Working out on my oyster boat this week, I've been slurping my catch and wondering what sort of future lies ahead for those of us who work in industries already being impacted by climate change.
Some like me will be the first to experience the negative effects: I run a small organic oyster farm that faces extinction within the next 40 years because my oysters will not survive rising carbon emissions. Friends of mine are firefighters already facing hotter and more frequent wildfires.
Others work in industries that will gain jobs as a result of efforts to protect the climate: as electrical workers installing solar panels, steelworkers assembling wind turbines and as government workers being redeployed as environmental accountants.
Still others work in industries that will be transformed by climate protection policies, such as coal mining and forestry, who need and want to be part of the green workforce of the future.
As workers we stand on the front lines of the transition to a new green economy. Those of us earning our living in industries impacted by climate change and who believe in the need for both good jobs and sustainable environmental policy, have a stake in the national and global climate change debate and in building a greener, more just economy.
Unlike everyone else, we have both our livelihoods and our planet on the line, giving us a special interest and role in finding real solutions to climate change that also address the economic dimension effectively.
So far, as the politicians fiddle while the world burns, we've remained on the sidelines. We have a stake in the outcome of this fight. It's time to come together and play a role in shaping our future.
Mary Ellen Harte and John Harte: Addressing Global Warming: the Next American Revolution by...You!
From the bottom up, the green revolution is already starting. In many states there are policies to help communities use clean energy. And this is where you can make a difference: through your local government.
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