Rejobs

Renewable energy jobs tagged "Advocacy & Policy"

  • Expired
    Washington, D.C., United States
      Hybrid   Full time   More than 3 months ago
      USD 65k–70k yearly
  • Expired
    Washington, D.C., United States
      Hybrid   Full time   More than 3 months ago
      USD 115k–125k yearly
  • Expired
    Munich, Germany
      Hybrid   Full time   More than 3 months ago
  • Expired
    Everett, United States
      On-site   Full time   More than 3 months ago
      USD 100k–160k yearly
  • Advocacy & Policy Jobs in Renewable Energy

    Renewable energy advocacy and policy roles sit at the intersection of politics, regulation, and market design. These positions shape the rules that determine how fast clean energy gets built, who benefits from the transition, and which technologies receive government backing. The work is less visible than installing solar panels or maintaining wind turbines, but it directly determines the pace of the energy transition.

    What These Roles Actually Involve

    Policy professionals in renewable energy draft regulatory frameworks, lobby government officials, build coalitions with industry stakeholders, and translate complex technical realities into language that legislators can act on. A Senior Policy Advisor at a trade association might spend one week preparing testimony for a parliamentary committee and the next coordinating a multi-country response to proposed grid connection rules. Government Affairs Directors manage relationships with dozens of elected officials simultaneously, tracking legislation across multiple jurisdictions.

    The skill set is distinct from general public affairs work. You need to understand capacity markets, grid tariff structures, permitting timelines, and the economics of power purchase agreements. Professionals who combine legal or engineering backgrounds with policy expertise are particularly sought after.

    Where These Jobs Are

    Brussels and Washington, D.C. dominate the landscape. Among Rejobs listings, Washington accounts for the largest share of advocacy roles, followed closely by Brussels, the regulatory heart of European energy policy. Berlin, London, Amsterdam, and Madrid round out the top European locations.

    Employers range from industry associations like the Solar Energy Industries Association and the Global Renewables Alliance to government agencies like NYSERDA, grassroots organisations like Solar United Neighbors, and large energy companies such as EDP Renewables and Clearway Energy Group. Think tanks like E3G, which operates across Brussels, Berlin, London, and Washington with over 150 staff, also hire actively for policy research and advocacy positions.

    The European Policy Landscape

    Europe's regulatory environment creates steady demand for policy specialists. The EU's REPowerEU plan accelerated renewable deployment targets, and the Clean Industrial Deal is now pushing decarbonisation alongside manufacturing competitiveness. In 2025, wind and solar generated more EU electricity than fossil fuels for the first time, a milestone that opens new regulatory questions around grid integration, storage mandates, and market redesign.

    The EU employed roughly 1.8 million people in renewables in 2024, making it the world's third-largest region for clean energy jobs at 10.8% of the global total. But Europe's policy roles carry outsized influence relative to headcount: EU directives on renewable energy targets, carbon pricing, and permitting reform ripple through every member state's energy market.

    Germany's European Energy Policy positions reflect the country's dual role as Europe's largest renewables employer (110,000 wind jobs alone) and its most complex regulatory market.

    Salary Expectations and Career Paths

    In the US, energy policy salaries average around $97,000 annually, with the 25th to 75th percentile range spanning $75,500 to $115,000. Senior and specialized roles reach $108,000 to $155,000, while Deputy Director-level positions in state advocacy command $119,000 to $150,000. European salaries vary significantly by country but tend to be competitive with other public affairs roles in Brussels and capital cities.

    Common job titles include Policy Officer, Senior Policy Advisor, Government Affairs Director, State Climate Policy Manager, and Regulation & Markets Specialist. Entry paths often run through legal services, consulting, or government agencies before transitioning to industry-side advocacy.

    The Global Picture

    Globally, renewable energy employment reached 16.6 million jobs in 2025 according to IRENA's annual review, with projections pointing toward 30 million by 2030. As the sector scales, the regulatory architecture must keep pace: permitting bottlenecks, grid connection queues, and trade policy disputes (particularly around solar manufacturing subsidies) all require skilled policy professionals to resolve.

    In the US, the interplay between federal policy shifts and state-level clean energy targets has created particular demand for professionals who can navigate both levels of government. Meanwhile, emerging markets in Asia and Latin America are building their own renewable energy regulatory frameworks, opening international opportunities for experienced policy advisors.

    Related fields that frequently overlap with advocacy and policy work include regulatory compliance, stakeholder management, and governance.

  • Expired
    Arlington, Virginia, United States
      On-site   Full time   More than 3 months ago
  • Expired
    Princeton, New Jersey, United States
      Hybrid   Full time   More than 3 months ago
      USD 125k–160k yearly
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