Trahant writes: "If jobs are no longer part of the equation, how does natural resource extraction benefit tribal communities?"
Construction site for a future oil pipeline. (photo: Supapornss/iStock)
Keystone XL Jobs Are Not the Good Jobs Tribes Were Promised
12 April 17
After the construction phase of the Keystone XL, only 35 employees would be needed to operate the pipeline.
couple of years ago a tribal leader showed me an abandoned lumber mill near the village of Tyonek, Alaska. The company promised jobs. And, for a time, for a couple of decades, there were those jobs. But after the resource was consumed, the mill closed, the company disappeared, and the shell of the enterprise remains today.
This same story could be told in tribal communities across North America. Sometimes the resource was timber. Other times gas and oil. Or coal.
The lucky communities were left with a small toxic dump site. More often there was major cleanup work required after (plus a few more jobs). And in the worst case scenario, a Superfund site was left behind requiring government supervision and a major cleanup.
But all along, and in each case, the accompanying idea was that jobs would be a part of the deal.
There would be construction jobs to build the mine, pipeline, or processing plant. Then there would be truck-driving jobs moving materials, a few executive jobs (especially in public and community relations), and, of course, the eventual supervision of the cleanup, especially if the tribal government had its own environmental protection agency.
That was the old deal.
But that�s no longer how it works. Now the resource is extracted, pipelines are built, and toxic waste is left behind�and the promised jobs are limited to the initial construction jobs.
The renewed effort to build the Keystone XL pipeline is an example of this shift. When President Donald Trump signed the executive order to approve the project, he promised �thousands of jobs.� That�s true enough for the construction phase, but only 35 employees would be needed to operate the pipeline, according to the State Department report.
Keystone, at least, is prospective jobs. New ones. But here�s the bigger challenge for the Navajo Nation, the Crow Nation, and some 30 tribes with coal reserves or power plants: This new deal for resource-extraction infrastructure does not create as many jobs.
The numbers are stark.
The U.S. Energy and Employment Outlook 2017 shows that electricity from coal declined 53 percent between 2006 and 2016. Over that same period, electricity from natural gas increased by 33 percent and from solar by 5,000 percent.
Coal is still a major source of energy, but it�s in decline. Coal and natural gas add up to two-thirds of all electricity generation in the U.S. That�s expected to remain the case until at least 2040, when the market share projection declines to a little more than half.
But because the market is in decline, tribes that develop coal will not share in the rewards of either major profits or in a spike in jobs. The only hope for this shrinking industry is to export the coal to other countries (something that will be extremely difficult because so many other nations have already agreed to the Paris climate targets). As Clark Williams-Derry has reported for the Sightline Institute:
Robust, sustainable Asian coal markets were never a realistic hope for U.S. coal exporters: the transportation costs were too high, the competition too fierce, and the demand too unstable. So the coal industry�s PR flacks may continue to spin tales about endless riches in the Asian coal market, the financials are telling a much more sobering story: that the coal export pipe dream continues to fade away, leaving a bad hangover on the coal industry�s balance sheets and a lingering bad taste in the mouths of coal investors and executives alike.
On top of all that, Derry-Williams points out that China�s coal consumption has fallen for three consecutive years.
And the international context is that coal is the most polluting of the three types of fossil fuels. More than 80 percent of the world�s known coal reserves need to stay in the ground to meet global warming targets.
There are jobs in the energy field, but as the Department of Energy report puts it: �Employment in electric power generation now totals 860,869 � [and] the number of jobs is projected to grow by another 7 percent, but the majority will be in construction to build and install new renewable energy capacity.�
The green economy is taking over, Trump or no Trump.
The extractive economy (like the farm economy a generation ago) reached its peak, probably back in 2014. Oil and gas employed 514,000 people a year. Today it�s 388,000. Coal and extraction-related jobs peaked at 90,000, and that number has dropped to about 53,000.
Indian Country�s development of coal�or not�has been the story so far in the Trump era.
Last month, new Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke lifted restrictions on federal coal leasing. He said the �war on coal is over.� Then he quoted Crow Tribal Chairman Darrin Old Coyote saying, �There are no jobs like coal jobs.�
A day later the Northern Cheyenne tribe filed suit. The tribe said the Interior Department did not consult the tribe prior to lifting the restrictions. �It is alarming and unacceptable for the United States, which has a solemn obligation as the Northern Cheyenne�s trustee, to sign up for many decades of harmful coal mining near and around our homeland without first consulting with our Nation or evaluating the impacts to our Reservation and our residents,� Northern Cheyenne tribe President L. Jace Killsback said in a news release. There are 426 million tons of coal located near the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation at the Decker and Spring Creek mines.
Meanwhile in Alaska, another coal project was put to rest in a tribal community. The village of Tyonek has been opposed to the Chuitna Coal Project. After a decade of planning, PacRim Coal suspended the project last month because an investor backed out. Although the project could be brought back to life, that�s not likely because coal is a losing bet for any investor.
According to Alaska Public Media, that meant a joyful celebration in Tyonek.
The president of the village Native Council, Arthur Stanifer said, �What it means for us is our fish will continue to be here for future generations. Also our wildlife, like the bears and the moose and the other animals, will be secure, and they�ll be here. They�ll have a safe place to be.�
And what of the jobs?
That�s the hard part. The prospects for extraction-related jobs are about to be hit by even more disruptive forces. For example, in the oil fields of North Dakota, one of the great paying jobs is truck driving�moving material back and forth. But already in Europe companies are experimenting and will soon begin the shift to self-driving vehicles. It�s only a matter of time before that trend takes jobs, because it fits the model of efficient capitalism. Self-driving trucks don�t need rest breaks. They consume less fuel and have fewer accidents.
That same automation disruption is occurring across the employment spectrum. Jobs that can be done by machines will be done by machines.
So if jobs are no longer part of the equation, how does natural resource extraction benefit tribal communities?
The answer ought to include a plan where the United States government and tribes work together to replace these jobs: Retrain workers and invest in the energy sector that is growing�renewable fuels.
But that�s not likely to happen in the Trump Era.
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NEVER VOTE REPUBLICAN
Onward 99%. It will be tough but we must sustain.
Well said, Eronat, and these are not even the "agent provocateurs" yet. These are the well-known (Since Seattle) Anarchists who show up perpetrating violence and destruction at protests where the Anarchists themselves can't even describe what is being protested. They just love to "sock it to the system". *Any* excuse to violence and vandalism is better than *no* excuse to violence and vandalism for these louts.
They always wear black clothing, black masks, and carry black flags. What's with Bubb Rubb quoted in the article as saying: "these people in black clothes with black flags .... they bamboozled us. They wanted violence."
They are ANARCHISTS, "Bubb", they *always* "want violence". If Occupy Oakland has a free library like OWS, better study up a little on the recent history of West Coast activism. The better to avoid being "bamboozled" over lack of easily accessed information. Knowledge is Power.
Or are you an out and out Fascist? You sure sound like it.
It's people like you who are finks and blacklegs to the corporate state and who are holding America back from entering the 21st century -42nd in the world in quality of life indicators as of recent polls and from being a force for good in the world by caring for it's own citizens and those in need of help abroad instead of being an over-armed thug.
Have YOU ever put your body on the line (other than possibly time a lock-step "yassuh" military cipher) for something you believe in passionately or are you happy with the "kick me again your lordship" status-quo?
The police should be out there with them and the real criminals are waltzing around in suits, albeit starting to shit in their Armanis!
"Oh villainous viper, damned beyond redemption, terrible Hell be on your spotted soul for this"!
NEVER VOTE REPUBLICAN!
Clinton opened the back door, George W. busted down the front door and the barn door, letting go the herd. Obama is allowing for the same thing. But in truth this all began during the time of Nixon/Reagan. Nothing is as simple as democrat vs. republican. Never forget the corporations that exited the country, along with factories and money.
It is very difficult to rid a protest of anarchists, thugs, plants, or any other critter attempting to denigrate dignified demonstrations. Everyone involved will have to police their own neighborhood demonstrations and call out the thugs. It is NOT easy.
Guess your corporate handlers didn't "spring" for a calculator or a calender, huh. BTW, your still in the gulag, and that fact is never gonna change. No matter how hard you "suck". What is "in tact" anyway?
PLEASE Mr. Eagle, I don't mean to come off as being mean-spirited, but for your sake and for the sake of the rest of us, get some professional councelling! Seek real life education! Then you too shall see the true light of what this country (and parts of the rest of this planet) has been suffering. ...And for God's sakes, PLEASE stop watching Fox News!
Then you can with enlightenment and dignity armed with the true knowledge, join our cause for the sake of the country and the world at large! Thanks!
Er...then it was some rogue billionaires in the 1% doing it? Of course it was the 99% - maybe only 1% of the 99% but it certainly helps more to tell the truth.
Having pointed that out- most protesters have been extremely restrained and should stay that way. It's the one thing the authorities don't understand. They understand and react to violence but are dumbfounded when confronted with peaceful obstinacy. The people shall overcome!
If you haven't caught on yet, you aren't paying attention and need to wake up!
Obama is behind the police repression. Karl Rove has little to no sway over mayors. Furthermore, a friend has started looking into which mayors belong to which party. So far, all Democrats except for one. But not finsihed yet.
Re this excerpt from the article: ". . . witnessed two demonstrators hurl items in retaliation.
I say good for them. The thugs who are perpetrating violence deserve whatever happens to them.
As for the people doing damage - has it occurred to anyone that these could be gov't installed perpetrators so that the police violence can be justified by our fascist leaders?
So what do YOU want? Again, you are the one with the twisted perspective and yet I've never hear a productive suggestion from y'r keyboard.
I'm a small business owner feeling the oppression of corporate monopoly and applaud every day these people make themselves felt.
Again, put up or shut up, mouthpiece and apologist for the power-elite with their freedom-and-cre ativity-killing jackboots!
Stop the flood of Chinese cheap bleep that displaces our workers? Or what?
Extraordinary show of force. Okay, the point has been made. Now what?
Until our demands are met? What demands? Who can actually meet them?
Arab Spring wanted rid of dictators--Assa d, Ghadafi, Mubarek, et al. must step down. The Euro protests raged at austerity that hit their 99% disproportionat ely.
Protests had an end point. I'm not seeing one here or any connection either.
Provocateurs and plants as well as undisciplined fools will drive away responsible protesters.
The big corporations ARE the bad guys and most bad in that they underwrite the politicians and determine policy by the overwhelming force of wealth and subsequent infiltration of the federal bureaucracy. Their agents are the regulators.
Big Corporations are no friends of small business.
While character flaws were surely involved in the flameout of our economy, much of the dysfunctional system is so set in place that often even smart, well intentioned people can't do their jobs.
Bashing government employees is not a way to foster pride in one's job and devotion to the public good. The government-is -bad mantra is a useless piece of ideological claptrap deflecting from the size of reform needed.
When will you honestly recognize, in your somewhat blinkered determination to blame the Government for everything and rationalize for big corporations, that they are one and the same thing, or a plutocracy?
And if you don't think that this is becoming a police state, you must live a very sheltered life. The Texas police now has drones; just a matter of time before they use them to stifle dissent on behalf of the Owner-Governmen t.
Try dissenting! Try protesting! Try getting to know some of those you call criminals -but then that's more challenging Innit?.
I was a 60's and 70's activist, and have faced the same clubs and agents provocateurs (and yes, there are loose-cannon scum, many being bored upper-middle brats who get their rocks off doing damage attributed to true and peaceful resisters then melting away). But now the cops have phasers, and all sorts of other crippling and sometimes lethal deterrents; just ask young Scott Olsen.
If you've never been out there, don't condemn what you don't understand and remember, dissent is truly democratic!
Read "The Nightmare Years" W.L. Shirer.