Sustainability is no longer confined to environmental teams or corporate reporting functions. It is rapidly becoming part of everyday decision-making across industries – from finance and logistics to engineering, operations and maritime.
That shift is changing not only how organisations operate, but how professional competence itself is defined.
For years, sustainability was often treated as something adjacent to mainstream industry rather than embedded within it. It sat with specialist teams, policy discussions and reporting functions, while most professionals outside environmental roles could engage with it at a distance.
That distinction is now rapidly disappearing.
Today, sustainability expectations are moving directly into operational decision-making across sectors. Supply chain managers are being asked about emissions exposure and procurement accountability. Finance teams are contributing to ESG disclosure and climate-risk reporting. Engineers are balancing operational performance alongside decarbonisation pressures. In maritime industries especially, environmental regulation is already reshaping day-to-day operational realities.
This is not simply the rise of more “green jobs”. It is a broader shift in how professional capability itself is being redefined.
The World Economic Forum estimates that 39% of workplace skills will change by 2030. Increasingly, many of the capabilities entering mainstream industries sit at the intersection of sustainability, technology, operations and governance. Sustainability literacy is no longer relevant only to environmental specialists. It is becoming an expected competency across existing professions.
Universities are now facing a structural challenge: traditional qualification models were designed for a slower-moving world.
For decades, higher education largely operated on the assumption that individuals would qualify early in life, enter a profession and apply that knowledge over decades with only periodic retraining. But industries are now evolving faster than many qualification structures were designed to accommodate.
A degree completed at age 21 can no longer be expected to sustain a 40-year career untouched by technological, environmental and regulatory change.
As a result, growing numbers of professionals are returning to education for a different reason. They are not necessarily changing careers – their industries are changing around them.
Sustainability is no longer confined to environmental teams or corporate reporting functions
Across sectors facing rapid environmental and technological transition, employers are placing greater emphasis on adaptability, systems thinking and interdisciplinary awareness. Sustainability reporting obligations now influence procurement, investment, operations, compliance and governance simultaneously, forcing organisations to rethink workforce capability far beyond specialist teams.
At the same time, most working professionals cannot repeatedly step away from employment to pursue full-time study every time industries evolve.
This tension is reshaping how professional learning is delivered.
The rise of continuous and modular learning reflects a wider structural shift taking place across the global workforce. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has noted that participation in adult learning often declines during mid-career stages, precisely when professional responsibilities are expanding most rapidly. Yet demand for continuous upskilling continues to accelerate across industries undergoing structural transition.
Importantly, this does not suggest that degrees matter less. Rather, their role is changing.
Qualifications are increasingly functioning as foundations professionals continue building upon throughout their working lives rather than educational endpoints completed in early adulthood. Short-form courses, stackable credentials and flexible postgraduate study are becoming part of a broader lifelong learning ecosystem tied more closely to workforce transformation.
There is understandable scepticism around short-form learning. Can complex subjects such as sustainability really be meaningfully explored in 30 minutes? On their own, probably not. But that may also be the wrong way to think about them.
Short-form learning is not replacing deeper education. It is becoming the gateway into it.
For working professionals balancing careers and personal responsibilities, accessibility often determines participation. Learning increasingly happens in smaller, continuous moments rather than through isolated periods of full-time study.
In practice, even relatively small learning interventions are already influencing organisational behaviour. An introduction to climate-risk frameworks may shape infrastructure planning discussions. Sustainability literacy can reshape procurement decisions, operational reporting and compliance priorities. In industries already under pressure to decarbonise, sustainability awareness is becoming embedded within everyday decision-making rather than sitting separately from it.
Among globally connected sectors such as maritime, logistics and energy, these changes are already highly visible.
Decarbonisation targets, environmental reporting expectations and energy transition policies are changing operational realities faster than many workforce structures anticipated. Professionals are being asked to develop new competencies while continuing to operate within highly regulated and commercially demanding environments.
For higher education providers, this presents both a challenge and an opportunity.
Institutions will increasingly be judged not only by the qualifications they award, but by how effectively they support industries through continuous periods of transition. Flexibility, accessibility and industry-connected learning models are becoming essential rather than supplementary.
At MLA College, the range of professionals engaging with sustainability learning has widened noticeably in recent years. Some are working in responsible business and governance roles. Others come from operational, maritime or logistics backgrounds. Some are already leading sustainability initiatives within organisations, while others are trying to better understand the environmental pressures beginning to reshape their industries and careers.
Increasingly, learning pathways are becoming more flexible too, with short-form sustainability courses often acting as accessible entry points into broader undergraduate and postgraduate study.
The wider transformation is ultimately cultural as much as educational.
Sustainability is no longer a parallel conversation taking place alongside industry. It is becoming part of the operating language of modern professional life.
The institutions that adapt early will recognise that lifelong learning is not an additional feature of higher education’s future – it is the future itself.
About the author

Pallavi Sharma is Director of Student Recruitment & Partnerships at MLA College, where she leads international student recruitment, strategic partnerships and global market development. With more than 20 years of experience across sales, operations and marketing, she has worked extensively in international education since 2017, focusing on global enrolment growth, workforce-focused education and sustainable recruitment strategies.
At MLA College, Pallavi has led the expansion of international recruitment and partnerships across multiple regions, working closely with global networks, institutions and industry stakeholders. Her work focuses on how higher education institutions adapt to changing workforce demands, evolving student expectations and the growing importance of flexible, lifelong learning pathways.


