The Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) has some good general information about nuclear careers. The following information is provided from the NEI website:
Job Opportunities
Varied employment opportunities. Employers in nuclear commercial power generation include full-service utility companies, electricity generation companies, and operating companies of nuclear power plants. Related employers include fuel mining, fabrication and enrichment companies; architectural/engineering and construction firms that design and build nuclear power plants; and nuclear waste management facilities. Research positions in nuclear energy are also available at the national laboratories run by the U.S. Department of Energy.
Staffing for the future. Many of today's nuclear experts are part of the generation that pioneered nuclear energy's peacetime use in the 1960s. These professionals are now retiring, and the industry needs qualified applicants to take their place. An estimated 30 percent of the U.S. nuclear workforce will be eligible to retire in the next 5 years. Nuclear energy professionals are more than willing to share their knowledge and experience and pass on their expertise to a new generation. They are proud to be able to play a role in furthering the benefits of this advanced technology.
Substantial shortage of nuclear professionals. In December 2000, the director of the U.S. Department of Energy's Universities Programs said that 400 nuclear specialties positions went vacant that year for lack of qualified applicants. The number of graduate students in nuclear engineering has declined from 1,800 in the late 1970s to 600 in the late 1990s. Undergraduate enrollment in nuclear programs declined from 1,400 in 1989 to 548 in 1999. About 160 students earned bachelor's degrees in nuclear engineering in 2000, a drop of 20 percent from 1999. About 130 students received master's degrees in nuclear engineering that same year, 6 percent less than the previous year.
Palo Verde as an example of the need for nuclear plant employees. Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station in Arizona—the largest U.S. power plant of any kind, including coal, oil, natural gas and hydro—will lose nearly half of its 1,800-2,000 employees over the next decade to attrition and retirement, said Paul Crawley, Director of Fuel Management at the Arizona Public Service station, in February 2002. In all, the U.S. nuclear industry will need 90,000 new professional and craft workers to fill jobs over the next decade, he added.
The nuclear energy industry's commitment to build new plants. In order for nuclear energy to continue to provide 20 percent of our nation's electricity, the nuclear energy industry has calculated that 50,000 megawatts of new nuclear power plant capability and an additional 10,000 MW of capability from improving existing plants will be required by 2020. Those new plants and plant modifications represent substantial employment opportunities. Already some of this country's largest energy companies are actively collaborating with reactor manufacturers, even investing in future projects, to build new plants in the United States by 2010. These new advanced-design reactors are being developed with today's business environment in mind. They are faster and less expensive to build than previous reactors because they are smaller, modular, standardized, and prefabricated, with simplified safety systems and fuel configuration.
Plant restarts approved and planned. In addition to the prospect of building new plants, even more jobs in nuclear energy will be created by projects to restart shutdown plants. For instance, early in 2001, the Tennessee Valley Authority commissioned a study by a team of experts to explore reactivating Browns Ferry Unit 1, idle since 1985. The two other reactors at the Athens, Alabama plant are operating. The study, completed in March 2002, found that restarting Unit 1 was technically feasible and financially manageable. In May 2002 the TVA Board approved the Browns Ferry 1 restart: "We must balance the responsibility to provide power to meet future needs with our objectives of protecting the environment and continuing the trend of debt reduction. Restarting Unit 1 will provide needed generating capacity without increasing air emissions." TVA presented a five-year restart plan to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in June 2002, scheduling reactor operation for no later than May 2007. At the end of June 2004, TVA said that the restart project was half complete.
A very real energy crisis. The energy industry will be the growth industry of the future. The Department of Energy estimates that the United States will need 44 percent more electricity by 2020. This country's digitally driven economy is expected to increase electricity demand by 30 to 35 percent by 2010. Today, computer and high-tech peripherals are estimated to account for 13 percent of all electricity usage. By 2020, they are expected to account for 25 percent. This is not to say that the Internet as an industry isn't energy efficient in itself or hasn't contributed to the energy efficiency of other industries. But its soaring growth represents a significant energy demand that did not exist before the Internet boom in the mid-1990s. And as the Internet evolves technologically to eventually become the standard telecommunications delivery system for a wide variety of informational, computational, and entertainment, services, its energy requirements can only increase.