Green Careers
Independent Newpaper
INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
GREEN CAREERS ARTICLE
Fresh Start: How going green can help you beat the
recession
By Steve McCormack
Thursday, 16 July 2009
For those hit by redundancy, adding environmental credentials
to a CV could enhance employability.
Allen & York's Business Manager Joe Heppenstall gives his
views on Green Careers and transferable skills.
Read
Full Article in the Independent Newspaper
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'Green Careers - 400,000 Environmental Jobs by 2015'
Allen & York examine the predicted global explosion
in environmental jobs
The House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee (EAC) is currently conducting an inquiry into the prospects for green jobs and policies aimed at increasing employment in environmental industries. It will consider how the UK can maximise the environmentally positive opportunities arising from changes in public spending and how this might help with employment during the recession.
The report will also examine other areas, including barriers
to creating green jobs and analyse where the gaps are in the
skills base for the UK environmental industries.
Interestingly Tim Yeo - Chairman of the EAC, has called for
the government to lead by example and do more to achieve its
own environmental targets. He told the BBC;
"If the government expects everybody else to be getting
greener, it's important that it should lead from the
front. It is missing its own target for cutting carbon
emissions from the government's own offices, it's using less
renewable energy, not more, and its recycling rate is
falling, not rising." 5th August 2009
The EAC inquiry comes hot-on-the-heels of the publication of
the report ‘Green Jobs: Towards Decent Work in a Sustainable,
Low-Carbon World’ funded by the UNEP (United Nations
Environmental Programme) . This year Allen &
York were delighted to be recognised as one of the first 100
participants of the UNEP - Climate
Neutral Network (CN Net) and therefore took great
interest in this recent report which is looking at green
careers across the globe.
The UNEP report predicts that there will be a significant
rise in ‘green jobs’ particularly within the Energy
industry. This will come from a shift in public
spending from fossil fuels (oil and natural gas) to renewable
energy sources (wind, solar and geothermal power), and that
the 1 million people already working in biofuels, could rise
by 12 million by 2030.
New jobs could also result, (the report suggests) from the
expansion of recycling and environmental engineering (e.g.
engineering new eco-vehicles). Wales as an example has
proposed targets to see 70% of domestic & municipal waste
and 90% of construction waste recycled by 2025.
Jane Davidson (Environment, Sustainability and Housing
Minster – Welsh Assembly) said she was keen to get Wales
living within its resources and pioneer sustainability in the
UK; “There are tremendous opportunities to save money and
create high quality industry in Wales by using the valuable
material resources contained in waste."
What does this mean in terms of actual numbers of jobs? Well
Ed Miliband, (UK Secretary of State for Energy and Climate
Change) predicts that the environmental industries across
Britain could generate an extra 400,000 jobs by 2015 and the
UNEP report predicts that the manufacture, installation and
maintenance of solar panels alone, will be such a booming
industry that it will generate 6.3 million more jobs
worldwide by 2030.
These are all large, optimistic numbers and some might say
(including Tim Yeo maybe?) that we will have to move a lot
faster to reach these ambitious targets. However, what
is does show is another global commitment to move the world
towards a greener, more sustainable society and that can only
mean the creation of more green jobs.
As leaders in Environmental Recruitment – Allen & York
were asked by the Independent Newspaper this month to give
their opinion on the growth of environmental recruitment and
the prospects of career changers looking at moving into this
industry.
The biggest area here, Allen & York suggest, is people
with generic project management skills, picked up in another
industry, such as construction, for example or sometimes
individuals with experience of a specific business role prove
to have easily transferable skills. Allen & York
managed a move recently for a telecommunications firm
employee, whose role was buying land for new masts. He moved
to a role buying land to site wind turbines.
Other upcoming areas where strong project management and
commercial skills will enable a shift toward the green agenda
are the Carbon Reduction Commitment or CRCs that come into
force in April 2010. There are certainly insufficient skills
in the market to ensure that all businesses hit their
“commitment” effectively so solid project managers from all
sorts of backgrounds are being lined-up within firms to
manage the carbon reductions, if not to set the policy and
actions at the outset. During the downturn this affords some
businesses a fresh area in which to house those redundant
from other sectors. As things pick up however, we will see
this trend extend in to the recruitment of project delivery
teams from a wealth of differing fields.
Another good example of where transferable skills can be used
is in the field of Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR), a growth area for many companies.
CSR spans all levels, from the Board to Junior roles and
often begins within Marketing and PR teams. However,
when taken on properly by a company it becomes part of the
business and drives every day activity. Often
skills will be acquired ‘on the job’, and people who
initially have minimal environmental training may find
themselves obtaining further qualifications to enhance their
newly found skills. The Institute of Environmental Management
& Assessment (IEMA) is a good place to find
introductory training courses.
As we approach the Copenhagen summit to find a successor to the Kyoto agreement, and as more environmental pledges are made by global governments, we need to ensure that the infrastructure is in place to deliver on the targets. Allen & York anticipate a surge in Environmental job opportunities over the next few years and look forward to supporting existing environmental experts, as well as career changers looking to start a new ‘green career’.
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