Battery Storage Recruitment in Europe: Why the talent market can’t keep up with infrastructure growth

Battery Storage Recruitment in Europe: Why the talent market can’t keep up with infrastructure growth

Posted 2 months ago

Battery Storage Recruitment infographic showing key hard-to-fill roles like grid, finance, ESG, and integration

By Hayatte Loukili — Executive Search Director & Energy Transition Market Expert | EnableGreen
Published: 26 March 2026

Battery storage recruitment has become one of the most contested areas in the energy transition. Across Europe, utility-scale battery storage is being financed, developed, and traded as core infrastructure — comparable to transmission lines and grid substations. Capital deployment is accelerating. Policy frameworks are improving. Yet the talent market is not scaling at the same pace. For developers, asset managers, and investors, this is no longer a background concern. It is a live execution risk.

 

Battery Storage Recruitment: Why the demand signal is structural

 

The numbers make the case plainly. The EU installed 27.1 GWh of new battery storage capacity in 2025 — a 45% year-on-year increase and the 12th consecutive record year, according to SolarPower Europe. Total installed capacity across Europe now stands at over 77 GWh. Utility-scale systems drove the majority of new installations for the first time, accounting for 55% of all added capacity.

Aurora Energy Research forecasts installed capacity will exceed 80 GW by 2030. LCP Delta projects the figure could surpass 215 GW before the decade closes. Aurora also estimates more than €24 billion flowing into four-hour duration systems alone.

Project scale is moving in one direction. When Fidra Energy — a company that only entered the market in 2024 — announced Europe’s largest battery project at 1,450 MW in the UK, backed by EIG’s Sandbrook Climate Infrastructure Fund, it was not an outlier. It was a signal. Allianz Global Investors acquiring a 50% stake in TotalEnergies’ German BESS portfolio (789 MW, 1,628 MWh, ~€500 million) confirmed the same: BESS is now an established infrastructure asset class with institutional capital behind it.

More projects, more capital, and more complexity — means more senior hiring across every function.

 

The revenue model is changing and so are the skills required

 

Early BESS projects were built on contracted ancillary services revenue: frequency response, FFR, and DCR. That model is under pressure. Wood Mackenzie projects that prequalified FCR capacity in Germany will exceed total demand by 2026, and spreads have already narrowed from €120/MWh in 2022 to €80–90/MWh in 2025.

The market is transitioning. Merchant, arbitrage, and hybrid co-location strategies are becoming the commercial foundation for new projects. This is not a problem — it is a maturation. But it changes the hiring brief significantly.

Guillaume Rivron, Managing Partner at Marguerite, frames it clearly:

“The next phase of BESS growth in Europe will be defined by the shift from ancillary services revenue models toward merchant, arbitrage, and hybrid models, underpinned by clearer regulation and accelerated grid investment. Now established as an asset class in its own right, BESS offers diverse risk-return profiles for investors who can master development and procurement, adapt to national market designs, and move selectively and quickly to capture the best opportunities.”

Mastering development and procurement, adapting to national market designs, moving selectively and quickly — these are human capability requirements. They translate directly into specific hiring profiles that the current talent pool struggles to fill at speed.

 

Where battery storage recruitment is hardest

 

Eighty-two percent of battery industry employers reported shortages of skilled local applicants in 2025, according to the Battery Industry Employment and Talent Needs Assessment (BIETNA). Over 90% of European transmission system operators flagged that skill shortages had delayed grid infrastructure projects. These are not abstract metrics. They describe real project timelines slipping.

The roles with the sharpest supply-demand imbalance in European BESS are:

 

  • Asset managers and revenue optimisation specialists — combining battery dispatch knowledge with power market expertise
  • Grid connection and technical development leads — covering permitting, grid code compliance, and TSO interface management across multiple national frameworks
  • Project finance and structuring professionals — with BESS-specific experience in merchant risk and infrastructure debt
  • Battery system integration and commissioning engineers — bridging power electronics, BMS software, and site safety
  • Regulatory and ESG compliance specialists — increasingly critical as the EU Battery Regulation’s Digital Battery Passport requirement takes effect in February 2027

     

The common thread across these roles is that they sit at the intersection of two or more disciplines. A grid connection lead needs to understand both planning law and power systems. An asset manager needs to model dispatch strategy and negotiate with TSOs. These cross-functional profiles take years to develop — and the BESS sector has only existed at utility scale for five to seven years in most European markets.

There is no legacy workforce to draw from at scale. Professionals are being redeployed from adjacent sectors — power trading, transmission, conventional generation — but the flow of candidates is not fast enough to meet demand.

 

A practical example: What hiring looks like on the ground

 

Consider a mid-sized European IPP expanding its BESS portfolio across the UK, Italy, and Poland simultaneously. To execute this, the business needs country-level development leads with jurisdiction-specific regulatory knowledge in each market, a grid connection specialist per pipeline, a senior battery optimisation hire to manage dispatch strategy, and a head of asset management for the operational portfolio. That is five to seven senior hires — in a market where each of those profiles typically has two or three competing offers active at the same time.

The firms winning this competition share common traits. They brief their specialist recruitment partner before the mandate is urgent. They compress the interview process. They make offers decisively — often within 48 to 72 hours of the final interview. Those that don’t are watching project timelines shift — not because of permitting or financing, but because the development team cannot be staffed.

 

National markets: Where recruitment pressure is most acute

 

Battery storage recruitment intensity varies by geography, but pressure is building across the board.

The UK remains the most active hiring market for BESS. The pipeline is deep, planning reform is improving, and revenue stacking strategies are more developed than almost anywhere else in Europe. Competition for senior talent — particularly grid, development, and optimisation profiles is fierce.

Germany is the largest storage market in Europe by traded volume, but its regulatory complexity and the ongoing FCR saturation are driving demand for more commercially sophisticated talent, especially in trading and asset management.

Italy and Poland are increasingly attracting capital and developer interest. Both markets face acute shortages of local BESS expertise, which means recruitment often requires international candidates or relocation packages — adding complexity to already competitive searches.

France is expected to become more active from August 2026 following the TURPE 7 tariff reform, which will improve the economics of storage investment significantly.

 

Author analysis & expert opinion

By Hayatte Loukili, Executive Search Director, EnableGreen

 

The recruitment constraint in European battery storage is more serious than most market commentary acknowledges. Reports focus on GW pipelines and investment volumes, which are impressive, but rarely capture what is quietly lost in roles that take six months to fill, or never get filled at all.

The most underestimated shortage is not purely technical. It is the commercial-technical hybrid: the asset manager who can model dispatch strategy and present revenue assumptions to an investment committee in the same day. The development director who understands grid code compliance across three national frameworks. These people are not abundant, and they are not available for long when they do come to market.

What concerns me looking forward is that the shift toward merchant and arbitrage revenue models will demand even more sophisticated talent at precisely the moment when existing capacity is already stretched. Developers expanding into multiple European markets simultaneously face compounded complexity — each jurisdiction has its own grid tariff design, permitting logic, and regulatory timeline. Placing a generalist into that context carries real project risk.

The firms that will execute most effectively are those treating battery storage recruitment as a strategic input to their business plan rather than a reactive function. That means engaging partners with genuine sector depth, building talent pipelines before roles are open, and investing in retention as seriously as acquisition.

At EnableGreen, we operate exclusively within the energy transition. Our energy storage recruitment practice covers the full value chain development, grid, finance, asset management, and commercial, across Europe and internationally. We do not place generalists into specialist roles. If you are scaling a BESS team or looking for your next move in this space, explore our current energy storage vacancies or get in touch directly.

 

FAQ

 

  1. What is battery storage recruitment and why is it so competitive in Europe?
    Battery storage recruitment refers to sourcing, assessing, and placing professionals in roles across the utility-scale BESS value chain — development, grid, engineering, finance, and asset management. It is highly competitive in Europe because the sector has scaled rapidly while the pool of experienced candidates remains small. Most skilled professionals have two to three active offers at any given time, and average time-to-hire for senior roles is extending.

     

  2. What roles are hardest to fill in battery storage recruitment?
    The most difficult profiles to recruit are asset managers with battery dispatch and power market expertise, grid connection leads with multi-jurisdiction experience, project finance specialists familiar with merchant BESS structuring, battery system integration engineers, and regulatory compliance professionals ahead of the EU Battery Regulation. All require cross-disciplinary skills that take years to develop in a sector that has only existed at scale for five to seven years.

     

  3. Which European countries have the highest demand for BESS talent in 2026?
    The UK leads in both project pipeline volume and hiring intensity, particularly for grid, development, and optimisation roles. Germany has the largest market by traded volume and needs commercially sophisticated asset management and trading talent. Italy and Poland are fast-growing markets where local BESS expertise is scarce, often requiring international recruitment. France is expected to increase activity significantly from mid-2026 following the TURPE 7 tariff reform.

     

  4. How should energy companies approach battery storage recruitment strategically?
    Companies should engage specialist executive search partners before hiring is urgent, streamline interview processes to compress time-to-offer, typically 48 to 72 hours after final stage, and build talent pipelines in advance of confirmed headcount. Investing in employer brand within the BESS community and offering competitive packages benchmarked to current market rates are also critical. Treating recruitment as a strategic input to project planning, not a reactive function, separates the firms that execute from those that fall behind.

     

  5. Why is battery storage recruitment different from general renewables hiring?
    Battery storage recruitment requires a unique combination of technical, commercial, and regulatory knowledge that does not exist in the same depth across other renewables sectors. BESS professionals must understand power market mechanics, battery system technology, grid code compliance, and increasingly complex revenue optimisation strategies. The sector lacks the deep talent legacy that wind and solar have built over two decades, and the pace of growth is significantly outrunning organic candidate development.

     

  6. How does EnableGreen approach battery storage recruitment?
    EnableGreen operates exclusively in the energy transition, with a dedicated
    energy storage recruitment practice covering the full BESS value chain across Europe and internationally. Mandates span development, grid, engineering, asset management, and commercial roles. The approach is built on genuine sector knowledge — not volume sourcing — which reduces time-to-hire and improves placement quality. Current opportunities are available at EnableGreen Jobs.

     

Sources & References

  1. SolarPower Europe — EU Battery Storage Market Review 2025 (January 2026): https://www.solarpowereurope.org
  2. Aurora Energy Research — European Battery Storage Capacity Forecast 2030: https://www.enlit.world/library/bess-roundup-how-europes-storage-momentum-is-gathering-pace
  3. Wood Mackenzie — European Battery Storage Deployment 2025 (December 2025): https://www.woodmac.com/press-releases/european-battery-storage-deployment-expected-to-grow-45-year-over-year-to-16gw-in-2025
  4. LCP Delta — European Energy Storage Capacity Forecasts 2030: https://www.indexbox.io/blog/europes-energy-storage-market-matures-as-focus-shifts-to-project-execution-in-2026/
  5. Energy-Storage.News — Europe’s Energy Storage Buildout (February 2026): https://www.energy-storage.news/europes-energy-storage-buildout-who-leads-and-who-is-left-behind/
  6. InnoEnergy — Europe’s Battery Breakthrough Hinges on Skilled Workforce: https://innoenergy.com/news-resources/europes-battery-breakthrough-hinges-on-skilled-workforce/
  7. BIETNA / Center for Automotive Research — Battery Industry Employment and Talent Needs Assessment: https://www.batterytechonline.com/design-manufacturing/report-battery-industry-needs-more-workers-with-higher-skills
  8. Marguerite — Guillaume Rivron, Managing Partner (direct quote, 2026)
  9. LinkedIn / EnableGreen — Why Battery Storage Is Becoming a Core Infrastructure Asset: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/why-battery-storage-becoming-core-infrastructure-asset-c44yf/
Author picture

Executive Search Director — EnableGreen

With over twenty years of experience across finance, strategy, and renewable energy, Hayatte has worked alongside leading organisations including Deloitte, Accenture, Engie, and Cubico. She is deeply committed to sustainable development and diversity, and now supports companies in achieving their ESG objectives by helping them recruit high-calibre sustainability and ESG talent.

See More..
Author picture

Executive Search Director — EnableGreen

With over twenty years of experience across finance, strategy, and renewable energy, Hayatte has worked alongside leading organisations including Deloitte, Accenture, Engie, and Cubico. She is deeply committed to sustainable development and diversity, and now supports companies in achieving their ESG objectives by helping them recruit high-calibre sustainability and ESG talent.

See More..

Let's continue the conversation

Share your views on LinkedIn and join the discussion with other sustainability and business leaders.

Share this article

Subscribe to the newsletter

You agree to our Terms and Conditions

Continue reading ​

Sustainability initiatives that defined 2025

Green technologies driving energy efficiency: What the data and the market are actually saying

CSO: The Strategic Role in ESG Capital Allocation

Is your organisation ESG-ready in 2026?

Who we are and What we do

We are an exclusive Sustainability and ESG Executive Search and Recruitment Agency, offering both permanent and temporary contracts recruitment solutions, across all sectors. We assist employers find their next great hire in ESG and Sustainability Integration/ Green Energy & CleanTech/ Responsible Investment, Sustainable Finance & Impact Investing.

The Paris Agreement at COP21 identified capacity building as a core challenge our governments, institutions, organisations and civil society need to overcome to build a sustainable world.
Companies need to build business strategies and develop activities to keep growing and create value for their shareholders without exhausting resources or harming future generations. Therefore, engaging in building a decarbonised and equitable economy is at the core of their mission and success in the long term. Their ability to build resilience of human and ecological systems will enable them to navigate this ever-evolving world.
As a recruitment agency, we truly believe, we have a substantial part to play in equipping those thriving businesses with the best candidates to conquer those challenges.
Our purpose is to support businesses in their sustainability journey by connecting them with the best talents in the ESG and Sustainability job market.
We focus to provide tailored solutions to our clients’ needs and enhance candidates’s experience in finding their ideal jobs.

Qualifications and Education: Building Expertise in the Field

In terms of qualifications, academic programs and certifications in sustainability and ESG management have gained prominence. Universities and professional organisations offer courses and certifications that equip individuals with the necessary knowledge and skills to excel in the field. Additionally, relevant degrees in environmental science, sustainability, business administration, and finance are highly valued by employers.
The ESG and sustainability job market is experiencing significant growth and offers diverse opportunities for professionals. Dedicated roles, as well as the integration of ESG knowledge into traditional job functions, highlight the increasing importance of sustainability in business strategies. Specialized skills, regulatory expertise, and industry knowledge are highly sought after.
​As companies strive to embed ESG practices into their operations, professionals with ESG expertise will continue to play a crucial role in driving positive change and shaping a sustainable future.

Diverse Opportunities: ESG and Sustainability Across Industries

The ESG and sustainability job market is not limited to specific industries. While sectors such as renewable energy, cleantech, and sustainable finance have a well-established presence, organisations across diverse industries are recognizing the need to prioritize ESG and sustainability practices. From manufacturing and retail to technology and healthcare, professionals with ESG expertise are sought after to drive sustainability initiatives and help companies future-proof their operations.

Navigating the Regulatory Landscape: Compliance and Governance Expertise

The increasing regulatory focus on ESG factors has led to a rise in demand for professionals who can navigate the evolving compliance landscape. Knowledge of relevant regulations and frameworks, such as the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), is highly valued. This includes expertise in managing ESG risks, conducting audits and assessments, and implementing sustainable governance structures.

Specialised Skills and Knowledge: Key Areas in High Demand

The ESG and sustainability job market also offers opportunities for specialised skills and knowledge. Professionals with expertise in renewable energy, circular economy, sustainable supply chain management, impact investing, and environmental conservation are in high demand. Additionally, individuals with experience in sustainability reporting frameworks, such as the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) or Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), are sought after to ensure transparent and standardized reporting.

ESG Expertise in Traditional Job Roles: The Integration of Sustainability Principles

Another emerging trend is the growing importance of ESG expertise in traditional job roles. Professionals in finance, legal, marketing, operations, and human resources are increasingly expected to have a solid understanding of ESG principles and their implications for their respective fields. For example, financial analysts need to assess the financial risks and opportunities associated with ESG factors, while marketing professionals must effectively communicate a company’s sustainability initiatives to consumers.

Dedicated ESG and Sustainability Roles: A Shift Towards Holistic Approaches

One significant trend in the job market is the rise in dedicated ESG and sustainability roles. Previously, these responsibilities were often dispersed across different departments, such as corporate social responsibility, environmental management, or investor relations. However, as companies recognize the need for a holistic approach, they are creating specialised positions such as ESG managers, ESG analysts, and corporate sustainability officers. These roles focus on integrating ESG considerations into business strategies, measuring and reporting on sustainability performance, and engaging with stakeholders.

ESG and Sustainability Job Market Trends

The ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) and sustainability integration job market has experienced significant growth and transformation in recent years. As companies worldwide recognize the importance of incorporating ESG principles into their operations, the demand for professionals with expertise in this field has surged. This article will explore the evolving landscape of the ESG and sustainability job market, highlighting key trends and opportunities.
The integration of ESG and sustainability practices into business strategies has become a top priority for organisations across industries. This shift is driven by various factors, including the increasing awareness of climate change, social justice issues, and corporate governance standards. As a result, companies are actively seeking professionals who can navigate the complexities of ESG and sustainability and drive positive change within their organizations.
EnableGreen
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.