Building Services Engineering (BSE) Skills is urging employers, employees, and other stakeholders who can provide the expertise, experience, and understanding of the sector to help them ensure that the NOS are technically fit for purpose.
With the industry-facing a growing skills shortage, BSE Skills says it is ‘more important than ever’ that the standards which underpin training for apprenticeships and qualifications across the various professions for the whole UK fully ‘reflect the evolving nature of HVACR’.
BSE Skills said: “The standards were last updated in 2019, and the current project seeks to reflect technology changes and new regulations since then, particularly those with implications for building safety, because NOS play a part in ensuring that workers are competent to carry out their specific tasks.”
Each standard includes performance criteria, and outlines required knowledge and understanding for each industry discipline. As a result, BSE Skills said this project would also play a major part in ensuring the industry can meet future customer demands and contribute effectively to the UK’s net zero targets.
The new National Occupational Standards are now in draft form after a series of meetings with employers, employees, and training providers from all parts of the UK, and are available to be reviewed via the consultation portal. The consultation closes on 29 November.
Technical areas under review and requiring expert feedback via the consultation include installation, maintenance, servicing, commissioning/decommissioning, and fault diagnosis/repair of electrical and mechanical plant and equipment for heating, ventilation, refrigeration, air-conditioning, and heat pumps.
BSE Skills is a not-for-profit company, established as a joint venture by the Building Engineering Services Association (BESA), SELECT, and the Scottish & Northern Ireland Plumbing Employers’ Federation (SNIPEF). Set up in June 2017, it manages NOS, qualifications, and apprenticeships, for the building services engineering sector across the UK, as well as addressing the sector’s wider skills. It cumulatively represents over 43,000 businesses and around 342,000 operatives.
“This is your opportunity to have a say in the training standards which underpin qualifications and apprenticeships in the sector,” said BESA’s director of Competence and Compliance ,Helen Yeulet. “This project will help us develop the skills framework that will underpin a safer, more sustainable built environment now ,and far into the future.”
The consultation, which closes on November 29, can be accessed at: www.bseskills.co.uk