2020 a COVID-year of major energy industry job losses

This is a re-post from Yale Climate Connections by Karin Kirk

Impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic caused major job losses in the energy industry in 2020. But the rate of job loss was highly uneven across the wide spectrum of energy jobs.

Fossil fuel jobs endured major losses, but four energy sectors managed to grow their labor forces: Wind, electric vehicles, hybrid vehicles, and battery storage.

That the U.S. energy industry lost jobs during 2020 is hardly a surprise. But it’s noteworthy how deep the losses were across all aspects of the fossil fuel industry, which shed 10 to 24 percent of its workforce. Meanwhile, cleaner energy technologies were the only sectors that managed to grow amid chaotic pandemic and economic conditions. The overall job growth in wind, cleaner cars, and battery storage was robust enough to overpower both the economic downturn and the disruptions to working life caused by the pandemic.



The graphic above plots changes by percentage, which helps level the playing field between large and small sectors. But seeing the raw numbers is illustrative, too, so the graph below shows the gains and losses by the number of jobs. Note, for example, how the 8 percent gain in EV jobs equates to 6,100 jobs – a small sliver compared to the more than 200,000 jobs lost in the gasoline and diesel vehicle workforce. Ultimately, it’s useful to appreciate both the relative amount of change in various sectors and the comparative size of each of these labor pools.



The data in the charts above comes from the U.S. Energy and Employment Report, and a few more takeaways are listed below.

Fossil fuels and renewables lose about one-fifth of jobs

Motor vehicles

Transmission and storage

Overall, 2020 was a disruptive year for the energy industry, as it was for most other aspects of life. That wind, electric vehicles, and battery storage all managed to grow in an environment of massive job losses speaks to the rising potential for these industries. The pandemic may persist for an uncertain period of time, but modernization of the energy industry nevertheless appears likely to grow.

Learn more

All data from the 2021 U.S. Energy and Employment Report: Summary / Full report.

Posted by Guest Author on Wednesday, 9 February, 2022


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