Data Brief 2020-029 | November 27, 2020 | Written and compiled by Lukas Poteracke, Leila Gonzales and Christopher Keane, AGI, November 2020
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Employment trends in geoscience-related industries (April-September 2020)
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Current Employment Statistics
dataset is used to examine monthly employment data for the primary
industry sectors within which most geoscientists work. Since April 2020,
monthly year-over-year employment levels were negative for nearly all
geoscience-related industry sectors, with the exception of the oil and
gas extraction, scientific research and development services, and
federal government sectors, where year-over-year employment continued
to be positive.
Year-over-year employment trends for many industries showed signs of
rebounding from April’s declines in the months leading into August and
September. As of September, two industries continued to show declining
trends in year-over-year employment: oil and gas extraction and
support activities for mining. Although year-over-year employment in
the oil and gas extraction industry has remained positive during 2020,
it declined from 6% in April to 2% in September. Year-over-year
employment in the support activities for mining sector declined from
-24% in April to -33% in August, thereafter stabilizing through
September. The sharp increase in year-over-year employment in the
federal government sector in August was due to the hiring of U.S.
Census Bureau workers and not representative of geoscience employment
trends within the federal sector. We will continue to report on the
monthly employment situation in geoscience-related industries over the
coming months as additional data becomes available.
We will continue to provide current snapshots on the impacts of COVID-19
on the geoscience enterprise throughout the year. For more information,
and to participate in the study, please visit:
www.americangeosciences.org/workforce/covid19
Funding for this project is provided by the National Science Foundation
(Award #2029570). The results and interpretation of the survey are the
views of the American Geosciences Institute and not those of the
National Science Foundation.