It would appear the Auditor General's annual report makes reference to the widely discredited "Spanish Jobs Study".
We are not in the habit of criticizing the hard-working Ontario Auditor General (AG), but were disturbed today to see his apparent reliance on a series of
widely discredited oil industry-backed reports attacking the value of "green jobs".
“A 2009 study conducted in Spain found that for each job created through renewable energy programs, about two jobs were lost in other sectors of the economy.”
While not properly referenced, it would appear the AG's report is referring to the
infamous "Spanish Jobs Study" from 2009. The study was created by a libertarian think tank tied to the
American Enterprise Institute (AEI). The AEI is partly funded by oil companies Exxon Mobil and the Koch Industries Inc – major funders of climate change denial campaigns worldwide.
The "Spanish Jobs Study" report didn’t actually show that any jobs were lost, but simply implied this through a highly discredited methodology. The U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory explains the false methodology
here. The study has also been called into question by the
Spanish Government itself, and the
Wall Street Journal. The study’s author, Gabriel Calzada, was a keynote speaker at the Heartland Institute’s
climate change denial conference in 2009.
The Auditor General also makes reference to two other nearly identical ‘zombie studies’ using the same flawed methodology for
Denmark, and the
UK. Not one of these reports actually shows any evidence of real job loss.
These are reports mostly used by right-wing republicans and
Fox news in the U.S. to discredit renewable energy policies and confuse the public. Their unfortunate inclusion in the Ontario AG's report accords them a credibility that is manifestly undeserved.
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