Agile Methodologies Jobs in Renewable Energy
The energy sector employs 76 million people globally, but when it comes to agile ways of working, the industry is still catching up. Energy currently accounts for just 3% of total agile adoption, compared to 27% in technology and 18% in financial services. That gap is closing fast. As utilities and renewable energy companies pour investment into software platforms, grid management tools, and customer-facing products, they need people who can run sprints, not just build power plants.
What the roles actually look like
Agile roles in renewable energy sit at the intersection of technology and energy infrastructure. The most common positions are Scrum Master and Product Owner, but the tag extends to Engineering Managers, Release Train Engineers, Business Analysts, and Test Automation Engineers. These professionals work on everything from smart grid software and EV charging platforms to energy trading systems and home battery apps.
The twist compared to pure tech: renewable energy product cycles often depend on regulatory timelines, grid connection approvals, or hardware rollout schedules. Agile teams here must reconcile rapid iteration with the slower cadence of physical infrastructure. A Product Owner at a solar software company might manage a backlog that includes both API features and hardware integration milestones in the same sprint.
Who is hiring
European energy companies drive most of the demand. Enexis, a Dutch grid operator with over 1,000 employees, posts the highest volume of agile-tagged roles, reflecting the Netherlands' push to digitize distribution networks. Scottish Power, part of the Iberdrola group, and OVO Energy in the UK hire Scrum Masters and Product Owners for their consumer energy platforms.
On the product and software side, companies like Uplight (US-based, 500+ employees), EnergyHub, and Aurora Solar build SaaS products for the energy transition and run fully agile engineering teams. Germany's sonnen hires across Berlin and Munich for its home energy storage platform, while Greenchoice and Photon Energy Group round out the European hiring picture.
Where the jobs are
Germany dominates, with Berlin, Hamburg, and Munich accounting for the largest share of agile roles in renewable energy. The Netherlands follows, concentrated around Den Bosch and Amsterdam. The UK clusters around London, Glasgow, and Bristol. Lisbon has emerged as a growing hub, driven by Southern European cleantech expansion and competitive operating costs.
Frameworks and expectations
Most energy companies adopting agile at scale use SAFe (Scaled Agile Framework). Across all industries, 65% of organizations now run some form of scaled agile, and SAFe holds a 35% share among them. In energy, SAFe adoption is particularly visible at larger utilities managing multiple product streams. Eversource, a major US utility, reported 40% more stories delivered after its second SAFe program increment, a pattern that European utilities are beginning to replicate.
Job postings typically ask for 3+ years of experience with Scrum, Kanban, or SAFe. Certifications like CSM, CSPO, or SAFe Agilist are common requirements, though hands-on experience with energy domain products often matters more than credentials alone.
The digital acceleration ahead
The IEA's 2025 World Energy Employment report found that energy firms have AI-skilled worker concentrations about 40% lower than technology, finance, or media companies. That skills gap is a direct opportunity for agile practitioners. By 2027, nearly 40% of utility control rooms are expected to use AI, and someone needs to manage the product development cycles that get those systems built.
Europe's energy management systems market alone is projected to grow from $17.3 billion to $31.7 billion by 2030. Every dollar of that growth translates into software development, cloud computing, and platform engineering work, all managed through agile delivery. For professionals with both agile expertise and an understanding of energy systems, the sector offers a rare combination: mission-driven work with strong salary growth and a 24% projected increase in demand for Scrum Masters through 2026.