Developing the future energy workforce

Page 112

Appendix 3 – Work Package 1 and 2 survey The survey was preceded by an ethics statement, including an assurance of anonymity for respondents and contact details for the UTS ethics department and the research directors responsible for the survey.

Q1

What is the most important information you would like to be collected from a survey of the clean energy workforce?

E.g. energy efficiency jobs versus renewable energy jobs, clean energy jobs numbers versus fossil fuel jobs numbers, diversity metrics, jurisdictional breakdown, breakdown of job types, skills and training of the clean energy workforce, etc.

Q2

Energy management & demand management including asset, building or facilities management, software and systems, & paid and unpaid demand response

Energy efficiency Including auditing and measurement, automation, energy upgrades/ retrofits, and low energy building construction

Clean energy sector only

Energy sector as a whole

Cross-cutting services Including finance, consultancy, regulation, planning, advocacy, research

Renewable power generation and renewable heat

Electricity transmission and distribution

Fuels/ fuel switching Including biofuels, and Hydrogen

Transport Including electric and hybrid vehicles, electrification of buses/ rail, mode shifting (e.g. buses, trains, car share etc.)

Would you prefer to see a survey/ projection for the Clean Energy Sector only, or for the Energy Sector as a whole? (Please give reasons below)

Q3

We will be assessing alternative methodologies to measure the clean energy workforce. There may be trade-offs in the survey’s outcomes based on the choice of methodology.

Please rate the importance of the following potential survey characteristics as: not important, somewhat important, important, very important, or vital. •

Completeness of coverage (e.g. all energy sectors, all parts of supply chain)

Overall number of jobs by sector

Breakdown of jobs by occupation

Breakdown of jobs by state/Local Government Area

Breakdown of jobs by diversity metrics

Ability to be repeated annually/ biennially

Cost of survey

Ability to project future workforce from energy scenarios

Ability to project future market size (value) from energy scenarios

Q4

Thinking about projecting the size and makeup of the workforce, what time horizon are you interested in (pick the most important)?

112

Q5

Sectors to include: Please rate the importance of including the following sectors in the survey, calculations, and projections, as not at all important, slightly important, moderately important, very important, or extremely important.

Next twelve months

Next 2 years

Next 5 years

Next 10 years

To 2050

E3 Opportunity Assessment: Developing the future energy workforce

Q6

Please identify anything additional we should include, and anything which you think should not be included. Any other areas that you would like to see included? Are there things we’ve included that you think should be excluded?

Q7

Studies into energy jobs and skills have found shortages of particular technical skills that could delay Australia’s energy transition. Some of these shortages are for:

grid engineers

construction managers for wind and large-scale solar projects

blade and turbine technicians

energy data analysts / energy data scientists

electricians certified to install solar (particularly in rural areas)

Considering the Australian market, are there other technical skills / skilled jobs currently, or anticipated to be, in short supply, that could slow down the energy transition (you can name more than one)?


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Appendix 6 – Literature reviewed for Work Package 1

6min
pages 120-123

6.3 Strengthening innovation pathways

3min
page 82

Appendix 3 – Work Package 1 and 2 survey

5min
pages 112-114

Table 15. Opportunities to strengthen Australia’s energy innovation system

9min
pages 83-87

Appendix 2 – Selected Australian studies reporting on the clean energy sector

3min
pages 110-111

Appendix 7 – Research roadmap

16min
pages 124-132

7.1 Summary of findings

15min
pages 88-95

Appendix 4 – Studies included in the Work Package 2 rapid review

2min
page 115

Figure 11. Energy-related public R&D as a percentage of GDP

19min
pages 74-79

Table 11. Summary of barriers and facilitators of a clean energy transition

2min
page 59

Figure 6. The energy efficiency market

5min
pages 49-50

Figure 8. How participants foresee shortages in skills/ roles will change in the next five years (N=35

2min
page 56

Figure 5. Preference for survey and projections to be clean energy or energy sector as a whole (N=38

2min
page 46

Figure E-1. Stakeholder involvement

10min
pages 6-9

2.2 Unclear pathways for skills and occupations required to deliver a clean energy transition

1min
page 22

Figure 1. Information priorities from a survey of the clean energy workforce (N=140

7min
pages 18-20

4.2 Methodologies for measuring and projecting the clean energy workforce

9min
pages 35-37

4.3 International approaches – overview

3min
page 38

Table 4. International approaches to energy sector employment – IEA countries

4min
pages 39-40

3.1 Literature review

2min
page 29

2.1 Lack of robust measures to characterise and project the future energy workforce in Australia

2min
page 21
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