CONCORDIA, Kansas – Leah Benne a recent high school graduate, has no worries about the job market. She’s in her first year of a two-year program at Cloud County Community College and when she graduates with a degree in wind technology she expects to have her pick of jobs – most of which pay at least $40,000 a year to start.

“The training is fun, the industry is fun and it feels like you’re doing something important while being paid a pretty penny,” said Benne, 18.  

She’s one of hundreds of students around the country enrolled in renewable energy training programs. But schools still can’t keep up with the demand from employers.

For people who have worked in related fields, there are even fewer education barriers for getting a job as a wind technician.

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Energy companies need technicians amid green energy expansion

There’s such high demand for people to work at utility-scale wind and solar farms that many companies will hire and train people with no specific experience in the field. But a two-year community college degree is a strong foundation that allows graduates to quickly work their way up to management.

“There’s more jobs right now than we can hope to have students for,” said Michael Gengler, a wind professor at Iowa Lakes Community College in Estherville, Iowa. “I get one or two emails a week asking ‘How many students do you have? Can we get into your class and come and talk to them?'”

What is green energy? What to know about renewable, clean power like solar and wind energy