Here are additional sustainability & climate tech layoffs.
June 2024 Layoffs
- Microsoft layoffs will impact hundreds of Azure cloud services employees, Business Insider reported. We don't know if the job cuts involve Microsoft's SaaS-based sustainability software applications. The job cuts surfaced within days of job cuts at rival Google Cloud.
- Google Cloud made sweeping job cuts, Business Insider reported. We don't know if the job cuts involve Google's sustainability software applications.
May 2024 Job Cuts
- Siemens Energy wind turbine division -- known as Siemens Gamesa -- plans to cut 4,100 jobs, or around 15% of its workforce, the unit's Chief Executive Jochen Eickholt said in an internal letter to staff, Reuters reported.
- EV maker Fisker had more job cuts this week, according to an Electric Vehicles report.
- EV maker Great Wall Motor is laying off 100 or so GWM employees in Europe, multiple reports said. GWM, based in China, is struggling on the international front amid heavy tariffs in Europe and the United States.
- Shell will cut staff from its offshore wind business as CEO Wael Sawan moves the company away from the capital-intensive renewable energy sector, Bloomberg reported.
- Barclays cut some employees from a team of more than 100 bankers focused on energy transition, Bloomberg reported. The cuts, which are part of broader job cuts at the company, included staffers with expertise in climate technologies, such as carbon capture and hydrogen, the report said.
April 2024 Staff Cuts
March 2024 Layoffs
February 2024 Job Cuts
January 2024 Staff Cuts
December 2023 Layoffs
November 2023 Job Cuts
The job cut announcements included...
- Our Next Energy (ONE) layoffs involved 25% staff cuts at the electric vehicle (EV) battery maker and energy storage company.
- Origin Materials layoffs involved 30% staff cuts, the carbon negative materials company disclosed.
- LG Energy Solution layoffs will impact roughly 170 employees between December 2023 and January 2024, The Holland Sentinel of Michigan reported. The business develops EV (electric vehicle) batteries for U.S. automakers. Key customers include Volvo, Stellantis, Ford and General Motors.
- Tritium DCFC is planning layoffs and an Australia factory closure. The goal: Achieve a path to profitability in 2024, the fast-growing but money-losing electric vehicle (EV) charging technology company said.
October 2023 Staff Cuts
The job cut announcements included...
- Bloom Energy layoffs will impact roughly 100 employees in Fremont and Sunnyvale, California, according to Silicon Valley Business Journal. Bloom Energy's flagship product -- known as an Energy Server -- is a distributed power generation platform. The fuel cell technology converts natural gas, biogas, or hydrogen into electricity without combustion, resulting in low or no CO2 emission, the journal's report said.
- Shell layoffs will impact about 15% of the energy company's Low Carbon Solutions (LCS) employees, Reuters reported.
- Navigator CO2 layoffs arrived amid pushback to the proposed Heartland Greenway project -- which involves a carbon capture pipeline and greenhouse gas (GHG) storage system.
- Flexport layoffs impacted 20% of staff at the supply chain software and logistics startup. The layoffs surfaced one month after numerous executive suite changes at the company.
- Maxeon Solar Technologies layoffs impacted roughly 15% of the solar company's global workforce.
September 2023 Layoffs
The job cut announcements included...
- Morningstar Sustainalytics layoffs impacted roughly 10% to 12% of employees at the ESG (environmental, social, governance) data, research and ratings firm.
- ChargePoint layoffs hit 10% of its staff and reorganized operations amid weaker-than-expected quarterly revenue guidance from the electric vehicle (EV) charging station network company.
What did we miss? Send me details about a green IT and sustainable technology layoffs (Joe@MentoreVentures.com), and we'll potentially update the timeline above.
Sustainability and Green Technology Jobs: Climate Tech Training Programs
Despite those anecdotal job cuts, demand for green jobs in the United States has grown roughly 50% since 2019, according to Lightcast -- though it's unclear if the growth rates will continue during the second Trump administration.
Meanwhile,, companies such as Accenture, EY, Goodwill and Microsoft offer green jobs training programs. But in some cases, it's unclear if the training actually leads to career opportunities.