ECN June 2021

Page 20

KEY ISSUE

DOES OUR WORKFORCE HAVE THE RIGHT SKILLS TO REACH NET ZERO? Evidence shows we have little time to mitigate the ongoing impacts of global warming. ECA is focused on supporting the electrical and wider engineering service sector’s delivery of ‘active’ technologies and skills to help attain the UK’s net zero Carbon 2050 target, says Luke Osborne, ECA Energy and Emerging Technologies Solutions Advisor.

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ctive technologies include the full range of equipment and systems that provide ‘low to no carbon’ energy solutions. They include solar and wind energy, heat pumps, EV charging, energy storage, and other smart, monitoring and wireless systems. They are distinct from ‘passive’ energy solutions, such as insulation. To this end, ECA recently partnered with TESP, BESA, the Renewable Energy Association and Solar Energy UK (formerly the Solar Trade Association) to produce the Skills4Climate industry report, examining ways to ensure our sector has the required skills base. The report gives voice to the views and experiences of nearly 150 electrotechnical businesses, ranging from microbusinesses to those with over 500 employees, and the results are already helping to map the way forward for our sector.

Powerful consensus There was overwhelming survey support for a ‘low to no carbon’ UK economic recovery following the pandemic, but the survey also showed a quarter (25%) of respondents would struggle to find workers with the necessary ‘green’ skills to help deliver it. Andrew Eldred, ECA’s Director of Employment and

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Key Issue – ECA.indd 20

Skills, said of the Skills4Climate report, “Despite a powerful consensus in favour of transition to a low carbon economy, skills policy and delivery in this area remains sub-optimal, with insufficient engineering services sector input and buy-in.” Renewable energy, heat pumps, electric vehicle charging, smart systems and energy storage all require specialist design and installation skills, and almost half of respondents (48%) added there is ‘insufficient training’ to enable installers to deliver all these low carbon technologies. Yet with a suitably skilled workforce, many more engineering services businesses can pivot successfully into these technologies, as is already happening in the growing arena of EV charging. Other low carbon technologies, such as heat pumps, are being lined up. Survey respondents pointed to too many disjointed training offerings and standalone short courses, causing confusion, mismatched standards and undermining sector confidence in what to do next. To make significant progress in low carbon skills, government, industry and education providers need to work together to deliver a joined-up nationwide training programme. Andrew adds, “A more inclusive and strategic approach is required to encourage more engineering services employers to upskill their current workforce to deliver a low carbon revolution, and to recruit and train the next cohort of school leavers for secure and meaningful careers for the future.”

Actuate UK: driving change

“There has never been a more exciting time to be a part of the industry”

electricalcontractingnews.com

ECA is a member body of the recently formed engineering services alliance, Actuate UK, which is now considering the Skills4Carbon report. Supporting the Actuate UK launch event in February, David Pinder, Chair of the CLC Green Construction Board told launch attendees, “I’m pleased to see Actuate UK concentrating not just on net zero carbon, but also on skills development. I believe that delivering on net zero will rely more on developing essential green skills than on further developing the technology, and progress must include both new and re-skilling.” So, it seems everyone agrees that low carbon installation needs a suitably trained and competent workforce, with practically useful and properly scoped training for new sector entrants, notably in the form of apprenticeships, and optimised upskilling activity for the larger cohorts of existing installers. Arguably, despite the many challenges facing electrical and other engineering services, business and society in general, there has never been a more exciting time to be a part of the electrotechnical industry, nor a time that requires such urgency to develop the necessary skills to help decarbonise the UK.  ECA, eca.co.uk

@ElecConNews

/electricalcontractingnews

25/05/2021 16:41


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Company Showcase

14min
pages 56-60

Government boosts energy efficiency spending to £1.3bn

2min
pages 54-55

Testing improved network bandwidth capability without re-cabling

8min
pages 50-53

Four surprising myths about electrical safety

4min
pages 48-49

Is poor quality test and measurement equipment compromising safety?

3min
pages 46-47

Advertisement Feature

3min
pages 44-45

Getting EV chargers up to speed – what the UK can learn from Norway

4min
pages 42-43

Software trial unlocks potential for thousands of EV chargers

2min
pages 40-41

Doepke’s Chaz Andrews outlines key point and selection possibilities when connecting RCDs in series for EV installations

3min
pages 38-39

The drive towards a green mobility model has created a future-proof revenue opportunity for elecrical contractors

8min
pages 34-37

Competition

3min
pages 32-33

Why are there so few women in electrical contracting?

8min
pages 29-31

Tackling the silent pandemic

4min
pages 26-28

Advertisement Feature

3min
pages 22-23

Help Inside the Hard Hat campaign launched to support construction workforce

5min
pages 24-25

Project Focus

3min
page 21

Contract News

9min
pages 15-17

Advertisement Feature

2min
page 14

Cover Story

7min
pages 12-13

Key Issue

3min
page 20

Industry News

9min
pages 7-9

Training

3min
pages 18-19

Advertisement Feature

4min
pages 10-11

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2min
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