US Clean Energy Sector Breaks Through 1 Million Job Vacancies

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Ecotech Institute’s Clean Jobs Index, a tool to compare US states’ use and development of clean energy, found more than one million job postings in the clean energy sector from July through to September this year. The milestone figure reveals a 54 percent increase in needed clean energy employees, evidence that the sector is rapidly growing and in need of experts.

Ecotech Institute’s Clean Jobs Index, a tool to compare US states’ use and development of clean energy, found more than one million job postings in the clean energy sector from July through to September this year.

The milestone figure reveals a 54 percent increase in needed clean energy employees, evidence that the sector is rapidly growing and in need of experts.

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Ecotech Institute, the first and only school dedicated to educating students solely in clean energy fields such as solar, wind and renewable energy, launched the Clean Jobs Index in January 2013 to provide objective job information about the clean tech industry.

The Index also looks at various sustainability factors such as alternative fueling stations, LEED projects and total energy consumption in all 50 states.

The Clean Jobs Index defines a clean tech job as one where workers make their business more environmentally friendly, use fewer natural resources, or produce goods or provide services that benefit the environment.

To complement the increase in these clean energy job opportunities, 1,543 new alternative fuelling stations opened across the United States since the second quarter 2013. Between the months of July and September, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Tennessee had the most alternative fuelling stations per capita.

Highlights from the Clean Jobs Index, Q3 2013, include:

* Number of US Clean Jobs Postings: 1,099,734 (a 54 percent increase from Q2 2013)

* New Alternative Fuelling Stations (Since Q2 2013): 1,543

* States With the Most Alternative Fueling Stations (Per Capita): Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Tennessee. In Q3, Ohio Moved From 24th in Energy Efficiency to 2nd in the Nation

* The Most Energy Efficient States (in no particular order): California, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington

* States With the Most Incentives for Sustainability and Renewables (in no particular order):
California, Texas, Minnesota, Washington and Oregon

* Rhode Island added more incentives and rebates than any other state in Q3

"This data shows a long-awaited boom in the clean tech industry, from the increases in alternative fuelling options to a massive amount of clean job opportunities," said Kyle Crider, Ecotech Institute's Program Chair and Manager of Environmental Operations.

"States now offer more sustainability and renewable incentives than we've ever seen before, which proves that they're taking the power of the industry seriously. In the state of the current economy, over 1 million job opportunities is a truly incredible statistic."

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