Clean energy jobs grew in 2024 but face policy threats: E2

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Clean energy jobs outpaced growth in the rest of the energy sector as well as overall employment growth.

Clean energy jobs grew by 2.8% in 2024, outpacing overall U.S. employment growth by 2 percentage points, according to a new report from E2 – but that growth might be interrupted by policy changes like the rollback of certain Inflation Reduction Act incentives, the group said.

“At the end of 2024, more than 3.5 million Americans were employed in clean energy occupations, spanning renewable generation, battery and storage, energy efficiency, biofuels, grid modernization and clean vehicles industries,” E2 said. “The growth of clean energy jobs also far outpaced job growth across the rest of the energy industry.”

Around 60% of clean energy jobs, a total of 2.2 million workers, are currently in construction and manufacturing, said the report. More than 2.3 million workers are in energy efficiency, which E2 calls the “foundation of the clean energy economy ... spanning construction, HVAC, lighting, and advanced building materials.” Solar employs the most workers in the renewables sector, with 370,000 jobs.

There are nearly 170,000 workers in the storage and grid sectors, and nearly 400,000 workers in EVs, hybrids, and hydrogen vehicles, according to E2.

At the beginning of 2025, “clean energy was expected to remain one of the fastest growing segments of the U.S. economy,” E2 noted, with wind turbine technician and solar installer jobs projected to be the fastest-growing roles, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“But recent policy decisions to revoke energy incentives, cancel permits, and add additional administrative burdens to clean energy projects puts the continued growth of clean energy jobs in America at serious risk,” E2 said.

In a July report, E2 said that $22 billion worth of new factories and clean energy projects were canceled in the first half of this year, leading to a loss of around 16,500 jobs.

The growth of offshore wind jobs seems particularly precarious in 2025, as new offshore wind farms are not being developed and several of the largest farms under construction are facing stop-work orders and revoked permits as the Trump administration executes on the president’s executive order to halt wind development.

Reporter: Diana DiGangi

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