This is an early-career role with real ownership. You will work at the core of our first commercial plant deployment, designing, specifying, and coordinating the technical backbone that makes it happen. You will have experienced engineers around you to challenge ideas with and learn from. We do not micromanage. We give you clear goals, a strong team, and expect you to grow into your own way of solving problems. Growth here is fast because the problems are real and the stakes are high.
- Own and maintain core engineering documents, P&IDs, BFDs, and equipment specs, driving them through revisions and keeping them accurate as the project evolves.
- Design for flexibility, accept that information arrives in stages, structure your work to absorb that, and communicate uncertainty clearly and early.
- Act as the technical liaison to our suppliers: evaluate equipment options together with the supply chain team and stay the go-to contact from selection through delivery.
- Work out and challenge mass and energy balances; perform your own calculations for heat loss, pressure drops, and structural estimations.
- Develop scalable factory standards for future projects, including pipe classes, modular concepts, and reusable design principles that outlast this deployment.
- Navigate ambiguity with support: assess whether a problem is relevant, identify where to find answers, and help design tests when no one else has them yet.
- Build cost awareness from day one: understand what drives costs and flag them early in the design process.
- Collaborate across functions, working directly with Systems Engineering and Operations, in a flat structure where everyone is approachable and willing to help.
Your first 12 months in the role
Week 1 to 4Onboard into the team and the FOAK project. Get up to speed on existing P&IDs, BFDs, and equipment specs. Map the document landscape and understand what needs updating and why.
Month 1 to 3Own your first set of documents end to end. Drive revisions, manage release cycles, and keep specs aligned as design decisions evolve. Make your first independent equipment calls together with the supply chain team and establish working relationships with key suppliers.
Month 4 to 6Run your own process calculations without being asked. Challenge the M+E balance where numbers don't feel right. Start contributing to factory standards: pipe classes, modular concepts, reusable design principles. Flag cost drivers early and make them visible to the team.
Month 7 to 12Be the person who knows the documents, the suppliers, and the open questions better than anyone else in your scope. Contribute to scalable standards that will outlast this project. Communicate uncertainty clearly, keep parallel workstreams moving, and be a reliable technical voice in cross-functional discussions.