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Solar O&M Jobs in Renewable Energy
Solar operations and maintenance (O&M) covers the ongoing inspection, troubleshooting, and repair of photovoltaic systems after installation - from residential rooftops to utility-scale plants spanning hundreds of hectares. With the EU's solar fleet reaching 406 GW in 2025, every megawatt installed creates decades of maintenance work. O&M employment in the US alone grew 117% over the past five years, the fastest-growing segment of the solar workforce.
What solar O&M professionals actually do
The work splits broadly into preventive and corrective maintenance. Preventive tasks include thermal imaging of modules to detect hotspots, cleaning panels in arid regions where soiling can cut output by 5-15%, testing inverter performance, and inspecting mounting hardware for corrosion or wind damage. Corrective work means diagnosing faults - ground faults, string failures, communication drops between inverters and monitoring systems - and replacing components under warranty or outside it. On utility-scale solar sites, technicians also manage vegetation, monitor tracker systems, and maintain medium-voltage switchgear and transformers. The role requires a blend of electrical, mechanical, and increasingly digital skills: many plants now rely on SCADA systems and remote monitoring platforms that flag anomalies before a technician sets foot on site.
Who hires and where
Solar O&M employers range from large vertically integrated companies to specialist service providers. Sunrun, the largest US residential solar company, runs significant O&M operations alongside installation. In Europe, BayWa r.e. manages a growing fleet of solar assets across Germany, Spain, and the Netherlands, while Voltalia operates and maintains plants across Southern Europe, Latin America, and Africa. GOLDBECK SOLAR Group is another active European employer. A notable trend is the rise of independent service providers (ISPs) - the outsourcing rate for solar maintenance sits at 54% in the US and nearly 90% in Spain and Germany, creating a robust market for specialist O&M firms.
In-demand roles and skills
The most common positions are O&M technicians, solar field technicians, and commissioning engineers, with senior roles including O&M leads and site managers. Inverter technology expertise is particularly valued, as inverters are the most failure-prone component in a solar system. Drone-based inspection and thermography skills command premiums, as does experience with battery-integrated systems - increasingly, solar-plus-storage plants require technicians who understand both PV and battery management. The first ANSI standard for solar technician training (ANSI/SEIA 301-2025) was published in 2025, signalling the sector's push toward formalised credentials.
Where the field is heading
The maths is straightforward: every year of new installations adds to a cumulative fleet that needs servicing for 25-30 years. Europe alone adds roughly 65 GW of new solar energy capacity annually, while 30% of companies still report a reactive or nonexistent maintenance strategy - a gap that will close as asset owners realise deferred maintenance erodes energy yield and asset value. Predictive maintenance using AI and IoT sensors is growing but has not replaced boots on the ground. For job seekers, solar O&M offers something unusual in renewables: long-term, location-stable employment tied to physical assets that are not going anywhere.
Last updated on Apr 3, 2026 | Report an issue
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