City of London Corporation report highlights need for a skilled and diverse workforce capable of constructing, retrofitting, and managing sustainable buildings.
A new report is calling for investment in workers to meet the growing demand for green jobs and skills in decarbonising London City’s commercial buildings.
The report, released by the City of London Corporation, highlights a need for a skilled and diverse workforce capable of constructing, retrofitting, and managing sustainable buildings.
The Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) predicts a surge in construction labour demand in central London, reaching more than 250,000 by 2027. Additionally, it reports, there’s an annual demand for around 35,000 non-construction professionals in the built environment sector.
More than 300 organisations have joined the City of London Corporation’s Skills for a Sustainable Skyline Taskforce, including designers, construction firms and education providers. The taskforce emphasises the urgency of addressing the growing demand for sustainable commercial buildings.
The report recommends reforming the Apprenticeship Levy and s106 policies to match the demand for skilled workers. The current inflexibility of the Apprenticeship Levy and inconsistencies in s106 policies have raised concerns within the sector, according to the corporation.
“Buildings have substantial carbon footprints, so reducing emissions in the sector will be pivotal for addressing climate change”
The report includes six main recommendations for government, training providers and the wider industry to address collectively. These include:
“The built environment is critical in supporting central London’s transition to a more sustainable economy. Buildings have substantial carbon footprints, so reducing emissions in the sector will be pivotal for addressing climate change,” said Shravan Joshi, chairman of the City of London Corporation Planning and Transport Committee.
“Ensuring technical education, such as through apprenticeships, offers a range of flexible training routes towards new jobs, which will be essential to delivering on sustainability ambitions.”
He continued: “I would like to personally invite industry representatives to join the Skills for a Sustainable Skyline Taskforce, read the new report and to follow the six recommendations to help us build a more sustainable built environment workforce and reshape the sector.”
“Ensuring technical education, such as through apprenticeships, offers a range of flexible training routes towards new jobs, which will be essential to delivering on sustainability ambitions”
The Skills for a Sustainable Skyline taskforce has committed to sustained engagement with the government to promote a reformed Apprenticeship Levy and s106 policy, that is more flexible and meets the needs of employers. It will also promote the delivery of a new National Retrofit and Green Skills Strategy for commercial developments.
In addition it will convene with employers, owners, leaseholders, local government and training providers to explore how they can work collaboratively to promote workforce upskilling, expansion and diversification.
Why not try these links to see what our SmartCitiesWorld AI can tell you.
(Please note this is an experimental service)
How can apprenticeship reforms better support green skills development in construction?What strategies attract diverse candidates to sustainable built environment roles?How can data sharing improve workforce planning for green building projects?What role does ESG strategy play in advancing retrofit and sustainability training?How can collaboration between government and industry enhance green skills training?