Partnership

The Labor Energy Partnership (LEP) is uniting climate and labor priorities in a shared vision for a low-carbon future that uplifts families and communities. To achieve this, the LEP develops innovative, technically sound, place-based solutions to the climate crisis that are rooted in social and economic justice and create and sustain high-quality, union jobs.

AFL-CIO

AFL-CIO

The AFL-CIO works tirelessly to improve the lives of working people. We are the democratic, voluntary federation of 57 national and international labor unions that represent 12.5 million working men and women. We strive to ensure all working people are treated fairly, with decent paychecks and benefits, safe jobs, dignity, and equal opportunities. We help people acquire valuable skills and job readiness for the 21st century economy.

Energy Futures Initiative

Energy Futures Initiative

The Energy Futures Initiative, an independent. nonprofit research organization, advances solutions to the climate crisis through building coalitions, thought leadership, and evidence-based analysis. Under the leadership of former Secretary of Energy Ernest J. Moniz, EFI analysis is widely published and publicly available. EFI’s mission: Harness the power of innovation to build a secure, affordable, low-carbon energy future.

How We Were Founded

Industrial transitions have rarely been smooth. They have been typically marked by community and worker dislocations with significant regional disparities, disproportionate impacts on minority communities, and the fraying of existing social institutions, including public education systems, local government services, unions, and even religious organizations.

Whether technology or policy-driven, the US has had an uneven track record of managing industrial transitions in ways that provided the impacted employees and their communities with the tools and resources to rebuild.

Today’s transition to a low carbon economy is being enabled by the growing competitiveness of new technologies and will be shaped by trade agreements and other public policies, but these are not its primary causes. The origins of this transition are grounded in the need to address the existential threat of climate change and will be driven in large part by public actions, programs, policies, and investments designed and implemented by federal and state governments to regulate and subsidize the growth of low carbon technologies.

It is the duty and obligation of policymakers to embrace solutions to industrial dislocation as fundamental to a clean energy economy transition’s design and implementation, technological evaluation, and how regions and localities are supported.

On Earth Day, 2020, the AFL-CIO and the Energy Futures Initiative announced the formation of the Labor Energy Partnership (LEP). Together, we have launched a multi-decadal effort to create a clean energy economy that is more equitable for all Americans and can be sustained across our diversity of political views, regional differences, and economic challenges for the next thirty years.

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The Partnership Team

The Labor Energy Partnership is bringing together some of our movements’ most renowned climate experts and labor leaders.

What We Do

Our team is developing timely and comprehensive products, events, and tools laser-focused on building a clean energy future with working people at the center. Explore some of our most recent work.