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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Humber feeling the benefit of offshore wind boom as employment rises 16 per cent

Sector is surging and the region is leading in England

Orsted apprentices at Hornsea Two offshore wind farm.(Image: Orsted)

Jobs in offshore wind have surged 16 per cent in a year - with the Humber region topping the charts in England.

More than 31,000 people are now employed in the burgeoning º£½ÇÊÓÆµ sector, up from 26,000 last year, according to a report released on Monday by the Offshore Wind Industry Council.

It also showed a substantial increase in the billions of pounds of private investment which the sector is attracting every year.

Read more: World-leading wind farms will now match our Russian reliance on gas for power generation

Melanie Onn, deputy chief executive of trade body Renewable º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and , has led on OWIC’s People & Skills workstream. She said: “The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ offshore wind industry is a powerhouse for job creation. I’ve seen at first hand the way that my home town of Grimsby is being transformed by this dynamic sector which is bringing billions of private sector investment into coastal communities up and down the country.

“This report shows that we’re making rapid progress in seizing the economic benefits of the Green Industrial Revolution, and that we’ll need to continue to grow fast to ensure that we meet the Government’s target of 50 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2030 - a fivefold increase in our current capacity. That’s why it’s important for industry and Government to work together to address skills shortages in areas like electrical engineering and data analysis, so we can boost the number of high-quality green jobs in offshore wind throughout this decade.”

Melanie Onn is presented with the Humber Renewables Champion award by Andy Sykes, Siemens Gamesa's plant director.(Image: Richard Addison)

Orsted alone now employs 550 people at its East Coast Hub at the first port of call on the Humber, with Siemens Gamesa across the river also recruiting as it expands its huge blade-building facility.

Yorkshire and the Humber was behind only Scotland in job creation, up 30 per cent and 15 per cent respectively.