Australia's peak union body has called on the Federal Government to establish a national energy transition authority in the federal budget.
ACTU president Michele O'Neil told the National Press Club on Tuesday that the authority was the "missing piece in Australia's climate and energy policy".
"Climate change poses a profound material threat to the Australian way of life and workers want governments to take action," she said.
"But for many communities, the adjustment to net zero emissions risks being a disruptive and difficult one. In the years between 2013 and 2020, we saw 11 coal-fired power plants close, with an average notice time of just four months. At least seven more are due for closure between now and 2030. A just transition plan is urgent and critical."
The ACTU is among a growing number of groups on both sides of politics calling for an independent authority to support workers through pooled redundancy and redeployment schemes, education, training, income replacement and retirement plans.
While the proposed models vary in their structure, there is general agreement that an authority should fund and co-ordinate regional economic diversification programs designed to deliver sustainable and secure jobs in new and emerging industries.
NSW Labor has committed to the establishment of Hunter clean energy transition authority to help the region adjust to unprecedented social and economic change in coming years.
The authority, which will also work in partnership with a Hunter-based TAFE manufacturing centre of excellence, will be one of several such bodies created in the state's mining regions.
Ms O'Neil cited examples of transition authorities in Germany and Spain that were supporting workers who had previously worked in the fossil fuel industry.
"Decarbonising our economy could generate hundreds of thousands of good jobs, healthier and more equitable communities, and a renewed national prosperity. We need to capture these opportunities, especially in communities where there are planned closures of facilities and businesses," Ms O'Neil said.
"An independent, statutory National Energy Transition Authority will ensure the shift to renewable energy happens with workers, not to workers, and delivers good jobs and economic opportunity."
To see more stories and read today's paper download the Newcastle Herald news app here.