Environmental Tech Talent & Workforce

We're building new pathways for the people and teams working across boundaries to deliver for our environment.

Decision makers and teams and at every level of government—and in nearly every sector—need the right technology, data, and skillsets to adapt to a changing planet. That means a workforce built to improve outcomes across our ecosystems and communities.

Did You Know?

8 in 10 federal environmental bureaus have less capacity today than at any time in the previous four decades—even as the complexity of their missions has exploded. National priorities as wide-ranging as drinking water, wildfires, climate adaptation, and new infrastructure all require capabilities that legacy workforce systems and policy were never designed to provide.

Old models in tech talent and workforce planning won’t get the job done. Despite real advances in data-driven decision-making, civic tech, and digital service delivery, governments are still struggling to define, hire, deploy, and retain the talent they need to deliver on their missions. Now’s the time to design new strategies for building the teams and career pathways our environment and communities need.

The supply of tech talent isn’t the problem—major gaps are on the demand side of the equation. Whatever the root causes, demand signals for tech skills and talent inside government are neither clear nor consistent—especially when it comes to environmental or natural resource teams. Agencies need a clear roadmap, dedicated resources, and a shared vocabulary to bolster their technical workforce. 

What Drives Us

Environmental work is becoming more complex, more technical, and more urgent than ever—but our workforce systems, career pathways, and delivery approaches haven't kept pace. EPIC’s theory of change is simple: the enabling conditions for better environmental and public health outcomes starts with getting the right people, processes, and human-centered tools in place. That’s why our tech talent and workforce initiatives are laser-focused on empowering government and its partners to use data and technology better, faster, and at scale. In practice, we advise and partner with leaders, policymakers, and teams working in or “around” government, and prototype new strategies and tools to build tech capacity wherever we can. 

Why It Matters

At every level of government, environmental agencies and their partners face an unprecedented workforce crisis: climate impacts, the pace of technology change, and long-standing tech capacity gaps are all converging faster than our workforce systems can respond. Job descriptions and teams built for stability in a world that's anything but; workforce policy and talent approaches that screen for degrees and tenure rather than aligned skills or better outcomes; and training programs designed to replicate yesterday's models instead of adapting them to new conditions. The result is that leaders and practitioners across fields are struggling to help ecosystems and communities adapt.

Our Way Forward

EPIC’s tech talent and workforce initiatives cluster strategy, research, partnerships, and advocacy efforts in three priority areas:

1. Research + Strategy Design: We incubate workforce strategies, ideas, and partnerships that government leaders can use to enhance tech capacity.

2. De-risking Innovation: We build cross-sector partnerships to help leaders understand, experiment with, and invest in innovative approaches to tech talent and delivery.

3. Storytelling + Advocacy: We advocate for better models, policies, and approaches to enhancing tech and data use in government—so that teams can deliver better results across our ecosystems, communities, and environmental priorities.

Our Principles

Our Projects

Environmental Management Skills Taxonomy

Digital Service for the Planet (DSP)

Research, Advocacy, and Reform

Permitting Technology + Talent

What’s New