Instrumentation technicians are the people who keep Louisiana's industrial plants running safely and efficiently. They install, calibrate, and maintain the sensors, analyzers, and control systems that measure temperature, pressure, flow, and chemical composition across every major process.
Instrumentation technicians work in refineries, chemical plants, and industrial facilities throughout the New Orleans Region. Unlike general maintenance trades, instrumentation is a technically specialized field that requires both hands-on wiring and electronics skills and an understanding of how plant control systems work together.
Test and adjust sensors and transmitters to ensure accurate readings within required tolerances.
Diagnose signal faults, wiring issues, and equipment failures in live process systems.
Run conduit, pull wire, install field devices, and commission new instrumentation during plant projects.
Interpret P&IDs, loop diagrams, and wiring schematics to plan and execute work safely.
Louisiana's industrial sector is experiencing sustained project activity through the late 2020s. The chart below shows skilled labor demand for instrumentation technicians across Southeastern Louisiana, where projected demand dramatically outpaces available craft supply through mid-2028. Hover over the chart to explore specific data points.
Source: Construction Industry Resources (CIR), CLMA Report. BLS supply data. Displayed through July 2028.
You do not need a college degree. Louisiana's Jump Start program lets high school students begin NCCER credential training before graduation, then continue into an apprenticeship, internship, or technical college program immediately after.
Available through Jump Start at select parishes. Talk to your counselor about the Architecture & Construction or Manufacturing pathway.
Fast Forward dual enrollment lets you earn college credit at a training campus while still in high school.
Graduate with a Jump Start Career Diploma, enter an apprenticeship or internship program, and begin earning. Advance to journeyman within four years.
Instrumentation technicians in Louisiana's industrial sector command some of the highest wages among craft disciplines, reflecting the technical complexity of the work and consistent demand from petrochemical and refining employers in the New Orleans Region.
Wage ranges reflect prevailing rates in Louisiana's industrial sector and may vary by employer, location, and project type.
These campuses offer NCCER instrumentation training through the Jump Start pathway and are accessible from across the New Orleans Region.
Talk to your school counselor about the Jump Start pathway and ask specifically about NCCER instrumentation training in your parish. A career in this field can begin before you ever walk across the graduation stage.