EDITION: U.S.
 
CONNECT    

Leo W. Gerard

Leo W. Gerard

Posted: August 10, 2010 11:52 AM

Red, as in furiously red, defined the day last fall when a consortium of companies announced it wanted $450 million in U.S. stimulus money to build a wind farm in Texas, creating 2,000 jobs in China and 300 in America.

Now, nine months later, things have cooled down and turned around. In a deal with the United Steelworkers (USW), two Chinese companies have agreed to build as much of the wind turbines as possible in America, using American-made steel, and creating perhaps 1,000 American jobs.

The deal is a result of white collar Chinese executives negotiating with blue collar union officers to create green collar jobs in the U.S. The agreement defies stereotypes about unions as constantly combative, excessively expensive and environmentally challenged. The USW has a track record of engaging with enlightened CEOs for mutual benefit. It has a long green history. And it has worked to return off-shored jobs to the U.S.

The USW, like the Democrats in the House and Senate with their Make It in America program, is devoted to preserving and creating family-supporting, prosperity-generating manufacturing jobs in America. And if they're green, all the better.

Billionaire investor Wilbur Ross has first-hand experience negotiating with unions, including the USW, to sustain U.S. manufacturing. He describes it positively. Here he is on PBS' Charlie Rose on Aug. 2:

"I have found the leaders of big industrial unions, the steelworkers, the auto workers, they understand dynamics of industry at least as well as the senior management of the companies."

Ross talked to Rose about dealing with the USW during the time when he was buying LTV Steel:
"We worked out a contract that took 32 job classifications down to five, changed work rules to make it more flexible and most important of all, we put in a blue collar bonus system. . .We became the most efficient steel company in America. We were making steel with less than one man hour per ton. The Chinese at the time were using six man hours per ton. We were actually exporting some steel to China."

Ross accomplished that while paying among the highest wages for manufacturing workers in America.

The USW approached the Chinese companies that planned the $1.5 billion Texas wind farm, A-Power Energy Generation Systems Ltd. and Shenyang Power Group, the same way it did Ross. The meetings occurred with the help of U.S. Renewable Energy Group, a private equity firm that facilitates international financing and investment in renewable energy projects. Jinxiang Lu, chairman and chief executive of Shenyang Power, said talking to the union enabled him to see its "vision for win-win relationships between manufacturers and workers."

For the USW, this deal means the Chinese firms will initially buy approximately 50,000 tons of steel manufactured in unionized American mills to fabricate towers and rebar for the 615 megawatt wind farm in Texas, will employ Americans at a wind turbine assembly plant to be built in Nevada, and will employ more American workers in green jobs at plants constructing the blades, towers and thousands of other wind turbine parts.

For the Chinese companies, the USW, the largest manufacturing union in America, will use its long list of industry contacts to help construct an American supply chain essential to amass the approximately 8,000 components in a wind turbine. The idea is to collaboratively create a solid manufacturing, assembly, component sourcing, and distribution system so that this team - the Chinese companies, U.S. Renewable Energy Group and the USW -- will build many more wind farms after the first in Texas.

Additional wind farms mean more renewable energy freeing the U.S. from reliance on foreign oil. As U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, says, there's no point in replacing imported foreign oil with imported wind turbines. For energy and economic independence, green manufacturing capacity and green jobs must be in the U.S.

This deal does that. And there's nothing unusual about foreign companies employing Americans. Many Americans, including USW members, already work in factories owned by many different foreign national companies, including German, Russian, Japanese, Mexican, and Brazilian, with names like Bridgestone-Firestone, Arcelor-Mittal, Rio Tinto, Grupo Mexico, Svenska Cellulosa AB (SCA) and Severstal.

In at least one other case, action by the USW forced the hand of a Chinese company to move jobs to the U.S. Tianjin Pipe, the world's largest manufacturer of steel pipe, said it could not export profitably to the United States if tariffs rose above 20 percent. This was after the USW and seven steel manufacturers filed a petition with U.S. trade agencies in April of 2009 accusing China of illegally dumping and subsidizing the type of pipe used in the oil and gas industry. The union won that case this past April, and the U.S. Commerce Department imposed import duties ranging from 30 to 100 percent to give the domestic industry relief from the unfair trade practices. To continue selling in the U.S., Tianjin Pipe had no choice but to build an American pipe mill. Construction is expected to begin in Texas this fall on the $1 billion plant to employ 600 by 2010.

Although the USW is cooperating with A-Power and Shenyang Power, it will not back off its trade cases involving exported Chinese steel, pipe, tires, paper and other manufactured products. The stakes for U.S. jobs are just too high.

Back in 1990, when green was not as trendy, the USW recognized that the environment would be among the most important issues of the era and issued the report, "Our Children's World." Since then, it has steadily promoted green -- became a founding member of the BlueGreen Alliance and Apollo Alliance, which promote renewable energy and renewable energy jobs.

Good, green American manufacturing jobs. Establishing American energy independence. It is win-win. And it's getting a green light now.

 

Follow Leo W. Gerard on Twitter: www.twitter.com/uswblogger

 
  • Comments
  • 16
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EminemsRevenge
07:23 AM on 08/11/2010
In NYC the MTA spends billions on trains, NONE of them made in the USA..and WHY is that?

It seems that this country is incapable of creating anything "green," unless it's envy.
05:09 AM on 08/11/2010
Gee, Big China meets Big Government with Big Union, now THERE's the free market system at work.

Can I get a piece of that, too? Oh, no subsidies from the Big Three in my business, I'm on my own to negotiate projects around the roadblocks­, instead of the subsidies, they throw up in my industry, real estate and finance.

That's the beauty of Big Government running the show, like any monopoly it's inefficien­t, supplies dwindle, costs go through the roof, it's responsive to politician­s and cronying, not citizens and consumers, and picks winners and losers. Misery for everyone not on the Committee.
photo
intolleft
Micro Bios must be politically correct
08:32 AM on 08/11/2010
Betcha can't wait until they get full control of health care huh?
07:55 PM on 08/10/2010
Leo - Get busy on getting the offshore drilling moratorium lifted. Steelworke­rs will get far more jobs building rigs, manufactur­ing pipe, etc. than most of the other stuff you mention. Offshore wind could create some real steel jobs, though.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lucky123
My micro-bio is empty.
07:30 PM on 08/10/2010
American jobs, and America in general, will never be green as long as big business, and all their lobbyists, are in the ears and wallets of those in Congress.

Try to do something for solar and wind? Oil and coal get upset.

Try to improve gas mileage, or turn cars electric? Auto industry gets bent out of shape.

So much for America being the Land Of The Free.
07:58 PM on 08/10/2010
Simply create a $75/ton tax on CO2 equivalent emissions from all sources (tillling land, cutting down forests, use of fossil fuels and carbon based fertilizer­s, etc.) and solar and wind will have enough room to develop with grovelling for endless subsidies and mandates. (And, if they can't then they aren't real.)

And take all the tax income created via this carbon tax and use it to reduce income taxes dollar for dollar. This will let all Americans help pay to clean up the environmen­t and fund the government­, unlike the current system where half of all Americans pay no net income taxes.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lucky123
My micro-bio is empty.
11:02 PM on 08/10/2010
That's a great plan. I just don't see it ever coming to fruition because of all the conflicts of interest with Big Business and Congress.
photo
intolleft
Micro Bios must be politically correct
08:35 AM on 08/11/2010
Solar and wind aren't real. Those technologi­es are thousands of years old. If they had any economic viability, it would have been developed by now. Too inefficien­t and they need baseline power generation­. Not to mention they are as expensive as hel l.
07:03 PM on 08/10/2010
Here in America, sending trillions of dollars to countries that actively work to harm us in exchange for overpriced oil is just the way we do things.

This isn't about what's smart, right, best or most beneficial­. If that were the case we'd have gotten off of oil back when politics wasn't completely bought and paid for by corporatio­ns.

So yeah, we're completely fine with sending our money, know-how, natural resources and jobs to China. Free market and all. Good thing climate change isn't real, because we're gonna be burning oil and coal until there isn't any left anywhere in the world.
07:59 PM on 08/10/2010
Yup, and putting ANWR and offshore areas out of bounds (when very environmen­tally conscious countries such as Norway develop all the resources they can, as does the UK) really helps in this area. You can't have it both ways and maybe you need to look in the mirror.
09:30 AM on 08/11/2010
Why would I need to look in the mirror? I don't care what the UK or Norway do, and I don't care to engage in dialog about ANWR or offshore anything. If you want to cheerlead for the Drill Baby Drill crowd, knock yourself out. You're simply accelerati­ng the inevitable­.

I will reiterate my earlier point: This isn't about what's smart, right, best or most beneficial­. Nothing - NOTHING - is going to dissuade Big Oil from what they're doing now, at least not until they've extracted every last drop of oil from under every last country on earth, whatever the cost. Iraq and Afghanista­n were just beta tests to see how far they could push things before the American people push back. And shocker: no one did, at least not enough people to matter.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
den1953
Save every US citizen buy American!
03:07 PM on 08/10/2010
What good are wind farms when the power grid is so worn it can't handle the electricit­y?
photo
Ragnar Danneskjold
Defender of Liberty
01:55 PM on 08/10/2010
Wind Energy is far from a panacea. In Falmouth, MA the unintended consequenc­es are already in force. The air movement has been affecting brain function in residents within a mile causing headaches and sleeping disorders from former supporters of the project. The result has been to govern the speed of the blades which, in turn, decreased the amount of energy the unit can generate, reducing the impact. In Newburypor­t, MA the same issue is being fought in court as we speak. In Nantucket sound, the opposition (which included the late hypocrite Teddy Kennedy) has been successful in delaying the wind farm offshore in more reliable windy areas away from homes for a decade now. There are now lawsuits over the advertised increases in the cost of electricit­y that will be billed if and when the farm is built. In the Berkshires­, environmen­tal grups have so far successful­ly killed a large mountain wind farm in a remote area. In Californa and Nevada, the Sierra Club has been fighting the constructi­on of the transmissi­on lines necessary to bring power from wind farms to the end user distributi­on system. We will not even put a dent in what we need with Wind Energy. I am not opposed to it, but reality is what it is. This litigious society we live in will not allow the timeley delivery of said wind energy facilities­.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
stack
USW Blogger
11:57 AM on 08/10/2010
We already buy our poisoned dog food, toothpaste and plaster board, our cadmium-la­ced children's necklaces, and our lead-paint­ed infant toys from China. We do not want to rely on any foreign country for our defense or energy production­. Make It in America.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
den1953
Save every US citizen buy American!
03:08 PM on 08/10/2010
Fanned and totally agree we need to stop feeding the communist piggy!