It is no easy feat, and it has got to be a combined effort – businesses and organisations should ensure they are aware of the latest technologies and support their workforce to continue to upskill in areas that will support net-zero. Incentives can and should also come from government - such as support for skills training. For example, establishing a small pot of funding that could be made available for training in new and cutting-edge technologies. Making small changes to the apprenticeship levy to allow unused funds to be repurposed would help address this. Industry confidence in the UK education pipeline was comparatively low in our international survey – what businesses have said they want to see is more industry placement and industry targeted projects. We can also ensure that sustainability is embedded in engineering courses and apprenticeships so that new technologies are focussed on meeting net zero targets.
There is huge potential for engineering and technological innovations to help us become a more sustainable world but we need to be agile, constantly questioning, assessing, and improving to make best use of it.