How to Successfully Find a Green Job
Changing your career direction is a significant decision on a good day. Making the choice to enter the green economy ups the ante even more. Successful job-hunting is about more than landing a great job; it’s about landing a job that plays a role in the environmental movement. Use the following tips to stay focused as you step toward your green career:
Staying informed: The green economy is currently in its infancy. Over time, as the economy develops, some industries will thrive, others will change in response to the marketplace and new technologies, and others will fade away into the sunset. The only way you can know where your target industry is heading is to track the factors that are shaping the green economy, your industry, sustainability, your profession, and the technology and processes unique to your field. Instead of being blindsided by these developments, use the changes you see to make strategic decisions about your future.
Taking the initiative: Your green career is not going to be handed to you on a silver platter, you must take an active role in finding your place in the green economy.
Becoming an activist: On occasion, you may find your career hanging in the balance as new laws, regulations, incentives, and disincentives are introduced or reach their expiration date. Stay alert. If you haven’t yet subscribed to a newsletter for your profession or industry, it is time to do so. When your industry or profession is galvanizing its members to call for passing or defeating a certain measure, you need to pay attention.
Demonstrating your commitment to the planet: Green employers want to hire job candidates who walk their talk. It’s not enough to pretend you are green. Employers will know in a heartbeat if you aren’t authentic. You must find ways to show prospective employers that you are committed to the environment and sustainability.
Establishing your leadership: During the early stages of the green economy, everyone must be a leader. Whether your job involves using a new technology, engaging people to take new actions, or encouraging your management team to make a process more sustainable, you must have leadership skills to get the job done. Look for opportunities to develop and demonstrate your leadership skills.
Navigating a changing world: If you want to work in the first wave of the green economy, you must be comfortable with uncertainty. To thrive, you must be able to go with the flow when plans change, stay focused, pick up on trends amid the random noise of constant change, and change goals midstream as new circumstances demand it. Are you ready?
If you’re just starting out on your quest for a green career, you may feel overwhelmed by all the options and directions you could go. Everything looks so interesting it’s hard to narrow down your focus. Begin by keeping track of the topics that interest you. As you collect these clues, you’ll begin to see possible themes develop. It’s those trends that point you in the right direction for your career.

Green Careers Glossary
Biomass power; biopower
Biopower creates electric power from organic material such as manure, crops, wood resources and processing residue, food and yard waste, and municipal bio waste. Biomass can be converted to electricity, biofuels, space heating/cooling, or process heat.

Green Careers Glossary
Cleantech; clean energy
Products, processes, and services that depend on renewable energy sources, minimize waste, and use natural resources judiciously.

Green Careers Glossary
Climatologist
Scientist who studies long-term climate variations by looking at past weather data and using complex computer models and datasets to project how various factors such as greenhouse gases, volcanic activity, and solar flares impact our climate.

Green Careers Glossary
Concentrating solar power CSP
Typically used in utility-scale projects, CSP uses a large array of mirrors to focus sunlight onto receivers. As the receivers collect the solar energy, they convert it to heat. Several designs are in use, including a mirrored dish, a power tower with mirrors encircling the tower, and linear trough systems.

Green Careers Glossary
Cradle to cradle model
Production life cycle wherein materials from outdated models become an input to the production process.

Green Careers Glossary
Diverted waste
Waste that doesn’t make its way to landfill because it is reused, recycled, or composted.

Green Careers Glossary
Ecohydrology
Branch of hydrology industry that tackles how organisms interact with water at various stages of the water cycle.

Green Careers Glossary
Ecolabeling
A labeling system to assess the life cycle impact of a product or service.

Green Careers Glossary
Ecological design
Section of ecology that calls upon designers to bring ecological principles into the design projects to conserve energy, reduce toxins, and minimize waste.

Green Careers Glossary
Ecological engineering
Industry that integrates the two fields of ecology and engineering to design, monitor, restore, and construct aquatic and land-based ecosystems in a way that benefits humans and the environment. Applications include creating ecosystems to handle storm water in urban areas or restore community forests or wetland areas.

Green Careers Glossary
Ecotourism
According to the Mohonk Agreement of 2000, ecotourism is tourism that seeks to minimize ecological and sociocultural impacts while providing economic benefits to local communities and host countries.

Green Careers Glossary
Electronic waste; e-waste
Discarded TVs, computers, monitors, printers, scanners, mice, keyboards, and cellphones.

Green Careers Glossary
Environmental education
A process aimed at developing a world population that is aware of and concerned about the total environment and its associated problems, and which has the knowledge, attitudes, motivations, commitments, and skills to work individually and collectively toward solutions of current problems and the prevention of new ones.

Green Careers Glossary
Environmental geography
Branch of geography (the study of earth, including human geography, which refers to the built environment, and physical geography, which consists of the natural environment) which looks at the interactions between humans and the environment in order to understand how the environment is created, managed, and used.

Green Careers Glossary
Environmental meteorologist
Scientist that uses his or her expertise to study and evaluate environmental problems, including climate change, air contaminants, greenhouse gas emissions, fresh water shortages, droughts, and ozone depletion. Environmental meteorologists may be called upon to conduct environmental assessments and prepare environmental impact reports on their findings.

Green Careers Glossary
Environmental science
An interdisciplinary study of the natural environment from a systems point of view.

Green Careers Glossary
Forestry
Broad term used to refer to the management of natural forests, industrial forests, and the other natural resources found within forests.

Green Careers Glossary
Geodesy
Branch of applied mathematics that specializes in measuring the Earth to determine its shape and size.

Green Careers Glossary
Geology
The study of the physical properties of the solid and liquid materials that make up the Earth, their history, and the processes that create and change them.

Green Careers Glossary
Geophysics
The study of the entire Earth as a whole using quantitative instruments and the principles of physics.

Green Careers Glossary
Geosciences; earth sciences
An umbrella term for all the sciences that are devoted to studying the planet. Typically divided into four fields: geography, geology, geophysics, geodesy.

Green Careers Glossary
Geothermal energy
Clean, reliable, renewable resource that taps the heat from the core of the Earth to generate electricity and provide heating and cooling applications. Geothermal energy is divided into three categories: geothermal electricity production, geothermal direct use, geothermal heat pumps.

Green Careers Glossary
Glaciology
Branch of hydrology that focuses on glaciers.

Green Careers Glossary
Green
Generally used as shorthand for something that improves the state of the environment in a discernable way. Can refer to a product, industry, company, job, process, or organization that conserves energy and resources, generates clean, renewable energy, minimizes waste, eliminates hazardous materials, or restores the environment and biodiversity.

Green Careers Glossary
Green economy
The industries that are producing greener products, using cleaner processes, and offering more sustainable services in an effort to move us toward a new standard.

Green Careers Glossary
green marketing; environmental marketing; ecological marketing
Marketing practices that emphasize a company’s corporate social responsibility initiative; the marketing story may also include a description of the social impact of the product on the communities of the suppliers, producers, and end users.

Green Careers Glossary
Green-washing
Marketing practices that lead the consumer to believe that a product or service is beneficial to the planet even though it’s not.

Green Careers Glossary
Holistic land management
Managing their land holistically or sustainably, using a triple bottom line approach that balances financial results, environmental impact, and community impact.

Green Careers Glossary
Hydrogeology
Branch of hydrology that looks at the movement and distribution of groundwater.

Green Careers Glossary
Hydrography
Branch of hydrology that researches the distribution of water.

Green Careers Glossary
Hydrology
Scientific field that assesses the quantity and quality of water by studying the movement of water, the quality of water, and how water is distributed over time and space throughout the Earth. The study includes the biological, chemical, and physical properties of water and how these properties interact with the environment and living organisms during the water cycle.

Green Careers Glossary
Hydrometeorology
Branch of hydrology that examines water as it moves from bodies of water to the atmosphere.

Green Careers Glossary
Industrial ecology
Branch of ecology that incorporates ecological principles into the technological world of manufacturing. The goal within this sub-discipline is to create industrial systems that function much like a natural ecosystem.

Green Careers Glossary
Limnology
Branch of hydrology that tracks inland waters.

Green Careers Glossary
Ocean current energy
Source of energy that takes advantage of strong currents that occur naturally between islands, near headlands, and at the entrances of bays and harbors. Underwater turbines capture the energy created by currents that have a velocity of 5 or more knots.

Green Careers Glossary
Ocean thermocline energy OTEC
Method of energy creation that relies on temperature differences between the warm water on the surface of the ocean and the cold water at deeper depths.

Green Careers Glossary
Rangelands
Unimproved lands with a high proportion of native vegetation that may be marshy, shrubby, grassy, or arid desert.

Green Careers Glossary
Renewable energy
Energy that is derived from resources that are readily available all over the world. The crucial feature of renewable energy is that by tapping into its power, you don’t deplete the resource, nor do you inflict damage on the environment or the planet as a whole.

Green Careers Glossary
Reverse logistics; aftermarket logistics; retrologistics; aftermarket supply chain
All post-sale logistics, from the support call center and field service to refurbishing, recycling, and reusing materials in a product at the end of its life cycle.

Green Careers Glossary
Smart grid
The industry that focuses on how electricity and information are handled from power generation, transmission, and distribution to energy storage and real-time energy management technology are successfully combined, including traditional and new energy sources, within a reliable, secure, efficient infrastructure.

Green Careers Glossary
Supply/distribution logistics; supply chain
The management of a vast network of suppliers spread throughout the world through sophisticated software that allows all the players to understand the supply and demand needs and status.

Green Careers Glossary
Surface hydrology
Branch of hydrology that studies how water moves on the surface of the earth.

Green Careers Glossary
Sustainable
Any sort of practice that does not take more from a source than it can regenerate in a reasonable amount of time. One way to become sustainable is the triple bottom line approach — attending to the economic and social and environmental impacts of our choices.

Green Careers Glossary
Sustainable manufacturing
According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, the creation of manufactured products that use processes that are non-polluting, conserve energy and natural resources, and are economically sound and safe for employees, communities, and consumers. The goods may have green uses, such as solar panels or green building supplies, or they may be traditional goods produced sustainably, such as toothpaste and carpet tiles.

Green Careers Glossary
Tidal energy
Energy captured and converted to electricity as tidal waters move into and out of a bay.

Green Careers Glossary
Waste-to-energy WTE
Renewable energy model that uses facilities that burn organic and manufactured waste in carefully designed boilers with modern pollution control equipment to scrub the emissions from the burn and maintain precise heat conditions to ensure that all waste matter is combusted completely.

Green Careers Glossary
Wave power
Energy captured from the change in height and speed of ocean waves.

Green Careers Glossary
Wind energy
Energy captured from the wind created as the sun heats different parts of the earth at different rates, and hot air rises and cooler air is drawn in to replace the warmer rising air.