News
Jan. 20, 2005
Contact: Andy Bowen, Clearview Communications
770-437-9633 • ab@clearviewcom.com
Colorado utilities facing future staff shortages;
E3 brings together two universities to work on solutions
DENVER – Concerned about future professional staff shortages
at the state’s utilities as their aging workforces near retirement
age, E3 Consulting is bringing together faculty from campuses at the
University of Colorado and Colorado State University to develop new
curriculum for energy-sector career tracks at the two institutions.
“Older workers all across America will be retiring in large numbers
in the next five to 10 years, and many of those can be replaced. But the problem
is particularly urgent in the utility industry because young people just aren’t
lining up to go to work in the power sector,” said Donald J. Hurd, President
and CEO of E3 Consulting, which provides oversight, critical analysis and solutions
for businesses building, optimizing or restructuring energy projects. “We
must begin to act now to develop the next generation of talented energy-sector
executives, technicians and managers to run Colorado’s power-producing
facilities an distribution systems in decades ahead. The solution lies in the
classroom.”
E3 Consulting, based in Denver, reached out to leading educators in
the engineering field at both CSU and CU, and has received positive
response to the idea of commencing work to develop a power production
career track in their schools of engineering.
“Colorado State would welcome the opportunity to work with the industry
to put some things into place to have the ideal candidates available as this
transition comes about,” said Dr. Wade Troxell, Associate Dean for Research
in the College of Engineering at CSU. “We have done this in other industries,
and look forward to developing strategies to provide the workforce of the future
for the utility industry.”
Dr. Frank Barnes, Distinguished Professor or Electrical Engineering
at CU, has embarked on an initiative to launch a new course in Public
Utilities Management, and planned to present his plans to the faculty
there Jan. 20.
E3 will be coordinating a meeting between the two faculties this winter
to map strategy, Hurd said. The strategy includes contacting Colorado’s
utilities to determine their level of interest in assisting in development
of utilities management career track curriculum.
UTILITIES MUST GET INVOLVED
Because they have so much at stake, Hurd urges the state’s nine
utilities to join the educational initiative by providing materiel,
personnel and even financial support for development of the new academic
programs.
Barnes at CU and Troxell at CSU said the utilities had supported specific
power sector career track curriculum in the past, but have not done
so for many years – more than 15 years ago at CU.
Hurd said that although most business, professional and industrial sectors
are facing employee shortages in the future, the pending shortage is aggravated
in the utility industry because it has not been able to speak with one voice
or take specific action to benefit its members in ways similar to medicine,
law, journalism and other more consolidated professions.
E3 and faculty at CU and CSU plan to formally invite the state’s
utilities to support curriculum development at the state’s institutions
of higher learning.
E3 Consulting (http://www.e3co.com/),
with offices in Denver and Houston, is an experienced
team of experts with backgrounds in engineering, the environment,
science and finance. E3’s consultants provide objective oversight,
critical analysis and solutions for businesses building, optimizing
or restructuring energy projects.
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