Currently reading: Call for UK to address EV skills shortage before 2030
Institute of the Motor Industry claims just 5% of garage and dealer technicians are appropriately trained to work on electric cars

There are a number of potential roadblocks to the UK government's plan to stop the sale of pure-petrol and diesel models by 2030 - but one seldom discussed is the lack of mechanics trained to work with EVs. 

Professor Jim Saker and Steve Nash, CEO and president respectively of the Institute of the Motor Industry (IMI), have today released an open letter claiming the country "urgently" needs a "concerted, ongoing workforce development strategy" to ensure the planned sales boom in electrified cars isn't met with a lack of people qualified to work on them.

"Right now only 5% of the technicians working in garages and dealerships are appropriately qualified to work on these [hybrid and electric] vehicles," says the letter. "This is the real context of the government's Green Plan. Unless we start to discuss these issues, that plan will be compromised."

The IMI estimates there are currently between 13,000 and 20,000 technicians qualified to service and repair the approximately 380,000 plug-in electric or hybrid cars on UK roads. "Ramp up the numbers based on the government's Green Plan and the capacity is simply not there to support the transition the government wants," the letter continues. 

The Covid-19 pandemic has made matters worse, it is claimed. While 6500 certificates for working on electric vehicles were issued in 2019, that number was down by 85% throughout the second quarter of 2020 due to lockdown. The UK was forecast to need at least 75,000 EV-trained techicians to meet the number of hybrids and EVs expected to be sold in 2030. 

"The automotive workforce is already behind in the skills required for these emerging technologies - through no fault of its own," the letter claims. "Embattled employers need support and incentives to get more of their technicians trained, and to reignite recruitment and apprenticeship plans."

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Deputy 8 December 2020

It will take all of 5 minutes to train these guys and girls up to the standard of my current main dealer team!  Any issue, plug in the laptop/OBD, read code. Open interactive manual, swap part.

If issue not fixed, repeat the above. I recall my last MOT, failed due to exhaust hanger.  Don't worry they said, we've ordered you a whole new exhaust system for £1,200, it will arrive tomorrow and we'll fit it for free!!  Hang on I said.  Drove round the corner, local garage welded the hanger for £20 and I returned to main dealer. Oh, they said, that was quick and cheap but we aren't allowed to do that!

adrian888 7 December 2020
To set up a suitable training scheme , appropriate qualification standards, get qualified technicians out into the sector, and so on will take all of 9 years. There is already a shortage given my Volvo dealer shares a suitably qualified technician such certain tasks on a hybrid are booked around his availability. If i were a young lad i would see it as the future and guarantee of a job in demand for some years.
The Colonel 7 December 2020

It is funny but there was a hilarious article on here about the M6 toll fee going up. Funny because it came with a whole load of unnecessary maths.  Here is an article that would be better with some maths but just throws out numbers instead.

2020, The Year of Covid, notwithstanding, given the current estimated number of technicians and the issuing of 6500 certifications in 2019, that would suggest that if the trajectory were to be maintained on average by 2030 there would be around 75,000 EV technicians.

Mountain, meet molehill.