Manufacturing, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Talent Needed in the Global Energy and Sustainability Shift
Changing Global Energy Needs
The global shift toward electrification is not a single-industry trend — it’s a system-wide transformation of how energy is generated, distributed and consumed.
The reasons for the shift are multifaceted, but there’s a growing concern consistent across all sectors. Our society is moving toward a more electric future, and while we have the drive to get us there, we’re finding that we don’t have the workforce.
Our ability to execute will not be limited by capital or technology, but by being able to access the right engineering talent at the right time. Amidst growing demand and persistent labor shortages, access to talent will be the key difference between project success and failure.
Top Factors Driving the Shift Toward Electrification
To understand the rapidly changing engineering landscape, we need to understand the key factors that are shifting our energy supply toward electricity.
Data Centers
With artificial intelligence now ubiquitous in nearly all industries, the U.S. is investing aggressively in the data centers needed to power these tools. There are currently 1,600 facilities in the United States, with Meta recently announcing a planned $10 billion spend on data centers in Texas.
Renewable Energy Expansion
Renewable energy growth wasn’t quite as robust in 2025 as in years past, due in part to a rollback on clean energy tax credits. Still, renewables accounted for 93% (30.2 gigawatts) of additions to U.S. capacity growth as of September 2025. The majority of that growth was made up by solar and storage.
Electrified Vehicles
The elimination of the EV tax credit and lessening consumer demand have stalled the electric vehicle market. But automakers continue to roll out new EVs, citing optimism the market will return, in part because of recent high gas prices.
Grid Modernization
Investments in data centers, renewables and EVs cannot come to fruition without putting significant resources into grid modernization.
From 2026 to 2030, global power demand is projected to grow at a 3.6% compound annual growth rate. But power needs aren’t the only stressors on a grid. An aging grid is also vulnerable to cyberattacks, geopolitical threats and extreme weather events. To combat this, the U.S. is expected to invest $1 trillion into the grid over the next decade.
Semiconductor Production
The CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 invests over $52 billion in domestic chip manufacturing. This funding looks to support the entire lifecycle of manufacturing, from the construction of fabs through the production of semiconductors.
Looking for MME Enginnering Talent?
Partner with Actalent on your engineering staffing needs.
Talent Shortages Threaten to Stall Progress
At the center of this electrical transformation are manufacturing, mechanical and electrical (MME) engineers.
The demand for industrial, mechanical and electrical engineers is expected to grow by 11%, 9% and 7%, respectively, by 2034, with the semiconductor industry alone requiring 250,000 engineers and technicians by 2030.
However, the engineering talent shortage reflects a growing disconnect between increasingly complex project requirements and available workforce capabilities. As experienced engineers retire and fewer workers enter the profession, this gap is becoming most acute in cross-disciplinary MME roles.
As a result, a third of the new engineering positions now go unfilled. Even when positions are filled, many organizations often must invest significant time and resources to close capability gaps — adding cost, schedule pressure and execution risk to critical energy initiatives.
In-Demand MME Engineering Job Skills in 2026
As engineering leaders, you're being asked to deliver increasingly complex, electrification-driven initiatives tied to energy transition and sustainability goals. To accomplish this, you’ll need engineers with cross-disciplinary experience in areas such as:
- Semiconductors and fab construction
- AI, data and automation
- Grid automation
- Electrification and battery systems
Combating Threats to Energy Transitions with Workforce Strategy
The challenge isn’t simply recruiting more engineers — it’s aligning the right capabilities to the right phases of increasingly complex projects. Long recruiting cycles and rigid workforce structures often leave teams understaffed at critical moments or overextended once project demands shift.
Organizations that rethink how they access and deploy MME engineering talent gain greater flexibility and control. Workforce strategies that align talent deployment to project timelines — rather than permanent headcount — allow teams to maintain execution speed while managing cost and risk.
Access In-Demand MME Talent with Actalent
Workforce strategy is a competitive advantage in the next phase of energy infrastructure. Organizations that can quickly deploy specialized engineering talent are the ones best positioned to deliver on energy transition goals.
Actalent helps organizations move beyond the constraints of traditional hiring through flexible workforce solutions and contract talent deployment. By providing access to niche MME engineers precisely when they’re needed, teams can scale efficiently across project phases without sacrificing expertise or momentum.
This approach enables faster onboarding, greater adaptability and reduced risk — ensuring engineering capability keeps pace with electrification-driven demand.
We help organizations bridge critical workforce gaps with cross disciplinary engineering talent that supports execution, speed and sustainability goals.
Contact us to begin finding MME engineering talent to support your energy and sustainability initiatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
About MME Engineering Jobs
To support electrification initiatives, there’s a growing need for engineers with cross-disciplinary experience in areas such as:
- Semiconductors and fab construction
- AI, data and automation
- Grid automation
- Electrification and battery systems
