Oregon’s Green Jobs

by Luke Coury

May 15, 2025

Oregon has been making a concerted effort to address climate change and promote a healthy environment by developing its green economy. As a result, green jobs have been increasingly in demand in Oregon and many green occupations are projected to grow strongly over the next decade.

Defining a Green Job

It is challenging to precisely define a green job. Generally, definitions converge around jobs related to renewable energy or environmental protection. However, many other less traditionally green occupations play a role in the green economy.

In a recent report, Lightcast, in collaboration with WorkingNation, explored different ways in which occupations can relate to the green economy. Rather than a single catch-all definition, they outlined four kinds of green jobs based on varying degrees of interaction with green skills or output:

  • Core green jobs are directly tied to the green economy, i.e. environmental protection, conservation, or renewable energy.
  • Green enabled jobs are separate or tangent to the green economy but are seeing an increasing demand for green skills.
  • Green enabling jobs are jobs that don’t require green skills but are housed in a firm working in the green economy.
  • Potential green jobs are jobs that may not currently require green skills but might in the near future.

Using these definitions, let’s explore the role of core green jobs in Oregon’s labor market.  

Core Green Jobs Encompass a Broad Range of Occupations

A wide range of occupations directly contributed to the green economy in 2024. Jobs included in Lightcasts definition of core green varied from biological scientists to janitors.

Environmental scientists topped total job ads for core green occupations in 2024 with 710 postings. Other occupations with a relatively large number of total job postings included laborers and freight, stock, and material movers (470); sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, technical and scientific products (360); solar photovoltaic installers (310); and occupational health and safety specialists (300).

Graph showing Total Core Green Job Online Postings By Occupation in 2024

Online Demand for Core Green Jobs Remain Higher Than Pre-Pandemic

Online postings for core green jobs remained relatively strong in 2024. In 2019 and 2020, an average of around 360 ads posted per month. In 2021, the monthly average increased to 550 before increasing again to 670 in 2022. Postings began declining in 2023, when average monthly ads lowered slightly to 580. In 2024, average monthly postings dropped to their lowest levels since 2020, hovering around 490. Despite this decrease, average postings were around 150 higher than pre-pandemic levels. 

Graph showing Online Postings for Core Green Jobs Over Time

Occupations Related to Renewable Energy Lead Core Green Projections

Renewable energy generation is an important part of the green economy and a large part of Oregon’s overall power generation. According to a 2023 report by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), about 62% of Oregon’s in-state electricity was generated through renewable energy resources in 2023. Of this 62%, almost two-thirds (or 42% of total generation) came from hydroelectric power, making Oregon the fourth-largest hydroelectric power producer in the nation after Washington, California, and New York.
 
Despite its prevalence, hydropower generation has slowly decreased as a percentage of total energy generation in Oregon as other renewable sources have become more prevalent. Nonhydroelectric renewable power generation has doubled since 2011. Wind energy has become especially prominent, accounting for 15% of Oregon’s total in-state electricity generation in 2023. Solar energy supplied about 4%.

The increasing role of nonhydroelectric renewable power generation is reflected in the Oregon Employment Department’s occupational projections. The two core green occupations with the fastest projected growth rate between 2023 and 2033 are directly related to nonhydroelectric renewable energy production. Wind turbine service technicians are projected to be the fastest growing core green occupation with around a 45% growth rate over the next decade, followed by solar photovoltaic installers (42%), environmental science and protection technicians (24%), geological technicians (21%), and geoscientists (20%). The total projected growth rate among all occupations in Oregon is 7.8%.

Graph showing Fastest Growing Core Green Occupations, 2023-2033

 


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