On January
11, 2008, Green Collar Vets conducted an area reconnaissance in Sweetwater,
Texas and
vicinity in order to determine the status of green collar job opportunities for
veterans. The mission focused on conditions in the local wind energy
industry.
Wind power
generation centers around the wind turbine – basically, a huge airplane on a
stick. A wind turbine catches the wind with enormous blades and converts
the movement, through a generator, into electricity. Arranged in large
groups, called wind farms, turbines generate large amounts of clean, renewable,
utility-scale energy.
Texas
is the nation’s largest wind energy producing state – already producing twice
as much as the next largest producer, California.
Increasingly, the place to get in on the ground floor of this rapidly expanding
and cutting edge industry is West Texas.
Sweetwater,
Texas sits at the epicenter
of Texas’
wind energy expansion. Job opportunities abound for service members with
technical backgrounds such as diesel and generator mechanics, electronics,
avionics, and hydraulics. These skills could easily translate into a job
as a wind energy technician – the person responsible for installing,
inspecting, troubleshooting, and repairing wind turbines. Many wind
energy companies with local operations are looking for qualified individuals,
and seem particularly veteran-friendly. Veterans
without a technical background, or those looking to get a leg up on the
competition, should consider Texas State Technical College (TSTC) West Texas, located in Sweetwater.
TSTC West Texas offers an Associate’s Degree in Wind Energy Technology which is
unlikely to be found anywhere else. The degree, designed with the input
of wind industry managers, prepares a student for employment as a wind energy
technician. These skills could then lead to employment in the wind
industry anywhere in the world. The
demand for technical workers in West
Texas is unlikely to slow anytime soon. The labor pool in
the local area, including the larger city of Abilene, has
provided as many qualified workers as it can. In fact, the movement of
people into the wind energy industry has opened many positions in traditional
fields such as construction and manufacturing. The strong demand for
workers coupled with wind energy expansion plans in Nolan County from 3,000
to over 6,000 wind turbines – equals outstanding job opportunities for veterans.
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