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Economic Development

Skills shortage sparks dedicated welding and pipefitting hub launch on Humber Bank

Catch to train 60 apprentices a year as visors pulled down to meet needs of Net Zero vision

Welding is an in-demand skill in the Humber region.(Image: STOKE SENTINEL)

A welding and pipefitting hub is being launched by industry training provider Catch, with designs on taking 60 new apprentices a year.

It is a direct response to an identified shortage in skills with huge infrastructure projects emerging on top of the existing need across the Humber Bank and beyond.

A large workshop at the Stallingborough base is to be repurposed as tenant and fellow operator Heta makes a move to a £5.5 million new standalone site at neighbouring Pioneer Business Park. The vacated building will immediately be put to work for the vital Humber Bank trade, with anecdotal evidence suggesting welders can earn more than doctors in the region, such is the need.

Read more: Harbour Energy buoyed by carbon storage verification for grand Humber capture plan

James McIntosh, chief operating officer and director of skills at Catch, said: “We will be expanding our apprenticeship provision in 2023 with the introduction of premium welding and pipefitting pathways to complement our offer in process operations, mechanical, electrical and instrumentation standards.

“The main reason for doing it is we see demand. Demand from employers, our members in the supply chain, and the data coming out of reports like the Humber Industrial Cluster Plan and ECITB papers, which shows this region has a huge void in welding and pipefitting skills and also a huge demand. We have tens of thousands of jobs needed to meet current projects, then more on the mega infrastructure projects that are coming.”

A £15 billion investment portfolio in process industry operations is well documented as part of the Humber 2030 Vision, leading the transition from the most carbon intensive industry cluster to a Net Zero leader. Not only are individual sites pipeline intensive, but they depend on region-spanning links to hydrogen production and carbon capture sites.

Mr McIntosh said: “This is about how we can support the region as a whole. We want to retain and grow these skills and allow the companies that are in the area to benefit from that.