Learn about the types of people who become power engineers. This page goes into detail about the employment, gender, and ethnic ratios of the workplace.
Gender Mix By Career Interest, 2024
This graph shows the distribution of females and males that are interested in becoming a power engineer. Four or five star ratings on CareerExplorer indicate interest.
More men than women are interested in becoming power engineers at a ratio of 5.16 to 1.
Actual Gender Mix, 2024
19% of power engineers are female and 81% are male.
Gender Bias, 2024
This is one of the most compelling statistics we collect. Gender bias shows the difference between gender interest in being a power engineer and the actual gender mix of people in the career.
If there is a significant difference, then it means there is a gender imbalance between those interested in becoming a power engineer and those who end up becoming one.
In this case there are more men interested in becoming a power engineer than those actually working as one. It is hard to pinpoint the exact reasons why, but there are likely various forces at play, from changing interests over time to societal norms and biases.
Ethnic Mix, 2019
The largest ethnic group of power engineers are White, making up 59% of the population. The next highest segments are South Asian and Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish, making up 16% and 7% respectively.