Renewable energy jobs · Utility Management
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ExpiredSaint-Hubert, Quebec, CanadaOn-site Full time 42 days agoUSD 86k–112k yearly
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ExpiredAlpharetta, United StatesOn-site Full time 42 days agoUSD 85k–121k yearly
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ExpiredSan Dimas, United StatesHybrid Full time 58 days ago
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ExpiredHamilton, Canada  + 3 locationsOn-site Full time 2 months ago
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ExpiredBelleville, Ontario, CanadaOn-site Full time 41 days ago
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ExpiredScottsdale, Arizona, United StatesHybrid Full time 27 days agoUSD 88k–100k yearly
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ExpiredUnited States of AmericaFlexible Full time 6 days agoUSD 115k–135k yearly
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ExpiredWrexham, United Kingdom  + 1 locationHybrid Full time 58 days agoGBP 72k yearly
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ExpiredGalashiels, United KingdomOn-site Full time 60 days agoGBP 27k yearly
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ExpiredTorrance, California, United StatesHybrid Full time 57 days ago
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ExpiredPomona, California, United StatesHybrid Full time 2 months ago
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ExpiredThousand Oaks, California, United StatesHybrid Full time 41 days ago
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ExpiredTorrance, California, United StatesHybrid Full time 57 days ago
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ExpiredAustin, Texas, United States  + 2 locationsHybrid Full time 41 days agoUSD 100k yearly
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ExpiredThousand Oaks, California, United StatesHybrid Full time 2 months ago
Utility Management Jobs in Renewable Energy
Utility management professionals plan, coordinate, and oversee the network infrastructure that delivers electricity and gas to consumers - a function being reshaped as grids absorb growing shares of variable renewable generation. Europe's annual grid spending exceeded $70 billion in 2025, double the level from a decade earlier.
What the work involves
The scope ranges from planning network upgrades and managing outage schedules to coordinating vegetation management along powerlines and overseeing smart metering rollouts. What sets utility management apart in renewables is the pace of infrastructure change. Grids designed for one-directional power flow from centralised plants must now accommodate millions of distributed solar installations, battery storage systems, and bidirectional EV chargers while maintaining reliability.
Job titles reflect this breadth. Field supervisors coordinate line crews and utility arborists. District planning specialists model load growth from data centres and industrial electrification. SAP IS-U consultants configure billing systems for new tariff structures. Permit coordinators handle the regulatory approvals that precede every substation expansion.
Who hires
Employers range from regulated utilities to transmission operators and grid technology providers. SSE Renewables bridges generation and network operations across the UK and Ireland. Enexis in the Netherlands focuses on network expansion and grid connections. Landis+Gyr hires for smart metering and grid-edge intelligence. Iberdrola Renewables, Southern California Edison, TransGrid, and Scottish Power are among the other major employers recruiting utility management professionals globally.
Why demand is accelerating
The European Commission's Grids Package allocates €1.2 trillion for grid modernisation between 2024 and 2040, driven partly by the fact that 40% of Europe's distribution grids will be over 40 years old by 2030. E.ON alone invested €4.1 billion in grid expansion during the first nine months of 2025. In the US, the power sector faces $1.4 trillion in capital needs through 2030.
This spending translates directly into hiring pressure. Nearly half the current utility workforce is expected to retire within the next decade, creating a parallel need to replace institutional knowledge while scaling operations for the energy transition.
Skills that command a premium
Utility management increasingly sits at the intersection of physical infrastructure and digital systems. Nearly 40% of utility control rooms are projected to use AI by 2027, making data analytics and SCADA competency essential alongside traditional network engineering. Professionals who combine grid integration experience with operations management skills are particularly sought after, especially those fluent in smart energy systems and distributed resource coordination.
Career paths typically move from field coordination and project engineering into district or regional planning, then into strategic network development. The combination of regulatory knowledge, technical understanding, and people management makes experienced utility managers difficult to replace.
Last updated on Apr 25, 2026 | Report an issue
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