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Workers Are Reluctant to Admit They Lack Tech Skills
More than a third of workers need help with technology but almost 40% are embarrassed to admit it. Questionmark, the online assessment provider, is calling on employers to check what training their staff need to ensure they are taking advantage of the opportunities that innovations bring.
The new Questionmark report, “How to build a tech-enabled workforce” sets out how technology is transforming every aspect of business. Employers recognize that their future success depends on being able to incorporate new technologies into their business processes. However more than a third of workers feel they do not have the requisite skills to use technology properly.
Lars-pedersenNational-skills-coalitionலார்ஸ்-பெடர்ஸெந்தேசிய-திறன்கள்-கூட்டணிThe New Bedford Marine Commerce Terminal on the Acushnet River. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)
New Bedford s Marine Commerce Terminal is a huge spread of open concrete jutting into the harbor. On a recent day, a few refrigerated trucks were unloading seafood at a processing plant next door, but the terminal itself just looked like a giant empty parking lot. As the wind swept across the vast space, the biggest action was the crowds of seagulls hunkered down, squawking at each other.
This is where Bruce Carlisle wants you to use your imagination. In my mind s eye, I see the tower sections stacked and lined up. I see the blades all ready to go. I see forklifts and cranes and crawlers and just all sorts of activity, says Carlisle, managing director of offshore wind at the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center, or MassCEC.
New-bedfordMassachusettsUnited-statesBedfordCape-codAcushnet-riverLars-pedersenRobin-lubbockJoe-bidenJennifer-granholmCharlie-bakerBruce-carlisleOffshore wind is poised to take off in the U.S. but it won’t be easy
The Biden administration plans to build thousands of offshore wind turbines by 2030, a daunting task. Experts say it’s possible if everything goes as planned.
ByMadeleine Stone
Email
At a port on the Delaware River in southern New Jersey, construction workers are busy pouring a concrete foundation larger than a football field. By the end of the year, it will support a factory unlike anything ever built in the United States. The factory’s purpose: to turn sheets of steel from the heartland into columns that will underpin a colossal new tool in the fight against climate change
South-forkTexasUnited-statesMaineBlock-islandRhode-islandNew-jerseyIsraelMassachusettsDepartment-of-transportationLong-islandVirginiaSouthwire’s facility in Huntersville, North Carolina will manufacture the 51km of HV cable for the project.
Completion of the contract is projected for the first quarter of 2023.
Vineyard Wind chief executive Lars Pedersen said: “We’re proud to partner with Southwire, a leading US company that clearly sees the tremendous potential of offshore wind.
“Partnerships with US companies at all levels of the supply chain and in different regions of the country will be essential to maximising the potential of this industry here in the US.
“Vineyard Wind 1 has already teamed up with some strong local partners and we look forward to many more partnerships like this as we take the next step to construct the project.”
CopenhagenKøavnDenmarkNorth-carolinaUnited-statesHuntersvilleMassachusettsLars-pedersenAvangrid-renewablesVineyard-windRich-stinsonCopenhagen-infrastructure