By Aaron Clark Clean energy jobs in the US expanded 2.8% last year, three times faster than the rest of the nation’s workforce, according to a new report from research group E2, which cautioned that recent policy decisions threaten to derail future gains. The world’s largest economy added almost 100,000 new jobs in clean energy bringing the total number of workers in the sector to 3.56 million. About 60% of those positions are in construction and manufacturing and include jobs like assembling solar panels, batteries, electric vehicles and wind turbine parts, according to the group, which advocates for environmental policies. Green technology and renewables deployment is critical to lowering domestic energy costs and modernizing America’s infrastructure to better compete in the global energy transition, the authors wrote. Last year’s growth may not be repeated in 2025. The sector has faced sustained attacks from US Republicans and President Donald Trump, whose $3.4 trillion budget bill rolled back Biden-era green tax breaks. Companies canceled, closed or scaled back more than $22 billion worth of investments in clean-energy projects during the first half of this year, a separate E2 report found earlier this year. Clean energy jobs accounted for 82% of all new energy jobs added in 2024 in the US and now comprise 2.3% of the nation’s overall national workforce, according to E2. A tally of recent news you may have missed on changes impacting climate policy and science under the Trump administration. The Trump administration asked a federal court to cancel the approval of a $6 billion wind project planned off the coast of Maryland as part of a wider effort to halt the development of the offshore clean- energy resource. A panel of experts convened by the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine said the evidence that greenhouse gases harm human health is “beyond scientific dispute” — a conclusion that could impede the Trump administration as it seeks to roll back the federal government’s authority to regulate climate pollution. A Bloomberg Green investigation unearthed internal documents showing how online conspiracies and personal attacks disrupted FEMA during back-to-back hurricanes last year. What did we miss this week in Washington? Email dbochove1@bloomberg.net Exxon has called for European leaders to repeal a new climate and human rights law that would fine corporations and is threatening to become a flashpoint in US-EU trade negotiations. Designed to root out human rights abuses and improve environmental standards, critics say the European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive has evolved into a sweeping set of regulations that make net zero plans mandatory and apply outside Europe to companies’ entire global supply chains. “It’s the worst piece of legislation I’ve seen since I’ve been in this job,” Exxon’s Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods said in an interview. “Given the perspective I have around the world, that says quite a bit.” The directive has come under scrutiny from member states including Germany and France, which say it risks harming competitiveness. Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. Darren Woods during a Bloomberg Television interview. Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg EU leaders will turn up at the UN General Assembly in New York next week having failed again to deliver their climate homework on time after division among member states meant ministers did not agree on a 2035 emissions-cutting pledge. Increased wildfire smoke could lead to 1.4 million premature deaths globally each year by the end of this century, while an annual average of 40,000 people in the US died over the past decade due to smoke exposure, a new study says. A methane leak at a site owned by Australian fossil fuel producer Santos helped scupper a $19 billion takeover by suitors led by Adnoc, according to people familiar with the events that said other factors contributed to the collapse of the deal. Kuwaiti artist Monira Al Qadiri. Photographer: Markus Tretter/Markus Tretter Monira Al Qadiri says she is pre-empting the end of oil and building monuments to it. As one of the most important contemporary artists of the Middle East, her work — spanning sculptures, films and performances — throws new light on humanity’s deep interdependent relationship with fossil fuels. This week on Zero, Akshat Rathi asks Al Qadiri how art can help make sense of the current moment. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple, Spotify or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday. Join us for Climate Week NYC | The New York City skyline Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg On Thursday, Sept. 25, Bloomberg Green will host a solutions-focused look into a new era of climate action during Climate Week NYC. Following the 80th United Nations General Assembly, we’ll hear how top leaders in business, finance and government are approaching climate issues during times of geopolitical uncertainty. Learn more here. |