Bulletin 06/04:
14 July 2004
SKILLS DEFICIT LOOMING IN THE EUROPEAN ELECTRICITY
SECTOR
The European electricity
industry faces a looming skills deficit, in various employment areas across
the occupational span of the industry. This point is underlined in a joint
statement issued this week on the Future Skills Needs in the European
Electricity Sector recently approved by the social partners in the
electricity industry – Union of the Electricity Industry EURELECTRIC
representing employers and EPSU/EMCEF for the trade unions. Last year The
Electricity Training Association represented the UK on the skills project.
Based on the findings of a
recent study, partly financed by the European Commission within the European
level “social dialogue” framework, the joint statement sets out the main
conclusions of the research. Two aspects are especially notable.
First, a skills deficit is
emerging in the context of an overall decline in essential technical and
technological (crafts and engineering) employment. In part, this is reflected
in the ageing profile of the electricity industry. Second, there is a growing
shortfall in meeting the demand for new skills (sales, trading, commercial
activities, and customer-oriented skills) that are integral to the emergent
European electricity industry. One consequence of these two related
developments is the need for long-term training planning. Central to
addressing these issues should be a commitment to the “management of change”,
the report suggests.
The study makes an
analysis of the structure of the industry; looks at the national Vocational
Education and Training (VET) systems and employment data; the occupational
structure, training and future of the companies; and draws on interviews with
the social partners at company level and interviews with employees from
selected occupational areas.
These data are
complemented by policy, research and related materials, including previous
studies commissioned by EU bodies and/or the social partners in the
electricity industry.
To address this apparent
skills gap, the social partners have agreed a framework of actions including:
reflection on the most appropriate way to continue monitoring the situation;
the idea of exploring with the European Centre for the Development of
Vocational Training (CEDEFOP) means of developing a framework for training
which could assist unions and employers; to encourage companies to develop
models of competence management which co-operatively take into account both
the needs of the business and the development of workforce skills; a
recommendation to increase the number of technical & non technical
apprenticeships or comparable training opportunities at all levels; to
encourage companies to consider the impact of corporate restructuring on their
skill-profile; to address the results of this study to the relevant national
and European actors such as Government, national regulators and training
bodies where these exist.
EPSU/EMCEF and EURELECTRIC
have agreed to monitor developments in line with the statement and to evaluate
the planned actions in three years’ time.
RACE AGAINST TIME FOR TRAINING SIMULATOR
A new tool for
training power station operators can be set up anywhere in the world in less
than an hour. The Empower Training Services power plant simulator has been
designed for portability, so that generating plant scenarios can be quickly
re-created for training on six laptop computers. These pack away into tailor
made travelling cases for transport by road, rail or air, making them ideal
for Empower’s overseas clients in the Middle East and South East Asia.
Once on site,
the laptops are connected and the software loaded – a process that Empower
staff can complete in as little as 36 minutes. They put the kit through its
paces recently in an open day held jointly at the Empower Training Centre in
Ratcliffe-on-Soar, Nottinghamshire, and at Nottingham Racecourse. Guests from
companies including RWE npower, Scottish Power, EDF Energy and AFAQ-ETA were
introduced to the simulator in the training centre, then while they toured the
workshops and classrooms, Empower staff packed it up, drove it to the
racecourse 10 miles away and set it up again, all in under an hour. The
guests then arrived for a second session before enjoying an afternoon at the
races.
Paul Tipper from
the Empower training team said: “Until now, this type of programme has been
run on a full-scale fixed simulator based on traditional power station control
desks. There was no way something that size could be moved, so operators had
to travel to training centres like ours when they needed to brush up their
skills.”
The portable
version reduces the time and money power companies have to spend on training,
as it allows course to be run on the employer’s premises. The hardware is
also a closer match for the ‘soft desk’ controls now used in many modern power
stations.
The technology
uses a Microsoft Windows platform to model all the systems and processes
involved in power generation, allowing operators to learn and practice new
techniques safely in a realistic environment. Controls and screens are
configured to mimic those on units of up to 660MW, enabling trainees to see
the consequences of their actions in real time – for example, when reacting
quickly to a boiler tube leak during a unit run-up.
The software
incorporates several hundred component faults and scenarios to test the skills
of delegates and build their confidence so that they can run plant safely,
efficiently and cost-effectively.
The portable
simulator was developed by Paul Tipper, who has more than a decade’s worth of
experience in power plant training, in conjunction with Mark Woodward from
Hytec Electronics of Reading. Traditional ‘hard desk’ training is provided on
Empower’s fixed simulators, which have also recently been upgraded. Built-in
flexibility allows both portable and fixed simulators to be tailored to suit
particular plants and specific scenarios, depending on the customer’s needs.
NEWS FROM US!
Safety Representative Training
AFAQ-ETA’s new training
resource “Working Safely” is recommended for all safety representatives and
company members of local HESACs. The interactive CD based course includes
video commentary, self test questions and the latest legislation in respect of
health and safety at work. It replaces the previous course offered by the
Electricity Training Association. Further details are available from
tyla.davis@afaq-eta.com
POWER-GEN Conference Asia
AFAQ-ETA will be sharing
an exhibition stand with Empower at the POWER-GEN Conference and Exhibition in
Bangkok from 5-7 October. The conference
is dedicated to the power generation, transmission and distribution
industry in Asia. For details of the event visit
www.powergenasia.com
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