Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Could Face Skilled Labour Shortage Despite Energy Sector Layoffs

The Canadian Press, 18 Jan, 2016 12:46 PM
    EDMONTON — Alberta could face a shortage of skilled labour despite layoffs in the oilpatch unless companies and governments keep training new workers, an industry group warns.
     
    BuildForce Canada is projecting a loss of 31,000 construction jobs due to the downturn in the oilsands over the next four years, with many of those people heading to other provinces.
     
    "A skills vacuum is a real risk with the exodus of interprovincial workers within and outside the resource industry," Rosemary Sparks, the group's executive director, said Monday.
     
    The effects of the sputtering energy sector are expected to ripple out to residential and non-residential construction, she said.
     
    BuildForce Canada is forecasting the construction sector in Alberta will not bounce back until 2020.
     
    The "skills gap'' will be exacerbated by the retirement of thousands of baby boomers by the end of the decade, Sparks said.
     
    Alberta has been through such boom-and-bust cycles before, but factoring in a large number of retiring workers at the same time will make dealing with the downturn more complex.
     
    "That's why it's crucial for industry to stay focused on recruiting young people and attracting and keeping those skilled trades that are, or will be, in the most demand.
     
     
    "We can't wait for that cycle to turn around to start recruiting workers to replace the retiring workers. We have to make sure that we continue to replenish the workforce."
     
    Sparks said it takes four to five years to train a tradesperson through an apprenticeship program.
     
    Some of the trades include carpenters, electricians, boilermakers, welders, pipefitters and heavy-equipment operators.
     
    Sparks said companies will have to look at ways to keep skilled tradespeople on the job, such as doing maintenance work on major projects.
     
    Governments and companies also to need maintain apprenticeship training programs.
     
    "There is a role for employers and for governments to make sure we continue to have that system."
     
    Saskatchewan and Newfoundland and Labrador could also lose skilled workers due to the energy industry slump and retirements.
     
    Skilled tradespeople are expected to seek work in provinces such as British Columbia, Ontario and Manitoba that have more construction projects on the drawing board, Sparks said.
     
    ATB Financial, Alberta's Crown-owned bank, is forecasting the first half of 2016 to be the roughest yet in the current economic downturn, with unemployment projected to reach up to eight per cent. Last January, the unemployment rate in Alberta was 4.7 per cent.
     
    ATB is projecting more people could leave Alberta this year than move in, a migration pattern that hasn't happened since 2010.
     
     
    BuildForce Canada calls itself a national industry-led organization representing all sectors of Canada's construction industry. It receives some funding from the federal government.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Stephane Dion Says He's Concerned For Security Of Human Rights Sources In Saudi Arabia

    Stephane Dion Says He's Concerned For Security Of Human Rights Sources In Saudi Arabia
    Dion is responding to the growing clamour over the government's decision to allow an Ontario company to sell $15 billion worth of light armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia in spite of its questionable human rights record.

    Stephane Dion Says He's Concerned For Security Of Human Rights Sources In Saudi Arabia

    Crown Prince Of Morocco Really Doesn’t Like His Hand Kissed

    Crown Prince Of Morocco Really Doesn’t Like His Hand Kissed
    In a video that has been widely shared, Prince Moulay Hassan snatches his hand away every time someone tries to kiss it.

    Crown Prince Of Morocco Really Doesn’t Like His Hand Kissed

    B.C. Resident Diagnosed With Zika Virus After Returning From El Salvador

    B.C. Resident Diagnosed With Zika Virus After Returning From El Salvador
    The Public Health Agency of Canada says a B.C. resident who recently travelled to El Salvador has contracted a dengue-like virus transmitted through mosquito bites.

    B.C. Resident Diagnosed With Zika Virus After Returning From El Salvador

    Canada's Economic Growth Hit Hard By Falling Oil Prices: Finance Minister Bill Morneau

    Canada's Economic Growth Hit Hard By Falling Oil Prices: Finance Minister Bill Morneau
    ill Morneau told several hundred people attending a Halifax Chamber of Commerce luncheon that his department's projections on growth since the 2015 budget have fallen due to oil prices that are less than half those of 2014. 

    Canada's Economic Growth Hit Hard By Falling Oil Prices: Finance Minister Bill Morneau

    Homeless Campers At Victoria Courthouse Reject Offer Of Temporary Shelter

    Homeless Campers At Victoria Courthouse Reject Offer Of Temporary Shelter
    VICTORIA — Dozens of homeless people camping at Victoria's Law Courts are vowing to stay despite the B.C. government's offer of alternate shelter.

    Homeless Campers At Victoria Courthouse Reject Offer Of Temporary Shelter

    Trans Mountain Pipeline Project Doesn't Meet B.C.'s 5 Conditions, Says Minister

    B.C. Environment Minister Mary Polak says the company has not provided enough information about its proposed plans to double the pipeline to prevent or respond to oil spills in the ocean or on land.

    Trans Mountain Pipeline Project Doesn't Meet B.C.'s 5 Conditions, Says Minister