Andrew Glennie is just a few months into his career as a wind turbine technician. But he already says that getting into this fast-growing industry was the right move for him.
鈥Honestly I really feel like this job has just clicked with me,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 feel genuinely happy to be doing the work that I'm doing.鈥
Right now, he鈥檚 working on a wind farm in upstate New York. He says he likes the travel and the sense of camaraderie with his coworkers, and climbing hundreds of feet above ground to repair the blades.
His journey here has been a circuitous one. Glennie has a bachelor of fine arts degree from Pacific Northwest College of Art. For years, he worked in the automotive industry, painting custom lowriders and doing collision repair. But after being hit by a car while riding his bike, he had to give up painting, and hopped around jobs in construction, remodeling and manufacturing.
Eventually, he felt like he needed a change, and a family friend of his asked if he had ever considered getting into the wind industry.
鈥淚 was like, no, never thought about it, and then kind of looked into it and the more I looked into it, the cooler it sounded, and I kind of [got] hooked from the get go,鈥 he said.
Glennie is a recent graduate of a wind jobs training program offered by Austin-based workforce management company Workrise. Originally the company, which operated as RigUp, offered oilfield job training. But after watching the growing green tech sector, the company pivoted, changing its name to Workrise in 2019, and then expanded its training options to those workers interested in the renewable energy sector.
In May, Workrise opened a new, 56,000-square-foot facility near Denver, Colorado, to train wind industry workers.
鈥淲ind was one of the areas that really spoke out to us as a key area to start and make a deeper investment in largely, again, because when you look at wind and you compare that to oil and gas or construction, it's still new in the U.S.,鈥 said Leslie Elliott, managing director for the Workrise division focused on the energy industry.
She says the company noticed a disparity between available wind jobs and skilled workers to fill them.
鈥淲hen you just look at where we are today as an industry and skilled trades, there鈥檚 the massive shortage of skilled workers that is coming across all industries,鈥 Elliott said. 鈥淓specially within renewables and solar and wind.鈥
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, jobs for wind turbine technicians are 61% between 2019 and 2029, or about 4,300 new technician jobs. That rate of growth is considered 鈥渕uch faster than average鈥 by the bureau, and is considered for that time period.
鈥淚 think it's fair to say that wind and the wind industry has experienced pretty unprecedented growth during the past 10 years,鈥 said Eric Lantz, wind analysis manager with the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 National Renewable Energy Laboratory, or NREL. He says the growth of the industry can be attributed to a couple of things. First, costs have gone down dramatically.
鈥淔alling turbine prices have certainly been part of it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think that's a combination of technology improvements, but also value-based engineering and R&D innovations that are enabling us to to do more with less material鈥
Also a factor are federal tax credits for wind producers.
鈥淭hose have been declining per the scheduled sort of reductions that were put in place by the legislators over the years, in the recent past,鈥 Lantz said. 鈥淎nd so the industry has been sort of scrambling to take advantage of those tax credits while they're still available鈥
But the amount of qualified workers hasn鈥檛 been able to keep up with the explosion in jobs. A from the NREL found that wind industry employers were struggling to fill positions. Sixty-eight percent of industry representatives surveyed said they had difficulty hiring across most occupations.
Lantz attributed that to growing pains that most new industries face. Education and training just haven't ramped up as quickly as job growth has.
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