In the current climate of widespread corporate layoffs affecting white-collar workers, a critical shortage of skilled tradespeople is posing a significant threat to the ongoing, multi-trillion-dollar infrastructure boom powering artificial intelligence. This is the warning from Mike Rowe, creator and host of the Discovery Channel reality series "Dirty Jobs." He argues that bridging this skills gap is essential for securing the future health of the U.S. economy.
Rowe, whose program airs on Discovery, made these comments during a recent appearance on the "Power Players" podcast hosted by Yahoo Finance Executive Editor Brian Sozzi. He emphasized that it is time to refocus attention on blue-collar professions like electricians, revealing that some Gen Z electricians at the heart of AI data center construction are earning annual salaries as high as $280,000.
"The electricians I interviewed and met two months ago at a data center in Plano, Texas, were all under 30 years old, making between $240,000 and $280,000 a year," Rowe stated. "They can work as much overtime as they want, they have zero debt, and these three guys have each been poached three times in the last 18 months."
According to a report by Fortune, the AI data center construction surge is generating massive demand for electricians, HVAC technicians, welders, and on-site construction managers. Construction workers on data center projects earn approximately 32% more than those on traditional construction projects, with average annual pay around $81,800. Those working on data center projects in regions like Northern Virginia and Texas command even higher salaries, ranging from $140,000 to $280,000 per year.
Comments