Areas of the 海角视频 hardest hit by job losses from decarbonising industry will miss out on levelling-up funding and face losing more employment, new research suggests.
A study of the most polluting industries warned the move to a 鈥済reen鈥 economy risks jobs, even with levelling-up funds.
The Royal Society for Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA) said areas such as Aberdeen, Port Talbot - with its steelworks - and Stratford-upon-Avon could be affected if jobs in steel manufacturing and car production decline and the use of fossil fuels drops.
Its report calls for a Just Transition Fund to support areas impacted by a decline in 鈥減olluting jobs鈥, warning up to half of the places that will be hit hardest by job losses from decarbonisation are not in the 海角视频 Government鈥檚 top priority areas for levelling-up funding.
Ministers are urged to do more to support areas at risk of being left behind in the switch from industries such as fossil fuel production to greener ones.
The RSA said half of the 20 most fossil fuel-reliant areas in the 海角视频 have not been labelled as a priority for the Government鈥檚 aim of levelling up.
Fabian Wallace-Stephens, senior researcher at the RSA, said: 鈥淒ecarbonisation is essential and can lead to a better future for workers and communities, but only if the state takes an active role in shaping local labour markets through investment, skills training and better welfare support.
鈥淏ut at present, many of the areas where the impacts will be most acutely felt are not in the priority categories for levelling-up funding.
鈥淲e need to make sure that decarbonisation policy and levelling-up policy work hand-in-hand to secure a better future for the most affected communities.鈥
GMB union general secretary Gary Smith said: 鈥淕overnment must set up a Renewables Development Authority to grow the skills and facilities for a 海角视频 supply chain for the massive investment required for net zero. This can help alleviate the job losses identified elsewhere.鈥
He added that thousands of giant offshore wind turbines are needed to meet climate change targets, which will need 30,000 steel fabrication jobs every year and 20 million tonnes of steel.
Unite assistant general secretary Steve Turner said: 鈥淭he necessary transition to a new green economy must put workers and communities at its heart.
鈥淲orking people will only be won over when they鈥檙e confident that no workplace or community will be left behind on our journey.
鈥淲e need and deserve so much more than sound bites and rhetoric, we will not buy a pig in a poke.
鈥淭he 海角视频 Government has no industrial plan or strategy to reassure 海角视频 workers or this union that a 鈥榞reen鈥 transition will be either fair or just.鈥





















