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Energy Governance Jobs in Renewable Energy
Energy governance professionals design, oversee, and enforce the regulatory, corporate, and institutional frameworks that shape how clean energy is developed, traded, and integrated into national grids. With the EU alone targeting 42.5% renewable energy consumption by 2030 and the UK forecasting 400,000 new clean energy jobs by 2030, the demand for people who understand the rules - and can shape them - is growing faster than the demand for people who build the infrastructure itself.
What energy governance actually involves
The term covers a wide spectrum. At one end sit regulatory affairs specialists embedded in utilities and project developers, tracking permitting timelines, grid connection rules, and subsidy regimes across multiple jurisdictions. At the other end are corporate governance professionals - company secretaries, board advisers, and ESG committee members - ensuring that renewable energy firms meet the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), National Energy and Climate Plans, and investor disclosure requirements. In between are policy analysts working for governments, trade bodies, and consultancies who translate political intent into workable regulation.
What distinguishes these roles in renewable energy from general corporate governance is the pace of regulatory change. The EU's Energy Efficiency Directive was transposed into national law by October 2025, with binding compliance obligations starting in 2026. New legislative proposals on the Energy Union Governance and Renewable Energy Directive are expected in the second half of 2026. Professionals in this field must track multiple moving targets simultaneously across jurisdictions that often contradict each other.
Who hires for these roles
Employers range from large transmission operators like TransGrid and Hydro Québec to vertically integrated utilities such as Scottish Power and pure-play renewables developers like SSE Renewables and BayWa r.e.. Grid operators and network companies like Enexis also recruit governance specialists to navigate the regulatory complexity of grid modernisation. The most common job titles include Senior Legal Counsel, Director of Regulatory Affairs, Assistant Company Secretary, and Business Controller - roles that sit at the intersection of legal, financial, and operational decision-making.
In-demand skills and variations
Job postings reveal a strong tilt toward legal and regulatory expertise. Senior and junior legal counsel roles dominate, often requiring knowledge of energy market regulation, power purchase agreements, and cross-border project structuring. Project controls managers and information security officers also appear frequently - the NIS2 Directive, implemented in October 2024, now mandates cybersecurity protections for energy companies, creating a new governance niche. Professionals who combine legal qualifications with technical understanding of grid operations or energy trading command a premium.
Where the jobs are concentrated
Glasgow, London, and Reading account for a significant share of UK-based governance roles, reflecting the concentration of utility headquarters and energy regulators. Berlin, Hamburg, and Dresden dominate in Germany, driven by firms like BEW Berliner Energie und Wärme and UKA Umweltgerechte Kraftanlagen. Sydney and Montreal are hubs outside Europe, tied to TransGrid and Hydro Québec respectively. Singapore is emerging as an Asia-Pacific governance centre for companies structuring cross-border renewable projects.
Where the field is heading
The regulatory load is not going to lighten. The EU's phased Energy Efficiency Directive obligations will require large energy consumers to operate certified energy management systems by 2027. Non-compliance penalties under the CSDDD can reach 5% of global net turnover - a figure that concentrates boardroom attention. As renewable energy projects become more complex and more international, governance roles will continue to shift from back-office compliance toward strategic advisory positions that directly influence investment decisions and project feasibility.
Last updated on Apr 3, 2026 | Report an issue
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