Close Menu
Live Media NewsLive Media News
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Auto
  • Sports
  • Travel
What's Hot

The Stablecoin Bill is Stalled: Here’s How It Impacts Your Daily Crypto Trades

10 April 2026

A 318 Percent Surge: The Growth Stock Wall Street Is Quietly Loading Up On

10 April 2026

The Q2 2026 Stock Market Outlook Is Here — and the Word ‘Don’t Panic’ Appears More Than You’d Expect

10 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Sunday, April 12
Contact
News in your area
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram TikTok
  •  Weather
  •  Markets
Live Media NewsLive Media News
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Auto
  • Sports
  • Travel
Live Media NewsLive Media News
  • Greece
  • Politics
  • World
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Travel
Home»Auto
Auto

The Talent Shortage That Could Stall AI – Power Engineers

News TeamBy News Team26 February 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News
The Talent Shortage That Could Stall AI: Power Engineers
The Talent Shortage That Could Stall AI: Power Engineers
Share
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Email

The air outside a substation fence frequently has a subtle metallic smell, similar to that of warm pennies. A constant transformer hum—an insect-like vibration that you stop noticing because it never stops—can be the loudest sound on a calm afternoon.

The issue is that most people drive by this type of location without giving it any thought. Although AI is being marketed as software, it actually operates on hardware, which requires electricity to function. Power engineers, who are responsible for ensuring the dependability of that electricity, are sitting in the choke point and appear somewhat surprised by their sudden fame.

CategoryDetails
Profession at the centerPower engineers (grid planning, protection & control, transmission, distribution, interconnection, reliability)
Why AI caresData centers and AI compute loads require new grid capacity, upgrades, and faster interconnections
Talent gapGlobal power sector needs ~450,000 to 1.5 million more power engineers by 2030 (Kearney + IEEE)
Hiring pressure~40% of power executives report difficulty hiring skilled workers
Cultural twistAI “talent war” isn’t only for ML PhDs; it’s increasingly for the people who build and run electrical infrastructure
Authentic referenceIEEE Spectrum coverage / IEEE Power & Energy Society workforce work: https://spectrum.ieee.org/power-engineering-workforce-gap

The figures are not nuanced. According to a joint Kearney and IEEE study, 40% of power executives already say they have trouble finding qualified workers, and by 2030, the global power industry may require an additional 450,000 to 1.5 million engineers. There is no “future challenge” there. This problem is currently getting worse as data center buildouts, renewable energy integration, and grid upgrades collide. As the mechanics retire, it seems like we’re attempting to install a rocket engine on an old bicycle.

Technology executives continue to refer to AI as a talent crisis, but they typically mean prompt-whisperers, data scientists, and model builders. 51% of technology leaders reported a lack of AI skills, up from 28% the previous year—an exceptionally high increase, according to the Nash Squared/Harvey Nash Digital Leadership Report. It’s costly, and it’s real. The lack of people who can connect megawatts safely, predictably, and on time may prove to be a greater barrier than the lack of people who can train models.

The scale lands in your body if you spend time close to an active data center construction site. Cranes swing steel, concrete trucks idle, and hard-hat workers move in a deliberate rhythm, aware of the dangers of their jobs.

Temporary generators are leaking heat, and the air is smelling of diesel. WIRED recently described single data center projects that can require multiples of a local union’s membership, framing the “real AI talent war” as one for plumbers and electricians. That is the layer that is visible. A more subdued prerequisite lies behind it: engineers capable of creating protection plans, negotiating interconnection studies, simulating load growth, and endorsing the plan.

Bidding wars are not the purpose of utilities. Regulated utilities are subject to commissions, rate cases, and a culture that values caution, whereas big tech can pay quickly, offer stock, and move teams overnight. According to POWER Magazine, a lack of workers delaying routine maintenance and restoration could be the cause of the next blackout rather than a storm.

That may sound dramatic, but imagine a control room during a fault event, with operators coordinating field crews, phones ringing, and screens flashing, and the bench of seasoned engineers appearing thinner than it did five years prior. Investors appear to think AI companies are glamorous. The grid is the source of the vulnerability.

Another specialty that doesn’t fit neatly into a bootcamp is power engineering. Errors can have disastrous consequences, and protection and control work is learned gradually, frequently through mentoring. Long lead times, public opposition, and approvals that disregard Silicon Valley timelines are all part of transmission planning. Since it takes more than twelve weeks to train a competent power engineer, it is still uncertain whether the pipeline can grow rapidly enough even when funding is available. It’s a decade of multi-layered judgment developed through resolving complex issues and navigating practical limitations.

This cultural mismatch seems strangely familiar. For many years, technology viewed infrastructure as background noise: dependable, uninteresting, and presumed. The background music has started to increase, occasionally shrieking.

The new anxiety is revealed by the way data center developers refer to “time to power,” which is similar to how startups refer to “time to market.” In many areas, the line to connect new loads and new generation is growing, and every study needs engineers who are aware of the system’s limitations rather than just its goals. As we watch this develop, it seems that coordination, rather than creativity, is the bottleneck.

Certain organizations are reacting in predictable ways, such as modernizing tools, funding training programs, increasing apprenticeships, and collaborating with universities. For the next ten years, IEEE’s Power & Energy Society has been promoting workforce development initiatives that sound like a warning sign. These actions are helpful, but they encounter the same harsh reality: experienced engineers are being overburdened with tasks such as evaluating interconnections, organizing upgrades, managing dependability, and offering advice on new standards. The weight continues to increase. There is no way to extend the calendar.

This is not an argument against the expansion of AI, despite what it may sound like. It is a counterargument to the notion that AI is frictionless.

While downplaying the importance of human labor in safely delivering electrons, the industry has grown accustomed to characterizing advancements as the result of GPUs and algorithms. If it occurs, the death won’t be spectacular. It will manifest as substation delays, upgrades that are put off, projects that are pushed back to “next year,” and subtly increased costs that are passed down through the chain.

The unsettling prospect is that the slowest-moving components of the physical world—transmission lines, permits, transformers, and a declining number of engineers who understand how everything works together—will limit AI’s speed. The irony that the most cutting-edge technology on the planet might wind up waiting on a profession that has been performing the same vital work, largely unnoticed, for a century is difficult to overlook once you realize that.

Follow Live Media News on Google News

Get Live Media News headlines in your feed — and add Live Media News as a preferred source in Google Search.

Stay updated

Follow Live Media News in Google News for faster access to breaking coverage, reporting, and analysis.

Follow on Google News Add to Preferred Sources
How to add Live Media News as a preferred source (Google Search):
  1. Search any trending topic on Google (for example: Greece news).
  2. On the results page, find the Top stories section.
  3. Tap Preferred sources and select Live Media News.
Tip: You can manage preferred sources anytime from Google Search settings.
30 seconds Following takes one tap inside Google News.
Preferred Sources Helps Google show more Live Media News stories in Top stories for you.
The Talent Shortage That Could Stall AI: Power Engineers

Keep Reading

The DDR5 Crash: How Google’s ‘TurboQuant’ Secretly Tanked Global RAM Prices

Inside the AI IPO Wave That Could Redefine Wall Street’s Relationship With Technology Forever

ADBE Stock Is Down 43% From Its Peak — Michael Burry Just Bought It and Analysts Think It Could Double

Why Avi Loeb Thinks 3I/ATLAS is More Than Just a Comet

Why the Yen Carry Unwind of 2026 Could Be Three Times Larger Than the One That Rattled Markets Last Year

Inside Amazon’s Warehouse Automation Push: 750,000 Robots, Declining Headcount, and a Workforce in Transition

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks

A 318 Percent Surge: The Growth Stock Wall Street Is Quietly Loading Up On

10 April 2026

The Q2 2026 Stock Market Outlook Is Here — and the Word ‘Don’t Panic’ Appears More Than You’d Expect

10 April 2026

How Crypto Remittances Are Quietly Replacing Western Union in Latin America

10 April 2026

Inside the $20 Billion Crypto Scam Empire the U.S. Government Finally Moved to Crush

10 April 2026

Latest Articles

The Last Wild Population of Northern White Rhinos Is Down to Two. Here Is the Plan to Save the Species.

9 April 2026

The DDR5 Crash: How Google’s ‘TurboQuant’ Secretly Tanked Global RAM Prices

9 April 2026

Inside the AI IPO Wave That Could Redefine Wall Street’s Relationship With Technology Forever

9 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 Live Media News. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?