Renewable energy jobs · Waste Management
-
On-site Full time Today
-
-
Flexible Full time Today
-
Remote Full time Today
-
On-site Full time Today
-
-
-
On-site Full time Today
-
On-site Full time Today
-
Hybrid Full time Today
-
Hybrid Full time Today
-
Remote Full time Today
-
On-site Full time Today
-
On-site Full time Today
Waste Management Jobs in Renewable Energy
Waste management in renewable energy covers the collection, processing, recovery, and recycling of organic feedstocks, decommissioned hardware, and process residues so that energy can be extracted or materials returned to the supply chain. The UK's anaerobic digestion sector alone supports around 4,800 jobs across more than 1,000 operational plants, processing over 25 million tonnes of organic waste each year, and industry analysts see a credible path to 60,000 roles as feedstock collection and biogas upgrading scale.
What these roles actually do
Most waste-management work in renewables sits at one of three points in the value chain. The first is feedstock and process operations: plant operators, process engineers, and maintenance technicians who keep digesters, waste-to-energy incinerators, and pellet lines run by Enviva and Anaergia inside their permits and on their throughput targets. The second is end-of-life: decommissioning leads, environmental specialists, and contract managers handle the wind farms, solar arrays, and battery sites coming offline as first-generation assets retire. The third is materials recovery: chemists, fabricators, and supply-chain professionals close loops on lithium, cobalt, nutrients, and digestate.
Why renewables changed the brief
Three policy and market shifts have rewritten what an employer expects from a waste-management hire. The EU's Batteries Regulation pushed recycling efficiency for lithium-based batteries to 65% by 31 December 2025, with a step up to 70% by 2030 and lithium material recovery of 50% by 2027. The European wind industry's self-imposed landfill ban on decommissioned blades takes effect on 1 January 2026, with annual blade waste forecast to climb from about 20,000 tonnes in 2025 to 55,000 tonnes by 2030 as roughly 80 GW of Europe's 290 GW fleet reaches end of life. And in the UK, waste and recycling roles now account for just over half of all green employment, with the sector growing 56.7% between 2015 and 2023.
Where the demand is concentrated
Anaerobic digestion and biomethane operators have steady openings for environmental specialists, hazardous waste advisors, and wastewater operators across rural processing sites: think Cottondale, Graniteville, Helmstedt, and Treviglio rather than the capitals. Battery recycling is the fastest-growing slice, with the European lithium-ion recycling market expected to grow from USD 2 billion in 2025 to USD 10.4 billion by 2034 at a 20.1% CAGR, much of it driven by gigafactory scrap rates running 20-30% in early production years. Decommissioning of first-generation wind and solar assets is the slower-burn opportunity, but the one that will define the late 2020s.
Where the field is heading
The premium combination right now is a permitting or environmental compliance background paired with hands-on experience inside a circular economy loop: tracking material flows, closing reporting gaps for extended producer responsibility, and translating regulation into operational SOPs. Employers in this space are no longer hiring waste managers to keep landfills full; they hire them to keep them empty.
Last updated on Jun 5, 2026 | Report an issue
Get job alerts
Get alerts for Waste Management jobs
Join Talent Pool
Let clean energy employers find you
Featured jobs
Renewable energy blog posts
-
Renewable Energy Forecast for 2030
By 2030, renewables are poised to supply nearly half of global electricity, with solar and wind leading this explosive expansion. In this data-driven piece, we explore job creation forecasts, supply chain bottlenecks, and policy hurdles. -
Fastest Growing Renewable Energy Sector: Data and Trends
In 2023, solar photovoltaics surged by 32.59%, officially making it the fastest-growing renewable energy source worldwide. Yet offshore wind, which soared by 57.87% in 2021, remains a formidable competitor in total electricity output due to its high capacity factor. This concise overview highlights how policy incentives, cost reductions, and manufacturing advances are propelling solar to the forefront of the global energy transition. -
Career Opportunities in Solar Energy
The solar energy sector is experiencing unprecedented growth, with over 7.1 million jobs in solar PV alone as of 2023. For professionals considering a career shift into renewable energy, solar offers pathways across R&D, manufacturing, project development, and operations.