Renewable energy jobs tagged "Energy Economics"
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Energy Economics Jobs in Renewable Energy
Energy economics professionals analyse how energy markets function, model price formation, assess investment risk, and quantify the financial viability of power generation assets - bridging the gap between engineering realities and commercial decisions. The field has expanded sharply as variable renewables reshaped wholesale electricity markets: the IEA's World Energy Employment 2025 report counts 76 million energy sector workers globally, a 2.2% rise that nearly doubled the economy-wide growth rate.
What energy economists actually do in renewables
The core work involves building financial models that capture how wind and solar projects earn revenue in increasingly complex power markets. That means forecasting electricity prices (where hourly shape matters as much as the annual average), quantifying cannibalisation effects as more renewables enter the grid, and stress-testing project returns against regulatory and market scenarios. Roles range from quantitative analysts building stochastic price models to policy economists evaluating subsidy mechanisms and carbon pricing frameworks.
What distinguishes energy economics in renewables from conventional energy analysis is the centrality of uncertainty. Fossil fuel assets produce predictable output at variable cost; renewable assets produce variable output at near-zero marginal cost. This inversion forces a different analytical toolkit - one built around weather-driven generation profiles, capture price erosion, and the increasing role of energy storage and demand response in setting price floors.
Where the demand is concentrated
London dominates European hiring for energy economics roles, followed by Berlin, Amsterdam, and Munich. Specialist analytics firms like Aurora Energy Research - now 900+ employees across 14 countries after TPG Rise Climate's majority investment - have driven much of the growth in dedicated energy market analysis. Utilities and IPPs such as NextEra Energy, EDP Renewables, and SSE Renewables hire economists and financial analysts for in-house merchant risk and portfolio optimisation teams. BayWa r.e. and Octopus Energy also recruit regularly for commercial analysis positions.
The most common job titles include Financial Analyst, Energy Market Analyst, Financial Modeller, and Investment Analyst, with senior variations like Chief Energy Modeller and Head of Power-to-X reflecting the growing strategic weight these functions carry.
Skills that command a premium
Proficiency in power market modelling tools and programming languages (Python in particular) separates the higher-paid roles from standard financial analysis. Employers increasingly look for analysts who can combine economic theory with data science - building predictive models for power prices, applying machine learning to load forecasting, or running Monte Carlo simulations for project finance decisions. Knowledge of power purchase agreements and renewable energy certificates adds further value, as these instruments define how renewable projects monetise their output.
Recent market shifts
The EU's 1.69 million renewable energy jobs are under pressure from a slowdown in wholesale electricity prices and a cooling investment cycle - the first such contraction in nearly a decade. For energy economists, this creates a paradox: the analytical demand intensifies precisely when project economics tighten. Developers need sharper revenue forecasts, investors need better risk quantification, and grid operators need sophisticated modelling of how grid integration costs evolve as renewable penetration grows.
The UK's Clean Energy Jobs Plan targets 860,000 clean energy workers by 2030, doubling the current workforce. Much of that growth will require economists and financial professionals to structure the investments, model the returns, and design the market mechanisms that make deployment commercially viable. The analytical backbone of the energy transition is not optional - it determines which projects get built.
Last updated on Mar 16, 2026 | Report an issue
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