P Prentice
OK · Carpenters

Oklahoma needs
carpenters for its data centers

Oklahoma is building 1.8 GW of new data centers. Here is how much carpenters work that makes — and why there are not enough carpenters for it.

12 sites |about $47,740/yr |Low shortage
Worth training up?
YES — tight

Carpenters for Oklahoma's data centers: needs almost all the area can spare.

Needed at peak
581
Free to take it on
952
Short or extra
371 spare
New permanent jobs
Enough workers?

Will Oklahoma have enough workers?

At the busiest point of the build. Bars to the left mean a shortage (good if you are in that trade). Bars to the right mean workers to spare.

just enough SHORT TO SPARE Ironworkers short 273 Network/low-voltage technicians 231 spare Carpenters 371 spare Sheet metal workers 566 spare HVAC/R technicians 994 spare Electricians 1,188 spare Pipefitters 1,408 spare Plumbers 1,620 spare Welders 2,181 spare
The short version

What this means for carpenters in Oklahoma

Oklahoma is building 1.8 GW of new AI data centers across 12 sites. On a data center, carpenters pour the concrete and frame the building.

Carpenters — worth training up: YES, tight. The data centers need about 581 carpenters at the busiest point — close to all of the ~952 carpenters Oklahoma has free for this kind of work. Expect overtime, steady work, and builders willing to train.

Oklahoma has 12 data-center sites in the works, with 1.8 GW still to build. That keeps carpenters busy for years: as one job winds down, the next one is starting, so the work does not dry up after a single build.

Oklahoma carpenters earn about $47,740 a year on average. Data-center work pays more than that, and when a trade is short, overtime can push experienced carpenters well over $100,000 a year, with health care and a pension through the union.

It is the same across the country: builders cannot find enough skilled workers. The U.S. needs about 140,000 more trade workers by 2030 to build all the data centers, and most builders say hiring is their hardest problem. Microsoft's president has called the shortage of electricians the biggest thing slowing data centers down.

The building work runs a few years, not forever — but Oklahoma has enough lined up to keep you busy, and the skills carry over to every other big job in the state. To start, look at the Oklahoma carpenters apprenticeship programs. That is the way in. Sources: a national survey of data-center building plans, plus U.S. jobs and pay data.

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The sites

The data centers behind these numbers