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COVID-19 caused estimated 38% drop in U.S. solar jobs

By Billy Ludt | May 18, 2020

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New analysis shows that the U.S. solar industry will employ 114,000 fewer workers by June 2020, compared with previous forecasts that projected the industry would employ 302,000 Americans over the same time period. With an expected workforce of 188,000 people, this job loss will take the industry back to 2014 levels as a result of the COVID-19 crisis.

Last week, the U.S. government reported another 3 million unemployment claims and the solar industry is now losing jobs at a faster rate than the U.S. economy.

The analysis from the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) represents a 38% drop in solar jobs compared to previous estimates for June. The drop coincides with a 37% decrease in expected Q2 solar installations from pre-COVID forecasts, as the United States is only on track to install 3 GW of new capacity in Q2 2020.

“Thousands of solar workers are being laid off each week, but with swift action from Congress, we know that solar can be a crucial part of our economic recovery,” said Abigail Ross Hopper, president and CEO of SEIA. “With a few simple changes, Congress has an opportunity to save solar jobs, rebuild our economy and advance clean energy even as policy makers address this very real public health crisis.”

All 50 states show solar jobs losses, with 36 states suffering losses above 30%. Seven states and Washington, DC — including large solar states like New York and New Jersey — have seen solar job losses exceed 60%.

On May 13, a BW Research Partnership report based on Bureau of Labor Statistics data showed 95,600 renewable energy jobs and a total of 594,300 clean energy jobs had already been lost in March and April. SEIA’s analysis shows that vast majority of renewable energy job losses come from the solar energy industry.

The 37% decrease in new installed solar capacity is equivalent to the electricity needed to power 288,000 homes and $3.2 billion in economic investment.

Strategic government action can prevent further solar job losses, revive many of the already lost jobs, and help reinfuse billions of dollars into the U.S. economy.

Key Facts and Figures

  • The U.S. solar industry had to cut 65,000 jobs since the end of February as a direct result of COVID-19, and there will be 114,000 fewer solar jobs in June than there would be without the pandemic.
  • 22 states will employ at least 1,000 fewer solar workers in June as a result of COVID-19, while 34 states and Puerto Rico will employ 500 less workers.
  • Solar job losses due to COVID-10 will negate 5 years of solar industry growth, pushing the workforce back to a level not seen since 2014.
  • Deployment losses in Q2 alone will exceed 1,700 megawatts, which is enough to power 288,000 homes and $3.2 billion in economic investment.
  • The solar industry is losing jobs at a faster rate than the overall U.S. economy.

News item from SEIA

About The Author

Billy Ludt

Billy Ludt is associate editor of Solar Power World.

Comments

  1. Jesse Truax says

    May 30, 2020 at 1:52 pm

    While true, many of these jobs are now considered essential, which means many companies are bringing back workers and hiring new ones. Clean energy will very likely lead the economic recovery (again). For those that are interested in a career in clean energy, hundreds of clean energy jobs have been posted on https://cleanenergysocial.com/jobs, with more being added every day.

    Reply

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