>>12715148Depends but...it'll most likely be a struggle, Anon. With the COVID overreaction and this regime's destructive attitude toward practical energy, shit's worse than it was a few years ago.
My advice is don't wait when you're young and can use your time well. The longer you go without a related job, the worse it looks to HR minions. It seems like the most likely place you'd find work is probably somewhere cold, flat, empty, and boring. That's just how it is, and desperate times call for desperate measures.
I know plenty of people who did internships just after graduating, companies would rather do that than take a blind chance on a full hire with all the paperwork, benefits, etc. involved with that. That way they can test you out. Don't be too proud to do that, interning as a graduate, nothing wrong with that.
Don't lose hope but don't delude yourself either. I graduated with people who earned 10-20% more than me, then started getting laid off in March 2020. That's the beauty of working for a utility, it's more secure and stable relative to private sector work. If power plants are going down, it means all society is completely fucked. Even in a civil war or invasion scenario, political actors will need political power and want to keep shit running.
Anyway good luck man.
>>12715160Agreed on all points