Just a note, not so much about training, although I should have more to update on that soon.
I just noticed that Direct Wind Services are hiring technicians right now, and not demanding experience in the industry. I know a lot of people run across this blog looking for a way into the industry, so am happy to link to this.
I have worked with the Direct Wind Service guys a little, and know that they are good guys who run a professional outfit, and have a good stream of work.
Hopefully this link works and you can see the job ads here
- http://nowhiring.com.au/566773+job+expressions+of+interest+composite+mechanical+and+electrical+trades+nsw+other+vic+other+sa+other.aspx
Otherwise go looking for Direct Wind Services on LinkedIn or just through Google.
Cheers
Richard
Wind Industry Training in Australia
Monday, August 4, 2014
Saturday, May 4, 2013
The Australian Wind Turbine Maintenance Technician qualifications (now live).
The qualification can now be found on training.gov.au,
The qualification is ready to go, but we have to wait until some registered training organisations actually get in on their scope (registered to deliver it).
It does look mostly electrical, because it is aimed at getting someone competent to do any electrical work in the turbine, under the various licensing regimes in place around the country. So the qualification is structured with lots of basic wiring and electrical units in its core, with electives covering off specific turbine knowledge, safety courses such as safe work at heights and vertical rescue, some mechanical skills, and extra stuff that can be good such as High Voltage switching.
What does it mean practically?
It means that the wind industry now has access to federal and state funding to run most of the training that a wind turbine technician will need, and has a nice framework
It doesn’t mean that there will all of a sudden be a wind turbine technician training course available for school leavers. At least in the short term, this qualification will likely only be delivered by the industry to currently employed technicians.
So how will it work?
Currently the industry employees mostly tradesmen to be technicians, either electricians or some form of mechanical trade. This will continue to happen, but the significant training effort that is required to turn either an electrician or a fitter into a turbine technician, will be covered by the qualification.
So, the qualification has both electrical and mechanical elements, and so an electrician starting as a wind turbine technician, would get some recognition of prior learning for the electrical parts of the qualification, while completing various mechanical, wind turbine specific, or High Voltage units, in order to get the qual. A fitter on the other hand, will focus mostly on the electrical units in the qualification, but on getting it, would be competent to work on the electrical systems in a turbine.
The qualification is structured so that the industry can have apprenticeships, but the details of this are still to be worked out, as are any licensing outcomes of the course. I am keen to develop an apprenticeship program in the wind industry, but this will take a little more time – we need providers, as well as having the apprenticeship registered, and the licensing outcomes agreed.
I have started the conversation on licensing outcomes with Energy Safe Victoria, but this may be a negotiation that takes time.
So initially, I am working with Mt Gambier Tafe to get the qualification on their scope, and then the first thing to do will be to get the wind technicians in my organisation qualified. Mt Gambier Tafe may wish to deliver the program outside the industry, and that wouldn’t make me unhappy, but it is up to them.
Happy to answer people’s questions on the qualifications, and there is some more information elsewhere on this blog, but now that they are here I may be blogging more regularly about using the qual, and the options for those wanting to enter the industry.
Friday, May 25, 2012
How to get a construction or maintenance job in the Wind Industry in Australia.
I get a bit of traffic here from people looking for a way into the industry as turbine technician. Now unfortunately it’s not a great time to be doing this in Australia – the industry is pretty flat, and has been for a couple of years. There are jobs around right now, but not a lot of them, and they are pretty much all regional, with limited fly in/fly out opportunities at present.
I should start by saying that there are two distinct paths into the industry, and two quite different jobs – construction and then maintenance.
Construction jobs are at the front end – the building of the farms, and so this work is reliant on the industry actually building new farms. But once there are farms being built, this is the easiest way into the industry for someone without wind turbine specific skills and knowledge. Wind farm construction needs civil crews to build the roads, crane crews to assemble the components, electricians to wire up the components and put together the substation / balance of plant, and plenty of trade assistants to help those guys get it done. There are plenty of guys who now have solid long term jobs in the industry who came first to wind farms through a trade assistant job in the civil or crane crews on a construction project. So this is the best way to get in if you are not an electrician or have a mechanical trade – find yourself a construction project and get on a crew. As I said, there is not much around at present, so the best thing to do would be to watch the industry press for any new projects, and then contact the construction company involved to try to get on.
The other site based jobs available in the wind industry are of course the operations and maintenance roles. These are a little tougher to get, as generally there are fewer low skilled jobs in this area. These jobs involve doing the scheduled servicing of the wind turbines (three or four days every six months), and then responding to breakdowns and getting the turbines going again if there are problems. Some turbines (particularly newer ones) are more reliable than others, so wind farms can need a rough ratio of one technician to every 5-8 turbines on a farm.
Wind farm operations and maintenance companies are overwhelmingly looking for qualified tradespeople, particularly electrical and mechanical trades. If you have one of these and you live reasonably close to a wind farm, it shouldn’t be too hard to get a start. The living close is important, because operators often want locals, who are more likely to stick at the job. So if you have a trade and live near a wind farm, you can just do some research to find out who the maintenance team work for, and get in touch with them.
If you don’t have a trade, it will be a little bit harder. Most wind farm operators will take on technicians without a trade, but would always take a tradesperson first. Your best if you have no trade and want to get into the industry would be to try to get a job on a construction project, and then show that you work hard and are capable with engines. The profile that operators will look for is someone who has messed around a lot with engines and machinery, maybe a farmer or a mechanic who has a bit of general industrial experience.
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
New Wind Industry Qualification Pathways for Australia
The wind technician qualifications are finally on the very near horizon in Australia. The industry has seen the need and started to be fully engaged, and EEOz, the electrotechnolgy skills council, have come to the party and is developing units and qualifications.
A framework for the qualifications has been developed and is shown below.
The proposed framework would consist of a series of graduated certificates commencing with a Certificate II schools/pre-apprenticeship stream and a traineeship with the aim of encouraging prospective employees into the industry. These qualifications will be generic to the power generation industry, with core subjects covering safety and basic work skills, and elective options such as working safely at heights, first aid, and working in confined space.
The Certificate III courses are existing electrical and mechanical trades certificates consistent with the current level of training most wind technicians already have but which can be tailored with elective subjects that will be aligned to wind industry competency requirements.
It is envisioned that the Certificate III in Electrical Fitting will provide the most appropriate apprenticeship qualification for the wind industry and this will reduce the need for external placements (required currently by some trades to complete qualification).
The Certificate IV course would comprise of wind industry specific competency units, which mostly have been drafted but yet to receive industry sign off
Each level is able to be entered directly with recognition of prior learning for existing skills (ie trade qualification).
It looks as if the Certificate II and III courses will be endorsed and part of the Electricity Generation Training package in the next few months, while a working group has been established with good industry representation, to finalise the competency units to go into the Certificate IV.
Friday, October 14, 2011
EcoGeneration article on Wind Industry Skills in Australia
I recently wrote an article for EcoGeneration magazine about skills in the Australian Wind Industry. It is just a rough piece hoping to influence some decision makers in regards to funding of technician training.
http://ecogeneration.com.au/news/skilling_up_in_wind/063237/
http://ecogeneration.com.au/news/skilling_up_in_wind/063237/
Monday, February 21, 2011
Update on the race for turbine service technician qualifications in Australia
I was asked this week if there had been any progress made by EE-OZ in getting their turbine technician qualification off the ground here, and so chased up a few things and found out it is time for an update to posting on this topic.
However it is not EE-OZ that have made progress to this point, it is Box Hill Tafe. Box Hill Tafe have got their wind farm units of competency registered as part of a Diploma of Engineering Technology. The units can be viewed at the Training Support Network website , if you are happy to leave a few details and download the curriculum. There is a bit of a trick. It doesn’t seem to allow you to download the curriculum, but you can access it by clicking on ‘view’ when you get that opportunity. It is just the same as downloading it really, because you can save it when you view it, so this is the way to go.
There are five units, with the focus on working safely on wind farms, working safely in wind turbines, servicing wind turbines, and accessing data through monitoring systems. The units are pretty simple, and have essentially been constructed by taking the competencies that most companies that have service workforces would train their staff too (for example First Aid, Work Safely at Heights, Service Fire Extinguishers) and sort of sticking them together.
So for those of you familiar with the Australian system, that means taking all the elements from the provide first aid unit, re-writing them with references to the wind industry and turning them into a set of performance criteria as part of a competency unit that also includes re-written elements from one or two other relevant competencies such as respond to workplace emergencies, and service fire extinguishers.
I was consulted at the end of the process, and they are not too bad, considering they were put together from previously existing competencies rather than written from observation or direct research.
Box Hill tell me they are now working on developing training resources in support of the units, particularly online learning modules. I am not sure of the sense of this, as I am not at present a believer in the value of online training for turbine technicians, but it is clearly what they have been able to get funding for, so we will get these resources, whether they are useful for us or not. It really becomes up to the industry a bit as to how much they would want to engage in the development of these materials, but I can’t see the industry offering much at this point. We’ll see, I’ll talk to them when they call.
What is a bit disappointing is that EEOZ don’t seem to have made any progress on their units. It is a shame if the momentum is lost there.
And I haven’t heard from Siegfried for a while either, either on the qualifications stuff, or just on delivering some training through the Danish Wind Power Academy, which I was kind of hopeful he would get off the ground (the training that is).
These views are those of the author only – not those of Suzlon Energy Australia
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Training Needs for Wind Turbine Service Technicians
I want to outline my understanding of the sort of training needed to develop a wind turbine service technician. This is important because while there are service technician courses and apprenticeships around the globe, there are no service technician courses in Australia. The technical and further education sector is getting interested, but does not yet have the teaching staff or the knowledge of the industry to do it. I don’t think this will take long though, as there are a few people working on this.
But anyway, if you wanted to be a wind technician in Australia, what kinds of qualifications would you need. To start with, it is going to be easier if you have a trade, and those preferred are electrical and mechanical trades. A trade shows you have some good skills, but it also shows application, and the ability to see things through. This might be a stereotype to a certain degree, but I am afraid that is the opinion that holds sway in the Australian industry – trade qualified workers are more likely to offer good general work skills as well as bringing their licences and specializations. It’s not over if you don’t have a trade though, there is still space for you to get in, but you must be able to show application to the tasks, and good general mechanical skills. Wind farm managers will tell you that the profile they often look for is a local farmer who has worked extensively on farm machinery, and is pretty self sufficient and hardworking. If someone is local, and good with machines, they have a good base of skills, and are not likely to leave for another wind farm job after you have trained them, so they are a good bet for training up well.
So, some of the basic stuff that will appeal to hiring managers in wind farms is
1. First Aid – senior or level 2 with an up to date CPR – this is pretty standard, all wind technicians need to have this, and if you don’t have it and you get a job as a wind technician, you can expect to be sent to do it very quickly.
2. Working at Heights – obviously having a working at heights certificate is going to be an advantage, but most wind companies will now demand their technicians attend their specific training covering emergency equipment and evacuation from the particular turbines to be climbed. Nonetheless, it is useful to have a basic work at heights qualification before you start, to allow you to climb on your first day if your hirer’s procedures allow. Those wanting to go further could get certificates in vertical rescue and ladder rescue.
3. National Construction Induction – while wind farms are not construction sites, wind technicians will often be asked to visit sites that are under construction to assist with commissioning, initial servicing, and just generally filling in if extra needs to be done and the service site is running well, so you should be ready with a construction induction card.
4. Current Driver’s licence – don’t turn up with an expired one.
5. Confined Space – some windfarms have confined spaces, some don’t, but it would definitely be valuable to have if you were looking for wind farm tech work.
6. Hazardous Substances – There are various hazardous substances on wind farms, and techs generally need to be trained to use the Material Safety Data Sheets, and be aware around these chemicals.
7. Fire Extinguisher Service – all turbines have fire extinguishers in them, and you need to know how to use and service them.
8. Methods of Release / Electrical Safety – if you are not electrically trained, then electrical safety and rescue is an important competency – largely because if you are not electrical, likely that the other guy up the turbine with you, will be working on the circuits, and if there is an accident, you will be the only one there to help for some time.
This would be a good set of qualifications to bring to the table if you are looking for a job as a wind technician, combine them with a trade and you are sought after. But there will still be more training in your first year, some of the things you will likely get are
9. Respond to Site Emergencies – all sites have emergency plans, and most wind farms will want you to do more than just sit through the 45minute induction pointing to where the muster points are – they want you to know what to do if you are 80 metres in the air and a grass fire starts in 40 degree heat just upwind of you on the farm.
10. Job Safety Analysis – The construction induction course will give you a sense of JSAs, and how they are used, but wind companies will want to train you in theirs, and tick you off as being capable of assessing the risks you will be dealing with.
11. Manual Handling – every employer wants to be covered here, and will probably want to ensure new staff are across the particular manual handling risks of a windfarm. It probably wouldn’t hurt to turn up with it though.
12. Disconnect / Reconnect – if you are not an electrician, expect to be put through this certificate, see my most recent post for more details.
13. Turbine training – finally we get to learning about the actual gear, and while much of this will be learned on the job, it is likely that you will need at least a week’s formal training inside your first year on the job. You need to learn the electrics, the mechanics, the hydraulics, and the software and controls. You will need to learn to read the schematics, and understand the key functionality and components (pitch, yaw, gearbox). Further turbine training would likely follow each year either to deepen knowledge or keep up with the technology updates.
This is a pretty good list, but it doesn’t end there, because I have probably forgotten a few things. Further additions in time can be things like High Voltage Operation, Customer Service (clients like visiting windfarms), things to help out the crane guys such as dogging and rigging, and anything else your wind farm manager feels like getting you qualified in. As you can see though, becoming a wind technician does involve a significant amount of training, most of which is taken care of by the employer, because it is not easily locatable as a certificate or all provided by the one company or institution. But maybe this is only temporary. Please let me know in the comments if you think I have missed anything in particular
These views are personal and not necessarily those of my employer.
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