全球风能大会-2030年全球风能劳动力展望(英)
1Global Wind Workforce Outlook2025-2030Lead SponsorAssociate SponsorTable of contentsChapter 1Chapter 2Chapter 3Chapter 4Chapter 5Chapter 6Chapter 7Executive Summary 7Wind Workforce Forecast: from Energy Outlook to People Outlook 9Wind Workforce Development as an Industrial Challenge 15Wind Projects Duty Holders and Workforce Planning 16Energy Transition and Workforce Readiness 20Country Commentaries 24Methodology 42Definitions 44Copyright © December 2025This document contains forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current views, expectations, assumptions and information of the Authors (GWEC & GWO). The authors and their employees and representatives do not guarantee the accuracy of the data or conclusions of this work. They are not responsible for any adverse effects, loss or damage in any way resulting from this work.Authors:Haiqing Wang (GWO), Ralph Savage (GWO), Feng Zhao (GWEC), Kshitij Madan (GWEC)Acknowledgements:The authors thank the following companies and contributors for their contribution to this research: Xodus Group; Lara Taylor, SGRE; Jacob Frederiksen, SP Wind; Paulo Cordiero, Katherine York and Danielle Portsmouth, ORE Catapult; UGES PowerMax; Francis Jayasurya (GWEC); Dr. K. Chandramohan, Chairman, NTC Group (NTC Logistics).Permissions and usage:This work is subject to copyright. Its content may be reproduced in part for non-commercial purposes, with full attribution.Training photography courtesy of GWO certified training providers.Design:William Redfern Graphic Design, United KingdomPublication Date:4 December 20252Global Wind Workforce Outlook 2025-2030The momentum behind wind energy is continuing to build and it is critical that this decade sees an acceleration in deployment, with the development of the global wind workforce key to turning global ambition into the realisation of wind energy’s potential on every continent. Ambition was set at COP28, where almost 200 nations agreed on a global goal to triple renewable energy capacity by 2030, while wind power was recognised as a key technology to mitigate climate change. In 2024, GWEC’s Market Intelligence team recorded yet another record year for new wind energy capacity, with 117 GW of installations worldwide. That record growth is not enough however, and global wind capacity remains off-track for the tripling target. The latest report tracking progress, Delivering on the UAE Consensus: Tracking Progress Toward Tripling Renewable Energy Capacity and Doubling Energy Efficiency by 2030, co-released by IRENA, the COP30 Presidency, and the GWEC-supported Global Renewables Alliance, highlights a significant gap in progress to meet the COP28 objective and keep 1.5°C within reach. The gap has closed on the year before, but still requires a growth rate of 16.6%. This can be achieved by targeting the key challenges to accelerating the scaling up of wind deployment: streamlining permitting, strengthening supply chains, mobilising finance, and investing in
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