Abstract

Coal mining directly employs over 7 million workers and benefits millions more through indirect jobs. However, to meet the 1.5 °C global climate target, coal’s share in global energy supply should decline between 73% and 97% by 2050. But what will happen to coal miners as coal jobs disappear ?Answering this question is necessary to ensure a just transition and to ensure that politically powerful coal mining interests do not impede energy transitions. Some suggest that coal miners can transition to renewable jobs. However, prior research has not investigated the potential for renewable jobs to replace ‘local’ coal mining jobs. Historic analyses of coal industry declines show that coal miners do not migrate when they lose their jobs. By focusing on China, India, the US, and Australia, which represent 70% of global coal production, we investigate: (1) the local solar and wind capacity required in each coal mining area to enable all coal miners to transition to solar/wind jobs; (2) whether there are suitable solar and wind power resources in coal mining areas in order to install solar/wind plants and create those jobs; and (3) the scale of renewables deployment required to transition coal miners in areas suitable for solar/wind power. We find that with the exception of the US, several GWs of solar or wind capacity would be required in each coal mining area to transition all coal miners to solar/wind jobs. Moreover, while solar has more resource suitability than wind in coal mining areas, these resources are not available everywhere. In China, the country with the largest coal mining workforce, only 29% of coal mining areas are suitable for solar power. In all four countries, less than 7% of coal mining areas have suitable wind resources. Further, countries would have to scale-up their current solar capacity significantly to transition coal miners who work in areas suitable for solar development.

Highlights

  • The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 1.5 °C report states that keeping global warming below 1.5 °C requires the share of coal in total primary energy supply to decrease by 73%–97% by 2050 (IPCC 2018)

  • A rich literature is emerging on the need for a ‘just transition’ for coal miners whose livelihoods depend on coal production, in order to minimize the impact on those workers (Newell and Mulvaney 2013, Baker et al 2014, Abraham 2017)

  • Our GIS analysis shows that only 29% of the coal mining areas in China are suitable for solar power generation, with heterogeneity between provinces ranging from 88% in Inner Mongolia to no suitable areas in some provinces

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Summary

Introduction

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 1.5 °C report states that keeping global warming below 1.5 °C requires the share of coal in total primary energy supply to decrease by 73%–97% by 2050 (IPCC 2018). Meeting these targets would lead to a near elimination of coal mining jobs related to production of coal for both electricity (hard coal and lignite) and nonelectricity sectors (metallurgical coal). Just transition plans are seen as tools to overcome possible political resistance against the policies needed to phase out coal (Thurber 2019, Healy and Barry 2017). Even autocratic states like China have faced resistance from powerful coal mining interests when attempting to close down coal mines (Wright 2007)

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