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Photo: Shell |
Shell is no longer the employer of choice for young highly-skilled
engineering students. Rather than working for a company that still concentrates
on fossil fuels the students are increasingly turning to sustainable companies,
the Financieele Dagblad said on Tuesday.
The paper bases its claim on
interviews with students and head hunters.
‘We are seeing that companies like
Shell are having problems recruiting. Many graduates from Delft University no
longer want to commit to this sort of company because they wouldn’t be
contributing to a cleaner, more sustainable world,’ director of head hunters
Page Group Nederland Joost Fortuin told the paper.
A poll among engineering
students by research bureau Universum shows that Shell has fallen from third to
seventh place on the list of popular employers over two years. Number one is
the ‘green’ car manufacturer Tesla.
‘We have to be oil and gas free by 2050 but
I wonder if Shell realises what this entails,’ engineering graduate Michiel
Bots told the paper. ‘The company is slowing down the transition process
instead of promoting it and that makes it a less interesting employer for me.’
Bots, who graduated with honours, is now a trainee at the Dutch Association for
Sustainable Energy.
Fortuin says engineering graduates are scarce as it is and
Shell is struggling to recruit. Although Shell is expecting students will come
back to Shell once they become familiar with ‘ambitions, innovations and work
culture’ Fortuin thinks the change is structural. ‘Shell no longer interview
candidates for the job, the candidates are interviewing Shell,’ he told the
paper.
Efforts by Shell to convince young engineers that the company is serious
about transition don’t convince Bots. ‘We grew up with the climate problem.
Perhaps the older generation is still getting used to it,’ he told FD.
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