Boston unveils climate-ready workforce action plan

The City of Boston has released its Climate Ready Workforce Action Plan, developed through a year-long research project led by Northeastern University's Dukakis Center. The initiative aims to build a skilled workforce to support the city's goal of carbon neutrality by 2050. Researchers highlight the challenges in defining green jobs and the need for targeted training programs.

Boston's Climate Action Plan outlines a transition away from fossil fuels, including decarbonizing buildings, electrifying transportation, upgrading the grid, and enhancing coastal resiliency to achieve citywide carbon neutrality by 2050. A key component is workforce development, often the final piece in such climate strategies.

The Climate Ready Workforce Action Plan culminates a collaborative effort involving the Dukakis Center at Northeastern University’s Policy School, the Burning Glass Institute, TSK Energy Solutions, and Community Labor United. It incorporates input from 51 advisors, ranging from government officials to community leaders.

Defining a 'green job' proved challenging. For example, car mechanics may shift from servicing gas vehicles to electric ones, which require less maintenance overall. Similarly, HVAC technicians could install either gas furnaces or efficient electric heat pumps. "These examples show some of the murkiness of figuring out what a green job is," said Joan Fitzgerald, a Northeastern public policy professor who led the research.

Using a vast dataset of hundreds of millions of job ads from the Burning Glass Institute, researchers identified essential skills for the green economy. "We look at job postings from across the globe, identify the skills in them, and track how those skills are changing," explained Stuart Andreason, the institute's executive director.

Many current roles, such as construction work under energy-efficient codes or electrician tasks for EV chargers, can evolve into green jobs. Dukakis Center Director Alicia Modestino analyzed workforce needs for the Climate Action Plan, projecting demand for new entrants and replacements amid retirements. "The transition from entirely carbon-based jobs to those that require green skills... will be rapid, possibly creating a shortage of workers," Modestino noted.

The plan emphasizes environmental justice, offering opportunities in infrastructure and community engagement for disadvantaged groups. It also addresses training gaps, like insufficient funding for trainee wages. Fitzgerald recommended city support for such programs to sustain career pipelines.

"Our work to fight climate change will create good-paying jobs and a more inclusive workforce in Boston," said Oliver Sellers-Garcia, the city's Environment Commissioner and Green New Deal Director. This blueprint connects climate goals to economic opportunities, serving as a model for other cities.

Related Articles

South Korean officials announce ambitious greenhouse gas reduction targets at a press conference in Seoul.
Image generated by AI

South Korea approves 53-61% greenhouse gas cut by 2035

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

South Korea's Presidential Commission on Carbon Neutrality and Green Growth has approved a goal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 53-61% from 2018 levels by 2035. This target is slightly higher than the government's initial proposal of 50-60%. The goal will be finalized at a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday and officially announced at COP30 in Belem, Brazil.

A new study warns that cities worldwide need to cut greenhouse gas emissions from building construction and infrastructure by more than 90 percent over the next two to four decades to prevent global warming from exceeding 2°C. Researchers from the University of Toronto analyzed emissions for 1033 cities, highlighting the need for radical changes in building design and materials amid growing housing demands. The findings emphasize efficient multi-unit housing and better resource use over simplistic solutions like widespread wood construction.

Reported by AI

Climate risks, exemplified by recent Los Angeles wildfires, are destabilizing real estate markets, straining public budgets, and eroding household wealth. Insurers' retreat from high-risk areas like California, Florida, and the Midwest highlights systemic financial pressures. Meanwhile, investments in clean energy technologies continue to surge, offering pathways to resilience.

As 2025 closed, renewable energy overtook coal globally and the Global South—led by India—deepened climate commitments at COP30, offsetting US retreat under Trump and building on momentum from China and Africa.

Reported by AI

A new report by climate scientists and financial experts cautions that the world has underestimated the pace of global warming, potentially leading to trillions in economic losses by 2050. Governments and businesses are urged to prepare for worst-case scenarios amid accelerating temperature rises. Recent data shows 2025 as the third-warmest year on record, pushing closer to breaching the 1.5°C Paris Agreement threshold sooner than anticipated.

The Swedish delegation at the COP30 climate summit in Belém strongly criticizes the draft agreement released early Friday. The draft lacks mentions of fossil fuels and ambitious emissions reductions, sparking anger from the EU and several countries. Negotiations are in their final stage, but nations remain far apart on several key issues.

Reported by AI

Egypt hosted an introductory workshop for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) on Monday, underscoring its efforts to strengthen the role of Global South scientists in producing climate knowledge and informing evidence-based policymaking. The event was opened by Acting Minister of Environment Manal Awad as part of Egypt's push to develop its national adaptation plan, supported by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Green Climate Fund.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline