England, Wales, electrical skills, training and net zero in 2023
Contents |
[edit] England's apprenticeship developments: improving standards and boosting recruitment
[edit] Improving standards
This year will see the completion and roll-out of an updated and improved Installation Electrician and Maintenance Electrician (IE/ME) apprenticeship standard in England – the first significant update to this apprenticeship since 2015.
The present review started in the middle of 2022 and is part of a wider overhaul of construction apprenticeships in England, overseen by the Institute for Apprenticeships and Technical Education (IfATE). Jill Nicholls of IfATE described for ECA Members the rationale and priority objectives for this broader overhaul in an ECA webinar broadcast during National Apprenticeship Week last year.
Since then, the employer group responsible for reviewing the IE/ME standard – which includes ECA firms and staff among its Members – has worked exceptionally hard to get the job done as quickly and thoroughly as possible. One reason for a sense of urgency has been the desire to incorporate more new technology content, including EV charging and introductions to solar PV, battery storage, micro wind, etc. Another reason has been to get funding for the standard up from £18,000 per learner, in order to take adequate account of the current costs of delivery.
More than 300 individuals and organisations took part in an industry-wide consultation on updated content for the apprenticeship during summer 2022, with an overwhelming number backing the proposed changes. With more work completed since then – including invaluable contributions from NET, JTL, EAL and City & Guilds – all that is left to do now is secure final IfATE and ministerial approval for the standard, assessment plan and funding band. It is hoped that this will come in the Spring, in which case training providers will have a few months, at least, to prepare for delivery of the updated IE/ME standard in the new (2023/24) academic year.
In some cases, the revised IE/ME standard will be delivered alongside the new, separate Domestic Electrician (DE) standard, previously rolled out at the start of the current (2022/23) academic year. The DE standard has been designed by employers to raise competence levels within the domestic market, including in connection with installation of low carbon applications, especially domestic EV charge-points. Awareness of the DE standard has been growing steadily and more training providers are preparing to add it their offering during 2023.
Work is also under way to update and improve the specialist Fire Emergency and Security Systems Technician (FESS) apprenticeship standard – first launched in 2017 and led by Pat Allen of FSA.
[edit] Boosting recruitment
Beyond the need to keep apprenticeship standards suitable and up to date, the greatest skills challenge confronting the electrotechnical sector throughout England is the need urgently to increase overall numbers of new entrants, including apprentice starts.
At an average of 350 starts per year, the FESS standard is one of the most successful of the new crop of apprenticeships in England. Nevertheless, numbers need to be greater still if FESS is to establish itself unambiguously as the preferred entry route for the specialist fire and security sector.
For electrical contracting, the hill to climb is even higher and steeper. Although electrical apprentice starts of 7,500 last year (2021/22) represented the highest annual intake in England in a long while, this figure still fell well short of the 10,000 new entrants needed each and every year to allow the sector in England both to replenish itself and to meet the growing market demand for electrotechnical skills.
The consequences of this shortfall, repeated again and again over the recent past, can be seen in ECA Members’ ever greater concerns about labour and skills shortages – now the single biggest drag on engineering services business prospects, as reported in our quarterly BEBS business trends survey.
For this reason, ECA will be focussing ever more strongly during 2023 on doing all we can to boost Members’ appetite and ability to take on new entrants, and thereby to invest in the future of the sector, as well as their own.
For a sustainable workforce, electrotechnical businesses need to recruit the equivalent of 4%-5% of their existing workforce as new entrants each year. Assuming four years to complete an apprenticeship, this equates to apprentices, plus any other new entrants (e.g. experienced workers, trainees), constituting 16%-20% of an average firm’s total operative workforce.
There are plenty of ECA Members, both large and small and operating in every corner of England, who hit this target already, or even exceed it. As a trade body committed to securing our Members’ future and that of the sector, ECA has a clear interest in amplifying the success which these exemplar businesses have achieved and to explore how others might be helped to replicate this success for themselves.
If, therefore, you an ECA Member who either hits the 16%-20% benchmark already, or wants to find out more about how to go about it, then please get in touch with us now at [email protected].
This article appears on the ECA news and blogsite as "Apprenticeship developments in England: improving standards and boosting recruitment" written by Andrew Eldred and dated February 23, 2023..
[edit] Welsh Government highlights ECA in Green Skills Action Plan
[edit] Net Zero Skills Action Plan
Leading electrotechnical and engineering services trade body ECA has been highlighted in a new Welsh Government Net Zero Skills Action Plan designed to create a stronger, fairer, greener Wales.
The plan commits Wales to a just transition away from the fossil-fuelled economy, with skills playing a central role. It features ECA’s ground-breaking Leading the Charge initiative, which showcased the low-carbon engineering services work of Welsh ECA Member EFT Consult.
ECA members are at the forefront of the electrification of transport, of heat and the whole of the built economy. We work closely with our Members, industry partners and Government to improve skills provision and standards in the electrotechnical sector, with a special focus on ‘green skills’ that will enable the transition to net Zero Carbon by 2050.
[edit] Comments
Jeremy Parkin, Director of Welsh ECA Member firm Powerlink Electrical Services, added:
“ECA members and the electricians and apprentices whom we employ are absolutely essential to a successful green transition for Wales. We welcome Welsh Government’s recognition of this fact in their excellent Net Zero Skills Action Plan, and look forward to ever closer collaboration between Government, the education sector and ourselves to help make Wales’s green, electrified future a reality.”
Chris Jenkins, Director of Welsh ECA Member firm EFT Consult, said:
“Any companies that are considering investing in training and technology, I’d say go for it. Net zero and the demand for electrification is not something that’s going to go away. It’s only going to grow. Make the commitment and I believe it’ll pay off.”
Vaughan Gething MS, Welsh Minister for Economy, said in his foreword to the report:
“Skills will be a key enabler as we transition to a net zero economy. Everyone needs to take responsibility and play their part in taking action to improve practices, investing in people and communities to innovate and build a more resilient economy.
“This is just the start of this process and Government cannot tackle the challenge alone. A Team Wales approach is the only way we can drive forward these changes and meet our net zero commitments. The Programme for Government made clear our focus on driving a stronger, more competitive Welsh economy by narrowing the skills divide and tackling inequality to boost good jobs and lift people out of poverty.”
[edit] 7 key areas of action
The Welsh Government Net Zero Skills Action Plan prioritises 7 key areas of action:
- Gain an understanding of the current skills position for each emission sector
- Build a shared understanding of net zero skills across Wales
- Grow a skills workforce to meet Wales’s net zero commitments
- Strengthen the skills system
- Promote opportunities for early years and young people to realise their potential
- Cross-government and partnership approach to meet the skills commitment
- Just transition
ECA produces regular guidance notes, technical bulletins, and industry updates to keep Members at the forefront of the Net Zero transition. Learn more here.
This article was issued as a Press Release via ECA as " Welsh Government highlights ECA in Green Skills Action Plan" dated March 3, 2023.
--ECA
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- 4 steps to a budget focused renewable energy plan.
- Domestic micro-generation.
- ECA articles.
- EIC apprentice support programme.
- Electric.
- Electric current.
- Electricity.
- Leading the charge.
- Making the most of renewable energy systems DG 531.
- Renewable energy.
- Renewable and low carbon energy.
- Energy targets for buildings.
Featured articles and news
Industry Competence Steering Group restructure
ICSG transitions to the Industry Competence Committee (ICC) under the Building Safety Regulator (BSR).
Principal Contractor Competency Certification Scheme
CIOB PCCCS competence framework for Principal Contractors.
The CIAT Principal Designer register
Issues explained via a series of FAQs.
Conservation in the age of the fourth (digital) industrial revolution.
Shaping the future of heritage
Embracing the evolution of economic thinking.
Ministers to unleash biggest building boom in half a century
50 major infrastructure projects, 5 billion for housing and 1.5 million homes.
RIBA Principal Designer Practice Note published
With key descriptions, best practice examples and FAQs, with supporting template resources.
Electrical businesses brace for project delays in 2025
BEB survey reveals over half worried about impact of delays.
Accelerating the remediation of buildings with unsafe cladding in England
The government publishes its Remediation Acceleration Plan.
Airtightness in raised access plenum floors
New testing guidance from BSRIA out now.
Picking up the hard hat on site or not
Common factors preventing workers using head protection and how to solve them.
Building trust with customers through endorsed trades
Commitment to quality demonstrated through government endorsed scheme.
New guidance for preparing structural submissions for Gateways 2 and 3
Published by the The Institution of Structural Engineers.
CIOB launches global mental health survey
To address the silent mental health crisis in construction.
New categories in sustainability, health and safety, and emerging talent.
Key takeaways from the BSRIA Briefing 2024
Not just waiting for Net Zero, but driving it.
Comments
[edit] To make a comment about this article, click 'Add a comment' above. Separate your comments from any existing comments by inserting a horizontal line.