All that Glitters is Not Green

For someone who’s not from around here, the Buffalo Metro Area is Buffalo. For anyone who’s spent any real time here, Buffalo, Tonawanda, Amherst, Cheektowaga, Lackawanna and all the rest are distinctly different. The same thing is true of Green Jobs and Sustainable Jobs, they share some things in common, but they definitely different. Just like it is important to know the difference between Buffalo and its suburbs, it is important to understand the difference between Green Jobs and Sustainable Jobs.
To begin with, all jobs have an economic importance. This is one thing a Green Jobs Initiative and a Sustainable Jobs Initiative would share. Both would add jobs to the city, which means a positive economic benefit. Both have little or no negative environmental impact and this is one reason why the two are often confused.
Green Jobs are environmentally based. This means they have a positive impact on the environment. A good example would be wind power generation. The operation and maintenance of a wind farm has a net positive impact on the environment because of the reduction of environmental damage caused by coal burning power plants and the mining of coal. But there is also a reduction in carbon dioxide over the clean burning natural gas. So wind is a “clean” industry, no emissions to pollute the air or contribute to global warming.
Sustainable Jobs are based on local resources and meet local needs. So while they also need to have little or no negative environmental impact, they need to use locally based resources and provide opportunities for local residents. This sounds obvious, but consider what happens if the wind turbines in the Green Jobs example are manufactured in Cleveland, Ohio. The money for the turbines leaves Buffalo and goes to Cleveland, supporting jobs for Cleveland residents. When parts are needed, the money goes to Cleveland.
Now consider if Buffalo and the surrounding communities became a zero waste zone and recycled all of the glass, plastic and metals in the area. If this material was turned into the turbines by local workers, then these would be Sustainable Jobs as well as Green Jobs. The raw material is locally available, the market is locally based but there is also a net positive impact on the environment. If the company was locally based and provided fair wages and benefits, it would meet the criteria set for receiving sustainable venture capital in places that have created those kinds of investment funds to develop Sustainable Jobs. That would keep all of the money: the capital, the profit, wages, sales – everything – in the area where it gets re-spent and re-spent over and over again.
The Larkin Company did something like this in Buffalo during the 10 day long “banking holiday” in 1933. It issued $36,000 worth of "merchandise bonds" which it used to pay its employees. At the time, the employees could get most products through the Larkin outlets, but there were some things they needed cash for. But since most Buffalo residents were willing to accept the bonds in lieu of cash, these bonds turned over enough times to allow the sale of $250,000 worth of merchandise. This provided a significant boost to the Larkin business which helped keep its own and other Buffalo workers, employed.
Making Buffalo energy independent would keep a lot of money in the area rather than sending it to other states or countries. Wind, solar, biodiesel are all possibilities for both Green and Sustainable Jobs. Developing an electric mass transit system which ran on renewable energy and eliminated the need for cars would not only be another Green Industry Sector, but would also create jobs in eco-tourism as people came to Buffalo to see how this system worked. If it was manufactured locally from recycled materials (possibly the cars it was replacing) it would be a Sustainable Industrial Sector as well.
Most people don’t realize that there is also money to be made in trading carbon credits on the Chicago Carbon Exchange. These credits are carbon dioxide emission reductions that one entity sells another so the other can increase its emissions. The entity that owns the reduction in carbon emissions can sell them on the exchange. At least one company is leasing space for solar panels on residential roofs to take advantage of this. The home owner gets low cost renewable power, the company gets to depreciate the panels, sell the power they generate and bundle the carbon savings from all of the panels for sale in Chicago. This is a Green Business. If the panels (or any other goods) were locally built using recycled materials, the company building them could bundle a substantial amount of carbon savings from use of those materials, making this both a Green and a Sustainable Business.
Government and education can both be greener and can be Sustainable Sectors of the economy if they are managed that way. Other cities are doing this and doing it successfully. Urban agriculture could easily produce another $40 million/year of Sustainable Green Jobs within the Buffalo city limits, again other US and Canadian cities are doing this successfully. These other cities engage their residents about what the municipal priorities should be. Then, with that input of their residents, develop the programs and the spending priorities necessary to meet them. The people of Buffalo will have to take this role in developing Green and/or Sustainable Jobs initiative if they want those jobs to be created.

As we mentioned in our previous post, we’re in the process of changing the Buffalo Rising site. We’re almost there as we expect to launch the new site on Friday, December 19th.
In the meantime, posting will be light as we log new stories in the new publishing system which will only be viewable when we launch on Friday.
As always, we appreciate our users’ patience as we make this transition but we promise it will be well worth it. With faster load times, a comment view … 




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sbrof
Don't forget that sustainability have some form of perpetuity to it. It isn't just an economics tool. We should be creating item that then feed into natural or technical cycles of life without much degradation. Cradle to Cradle is a fantastic book that talks about waste to food systems and how the goods we manufacture should be returned as materials for the next good. But that the reprocessing of the raw materials should degrade them, otherwise all you are is less bad and prolong the inevitable trip to the landfill.
But there lots of opportunities to create these materials, and system for which we could sell to others for a high profit. This is going to become a whole new field or materials research and manufacturing those who figure it out are going to make quite the profit in years to come because products that can be used indefinitely will always be inherently greener products.
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sbrof
Not to keep talking to myself here but the best part about such an initiative in Buffalo or WNY is our ability to actually do this relative ease. Our climate isn't that cold compared to many places, it isn't that hot either. Much of our heating / cooling needs could be solved through innovative design (passive solar could go a long way here) + a little energy if needed. We have access to lots (but less every day) of cultivatable fertile lands for food and materials.
Energy flows through our area are plentiful, wind, solar (higher than you might think) to take advantage of. We just choose to throw energy at problems instead of creating lot term solutions to then. That was fine when energy was cheap but isn't so fine anymore when people are spending more and more of their disposable income on utilities.
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Herdsman
sbrof- you are totally correct!!!
There are lots of opportunities for creative solutions to local needs designed with life cycle impacts in mind. Historically, Buffalo has always been at the forefront of new product development. These kinds of solutions will bring royalties back to the city at the very least.
Buffalo has world class art, theater and music as well as other intellectual property which can bring similar sustainable returns back to the community.
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RisingDamp666
Buffalo can keep warm for a while simply by burning Amherst in the furnace. Watch those embers though, they contain cadmium, nickel and lead.
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sbrof
Here are a few examples ofGreen Startup Companies that we should be trying to bring, and grow in Buffalo. Anyone has the opportunity to become very successful. We need jobs for the next economy not clinging to those from the one that died 30 years ago.
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sbrof
huh.. no link, try this.
http://www.inhabitat.com/2008/03/13/video-portable-renewable-energy/
Anyone else notice that BRO hasn't been loading recently? Or giving out stars in Firefox isn't working either? Are they slowly blocking me?
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