Skills
82 skills are associated with this occupation.
0 skills selected
Essential knowledge
8 skills
Essential skills / competences
48 skills
Optional knowledge
13 skills
Optional skills / competences
13 skills
Explore environmental science work: analysing air, water, soil and environmental changes to understand risks and possible solutions.
Environmental scientists investigate environmental hazards through samples, field information and analysis. Their work can support water protection, waste-site management, impact assessment and advice on environmental measures.
Job descriptions may focus on sampling, laboratory or field analysis, environmental risk assessment, reporting, site studies or advising teams that need evidence about environmental effects.
Environmental scientists work where measurements, field observations and environmental questions meet. A project may involve water, air or soil samples, waste sites, construction impacts, habitat conditions or changes in land use. The scientist interprets evidence, explains uncertainty and helps teams understand what a proposed activity or existing site may mean for the surrounding environment.
The role can call for sampling design, laboratory awareness, field methods, risk assessment, data analysis, report writing and clear explanation of environmental impacts. Some environmental scientists specialise in water, waste, soil, biodiversity, contaminated land or impact assessment. Others work closer to policy advice, project planning or technical review of proposed solutions.
Salary context for environmental scientists usually reflects technical specialization, project responsibility and the consequences of the decisions supported by their analysis. Roles with field sampling only are framed differently from roles that interpret complex data, lead assessments, advise project teams or review environmental effects. Experience with reporting, stakeholder communication and cross-disciplinary projects can also matter.
Career development can move toward senior environmental scientist, impact assessment lead, water or soil specialist, waste-site advisor, project manager, research role or environmental consultancy. Some people deepen laboratory and data skills, while others build strength in field investigation or communication with planners and engineers. The best path depends on whether the person prefers evidence gathering, analysis or advisory work.
Environmental scientist roles can sound similar while asking for different daily work. Check whether the job is mostly field sampling, laboratory analysis, desk-based assessment, reporting or advice to project teams. It is also useful to look for the environmental medium named in the advert: water, air, soil, waste, biodiversity or built-environment impact.
This guide is editorial career context. It is not official labour-market statistics or role-specific salary data.
82 skills are associated with this occupation.
0 skills selected
8 skills
48 skills
13 skills
13 skills
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— Jobs total — Countries with jobs
Environmental protection professionals (2133)
| ESCO URI | http://data.europa.eu/esco/occupation/11d72bd6-779a-4643-9962-313833740094 |
|---|---|
| ESCO code | 2133.7 |
| ISCO group | 2133 |
| Concept type | Occupation |