was a strong economic case for
promoting the transition to a low carbon economy. "By the end of the decade,
global green industries will be worth as much as the global aerospace industry –
in the order of £350bn a year – and with the potential to create thousands of
new green collar jobs in Britain," he said. "So there is a clear business case
for maximising the opportunities presented by climate change and making sure
that Britain unlocks these business opportunities."
He added that the government would help drive the development of these skills
through its push to deliver an increasingly low-carbon energy mix and efforts to
work more closely with the business community, such as next month's joint
conference with the Royal Bank of Scotland on the actions required to deliver a
low carbon economy.
Matthew Farrow, head of environment at employer's body the
CBI,
welcomed the announcement but warned that urgent action will be required to head
off a potential skills crisis.
"There are some parts of the economy where the pinch is already being felt,"
he observed. "If you look at government targets for the installation of home
installation and wind turbines, you have to ask if the there are enough people
with the requisite skills to meet those targets." He added that skills shortages
could also worsen as growing numbers of countries similarly attempt to undertake
the transition to a low carbon economy, creating international competition for
people with green business and technology skills.
Farrow said that the market would help rectify the problem by driving up
salaries and attracting more people to the sector, but he warned that with it
taking years for people to develop many of the required skills businesses and
government would also have to co-operate to help increase the numbers of
entrants to the industry.
"Like most skills issues it will require employers and government to work
together to deliver a long term strategy capable of providing the skills we
require," he said.
Craig Bennett of the
Corporate
Leaders Group on Climate Change similarly welcomed the announcement, but
insisted that the scale of the government's response to the CEMEP report
remained inadequate. "If you accept, as the government claims it does, that
there is a strong economic argument for transitioning to a low carbon economy,
then we would argue for a far higher level policy measures to stimulate
investment and help pull us out of the current economic downturn," he said. "
You have to ask: where is the large scale low carbon stimulus package?"
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article