It said the drive to decarbonise means the UK energy industry needs more than 200,000 new starts with ScottishPower recruiting 1000 in 2023 alone.
Against a backdrop of economic uncertainty and a stalling labour market ScottishPower chief executive Keith Anderson said the clean power sector is thriving but it faces a race for talent.
He added: “The UK needs to electrify the hell out of everything, and we need more people to help us do it.
“We need to attract over 1,000 people this year alone, from ecologists to data analysts and everything in between.
“It’s not just engineers, there’s a wealth of careers on offer and one of the biggest challenges we have is to fill these roles.
“The energy sector is pumping billions of investments into clean, green UK infrastructure projects – £6m every single day – from onshore and offshore wind and solar farms to the kilometres of electricity networks needed to connect them up.
“It’s decades long investments, if we want the UK to continue to lead and compete on the clean energy world stage and electrify the economy, we need everyone; education, governments and skills bodies, to prioritise green skills and fast track the pipeline of people we need to decarbonise the UK.”
ScottishPower secured contracts for 19 renewable energy projects across the UK last year.
At the same time, it is investing heavily in the electricity network to connect up clean power across the country, as well as technology like hydrogen and batteries.
But green jobs are not just in construction and operation, the energy industry needs the project managers, the accountants, the HR and environmental staff who play a transformative role in getting projects from the drawing board to spades in the ground.


