Environmental Health Professionals: how AI changes this job over time
Our best estimates, shown as ranges and grades - not exact predictions.
Right now, AI can already do about 22% of the day-to-day work in this job, and by 20 years from now that could be around 64%. There are likely to be fewer of these jobs over time - very roughly 60-85% of the 2024 number, 20 years out. Getting your first job here is fairly easy today, and it looks set to get harder. What keeps this job safest is the law: you need a licence to do it, and AI cannot hold one.
What we assume: AI keeps getting cheaper and better; robots arrive more slowly - small effect by ~2031, bigger by ~2036, widespread by the mid-2040s. "Number of jobs" means how many jobs there will be compared with 2024 (100% = the same). "How hard to get in" runs from A (easy) to E (very hard).
How a Environmental Health Professionals job changes over time
AI is already handling a good chunk of the routine work in these jobs - drafting documents, flagging issues, running checks. But there is a legal line here: a qualified, registered person must still sign off the work, which means you cannot be replaced by a machine alone. The job is changing, and there will likely be fewer people needed for the everyday tasks, but the licensed human role stays necessary.
AI takes on more of the checking, drafting and sorting. You will be expected to use these tools, and employers will care more about your judgement than your ability to do the routine work.
The number of people needed for the lower-level work will likely drop. The roles that remain sit closer to the sign-off and the decisions - which is where the legal requirement for a human matters most.
Nobody can say exactly how far AI goes in twenty years, but the legal need for a qualified person is unlikely to disappear. Keep your registration current, build deep expertise, and stay ready to learn as the tools change.
The honest bottom line: the law keeping a qualified person in the loop is real protection, and that makes this group more secure than most. Routine tasks will shrink and entry-level roles may thin out over time. What lasts is the part only a registered professional can do - taking responsibility, making judgements, and signing your name to the work.
How to aim for a Environmental Health Professionals career
You're looking ahead at this job. By the time you join, AI will already do more of it - so aim for the part that will still need a person.
What pushes this score up
Sources: exposure dial - Anthropic labour market research (2026), observed real-world AI usage by occupation. Job-security category and forecast - OpenAI, "The AI Jobs Transition Framework" (Richmond, 2026, OpenAI Economic Research), CC BY 4.0, matched to "Environmental Scientists and Specialists, Including Health" (19-2041.00). Scorecard grades and verdicts are CourseMap editorial judgment - we show forecasts as forecasts and own our conclusions.