Cisco: Cultivating Skills and Talent for Clean Energy Opportunities

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NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESS Newswire / May 23, 2025 / By Mary de Wysocki

As part of Cisco's "Plan for Possible," our environmental sustainability strategy, I often emphasize the importance of resilient ecosystems. An essential aspect of resilient ecosystems is ensuring communities have the skills, tools, and resources to support the development and deployment of clean energy. Energy resilience is not solely about infrastructure; it's fundamentally about people. Communities can benefit from clean energy solutions, such as microgrids and solar storage, but a skilled workforce and innovative technologies are needed to sustain these initiatives.

Many sectors, including manufacturing, technology, and construction, need talent that can help improve efficiency, reduce usage of raw materials, minimize waste, and help protect the environment. In fact, a 2024 report from LinkedIn indicates that such skills "are likely to become increasingly important as the industry confronts the complexities of overhauling the power grid."

By investing in training, technology, and partnerships, we can help to build in resilience from the ground up and help people to take control of their energy future.

Recently, we held a discussion on this topic with three nonprofits funded through the Cisco Foundation, and here's what they had to share:

GRID Alternatives

Founded in 2001, GRID Alternatives is the largest nonprofit installer of clean energy technologies in the United States for low-income households and communities. GRID has trained over 33,000 individuals in solar installation through its workforce development programs and gives job seekers the experience and networking opportunities they need, while helping local solar companies fill their ranks.

Erica Mackie, P.E., Co-Founder and CEO of GRID Alternatives, shared, "When we first started, we weren't thinking about workforce development because the industry was nascent. People would come to us and say, ‘I need to volunteer with GRID Alternatives because I applied for a job, and the employer told me I don't have any experience.' Our workforce development programs respond to community members asking us to provide training and saying, ‘We are trying to get jobs and need the experience to get those jobs.' We now provide training modules in a lab that also includes hands-on experience at an actual installation. We'll also do wrap-around services like how to write a resume or how to interview. We now have a graduation ceremony where employers will come, and we'll have stations set up for each of our trainees to demonstrate their craft and what they learned in the installation basics training."