New Survey Finds Surprisingly High Percentage Of Unionized Solar Jobs

COVID-19 took a toll on solar employment, but compensation is now comparable to other energy industry jobs, according to a new report.
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Workers install solar panels on a California home last year.
Mel Melcon via Getty Images

Every year, the industry-backed Solar Foundation puts out a job census based on surveys of companies manufacturing, selling and installing photovoltaic panels across the country. For the past several years, the annual report has excluded how many solar workers belong to unions. 

“The last time we were tracking union labor, it was something like 3% of the overall workforce,” Ed Gilliland, the foundation’s senior director, told HuffPost in 2019. “It was a small number. We think it’s probably still pretty small.”

So when the group compiled its survey results this year, Gilliland reached a surprising conclusion: More than 10% of the industry had now unionized. 

The finding, coupled with a rosy picture of wages compared to other energy sectors, could become a useful talking point for President Joe Biden as his administration angles to supercharge the transition away from fossil fuels and give union organizers their biggest legal boost in decades. It comes just weeks after the nation’s biggest coal-mining union announced it would support climate legislation that promises its workers new clean-energy jobs. 

Bigger-than-expected union representation offers one of the more optimistic conclusions of the latest report, out Thursday, which largely takes stock of the damage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, 231,474 people worked in the U.S. solar industry, a 6.7% decrease from 2019.

Sales jobs, which historically make up the third-largest portion of solar employment, suffered the biggest hit, dropping over 12%. Jobs in manufacturing ― the second-largest employment sector, which the Trump administration attempted to boost with trade tariffs on imported panels ― fell more than 9%. Installation jobs, which make up the lion’s share of solar employment, decreased just over 4%. 

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President Joe Biden has vowed to make make it easier to unionize as he pushes for a major overhaul of the U.S. energy system.
NICHOLAS KAMM via Getty Images

Yet even though solar installations picked up again in the second half of last year, employment has not returned to pre-pandemic levels. That could indicate “efficiency gains” in the industry, as the pandemic made online sales routine and permanently diminished the need for door-to-door salespeople. 

It’s difficult to estimate the significance of the unionization rate, in part because this year’s job census used a more rigorous methodology to determine that data point than in years past, meaning annual comparisons are tenuous. 

Gilliland said unionization varies state by state, depending on the kind of labor provisions set out in government contracts and how favorable state law is to organizing workplaces. 

“Unionization has a lot to do with state policies and state licensing requirements, and obviously in some states there’s a very low union representation,” he told HuffPost on Tuesday. “In others, you’re looking at Minnesota or Washington, there’s very high union representation.” 

Still, the national trends around compensation offer a bullish look at where the industry may be headed. Construction managers, operations managers, maintenance workers and sales representatives all make more money on average in the solar industry than in other energy industries, including natural gas, oil, wind, nuclear and hydropower, the census found. Electrical engineers and electricians still make more working at other energy projects than solar ones, but only just slightly. Solar installers make just under what the average roofer earns. 

How unionization affects compensation is “still state by state,” Gilliland said. “But the strong union states are going to see this as favorable for the industry and for the wages the industry pays.” 

Solar has long employed a disproportionate number of veterans, who made up 8.7% of the industry last year, compared to 5.7% of the overall economy. Within the last five years, the number of women in the solar industry increased by 39%, and Latino workers saw even bigger gains (92%), as did Black workers (73%).

If the Biden administration achieves two of its biggest legislative goals, the industry could go gangbusters. The Protecting the Right to Organize Act — the most ambitious labor bill Democrats have advanced in decades — would upend the right-to-work laws that hamstring efforts to unionize new industries in conservative-leaning states. And the 100% Clean Energy Standard that the White House has vowed to pass to buttress its climate plans would require some 400,000 solar workers by 2030 — and 900,000 by 2035, according to estimates from the Solar Energy Industries Association, which co-authored the census. 

“The solar industry continues to support hundreds of thousands of jobs across all 50 states, and even during a pandemic, our companies largely were able to keep workers on the job,” Abigail Ross Hopper, president and chief executive of SEIA, said in a statement. “We now have an opportunity to quadruple our workforce.”

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Before You Go

Concentrated Solar Thermal Power in Canada
Concentrated solar in Medicine Hat, Alberta (01 of16)
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This concentrated solar thermal plant will supply superheated fluid to the city’s natural gas fired power plant, enough to generate one megawatt of electricity. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Medicine Hat Mayor Ted Clugston (02 of16)
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The one-megawatt concentrated thermal solar plant in Medicine Hat is the first in Canada and the first at this high of a latitude. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Concentrated solar mirrors at sunrise(03 of16)
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The mirrors in Medicine Hat’s concentrated solar plant are made out of lightweight metal. They focus the sunshine on a fluid that runs through the tube that runs down the middle of the unit. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Medicine Hat’s $9 million dollar solar project(04 of16)
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At nine million dollars the concentrating solar thermal project is expensive, partially due to it being the first in Canada. Mayor Clugston said while the project is fascinating, given a do-over he would be inclined to invest in solar photovoltaic modules instead, given its drop in price. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Dawn of the concentrated solar era(05 of16)
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A wide view of Medicine Hat’s one megawatt concentrated solar thermal plant that sits up on the hill above the city’s 204 megawatt natural gas power plant. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
City of Medicine Hat’s 204-megawatt natural gas powerplant(06 of16)
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Medicine Hat’s main power plant is fueled by natural gas and is owned by the city, along with the electric and water utilities. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Getting ready to commission concentrated solar plant in Medicine Hat(07 of16)
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Two workers are dwarfed by the large, light metal mirrors that focus light like a magnifying glass to super heat a fluid used to generate electricity in the first solar plant of its kind in Canada. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Solar sunrise(08 of16)
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The early morning sky is reflected in Medicine Hat’s concentrated solar mirrors that were just in the process of being commissioned when we toured the plant. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Solar sunrise in sunny Medicine Hat(09 of16)
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The sun rising as seen reflected in the concave mirrors that are part of Medicine Hat’s one megawatt concentrating solar plant, the first of its kind in Canada. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
In the solar oven(10 of16)
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Keith Peddle, plant manager of Medicine Hat’s new solar plant poses beneath the concave mirrors that are part of the city’s concentrating solar thermal plant just getting ready to be commissioned. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Medicine Hat's solar resource (11 of16)
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Keith Peddle the power plant manager for the City of Medicine Hat shows how much sun Medicine Hat, Alberta gets – more than Florida but not quite as much as Nevada. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Solar incoming(12 of16)
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Keith Peddle, power plant manager shows the two pipes that connect the city’s new one-megawatt concentrating solar thermal plant to its natural gas power plant. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Supporting solar energy(13 of16)
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The City of Medicine Hat population 61,000 invested $3 million in the concentrating solar project, “Which is a large amount of money for a relatively small city,” says Mayor Ted Clugston, The demonstration project was also supported by a science arm of the Alberta government and the Climate Change Emissions Management Corporation (CCEMC) . Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Solar, wind and energy efficiency – all in “Gas City”(14 of16)
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“I have been called a genius, a leader, someone with foresight, and I've been called an idiot and I'm going to bankrupt the city,” says Mayor Ted Clugston who along with a previous city council led the development of innovative energy efficiency and renewable solar and wind energy programs to diversify the city’s energy portfolio. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Box Springs Wind Farm(15 of16)
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Toronto may have one wind turbine in the core of the city but Medicine Hat now has three two-megawatt wind turbines right in the city. In a public-private partnership the city agreed to buy the wind-powered electricity produced by the turbines for 20 years. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures
Three wind turbines, very little fanfare(16 of16)
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Medicine Hat’s concentrating solar thermal plant is a pretty cool, first-of-a-kind project for Canada but without hardly any fanfare the City also worked with a private company to install 6 megawatts of wind power and provide Medicine Hat with enough renewable energy for 1,800 homes at a very competitive rate. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures