Rate this post

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars

Join the discussion

1 comment

Share this article

Published on July 26th, 2007

For New Grads, Green Jobs Are Plentiful

Newsweek just released a story featuring the increase in availability of environment-related jobs for 2007 college graduates, with openings ranging from environmental engineers to consultants growing at double-digit rates. The growth is in part due to companies implementing more green practices, but also because companies need help researching all the new environment-friendly trends.

“But employers and college guidance counselors say you don’t have to have studied conservation biology to work in a green field. ‘The environment is a career that can use any major, including history, anthropology, economics, policy, law and technology,’ says Karen Kirchof, assistant dean of career services at Duke’s Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences.”

Not only are companies hiring more environment conscious employees, but more schools are offering environment-specialized majors in preparation. A simple Google search for “green jobs” pulls up a ton of websites devoted entirely to finding jobs related to the environment.

Comments

  1. MBAs Pick Gold Over Green

    posted on January 19th, 2008 at 4:44 pm

    [...] was less than a year ago that Newsweek published a story on the abundance of green jobs, but those were primarily in an entry-level capacity and not [...]

Join the discussion



Recently Added to General

  • Economists Weigh in on Climate Change

    A new study found that an overwhelming majority of 144 top U.S. economists believe that climate change will have a negative impact on the nation’s economy.

    Eighty-four percent of participants in the study conducted by New York University School of Law …

  • Plans for Landfill Near Joshua Tree Stalled

    Plans to move in a new neighbor next to Joshua Tree National Park were stalled when a southern California appeals panel ruled to temporarily halt development of what would be the largest nonhazardous solid waste landfill in the nation.

    The proposed …

  • African Countries Receive $1.1B for Climate Action

    Six African countries were recently announced as the recipients of $1.1 billion in new grants and financing for climate action initiatives. Egypt, Morocco, South Africa, Mozambique, Zambia and Niger will share the additional resources to strengthen their investments in clean …