Why half of oil and gas workers are looking to offshore wind – according to new survey

29/09/2020

FOUR out of five UK oil and gas workers want to quit the fossil fuel industry, with a majority favouring a move to offshore wind and renewables, according to a new survey.

Campaigners Platform, Friends of the Earth Scotland and Greenpeace UK found 81% of workers they surveyed are considering leaving the oil and gas industry.

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More than half of the 1,383 respondents – representing 4.5% of the UK oil and gas workforce – would be interested in retraining in offshore wind (53%) and renewables (51%), making the sectors the most popular choices for a career change, they found.

The campaigners argued that skills needed for offshore wind work closely aligns with oil and gas, but fossil fuel workers’ knowledge and expertise is as-yet untapped by the renewable industry.

Gabrielle Jeliazkov, lead campaigner for a just transition at Platform, said: “These workers are the backbone of our energy sector but have faced years of job insecurity amid volatile oil markets, lax regulation and now the global pandemic.

“If the UK government is serious about levelling up and transitioning to renewable energy, workers’ voices must be at the centre of that transition process. The government must ensure oil and gas workers are supported into secure and sustainable jobs.”

The top priority for workers surveyed was job security (58%), while 43% of workers have been made redundant or furloughed – temporarily laid off – since March, amid the coronavirus pandemic and subsequent lockdown.

Job security was followed by pay (21%), similar work schedule (11%), health and safety regulations (5%), staying in a similar location (2%).

And given the option of retraining to work elsewhere in the energy sector, more than half would be interested in renewables (51%) and offshore wind (53%).

Workers would also be interested in rig decommissioning (38%), carbon capture and storage (26%) and non-energy sectors (20%).

Offshore union RMT, who said 300 of its members were surveyed, welcomed the report.

Mick Cash, general secretary, said: “The skills and expertise of offshore oil and gas workers are key to a Just Transition.

“Yet the testimony of RMT members and their colleagues lays bare the fact that chronic job insecurity in offshore oil and gas is not being alleviated by clear pathways to employment in growth areas like decommissioning, renewables and decarbonisation, despite this being central to a Just Transition.”

 

 

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