Letzte Aktualisierung: July 4, 2024
The European Union is providing money for an academy for skilled workers, but the industry doubts that this will be enough.
According to the solar industry, the demand for qualified workers in the European solar sector is growing faster than expected. For this reason, the European Commission gave the green light for a European Solar Academy in late June. The aim is to train 100,000 skilled workers for the solar industry over the next three years. The entire value chain is to be taken into account. The Commission estimates that around 66,000 specialists will be needed in the production of modules and system components alone by 2030. Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton spoke of an “urgent skills gap” and has earmarked nine million euros from his budget for the academy’s establishment.
Gareth Southgate has revealed he decided to step down as England manager before the end of Euro 2024. Southgate said in the immediate aftermath of England’s 2
The future of a competitive Europe depends on innovation. To keep pace with other regions in an increasingly unstable geopolitical world, the E
(Reuters) -Difficult economic conditions and persistently weak demand for many products have forced companies across Europe to freeze hiring or cut jobs. Here
Ireland continues to lead in flexible working across Europe, ranking second in hybrid and remote job postings on LinkedIn in October.Coming in just behind the U