Back to search

MILJØFORSK-Miljøforskning for en grønn samfunnsomstilling

Greening the economy- Facilitating Innovation, Economics and Labour Demand

Alternative title: En grønnere økonomi - Tilrettelegging og konsekvenser for innovasjon, økonomi og etterspørsel etter arbeidskraft

Awarded: NOK 12.0 mill.

GREENFIELD investigates the impact of the green transition on skills requirements and labour market outcomes at the firm and individual level, as well as measures that can help realize or speed up the green transition. It is organised around four work packages, applying state of the art econometric methods and unique high-quality population-wide linked employer-employee data on jobs, workers and firms with information on e.g., wages, education, unemployment, accounting and patents, combined with questionnaire survey data and textual data. GREENFIELD involves collaboration with leading researchers from Imperial College London, University College London, University of Albany and NBER, thus making it possible to compare elements of the green transition in Norway, UK and the U.S. WP 1 addresses issues related to how the transition to green industries, occupations and jobs affect working conditions, pay, location, job creation and job reallocation, with particular emphasis on polarization and inequality. We will also study the need for reskilling or upskilling. WP 2 study how public policies might support the green transition, domestically and abroad through trade, directly and through spillover effects. WP 3 addresses the role of intangible capital has for the green transition and the return to this form for capital. Traditionally by capital analyses have focused on physical capital. Intangible capital comprises copyrights, patents and software. WP 4 investigates how the pandemic alters the green transition, by addressing labour demand responses and firm innovation and performance. In particular, we analyze how the pandemic has influenced the use of electronic communication platforms, and how this has affected workers and their work patterns.

GREENFIELD investigates the impact of the green transition on skills requirements and labour market outcomes at the firm and individual level, as well as measures that can help realize or speed up the green transition. It is organised around four work packages, applying state of the art econometric methods and unique high quality population-wide linked employer-employee data on jobs, workers and firms with information on e.g., wages, education, unemployment, accounting and patents, combined with questionnaire survey data and textual data. GREENFIELD involves collaboration with leading researchers from Imperial College London, University College London, University of Albany and NBER, thus making it possible to compare elements of the green transition in Norway, UK and the U.S. WP 1 addresses issues related to how the transition to green industries, occupations and jobs affect working conditions, pay, location, job creation and job reallocation, with particular emphasis on polarization and inequality, but also on the reskilling or upskilling to satisfy labour demand. WP 2 study how public policies might support the green transition, domestically and abroad through trade. First, we analyse how the greenness innovation mix of firms respond to public policies, and how the implementation of green technology is sensitive to price and taxes. We explicitly address how spillovers associated with green innovations influence the greenness of the economy. Next, we address how public innovation support is successful in exporting green technology and how green technology developed abroad is implemented in Norway. WP 3 addresses the implications of the increasing role of intangible capital for the green transition, with special attention to the return to different forms for capital. WP 4 investigates how the pandemic alters the green transition, by addressing labour demand responses and firm innovation and performance. We explicitly look closer on electronic communication

Funding scheme:

MILJØFORSK-Miljøforskning for en grønn samfunnsomstilling

Thematic Areas and Topics

Digitalisering og bruk av IKTPrivat sektorFornyelse og innovasjon i offentlig sektorFornyelse og innovasjon i offentlig sektorForskning for fornyelse av offentlig sektorDigitalisering og bruk av IKTPortefølje Demokrati og global utviklingKjønnsperspektiver i forskningPortefølje Muliggjørende teknologierKjønnsperspektiver i forskningKjønn som variabelLTP3 Utenforskap, inkludering, kulturmøter og migrasjonPolitikk- og forvaltningsområderFinansmarkedene og økonomisk styringDemokrati, makt og styringLTP3 IKT og digital transformasjonInternasjonaliseringLTP3 Demokrati, styring og forvaltningUtdanningUtdanning og kompetanse i samspill med arbeids- og samfunnslivLTP3 Innovasjon i stat og kommuneKlimaPolitikk- og forvaltningsområderMiljø, klima og naturforvaltningLTP3 Klima, polar og miljøLTP3 Muliggjørende og industrielle teknologierArbeidUtdanningLTP3 Miljøvennlig energi og lavutslippsløsningerFNs BærekraftsmålMål 12 Ansvarlig forbruk og produksjonArbeidArbeidsmarkedInternasjonaliseringInternasjonalt prosjektsamarbeidPortefølje Energi og transportFNs BærekraftsmålMål 8 Anstendig arbeid og økonomisk vekstFNs BærekraftsmålLavutslippBransjer og næringerMiljø - NæringsområdeKlimaRammebetingelser og virkemidler for utslippsreduksjon og karbonopptakLTP3 Tillit og fellesskapAnvendt forskningLTP3 Styrket konkurransekraft og innovasjonsevnePortefølje Klima og miljøPortefølje ForskningssystemetCovid19Politikk- og forvaltningsområderPolitikk- og forvaltningsområderArbeidsliv - Politikk og forvaltningBransjer og næringerPortefølje Velferd og utdanningPortefølje InnovasjonLTP3 Et kunnskapsintensivt næringsliv i hele landetLTP3 Klima, miljø og energi