Renewing the jobs market
If you're wondering about a career change, try renewable energy.
It might help to spend quite a few years studying engineering, but the prospects for employment are looking rosy.
For Scotland, prospects for renewable energy jobs hang in the balance.
It's possible that its huge potential for providing weather galore for turbines of the wind or marine varieties is harnessed without many jobs being won.
The story of losing the race on wind turbines to Denmark and Germany is well-known, and now there are few jobs in building turbines.
The race to develop wind and tidal turbines is still one where Scottish companies have significant leads, and there is a need to ramp up capacity for the fabrication of the jackets on which offshore turbines sit.
This week saw the floating out of several such 500 tonne giants from Methil.
So the news today from Mitsubishi is encouraging.
It's putting 100 jobs into the centre for renewable engineering excellence set up last October by Scottish and Southern Energy along with Strathclyde University.
That shows it's not only Scots which recognise the expertise to be found. It's a big global player that could locate its research and development anywhere.
On-street plug-ins
And in announcing a partnership that will look at turbines, biomass and smarter grids, there was a significant statement from Alex Salmond - understandably delighted at the news - that it should help Scotland do some catching up on low-carbon transport.
Alexander Dennis in Falkirk is making progress on buses, but the networks needed to plug Scotland into an electric car revolution are nowhere to be seen.
And in cities dominated by tenements, with on-street parking, it's not clear how that on-street plug-in will work.
Another indicator of what's happening in the sector came from Hays Consulting.
On the very day of new unemployment figures showing Scotland in significantly more bother than the rest of the UK, it said that salaries in the renewables industry are on the way up because of skills shortages.
And while some accuse us in the media of spreading doom and gloom about jobs, there's a warning from PricewaterhouseCoopers that the negativity around graduate recruitment may be putting graduates off applying for jobs that DO exist - such as those in the accounting and consultancy firm itself.
Good fit
The jobs stories coming this week featured two other factors playing in the economy just now.
One was from the former Standard Life Bank, which was bought by Barclays last autumn.
It said then it was a good fit with its retail operations. Being quite small, this meant nearly 287,000 accounts and 78,000 mortgages.
But the fit was with the customers, not the staff.
After a six-month review, the whole Edinburgh operation is to close, taking 254 posts with it.
Now, there may be redeployment in other parts of the Barclays empire, notably including expanded operations in Glasgow's Barclays Wealth office.
And there was a hint that Scottish Development International, the government's inward investment agency, is actively looking for a company to take on those who have skills from Standard Life Bank.
But for 254 Edinburgh households, it's another harsh lesson in the world of corporate acquisition and consolidation.
A less harsh lesson comes from the collapse of Peter Scott in Hawick.
The textiles firm was placed in administration in May. With 18 people staying, 140 were laid off.
KPMG sold it on to Gloverall, and in a move that's all too rare for the Borders town, it's now looking to hire 60 people.
So there's a bit of gloom in some places, but it's not all doom.
Comment number 1.
At 17th Jul 2010, LondonHarris wrote:Douglas.
Over the coming next 5 Years and more in Scotland there will be ever increasing massive Unemployment.
While I can fully understand the reasons for talking up renewable Employment projects such as in the future fields of Energy etc:, you are correct in pointing out that at this level there IS a shortage of the New Skills needed to re-build for Scotlands tomorrows Indusrtral needs for future Employment.
The real problem is that whatever and wherever any RENEW Employment base emerges from in the Fields of Employment that will be required for tomorrow needs, this will come at a Cost of Billions of ADDITIONAL £££'s that WILL be needed up-front, and must be found becoming from somewhere to Train ALL the future Scottish Generations of Young Workers for ANY New employment ventures, which in itself will also take many Years to come upon stream through New Apprenticeships schemes etc.
Therefore, the trick that IS becoming clear is,- how do you reverse a real decline in Employment at a time of growing Cuts in ALL Sections and Areas of Public Expenditure which in Scotland currently makes up to 60% of the Scottish work-force along with around another 15% - 20% of Private Sector based Employment currently also dependent upon Contracts awarded to Services directly within the Public Sector, whereby these People will also be finding that their Jobs are also on the line and surplus to requirements during the future 5 Years of Cut-Backs and Down-Sizing in ALL Employment sectors throughout Scotland.
Again therefore, once we do arrive at a period somewhere in the current distance future of time and beyond, then with massive Unemployment to contend with even with any growing margin of New Professional Skills coming upon stream, there will NOT be enought put into future Investments to substain the combined total numbers of People that by this furure period in time are still Unemployed still waiting to return back into any gainful Employment.
While we are NOW currently at the beginning of a period of Employment melt-down in Scotland and with NO Money or real ideas for the future Post Recession line-up in Post Industrial out-look around, then just how do you make Water run back up Hill in the Employment Markets stakes for Scotlands future Jobs Market and Employment needs???
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At 17th Jul 2010, U14556362 wrote:This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
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