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Layoffs, Job Cuts and Staff Reductions

Sustainability Layoffs: Who Is Cutting Green IT and Climate Technology Jobs?

December 2, 2025 by Joe Panettieri

What's the state of employment for climate tech and sustainability professionals? The short answer is unclear, particularly in the United States -- where President Donald Trump has eliminated various energy transition programs.

Without federal dollars or regulatory incentives, some businesses are rethinking their commitment to sustainability-focused employees.

Amid that backdrop, here's a look at sustainability-oriented companies and green energy business units that announced staff cuts in 2025 (so far), 2024 and 2023...

December 2025 Layoffs and Furloughs

  • Carbon Capture Technology Job Cuts: Carbon8 Systems, a University of Greenwich spin-out, has laid off its staff and is seeking a buyer for its intellectual property, according to to Consulting UK.

November 2025 Layoffs and Furloughs

Mark Harper, group head of sustainability, exits Swire Group
  • Swire Group layoffs impacted 10% of employees at its Hong Kong head office, Bloomberg reported. The cuts, made in November 2025, affected some 40 people in divisions including sustainable development, finance and risk management. Some department leaders were laid off, including group head of sustainability Mark Harper, the report said.
  • Redwood Materials layoffs involved dozens of job cuts -- or 5% to 6% of staff. The startup, led by Tesla co-founder JB Straubel, is scaling back some of its ambitious projects to refocus on tapping into demand for grid-scale batteries, Bloomberg reported.
  • HP layoffs will impact roughly 6,000 jobs by 2028, the PC and printer maker said. The company laid off an additional 1,000 to 2,000 employees in February 2025, as part of a previously announced restructuring plan, CNN Business noted. HP is struggling to navigate rising memory chip prices, triggered by AI data center buildouts. Related: HP sustainability strategy and channel partner implications
  • ABN AMRO cut 67 jobs in its sustainability team of 400 experts, NL Times reported. The cuts affect 58 permanent staff and nine temporary workers, the report said.
  • Synopsys layoffs will impact 10% of employees or roughly 2,000 staff members. The staff cuts come roughly two years after Synopsys acquired Ansys for $35 billion in January 2024. Ansys develops simulation software that assists customers in such areas as sustainable transportation, advanced semiconductors, satellite systems, medical device development, and energy supply chains. (Source: Economic Times, Telecom Edition)
  • Qcells, the U.S. solar manufacturing arm of Korea's Hanwha, said it would furlough 1,000 workers at its Georgia factories because shipments of components it needs from overseas are being routinely stalled by U.S. customs officials. (Source: Reuters)

October 2025 Layoffs

  • AGL, a major energy company in Australia, plans 300 layoffs amid the company's shift to cleaner energy production, Reuters reported.
  • General Motors layoffs involved roughly 1,200 employees at Detroit’s electric vehicle plant and 550 cuts at Ohio’s Ultium Cells battery cell plant, in addition to 850 temporary layoffs at that site in Ohio, CNBC reported. GM also said it would temporarily lay off 700 at Ultium Cells’ Tennessee plant, the report said.
  • Rivian layoffs will impact about 600 employees or 4% of its workforce, The Wall Street Journal reported. In September 2025 or so, Rivian did a smaller round of layoffs, affecting 1.5% of its workforce, the Journal noted. (Source: The Wall Street Journal)
  • German wind turbine manufacturer Eno Energy has filed for insolvency, which could cost a regional government millions and leave 280 people unemployed, Recharge News reported.
  • Denmark's Orsted will cut 2,000 jobs by the end of 2027, a quarter of its workforce, Reuters reported. The cuts come amid President Trump's aggressive pushback against offshore wind technology. Orsted's U.S.-based projects have therefore faced numerous headwinds.

September 2025 Layoffs

August 2025 Layoffs

June 2025 Layoffs

May 2025 Layoffs

April 2025 Layoffs

  • Stem Inc. layoffs will impact 27% of employees at the energy software provider. In an email to staff, CEO Arun Narayanan wrote: "As highlighted in previous meetings, the company faces a large debt burden, limited operating cash, and is not operationally profitable. With this in mind, we’ve had to make the difficult decision to reduce the organization’s workforce."
  • BP is shutting its team looking into hydrogen and liquefied natural gas for transport, especially trucks, but the move does not affect the BP Pulse electric vehicle charging business, Reuters reported.

March 2025 Layoffs

  • AKQA Americas has shut down AKQA Bloom, a sustainability-focused creative agency, AdWeek reported. The shuttered organization will integrate into AKQA Americas -- though headcount reduction figures were not disclosed, AdWeek said.
  • IBM layoffs may include certain employees from the company's corporate social responsibility teams, The Register reported.
  • Siemens layoffs will impact more than 6,000 jobs across the company's automation business and electric vehicle (EV) segments, Smart Energy reported.
  • Breakthrough Energy, the climate-focused global initiative created by Microsoft founder Bill Gates, has cut dozens of staff, according to The New York Times and a follow-up report from GeekWire.

February 2025 Layoffs

  • Zendesk’s February 2025 layoffs included Shengyuan Su, director of sustainability, Trellis reported.
  • Southwest Airlines is cutting jobs in its sustainable fuel operations and working to sell off a renewables company called SAFFiRE Renewables, Bloomberg reported. The moves represent "an abrupt pullback after the carrier spent the past year investing in climate-focused initiatives," the report said. The layoffs included seven out of 10 employees on two key teams that work to reduce Southwest's climate pollution and increase its use of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), Bloomberg said.
  • Cruise, the self-driving robotaxi business owned by General Motors, will cut roughly 50% of staff, TechCrunch reported. The remaining Cruise assets will tuck into GM as the automaker "directs its resources toward improving its hands-free driver assistance system Super Cruise — and eventually rolls out personal autonomous vehicles."

January 2025 Layoffs

  • Amazon is laying off some employees in its communications and sustainability units, an executive overseeing the divisions announced internally, CNBC reported. Exact headcount reduction cuts were not disclosed.
  • The city of Des Moines, Iowa, has laid off team members who oversee the city's sustainability programs, a CBS news affiliate reported. The city blamed the the layoffs on a fiscal budget shortfall.
  • SolarEdge layoffs will impact 400 employees, the solar technology company disclosed in an SEC filing. The SolarEdge job cuts are part of a larger plan to "regain financial stability, better enabling us to achieve our organizational objectives this year and driving our return to profitable growth," CEO Shuki Nir wrote to SolarEdge employees in a memo dated January 6, 2025.

November 2024 Layoffs

  • SolarEdge layoffs will impact roughly 500 employees. The company plans to close its energy storage division. Most of the job cuts involve employees in South Korea. SolarEdge also had layoffs in January of 2024, and Zvi Lando stepped down in August of 2024. Ronen Faier is Interim CEO as of November 2024.
  • SolarZero has ceased operations, laid off 160 employees, and is facing liquidation, NewsRoom Pro reported. SolarZero, backed by BlackRock, is based in New Zealand.
  • Equinix layoffs will impact roughly 400 employees -- which represents about 3% of its global workforce, Light Reading reported. Equinix is a co-location and data center provider that's shifting hard to renewable energy.
  • Ola Electric layoffs will impact about 500 employees at the electric two-wheeler manufacturer in India.
  • Equinor layoffs will impact 20% of the company's renewable energy employees, Reuters reported. Equinor, based in Norway, is best known for its oil and gas operations.
  • Ford layoffs will impact almost 4,000 employees in Europe over the next three years, about 14% of its workforce in the region, as the carmaker faces slowing demand for electric vehicles and rising competition from China, CNN reported.
  • Two fuel cell companies have announced job cuts. First up, FuelCell Energy layoffs will impact roughly 75 employees or 13% of staff, MarketWatch reported. This is the company's second round of layoffs in 2024, the report said. Next up, HyAxiom will cut 67 employees in Connecticut, Hartford Business Journal reported. RelatedAll layoffs involving sustainability and climate tech companies.
  • Siemens layoffs may impact roughly 5,000 employees amid an automation business slowdown, CEO Roland Busch said, according to Reuters. Meanwhile, Siemens also plans to spin off its EV charging business, which includes various managed services and cloud services for EV charging networks.

October 2024 Layoffs

September 2024 Layoffs

  • Origin Materials layoffs will impact 28% of staff. The company is striving to reduce its cash burn rate. Origin's mission is to "enable the world’s transition to sustainable materials." The company had a $19.5 million net loss in Q2 of 2024, compared to a $6.5 million net loss in Q2 of 2023. Still, Origin reaffirmed a "pathway to profitability requiring no additional equity capital."
  • GE Vernova layoffs will impact roughly 900 employees worldwide, Reuters reported. Although GE Verona's overall business is performing well, the company's offshore wind operation has suffered from certain project delays and turbine blade failures, the report noted.
  • Blink Charging layoffs will impact 14% of employees, resulting in annualized savings of approximately $9 million, the EV charging company said. The layoffs will "begin immediately and be completed in the first quarter of 2025," Blink Charging said. The job cuts arrive ahead of a planned CEO transition. Blink Charging Chief Operating Officer Mike Battaglia will succeed President and CEO Brendan Jones on February 1, 2025, the EV charging company announced in August 2029.
  • Meyer Burger layoffs will impact nearly 20% of its global workforce, and CEO Gunter Erfurt has exited the business, Reuters reported. The Swiss solar panel is battling cheaper imports from China, the report noted.
  • IBM laid off a substantial number of employees in mid-September 2024, The Register reported. We don't know if the job cuts involved IBM's sustainability and ESG software teams. The tech company expects to exit 2024 with headcount figures that are roughly equal to 2023, the report said.
  • Swedish battery maker Northvolt will lay off some employees amid slowing growth in the EV market. The actual job cut figure is still pending.
  • ChargePoint layoffs will impact 15% of company staff at the electric vehicle (EV) charging company, according to an SEC filing. Revenue was $108.5 million in Q2 of fiscal 2025, down 28% from $150.5 million in Q2 of fiscal 2024. This ChargePoint's second round of layoffs in 2024; the earlier job cuts were in January.
  • Lyft layoffs will impact 1% of employees, and the company expects charges between $34 million to $46 million tied to the layoffs, The Wall Street Journal reported. Also, Lyft is discontinuing dockless scooters in Washington, D.C., and exploring alternatives in Denver, the report said.
  • Germany’s Volkswagen says auto industry headwinds mean it can’t rule out plant closings in its home country - and must drop a longstanding job protection pledge in force since 1994 that would have barred layoffs through 2029, the Associated Press reported. Separately, Volkswagen in 2023 hatched a layoff plan within the company's Cariad software unit. The software setbacks reinforced VW's struggle to develop next-generation software for multiple automobile brands -- including VW's Porsche, Audi, SEAT, Škoda, CUPRA, Lamborghini and Bentley lineups.

August 2024 Layoffs

  • GM layoffs will impact more than 1,000 salaried software and services employees, many of whom work at GM's tech campus near Detroit, CNBC reported.
  • The SunPower bankruptcy also involves layoffs, SiliconValley.com reported.

July 2024 Layoffs

Continue to the next page for additional sustainability & climate tech layoffs.

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