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British Gas boss: º£½ÇÊÓÆµ needs 40,000 new engineers to turn the country’s heating systems green

More people needed to install tech including electric vehicle charging points, heat pumps and hydrogen boilers

Boris Johnson, left, Centrica CEO Chris O’Shea and Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak(Image: Getty Images)

The boss of British Gas parent company Centrica said the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ needs 40,000 new engineers to turn the country’s heating systems green.

Centrica CEO Chris O’Shea told an audience at the Cop26 conference in Glasgow that his business was hiring the equivalent of one new apprentice every day this decade, as it tries to retrofit millions of homes across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ with hydrogen boilers and heat pumps.

He said 10 times that number would be needed to help with the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s broader green heating agenda.

Back in September Mr O’Shea told BusinessLive Centrica was creating 3,500 engineering apprenticeships over the coming decade at four º£½ÇÊÓÆµ training academies to meet the changing nature of its business.

He said a third of the 650 or so recruits taken on so far were female – compared to a previous figure of just eight per cent of the engineering workforce. The ambition is for half of all new recruits to be women.

British Gas has training centres in Dartford, Hamilton, Thatcham and Leicester, and the new workers – called “Smart Energy Experts” – will install and maintain carbon-efficient technologies including electric vehicle charging points, heat pumps and hydrogen boilers.

Mr O’Shea said British Gas already sells 100 per cent renewable and nuclear electricity and is planning to replace traditional gas with hydrogen, which he said can be used in much the same way but without the dirty by-products.

He told the Cop26 audience the cost of heat pumps would come down as with other green technologies in recent decades.