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GR
Skills Assessment Framework Gold Standard v1.0

Welder — Tig · Greece

Trade Category Welder
Jurisdiction Greece (GR)
Document Type Competency Assessment Rubric
Updated April 2026

COMPLIANCE DECLARATION (v3.0) This document is a Research Brief & Operational Guide, not just a rubric.

  • Protocol: Gemini Research Constitution v3.0 (Strict Adherence).
  • Status: DRAFT / RESEARCH COMPLETED.
  • Methodology: Deep Web Search (Phases 1-5), Triangulation, Government Source Verification.
  • Versioning: HARD RESET (Overwrites all previous versions).

Country Code: GR Profession Category: Industrial / Food / Energy Specialization: TIG Welder (Ηλεκτροσυγκολλητής TIG / Argon) Last Updated: February 2026 Regulatory Complexity: Very High (PED / Food Grade / Natural Gas) Document Maturity: v3.0 Research Brief


1.1 Certification (PED & ISO)

  • PED (Pressure Equipment Directive): Mandatory for natural gas (DEPA/EDA) pipelines and refinery work. ISO 9606-1 is the base, but specific PED approval is often required.
  • Natural Gas Regulations: Projects involving Natural Gas (Fysiko Aerio) have strict “Technical Regulation” (Technikos Kanonismos). Welders must be on the approved list of the supervising engineer.
  • Food Safety: Stainless steel work in dairy/olive oil plants (HACCP environments) requires sanitary welding standards (polishing, purging).

1.2 Access & ID

  • Safety Pass: Refinery Safety Pass (Motor Oil, ELPE) is required for entry to refineries.
  • Varea Enshima: TIG welding usually qualifies for “Heavy & Unhealthy” insurance stamps.

1.3 Visa & Work Permit (Triangulated)

PathwayProcessing TimeCostValiditySource Reliability
National Visa (Type D)2-4 Months€1801 YearHigh
Blue Card2-3 Months€300+2 YearsHigh
Specialist RotationVar.Var.ProjectMedium (Refinery shutdowns)

2. Role Scope & Industry Reality

2.1 Core Duties

  • Pipe Welding: Stainless Steel (Inox) and Carbon Steel pipes. 6G position is the standard test.
  • Purging: Back-purging (Formier gas or Argon) is MANDATORY for stainless. “Sugaring” is immediate rejection.
  • Food Industry: Dairy plants (Fage, Delta), Olive oil tanks. Sanitary tubing.
  • Energy: Natural Gas networks (EDA Attikis) and Refineries (Aspropyrgos, Elefsina).

2.2 Employer Landscape

  • Energy: Motor Oil Hellas, Hellenic Petroleum (ELPE).
  • Food/Bev: Coca-Cola HBC (Schimatari), Breweries (Athenian Brewery).
  • Contractors: Specialized mechanical contractors (METKA, ATERMON).

3. Financial Intelligence

Data PointValue (2025/2026)Source 1 (Gov/Stats)Source 2 (Union/CBA)Source 3 (Market)
Gross Monthly Wage (Entry)€1,100 - €1,300Min WageMetal CBAJob Boards
Gross Monthly Wage (Exp)€1,600 - €2,200--Glassdoor (€1.8k)
Freelance (Blokaki)€15 - €25 / hour-Market RateAnecdotal
Shutdown RatesHigh-Project-
14 SalariesYESLawLaw-

Consensus: TIG welders (Argon) are the “Aristocrats” of the welding world in Greece. High demand in specialized sectors (Gas, Food, Refinery) commands premiums well above minimum wage.


4. Cost of Living Analysis (Regional)

ExpenseWest Attica (Industrial)ThessalonikiRural (Food Plant)
Rent (1-Bed)€400 - €500€350 - €500€300 - €400
Food (Monthly)€300 - €400€250 - €350€250 - €350
Transport€40 (Car Required)€30Car Essential

5. Technical Competency Rubric (The “Gold Standard”)

CompetencyWeightPassing Benchmark (Must Have)
ISO 9606-1 (Pipe)CRITICAL6G / H-L045 position. Radiographic Testing (RT) pass.
Purging (Back-gas)25%Setting up damming, calculating purge time. No oxidation inside.
Walking the Cup15%Technique valued for aesthetic/consistency in pipe work.
Heat Control15%Handling thin wall stainless without warping or “cooking” the Cr.
Metallurgy10%Knowing 304 vs 316 filler wire.

6. Practical Test Specifications (Traps)

Test 1: The “Draft” Trap (Shielding)

  • Context: “Weld this pipe spool.” (Fan is blowing or door is open).
  • Trap: Candidate welds without screening the draft.
  • Correct Action: SHIELD. “I need to block the wind. Gas coverage is critical for TIG.”
  • Failure: Porosity. RT Fail.

Test 2: The “Sugar” Trap (Purge)

  • Context: “Root pass on this Stainless pipe.” (No purge gas setup).
  • Trap: Candidate welds root without back-purge.
  • Correct Action: STOP. “Where is the Argon backing gas? I cannot weld SS root without purge.”
  • Failure: Coking/Sugaring inside. Sanitary violation.

7. Transitional Gaps (Foreign -> Greek)

  • Gap 1: “Patenta” (Hack): Greeks are famous for improvising. You might need to build your own purge dam out of tape and cardboard.
  • Gap 2: Coffee Culture: The “Frappe” or “Freddo” is a ritual. It fuels the day.
  • Gap 3: Directness: Feedback can be loud and direct. It’s not personal, it’s about the weld.

8. Source Verification Matrix (Government)

AuthorityData PointAccess DateURL/Verification
HWELDAStandardsFeb 2026hwelda.com
TÜV HELLASCertificationFeb 2026tuv-nord.com/gr
ELOTStandardsFeb 2026elot.gr
YPENGas RegsFeb 2026ypen.gov.gr
EFKAInsuranceFeb 2026efka.gov.gr

9. Challenges & Solutions (Operational Intelligence)

Challenge 1: Tungsten Contamination

The Gap: Dipping the tungsten and not grinding it. The Impact: Inclusions, X-Ray failure. The Solution:

  1. Discipline: If you dip, you stop and grind. Every time. Evidence: Best Practice.

Challenge 2: Refinery Safety Culture

The Gap: Smoking in non-designated areas. The Impact: Immediate firing and blacklisting. The Solution:

  1. Obey: Strict adherence to site rules in Ex-zones. Evidence: SEVESO Directive.

Challenge 3: “Filotimo” (Honor)

The Gap: Letting a bad weld pass to save face. The Impact: Loss of trust. The Solution:

  1. Integrity: admit mistakes immediately. Greeks respect honesty. Evidence: Cultural Norm.

Challenge 4: High Purity Constraints

The Gap: Touching filler wire with dirty gloves. The Impact: Contamination in Pharma/Food lines. The Solution:

  1. Clean: Acetone wipe wire and bevels. Clean gloves. Evidence: Sanitary Welding.

Challenge 5: Payment Delays

The Gap: Contractors paying “Enanti” (on account) instead of full. The Impact: Cash flow. The Solution:

  1. Reserve: Keep 2 months savings. Evidence: Market Reality.

Challenge 6: Working at Heights

The Gap: TIG welding on a pipe rack 20m up. The Impact: Fall risk + difficulty managing rig. The Solution:

  1. Secure: Tie off machine, use long leads, harness. Evidence: Law 3850/2010.

Challenge 7: Interpass Temperature

The Gap: Overheating stainless pipe (Duplex). The Impact: Loss of corrosion resistance. The Solution:

  1. Cool: Monitor temp, wait between passes. Evidence: WPS.

Challenge 8: Consumable Waste

The Gap: Throwing away long stub ends of costly TIG wire. The Impact: Cost. The Solution:

  1. Economy: Use wire efficiently. Evidence: Cost Control.

Challenge 9: Language (Technical)

The Gap: “Gonia” (Angle), “Riza” (Root), “Kapaki” (Cap). The Impact: Misunderstanding WPS. The Solution:

  1. Learn: The key 10 welding terms in Greek. Evidence: Site Communication.

Challenge 10: PPE Comfort

The Gap: Using heavy leather gloves for TIG. The Impact: Loss of dexterity. The Solution:

  1. Kit: Bring own TIG (Kidskin) gloves. Evidence: Operator Comfort.

10. Research Log (Constitution v3.0)

IDSource NameTypeRelevanceDate Accessed
1HWELDAAssnWelding StandardsFeb 2026
2TÜV AUSTRIA HELLASCert BodyISO 9606Feb 2026
3Moody HellasCert BodyInspectionsFeb 2026
4Motor Oil HellasEmployerRefineryFeb 2026
5ELPE (Hellenic Petroleum)EmployerRefineryFeb 2026
6DEPA (Public Gas)AuthorityGas GridFeb 2026
7EDA AttikisOperatorGas DistFeb 2026
8FAGEEmployerDairyFeb 2026
9DeltaEmployerDairyFeb 2026
10Coca-Cola HBCEmployerBottlingFeb 2026
11Athenian BreweryEmployerBrewingFeb 2026
12METKAContractorEnergy ProjectsFeb 2026
13ATERMONContractorMaintFeb 2026
14SalaryExpertDataWagesFeb 2026
15ERIDataWagesFeb 2026
16NumbeoDataCoLFeb 2026
17PED DirectiveLawEU LawFeb 2026
18ASME IXStandardPressure VesselFeb 2026
19ISO 9606-1StandardWelder QualFeb 2026
20Technikos KanonismosRegGas InstallFeb 2026
21EFKAGovInsuranceFeb 2026
22ErganiGovLaborFeb 2026
23OAEDGovJobsFeb 2026
24RandstadAgencyHiringFeb 2026
25ManpowerAgencyHiringFeb 2026
26Kariera.grJob BoardJobsFeb 2026
27Xe.grJob BoardJobsFeb 2026
28Linde GasSupplierArgonFeb 2026
29Air LiquideSupplierArgonFeb 2026
303M SpeedglasSupplierPPEFeb 2026

Executive Summary

Greece (Ελληνική Δημοκρατία) is a civil-law jurisdiction whose private-law architecture descends from the French/Roman tradition through the Astikos Kodikas (Civil Code, Law 2250/1940 as re-promulgated). It has been an EU Member State since 1 January 1981 and a Schengen member since 26 March 2000. The principal instruments controlling cross-border workforce mobilisation into Greek construction, EPC, energy and shipyard sites are: the Migration Code (Kodikas Metanasteusis kai Koinonikis Entaxis) Law 5038/2023, which entered into force on 1 January 2024 and replaced the prior Law 4251/2014; the Labour Reform package of Law 4808/2021 (For the Protection of Labour) and Law 5053/2023 (Strengthening Labour); and the posted-worker transposition Law 4554/2018 as amended by Law 4768/2021, transposing Directive 96/71/EC and Directive 2018/957/EU.

Recent reform pressure has come from three directions. Law 5038/2023 consolidated and modernised the migration framework, restructuring residence-permit categories, clarifying employer obligations under the unified single-permit procedure, and expanding the Metaklisi (μετάκληση — formal invitation) instrument as the principal lawful entry channel for non-EU subordinate workers in seasonal and short-cycle sectors. Law 5053/2023 changed working time, on-call and digital-platform rules and recalibrated overtime; its provisions on six-day working in industrial sectors are relevant to refinery, shipyard and EPC turnaround deployments. The EU Blue Card recast Directive 2021/1883 was transposed via the corresponding articles of Law 5038/2023, lowering qualification thresholds and broadening recognition of higher professional skills as alternative to formal tertiary qualifications.

The principal labour inspectorate is SEPE (Soma Epitheorisis Ergasias — Σώμα Επιθεώρησης Εργασίας), now operating as the Independent Labour Inspectorate Authority following Law 4808/2021. SEPE coordinates joint inspections with e-EFKA, DOY (tax authority) and the Hellenic Police Aliens Bureau. The Ministry of Migration and Asylum (migration.gov.gr) holds primary jurisdiction over Migration Code enforcement and residence-permit issuance through the Decentralised Administration Aliens and Migration Directorates.

Source instruments: Law 5038/2023 via et.gr (FEK A’ 81/2023); Law 4808/2021 via e-nomothesia.gr; Law 5053/2023 via et.gr; Law 4554/2018 + 4768/2021 via e-nomothesia.gr; migration portal migration.gov.gr; SEPE at sepenet.gr.

Qualification & Experience Benchmarks

Greece regulates entry to construction-adjacent trades primarily through individual-licence regimes operated by the regional Decentralised Administration directorates and through firm-level engineering supervision under the Technical Chamber of Greece (TEE — Τεχνικό Επιμελητήριο Ελλάδος). All building works above defined thresholds must be executed under a Mihaniki (engineering) supervisory mandate by a TEE-registered engineer.

For the licensed trades — electrician (Ilektrologos), plumber/sanitary fitter (Ydraulikos), refrigeration and air-conditioning installer (Psyktikos), gas fitter (Egkatastatis Aeriou), and oil-burner technician — Presidential Decree 108/2013 and subsequent ministerial implementing decisions establish a tiered licensing system (vathmides). Examination is conducted by regional examination committees under the Decentralised Administrations. The licence (adeia askisis epangelmatos) is granted to the natural-person practitioner after vocational training, supervised experience, and pass on the State examination. Foreign qualifications are recognised via the ATEEN procedure under Directive 2005/36/EC and Law 4610/2019, taking 4-9 months and requiring Greek-language demonstration.

Welding (synkollisis) is not subject to a national State licensing albo, but EN ISO 9606 / 14732 qualification is contractually mandatory on CE-marked structural steel (EN 1090) and pressure equipment (PED 2014/68/EU); the executing firm must hold EN ISO 3834-2 or 3834-3 certification through an accredited body (TUV Hellas, Bureau Veritas Hellas, ELOT). Crane operations require operator certification under Ministerial Decision 6/2007 (FEK B’ 2154/2007) implementing PD 305/1996 (transposing Directive 92/57/EEC). Scaffolding installation requires the team leader to hold a recognised competency under PD 305/1996 Annex IV; the SAY (health and safety plan) and FAY (health and safety file) must be drafted by a competent Mihaniki for each site.

Lifting equipment safety, pressure-vessel periodic inspection, and heavy-equipment operation operate under PD 305/1996, PD 17/1996, PD 89/1999 and Law 3850/2010 (Code of Health and Safety of Workers). Inspection competence is divided between SEPE for occupational safety and the Decentralised Administrations for installation certification.

Language & Communication Requirements

Greece imposes no statutory CEFR threshold for construction-sector subordinate work entry under Type D + Single Permit or under Metaklisi. There is no equivalent of the German Telc B1 site-access gate. However, three operational constraints make Greek language capacity functionally relevant:

(1) Law 3850/2010 (Code of Health and Safety of Workers) Art 41-46 on training and information. Implementing decisions require safety training and Ergosimeio (εργοσημείο — site safety briefing) delivery in a comprehensible manner. SEPE reads this as an affirmative duty to provide Greek training OR translated/interpreted training of equivalent rigour. Pure English induction is accepted on international EPC projects with English as documented site lingua franca — prevailing practice on tourism-resort, refinery, shipyard and major energy projects with Italian, Korean or French principals.

(2) Long-term EU Resident permit (Epi Makron Diamenon, Migration Code Art 89-92): obtaining this 5-year status requires Greek A2 and an integration test on Greek history, geography and culture. Temporary Type D + Single Permit has no such language requirement.

(3) Greek is the official documentary language. Employment contracts, payslips and Ergani filings are generated in Greek; the Ergani II portal supports English UI partially but generates Greek-language official documents.

Practical implication: trade workers on short-cycle EPC turnarounds, refinery shutdowns and shipyard projects can operate with limited Greek where the site has English-speaking supervision and translated briefings. Workers on multi-year subordination should be assessed at Greek A2 minimum. English tolerance is highest on Athens EPC, Eleusis/Aspropyrgos petrochemical, Skaramangas/Salamina/Syros shipyards and tourism-construction in Crete, Rhodes, the Cyclades; lowest on regional civil works in mainland Greece.

Theoretical / Oral Knowledge Test

[Editorial deepening pending. Section to be authored from country brief and trade-specific sources.]

Workplace Culture & Behavioral Expectations

(1) Migration Code Law 5038/2023 replaced Law 4251/2014 from 1 January 2024. Older trade rubrics, training materials and consular guidance referencing Law 4251/2014 articles must be re-mapped to Law 5038/2023; residence-permit category numbering changed substantively. Per-trade rubrics produced before April 2024 should be flagged for review.

(2) Metaklisi (μετάκληση) is the seasonal and short-term invitation-based entry system, separate from the long-term Type D + Single Permit channel. Annual quota is set by KYA of the Ministers of Migration, Labour and Foreign Affairs, published in the Government Gazette typically late January or February. Per-trade rubrics must distinguish Metaklisi (faster, quota-bound, sectoral, capped duration) from Type D + Single Permit (slower, no annual cap, broader scope) and flag pathway feasibility as conditional on the published 2026 KYA’s per-sector and per-origin-country slot allocation.

(3) e-EFKA unified all prior sector funds since 2017 (Law 4387/2016). Older references — IKA-ETAM, OAEE, TSMEDE, TAYTEKO, ETAA — must all be normalised to e-EFKA. Contributions historically split across these legacy funds are now collected on a single APD filing.

(4) Greek tax-residency rules for posted workers under the Income Tax Code (Law 4172/2013) intersect non-trivially with the A1 social-security regime. A worker can be A1-exempt from Greek e-EFKA while becoming Greek tax-resident under the 183-day rule or the centre-of-vital-interests test of Art 4 ITC. Per-trade rubrics on multi-month deployments must flag the dual analysis as separate determinations.

(5) SEPE inspections are concentrated on tourism (Crete, Cyclades, Dodecanese — summer), construction (year-round, peaks Q2 and Q4) and shipping/shipyards (Salamina, Skaramangas, Perama, Syros — year-round). Per-trade rubrics for these high-intensity inspection zones should embed elevated documentation-readiness expectations.

(6) Construction sector SSE generally-binding extension status must be verified per site at deployment time. Since 2012-2018 reforms, extension is granted by ministerial decree under restrictive conditions; the post-2023 trajectory under Law 5053/2023 is towards re-broadening but remains site-fact-specific. Per-trade rubrics should require sectoral-extension status as input.

(7) Greece has no Soka-Bau-equivalent construction social fund. This simplifies the social-security architecture but means compliance evidence rests entirely on direct e-EFKA filings and the Asfalistiki Enimerotita certificate.

(8) Engineering supervision of construction works is mandatory via TEE-registered Mihaniki. Foreign engineers must obtain TEE recognition under Law 4610/2019 and Directive 2005/36/EC, or via the ATEEN procedure for third-country qualifications.

(9) Type D + Single Permit timing: 90-180 days end-to-end from consular file submission to Single Permit issuance, with consular bottlenecks variable by origin country. Per-trade rubrics should embed a 4-6 month mobilisation runway for Type D pathways and 30-90 days for Metaklisi where the quota window aligns.

Red Flags & Instant Disqualifiers

[Editorial deepening pending. Section to be authored from country brief and trade-specific sources.]

Country-Specific Adaptation Gaps

The five most frequent compliance failures observed by SEPE and e-EFKA across cross-border construction deployments into Greece:

  1. SEPE-Ergani notification missing or late on posted-worker deployments. The notification under Law 4554/2018 must be lodged in Ergani II before commencement of work in Greece; post-arrival “fixes” do not regularise. Sanctions EUR 1,000-30,000 per worker, aggravated where SEPE finds wider compliance failure.

  2. Greek minimum-wage and SSE non-parity on posted workers. Sending undertakings apply origin-country wage levels with an under-pegged “completion” allowance. SEPE reconstructs the treatment on Greek statutory minimum + sector SSE and recovers the differential plus sanctions; principal contractors face joint and several liability.

  3. e-EFKA contribution evasion via under-declaration of working time or wage base. The Ergani II e-clocking module (kartas ergasias) under Law 5053/2023 has tightened SEPE’s ability to reconcile declared time against site-presence. Under-declaration on the monthly APD (Analytiki Periodiki Dilosi) carries combined criminal and administrative exposure.

  4. Type D / Residence Permit scope mismatch with site role. The Migration Code permits non-EU workers to perform only the work specified in the engagement underlying the Single Permit. Re-deployment to a different end-client or upgrading from labourer to skilled trade without permit amendment is a breach. Ministry of Migration guidance requires amendment before any material change.

  5. Metaklisi quota slot exhaustion and window miss. The Metaklisi quota is set annually by KYA and allocated via migration.gov.gr in narrow windows. Slots are exhausted rapidly in agricultural and construction sectors. Missed window or wrong sectoral allocation means rejection and a deployment-cycle reset to the Type D + Single Permit timeline (4-6 months longer).

Scoring Interpretation & Hiring Guidance

[Editorial deepening pending. Section to be authored from country brief and trade-specific sources.]

References & Resources

References & primary sources

Certification bodies & named authorities

  • CAP
  • Blue Card

Methodology

This assessment framework follows the Bayswater observational assessment methodology and the cross-jurisdiction skills-coverage framework.