
"In 2024, the clean energy sector saw a job boom: The industry added nearly 100,000 new jobs throughout that year, meaning clean energy jobs grew more than three times faster than the rest of the workforce. Last year was a different story, however. It was a year of losses for the clean energy industry, in terms of projects, investments, and employment."
"Existing factories closed, like Natron Energy's sodium-ion battery facilities in Michigan and California. Planned facilities were canceled, including a $3.2 billion Stellantis battery factory in Illinois. And multiple kinds of projects were scrapped, blocked, or downsized, from EV plants to wind farms. In total, the turbulent year meant that 38,000 jobs-a mix of current and future positions-were erased from the clean energy industry, according to a new analysis by E2, a nonpartisan organization that tracks U.S. clean energy projects."
"The vast majority of those 38,000 lost jobs were in manufacturing (though some may have been counted in multiple categories, like energy generation or maintenance). For comparison, by the end of 2024, there were about 577,000 manufacturing jobs in the clean energy industry. These job losses are especially significant because they're happening amid a general decline in manufacturing employment. In 2024, clean energy manufacturing had been a "bright spot," says Michael Timberlake, E2 director of research and publications, helping bring back U.S. production."
Clean energy added nearly 100,000 jobs in 2024, growing more than three times faster than the overall workforce. Despite that growth, the industry experienced substantial setbacks the prior year, including factory closures, canceled planned facilities, and scrapped or downsized projects across EV plants and wind farms. Natron Energy closed sodium-ion battery facilities in Michigan and California, and a planned $3.2 billion Stellantis battery factory in Illinois was canceled. These disruptions erased about 38,000 current and future clean energy jobs, largely in manufacturing. The losses are notable amid a broader decline in manufacturing employment, reducing a previously bright spot in U.S. production.
Read at Fast Company
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