The labour movement has contributed to climate and environmental policy for decades, and developed the concept of a ‘just transition’. Despite this, the relationship between unions and climate policymakers can be strained, with concerns from both parties about how the other will approach job losses from phasing out fossil fuels.
How has trade union policy on decarbonisation developed over the decades, and what are union leaders’ perspectives on more radical academic arguments, such as the need to structure economic policy around other metrics than GDP?
With particular focus on Germany and the UK, Bertie talks to Vera Trappmann about union engagement with green policymaking, what a just transition means for workers, and how this varies between Global North and South.
Vera Trappmann is Professor of Comparative Employment Relations at Leeds University, where she co-leads the Priestley Centre for Climate Futures. Her work focuses on climate change’s impact on workers, as well as union movement perspectives and policies on climate issues.
Further reading:
- ‘Perspectives on Social and Justice Issues in Climate Policy – Comparing the Just Transitions, Sustainable Welfare and Eco-Social Policy Literatures‘, Milena Büchs, Vera Trappmann, Gina Moran, Max Koch, WIREs Climate Change, 2026
- ‘Trades unions, climate policy and just transition in the UK‘, Vera Trappmann, Jo Cutter, Ursula Balderson, Leeds University Business School, 2026
- ‘German Trade Unions and Decarbonisation: A Transition to Green Growth, A‐Growth or Degrowth?‘ Vera Trappmann, Dennis Eversberg, Felix Schulz, Industrial Relations Journal, 2025
- What workers want: Conditions for a fair and just transition in the UK, Vera Trappmann, Jo Cutter, and Alice Garvey, 2025
- ‘Conjunctures of eco-social partnership unionism: The German Trade Union Confederation’s climate policies over three decades‘, Vera Trappmann, Dennis Eversberg, Felix Schulz, Industrielle Beziehungen, 2024