Forget saving the planet. Clean energy interests sharpen a different
message: Money and jobs
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[February 08, 2025] By
SETH BORENSTEIN and ALEXA ST. JOHN
WASHINGTON (AP) — Saving the planet is so 2024. Clean energy leaders
across the globe are now tailoring their messages to emphasize the
greener side of green: wealth-building. It's an idea that sells far
better in the new world of nationalism and tycoon leaders.
Messaging from the U.S. renewable energy industry and the United Nations
on climate change has typically focused on the urgent need to cut
greenhouse gas emissions for the sake of environmental and human health.
To bolster the argument, they cite record-shattering heat around the
world, the frequent climate disasters costing billions of dollars and
the human toll of it all.
But a sharper emphasis on profit potential has become evident as
President Donald Trump stormed into office with a flurry of rollbacks to
clean energy initiatives and an emphatic declaration of plans to
“unleash” oil, gas and mining. In a lobbying blitz in Washington this
week, solar, wind, hydropower and other clean-energy interests touted
their role in a “robust American energy and manufacturing economy” and
sported lapel pins that said “American energy dominance” — a favorite
Trump phrase.
Meanwhile, in a major policy speech Thursday in Brazil, the U.N.'s top
climate official played up the $2 trillion flowing into clean-energy
projects and recalled a friend telling him that appealing to people’s
“better angels” only goes so far.
That friend, according to U.N. Climate Executive Secretary Simon Stiell,
added: “In the great horserace of life ... ‘always back self-interest
... what’s in it for me.' ”
It's not that clean energy backers haven't made the case before. But a
different landscape, especially in the U.S., stands to make it more
potent.

“It’s a very winning message for outreach to conservatives because it’s
really true,” said former U.S. Rep. Bob Inglis, a South Carolina
Republican who founded the conservative climate group RepublicEN.org.
“If we play our cards right and lead the world to this, we can create a
lot of wealth, create a lot of jobs here in America.”
Inglis pointed to Elon Musk's empire-building on electric cars, solar
panels and batteries.
"When right-of-center people hear, ’you know, you can you make a profit
at this' then it makes sense. Otherwise, it’s like, why are people
giving stuff away?" Inglis said.
Jobs especially have long been a big selling point for solar and wind
energy and electric cars, but there's a push to not think of
self-interest as a dirty word — and instead to harness it, United
Nations officials said. When Stiell mentioned the $2 trillion in his
speech for clean energy, he called it "unstoppable because of the
colossal scale of economic opportunity it presents.”
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Pumpjacks operate in the foreground while wind turbines at the
Buckeye Wind Energy wind farm rise in the distance, Sept. 30, 2024,
near Hays, Kan. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)
 Princeton University climate
scientist Michael Oppenheimer, who is also a professor of
international affairs, said climate change is such a difficult
problem, "if some people feel the need to cater to narrower
self-interests which can be bundled into a solution to the problem,
why not?”
In letters and at more than 100 congressional meetings this week,
industry leaders from the Solar Energy Industries Association,
Oceantic Network and other organizations appealed to keep crucial
tax incentives in place so their projects can be globally
competitive.
The appeal targets lawmakers who might dismiss climate change but be
open to an economic rationale, said Jessie Stolark, executive
director of the Carbon Capture Coalition, which spearheaded a
letter.
“In the past administration, obviously, we emphasized the common
interest around climate mitigation,” Stolark said. “The messaging
with this current administration and with the Republicans is
shifting more to that energy piece, the economic piece, the jobs
piece.
“I think you want to meet an audience where they are, what’s
important to them, what’s going to drive the conversation forward.”
Liz Beardsley, senior policy counsel at the U.S. Green Building
Council that was part of the sweeping lobbying effort, said the
economy has always been a core component of its messages, and that
“doing good is also good for business.”
To Lisa Sachs, director of the Columbia Center on Sustainable
Investment, messaging that climate efforts were strictly for the
planet was actually disingenuous.
“The honesty and coherence of the business and financial sectors in
making the economic case for the transition is refreshing, at least,
after years of doublespeak, greenwashing and confusion,” Sachs said.
“It’s not a perfect strategy from a climate or social perspective,
as the private sector cannot on its own fully decarbonize the
economy ... But under this administration, it’s probably our best
bet for progress.”
President Trump may not be reachable, but his Energy and Interior
secretaries are and they have power, said Frank Maisano, a longtime
Washington spokesman for energy interests from oil and gas to wind
and batteries.
It's time for a change, said Joanna Depledge, a climate historian at
Cambridge University in England: “Banging on about the catastrophic
climate crisis is obviously doing no good at all.”
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