Net Zero not possible without right skills
[edit] Report
Leading electrotechnical and engineering services trade body ECA has welcomed the report by the Climate Change Committee (CCC) urging government to prioritise workforce development and avoid a looming Net Zero skills crisis.
The body highlights the CCC’s calls for stronger investment and governance in further education and the wider skills and learning system. This echoes ECA’s own work with Local Skills Improvement Plans (LSIPs). Here we have highlighted severe mismatches throughout England between the courses and qualifications which many local colleges are currently delivering, and the skills which electrotechnical and engineering services businesses require.
Over 99% of these businesses are SMEs, and the qualified, competent electricians whom they employ are essential for the safe and efficient design, installation and maintenance of low-carbon installations, including electric vehicle charge points, solar photovoltaic panels, heat pumps and batteries.
(image from cover of "A Net Zero Workforce" https://www.theccc.org.uk/publication/a-net-zero-workforce/)
[edit] Comment
ECA Director of Workforce and Public Affairs Andrew Eldred said,
“We fully agree with the CCC’s statement that no Net Zero policy can succeed without skilled people with to deliver on it. Without stronger links between education and SME employers, and alignment around training routes which command real industry credibility and support, the education system will continue to miss the mark in its efforts to support the transition to net zero. Both at national and local levels, the voices of 50,000 electrotechnical and engineering services businesses need to be heard.”
The CCC report also says that with targeted intervention from the government, the Net Zero transition could potentially add up to 725,000 new jobs to the UK economy.
Andrew Eldred added,
“The Installation Electrician and Maintenance Electrician standard in England recently received the King’s Coronation emblem as one of six apprenticeships recognised as essential for the nation’s Net Zero future. Although the apprenticeship attracts an average of 5,000 to 6,000 starts each year, that’s not anything like enough to meet our needs. At the same time, around 20,000 learners are enrolled each year onto full-time, publicly funded electrical courses – most with little or no realistic prospect of progressing further into skilled industry employment. Priority Number One therefore must be to bridge the chasm between education and employment, and stem the present waste of ambition, time and money. Hopefully this new report will instil a welcome sense of urgency and realism into government skills policy and help support our industry to deliver a Net Zero economy.”
This article was issued via Press Release as "Net Zero not possible without right skills, says ECA ", dated May 22, 2023.
--ECA
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Apprenticeships levy.
- Achieving net zero in social housing.
- Actuate UK issues climate warning and urges action.
- Aligning net zero with the levelling-up agenda.
- A zero-carbon UK by 2050?
- Boardroom to building site skills gap survey.
- Carbon neutral.
- Climate Change Act.
- Construction skills crisis threatens UK net zero goals.
- CO2nstruct Zero programme grows to over 70 businesses.
- Diversity in the construction industry.
- Half of public sector bodies not planning for net zero carbon.
- Home thoughts from abroad: skills development.
- Making Mission Possible: report on achieving a zero-carbon economy by 2030.
- Net Zero All Party Parliamentary Group NZ APPG.
- Net zero by 2050.
- Net zero (whole life) carbon.
- Net zero strategy: build back greener.
- National Infrastructure Plan for Skills.
- National vocational qualification.
- Order books fill but skills shortages worry contractors.
- Payments for recruiting new apprentices.
- Recruiting and retaining talent in the construction industry.
- Skilled workforce unable to meet net zero ambitions.
- Skills.
- Skills shortage.
Featured articles and news
HSE simplified advice for installers of stone worktops
After company fined for repeatedly failing to protect workers.
Co-located with 10th year of UK Construction Week.
How orchards can influence planning and development.
Time for knapping, no time for napping
Decorative split stone square patterns in facades.
A practical guide to the use of flint in design and architecture.
Designing for neurodiversity: driving change for the better
Accessible inclusive design translated into reality.
RIBA detailed response to Grenfell Inquiry Phase 2 report
Briefing notes following its initial 4 September response.
Approved Document B: Fire Safety from March
Current and future changes with historical documentation.
A New Year, a new look for BSRIA
As phase 1 of the BSRIA Living Laboratory is completed.
A must-attend event for the architecture industry.
Caroline Gumble to step down as CIOB CEO in 2025
After transformative tenure take on a leadership role within the engineering sector.
RIDDOR and the provisional statistics for 2023 / 2024
Work related deaths; over 50 percent from construction and 50 percent recorded as fall from height.
Solar PV company fined for health and safety failure
Work at height not properly planned and failure to take suitable steps to prevent a fall.
The term value when assessing the viability of developments
Consultation on the compulsory purchase process, compensation reforms and potential removal of hope value.
Trees are part of the history of how places have developed.
Comments
To make a comment about this article, click 'Add a comment' above. Separate your comments from any existing comments by inserting a horizontal line.