Industry index
Energy
Job descriptions across the energy sector, from traditional oil and gas operations to the fast-growing renewables and grid-infrastructure space. Roles include plant operators, environmental compliance specialists, energy analysts, and engineers — each with daily duties, required certifications, salary ranges, and notes on how the energy transition is reshaping career paths.
All Energy roles
- 24/7 Carbon-Free Energy Analyst$85K–$145K
A 24/7 Carbon-Free Energy Analyst designs and evaluates strategies that match electricity consumption with carbon-free generation on an hourly — or sub-hourly — basis, rather than relying on annual average matching. Working at the intersection of power markets, grid operations, and corporate sustainability commitments, these analysts build the models, procure the contracts, and report the results that allow organizations to credibly claim carbon-free electricity around the clock.
- Battery Energy Storage Engineer$95K–$155K
Battery Energy Storage Engineers design, commission, and optimize utility-scale and commercial battery energy storage systems (BESS) — most commonly lithium-ion installations paired with solar or operating as standalone grid assets. They are responsible for system architecture, performance modeling, controls integration, safety compliance, and the operational data that determines whether a project hits its contracted dispatch targets.
- Battery Storage Operations Technician$58K–$95K
Battery Storage Operations Technicians install, commission, monitor, and maintain utility-scale battery energy storage systems (BESS) at grid-connected facilities. They work across the full stack of a storage project — from individual cell modules and inverters to SCADA dashboards and grid interconnection equipment — ensuring systems meet contractual availability targets, stay within thermal and electrical operating limits, and comply with NERC and utility interconnection requirements.
- Behind-the-Meter Power Engineer$95K–$155K
Behind-the-Meter Power Engineers design, commission, and optimize distributed energy systems — solar PV, battery energy storage, demand response, and microgrid controls — installed on the customer side of the utility meter. They work at the intersection of power electronics, utility interconnection rules, and building load management, turning customer energy assets into reliable, cost-effective systems that can arbitrage rates, reduce demand charges, and in some cases operate islanded from the grid.
- BESS Project Manager$95K–$155K
BESS Project Managers lead the development, engineering, procurement, and construction of battery energy storage system projects from site control through commercial operation. They coordinate interconnection, permitting, EPC contractors, and equipment suppliers while managing schedule, budget, and risk for projects ranging from 10 MW to multi-hundred-megawatt standalone storage facilities or co-located solar-plus-storage developments.
- Blending Operator$52K–$88K
Blending Operators mix crude oil derivatives, refined fuels, lubricants, and petrochemical feedstocks to precise specifications at refineries, fuel terminals, and chemical plants. They control automated blending systems and perform manual adjustments to hit product quality targets — octane ratings, viscosity grades, flash points, and additive concentrations — before finished product ships to downstream customers.
- Building Energy Modeler$72K–$115K
Building Energy Modelers create and analyze computer simulations of buildings to predict energy consumption, test efficiency measures, and support code compliance, green certification, and decarbonization planning. They work at the intersection of mechanical engineering, architecture, and energy policy — translating building designs and retrofit proposals into quantified performance projections that guide capital investment decisions worth tens of millions of dollars.
- Carbon Capture Engineer$95K–$155K
Carbon Capture Engineers design, evaluate, and operate systems that capture CO₂ from power plants, industrial facilities, and direct-air capture installations before it reaches the atmosphere. They work across the full CCS value chain — from amine solvent column design and compressor specifications to pipeline transport and geologic sequestration — and are accountable for meeting both emissions reduction targets and process economics under tight project timelines.
- Carbon Markets Analyst$72K–$118K
Carbon Markets Analysts research, price, and transact carbon credits and allowances across voluntary and compliance markets — including cap-and-trade programs like RGGI and California's AB 32, and voluntary registries like Verra and Gold Standard. They support trading desks, corporate sustainability teams, and project developers in valuing offsets, managing regulatory exposure, and executing carbon procurement strategies that increasingly sit at the center of energy company decarbonization plans.
- CCUS Project Manager$105K–$175K
CCUS Project Managers lead the development, engineering, and execution of carbon capture, utilization, and storage projects from feasibility through commissioning. They coordinate multidisciplinary teams across reservoir engineering, facilities design, regulatory permitting, and commercial agreements to deliver projects that permanently store CO₂ or convert it into useful products. The role sits at the intersection of oil and gas technical expertise, energy transition policy, and large-scale infrastructure project management.
- Commercial Energy Manager$85K–$145K
Commercial Energy Managers oversee an organization's energy procurement, consumption, and cost strategy across its portfolio of commercial facilities. They negotiate utility contracts and power purchase agreements, identify efficiency opportunities, track regulatory and market changes, and translate energy data into capital and operating decisions that reduce costs and meet sustainability targets. The role sits at the intersection of commodity markets, building operations, and corporate finance.
- Completion Engineer$105K–$185K
Completion Engineers design and execute the programs that turn a drilled wellbore into a producing well — selecting perforation intervals, designing hydraulic fracture treatments, specifying completion hardware, and optimizing production from the wellbore outward. They sit at the intersection of reservoir engineering, drilling operations, and production, translating subsurface data into field execution plans that determine how much oil and gas a well will ultimately recover.
- Data Center Electrical Engineer$95K–$165K
Data Center Electrical Engineers design, commission, and maintain the high-availability electrical infrastructure that keeps compute loads running without interruption. They work across power distribution systems, UPS systems, generators, switchgear, and cooling-adjacent electrical equipment at hyperscale, colocation, and enterprise data center facilities. The role sits at the intersection of utility-scale power engineering and mission-critical facility operations, where a single miswired breaker or an untested transfer switch can take down millions of dollars of compute capacity.
- Data Center Power Systems Engineer$95K–$155K
Data Center Power Systems Engineers design, commission, and maintain the electrical infrastructure that keeps critical compute facilities online 24/7. They own everything from utility service entrances and medium-voltage switchgear through UPS systems, PDUs, and busway distribution — ensuring the power chain delivers the uptime guarantees that hyperscalers, colocation operators, and enterprise IT depend on. The role sits at the intersection of power engineering and mission-critical operations, requiring both design rigor and hands-on troubleshooting under live-load conditions.
- Decarbonization Strategy Consultant$95K–$185K
Decarbonization Strategy Consultants advise energy companies, utilities, industrials, and governments on how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across their operations, supply chains, and capital portfolios. They build emissions inventories, model abatement pathways, evaluate low-carbon technologies, and translate scientific and regulatory requirements into commercially viable action plans that clients can actually execute.
- Demand Response Specialist$68K–$112K
Demand Response Specialists design, enroll, and manage programs that incentivize commercial, industrial, and residential energy customers to reduce or shift electricity consumption during peak grid stress events. They serve as the operational link between utilities, grid operators, and end-use customers — translating tariff schedules and reliability requirements into curtailment strategies that keep the grid stable without building additional generation capacity.
- DER Coordinator$72K–$115K
DER Coordinators manage the integration, dispatch, and performance monitoring of distributed energy resources — solar, battery storage, EV charging, demand response, and small-scale generation — into electric utility grids. They sit at the intersection of grid operations, customer programs, and regulatory compliance, ensuring DER assets perform reliably, meet interconnection requirements, and contribute to grid stability without compromising power quality or system security.
- Directional Driller$95K–$185K
Directional Drillers plan and execute wellbore trajectories through subsurface formations, steering drill bits along precise paths to hit reservoir targets that vertical wells cannot reach. Working at the wellsite around the clock, they use measurement-while-drilling (MWD) and logging-while-drilling (LWD) data to make real-time steering decisions that determine whether a well delivers its production potential — or misses the target entirely.
- Distribution Engineer$75K–$125K
Distribution Engineers design, analyze, and maintain the medium- and low-voltage electric distribution systems that deliver power from substations to homes and businesses. Working for electric utilities, cooperatives, and consulting firms, they size conductors, design protection schemes, model power flow, and shepherd capital projects from initial load study through construction and energization. The role sits at the intersection of classical power systems engineering and the fast-moving technology of grid modernization.
- Distribution System Operator$68K–$115K
Distribution System Operators (DSOs) monitor and control the medium- and low-voltage electric grid that delivers power from transmission substations to homes, businesses, and industrial customers. Working from utility control rooms around the clock, they dispatch field crews, switch distribution circuits, restore outages, and maintain system reliability within NERC and state public utility commission standards. The role sits at the intersection of real-time grid awareness, emergency response, and crew coordination.
- Drilling Supervisor$115K–$195K
Drilling Supervisors — often called company men or wellsite leaders — are the operator's on-site representative during well construction, responsible for everything that happens from spud to rig release. They direct drilling contractor personnel, enforce the well program, manage day-rate costs, and make real-time decisions on mud weight, bit selection, casing points, and well control. The role sits at the intersection of subsurface engineering and field execution, and the decisions made on the rig floor have immediate consequences measured in millions of dollars.
- Drilling Technician$52K–$98K
Drilling Technicians operate and maintain the equipment used to bore wells for oil, natural gas, water, and geothermal energy. They work on drill rigs monitoring downhole conditions, adjusting drilling parameters, and keeping equipment running safely under physically demanding conditions.
- Electrolyzer Technician$62K–$98K
Electrolyzer Technicians install, commission, operate, and maintain electrolysis systems that split water into hydrogen and oxygen using electrical current. They work at green hydrogen production facilities, industrial gas plants, and power-to-gas projects, ensuring electrolyzer stacks, balance-of-plant equipment, and safety systems operate reliably within specification. As hydrogen infrastructure scales rapidly, this role sits at the center of one of the fastest-growing segments in the energy transition.
- Energy Analyst$72K–$130K
Energy Analysts build the quantitative models and market analyses that inform decisions across utilities, independent power producers, ISO/RTOs, consultancies, and corporate energy buyers. The work spans wholesale power market forecasting, fuel and emissions modeling, asset valuation, load growth analysis, and the regulatory and policy work that connects all of it.
- Energy Efficiency Auditor$55K–$95K
Energy Efficiency Auditors inspect residential, commercial, and industrial buildings to identify energy waste and recommend cost-effective improvements. They perform blower door tests, infrared scans, lighting and HVAC inventories, and ASHRAE Level 1, 2, and 3 audits, then translate findings into ranked retrofit recommendations with payback calculations and incentive pathways.
- Energy Environmental Compliance Specialist$68K–$108K
Energy Environmental Compliance Specialists ensure that power plants, pipelines, upstream oil and gas operations, and renewable energy facilities operate within the requirements set by the EPA, state environmental agencies, and permit conditions. They track regulatory changes, manage environmental permits, coordinate air and water monitoring programs, and represent the facility during agency inspections — serving as the bridge between field operations and the regulatory framework those operations must satisfy.
- Energy Industry Safety Manager$95K–$155K
Energy Industry Safety Managers design, implement, and enforce occupational health and safety programs at power generation facilities, oil and gas operations, refineries, and renewable energy sites. They own the regulatory compliance posture under OSHA PSM, EPA RMP, and applicable state rules while building the safety culture that keeps workers, contractors, and communities free from harm. The role sits at the intersection of field operations, engineering, and regulatory affairs, requiring both technical depth and the management credibility to drive behavior change across a workforce that operates 24/7 in physically demanding environments.
- Energy Management Systems Engineer$85K–$145K
Energy Management Systems Engineers design, configure, operate, and maintain the software and hardware platforms that grid operators use to monitor and control electric transmission networks in real time. They sit at the intersection of power systems engineering and enterprise software, keeping the EMS/SCADA stack reliable during routine operations, major system upgrades, and grid emergencies. Their work directly supports the decisions that balance generation and load across interconnected power grids serving millions of customers.
- Energy Project Finance Analyst$78K–$130K
Energy Project Finance Analysts structure, model, and evaluate the financing of capital-intensive energy infrastructure — wind farms, solar projects, gas pipelines, battery storage, and LNG terminals. They build the financial models that determine whether a project gets built, sit at the intersection of engineering assumptions and capital markets, and support deal teams through financial close on transactions that can range from $50 million to several billion dollars.
- Energy Risk Analyst$78K–$130K
Energy Risk Analysts quantify, monitor, and report the market, credit, and operational risks embedded in a company's energy trading book, physical asset portfolio, or supply portfolio. Working at the intersection of commodity markets, quantitative finance, and operations, they produce the daily risk metrics — VaR, Greeks, mark-to-market exposure — that traders, risk managers, and executives use to make capital allocation and hedging decisions.
- Energy Storage Sales Engineer$95K–$155K
Energy Storage Sales Engineers bridge the gap between battery energy storage system (BESS) technology and customer buying decisions at utilities, C&I accounts, and project developers. They own the technical side of the sales process — sizing systems, modeling economics, responding to RFPs, and guiding prospects from initial interest through contract close. The role demands equal fluency in megawatt-hour economics and customer relationship management.
- Energy Trader$95K–$250K
Energy Traders buy and sell physical and financial power, natural gas, and related commodities in wholesale markets — placing positions in day-ahead and real-time auctions at ISOs like PJM, MISO, ERCOT, and CAISO, hedging utility load and generation portfolios, or speculating on price spreads at proprietary trading firms. The job combines fundamental analysis, market structure expertise, and disciplined risk management.
- EV Charging Infrastructure Technician$52K–$88K
EV Charging Infrastructure Technicians install, commission, troubleshoot, and maintain electric vehicle charging equipment — from Level 2 chargers in workplaces and multifamily buildings to 350 kW DC fast charging stations at highway corridors. They work across the boundary between electrical contracting, networked equipment troubleshooting, and customer service.
- EV Charging Network Operations Manager$95K–$155K
EV Charging Network Operations Managers oversee the real-time performance, maintenance, and growth of public or commercial EV charging infrastructure — managing everything from network uptime and service dispatch to utility coordination and customer experience. They sit at the intersection of energy systems, field operations, and software platforms, responsible for keeping hundreds or thousands of charging stations online and meeting service-level targets in a market that is expanding faster than the workforce trained to support it.
- EV Charging Station Project Manager$85K–$140K
EV Charging Station Project Managers plan, coordinate, and deliver the installation of electric vehicle charging infrastructure — from single-site commercial deployments to multi-site corridor networks. They manage contractors, utilities, permitting agencies, and equipment vendors to bring charging stations online on schedule and within budget, while navigating utility interconnection timelines, grant compliance, and site host relationships that vary widely from project to project.
- EV Fleet Electrification Consultant$85K–$145K
EV Fleet Electrification Consultants guide commercial, municipal, and utility clients through the end-to-end process of converting combustion vehicle fleets to battery-electric operation. They assess current fleet composition and usage patterns, design charging infrastructure, model total cost of ownership, and manage utility interconnection — translating complex technical and financial tradeoffs into decisions that fleet operators can execute confidently.
- Fuel Cell Engineer$85K–$145K
Fuel Cell Engineers design, develop, test, and optimize fuel cell systems that convert hydrogen or other fuels directly into electricity through electrochemical reactions. They work across the full development stack — from membrane electrode assembly materials and stack architecture to balance-of-plant integration, degradation modeling, and system controls — at automotive OEMs, stationary power companies, aerospace firms, and national laboratories.
- Geophysicist$85K–$160K
Geophysicists in the energy sector use seismic data, gravity surveys, electromagnetic methods, and subsurface modeling to locate and characterize hydrocarbon reservoirs, geothermal resources, and CO₂ storage sites. They work alongside geologists, drilling engineers, and reservoir engineers to reduce subsurface uncertainty and inform decisions worth hundreds of millions of dollars in capital. The role blends rigorous physics, software-intensive data interpretation, and applied earth science across onshore and offshore settings.
- Geothermal Engineer$88K–$155K
Geothermal Engineers design, drill, and operate the wells and surface facilities that extract heat from underground reservoirs for electricity generation, direct use, and emerging closed-loop and enhanced geothermal systems. The role spans reservoir engineering, well design, drilling supervision, and power plant integration — drawing heavily on petroleum engineering practices applied to a different fluid and a different commodity.
- Green Hydrogen Project Developer$95K–$165K
Green Hydrogen Project Developers originate, structure, and advance utility-scale electrolysis and hydrogen production projects from site selection through financial close and into construction. They sit at the intersection of renewable energy development, electrochemical engineering, and project finance — coordinating offtake negotiations, permitting, interconnection, and equipment procurement to bring projects from concept to shovel-ready status for developers, utilities, and industrial off-takers.
- Grid Cybersecurity Engineer$105K–$175K
Grid Cybersecurity Engineers protect electric utility infrastructure — generation facilities, transmission substations, distribution control systems, and energy management systems — from cyber threats. They design and operate security controls that meet NERC CIP regulatory standards while keeping operational technology (OT) systems available and reliable. The role sits at the intersection of information security, industrial control systems engineering, and federal energy regulation.
- Grid Interconnection Specialist$85K–$145K
Grid Interconnection Specialists manage the technical and regulatory process of connecting new generation and storage projects to electric transmission and distribution systems. They navigate FERC-regulated interconnection queues, coordinate power flow and protection studies with transmission owners, and serve as the primary technical liaison between project developers, independent system operators, and utilities — translating complex grid engineering requirements into actionable project milestones.
- Grid Operations Engineer$110K–$155K
Grid Operations Engineers keep the bulk electric system stable in real time. They monitor transmission flows, manage voltage and frequency, coordinate generator dispatch, and execute switching during contingencies — working from control rooms at utilities, independent system operators (ISOs), and balancing authorities under NERC reliability standards.
- Heat Reuse Engineer$85K–$145K
Heat Reuse Engineers design, analyze, and optimize systems that capture waste heat from industrial processes, power generation, and HVAC systems and redirect it as usable energy. Working across manufacturing plants, data centers, refineries, and district energy networks, they apply thermodynamics, heat transfer, and process engineering principles to reduce fuel consumption, lower carbon emissions, and improve overall energy efficiency — making industrial facilities measurably cheaper and cleaner to operate.
- Hydroelectric Plant Operator$72K–$118K
Hydroelectric Plant Operators monitor and control the generation, transmission, and water-handling equipment at hydroelectric power facilities — from large federal dams operated by the Bureau of Reclamation and Army Corps to small run-of-river plants owned by utilities and independent operators. They balance unit dispatch against reservoir levels, downstream flow requirements, and grid demand, often around the clock.
- Hydrogen Production Engineer$98K–$160K
Hydrogen Production Engineers design and operate the facilities that produce hydrogen — whether through alkaline or PEM electrolysis, steam methane reforming with carbon capture, or autothermal reforming. They are responsible for process design, plant performance, hydrogen purity specifications, safety case management, and the carbon intensity calculations that determine eligibility for 45V production tax credits and offtaker contracts.
- Hyperscale Energy Procurement Manager$130K–$210K
Hyperscale Energy Procurement Managers source, negotiate, and manage the power supply agreements that keep large-scale data center campuses running on carbon-free or cost-competitive electricity. They structure power purchase agreements, renewable energy certificates, and capacity contracts across multiple grid regions, translating complex wholesale market mechanics into procurement strategies that meet both the financial targets and the sustainability commitments of hyperscale technology companies.
- Lineworker$62K–$135K
Lineworkers — also called linemen, line technicians, or journeyman linemen — build, maintain, and repair the overhead and underground electrical distribution and transmission lines that carry power from substations to customers. They work energized circuits up to 500 kV from bucket trucks, hooks and gaffs, or live-line tools, often in storm response conditions and at all hours.
- Liquid Cooling Systems Engineer$95K–$165K
Liquid Cooling Systems Engineers design, commission, and optimize water-based and dielectric thermal management systems for high-density computing infrastructure, industrial power electronics, and energy conversion equipment. They work at the intersection of mechanical engineering, fluid dynamics, and electrical systems — ensuring that heat generated by CPUs, GPUs, power converters, and batteries is moved efficiently enough to prevent failure, maintain performance, and reduce overall energy consumption.
- LNG Plant Operator$85K–$140K
LNG Plant Operators run the liquefaction trains, storage tanks, and marine loading facilities that turn natural gas into liquefied natural gas at minus 260°F for export by ship. Working rotating shifts at facilities like Sabine Pass, Cameron, Freeport, Plaquemines, Rio Grande, and Port Arthur LNG, they manage cryogenic processes, boil-off gas handling, and ship loading operations under tight safety constraints set by PHMSA, FERC, and the Coast Guard.
- Load Growth Planning Engineer$85K–$140K
Load Growth Planning Engineers analyze current and projected electricity demand to help utilities, grid operators, and energy developers plan infrastructure investments, generation resources, and transmission upgrades. They build load forecasting models, evaluate distributed energy resource impacts, and translate demand projections into actionable capacity plans that keep the grid reliable and cost-effective as customer behavior and electrification trends reshape consumption patterns.
- Methane Emissions Specialist$72K–$118K
Methane Emissions Specialists identify, measure, and reduce methane leaks and venting events across oil and gas production, gathering, transmission, and distribution systems. They design and execute leak detection and repair (LDAR) programs, manage EPA Subpart W and OOOOa/b reporting obligations, and work directly with field operations teams to reduce Scope 1 emissions in compliance with federal and state regulations.
- Microgrid Engineer$85K–$145K
Microgrid Engineers design, integrate, and commission distributed energy systems that can operate independently from or in parallel with the utility grid. They work across solar, battery storage, generators, and advanced controls to deliver reliable, cost-effective power to campuses, military bases, remote communities, and industrial facilities. The role spans feasibility analysis, detailed electrical design, system integration, and long-term performance optimization.
- Midstream Operations Manager$115K–$185K
Midstream Operations Managers oversee the daily operations of pipeline, compression, gathering, and processing assets that move natural gas, crude oil, and NGLs from production areas to market. They are accountable for throughput targets, operating budgets, PHMSA and FERC regulatory compliance, and the safety performance of field operations crews across potentially thousands of miles of infrastructure.
- Mud Engineer$90K–$160K
Mud Engineers — formally drilling fluids engineers — design, monitor, and adjust the drilling fluid system that lubricates the bit, controls formation pressure, and carries cuttings to surface on active rigs. They work primarily for service companies such as Baroid, M-I SWACO, Newpark, and Tetra, rotating onto wellsite assignments where their job is to keep the mud system performing within engineered limits 24 hours a day.
- NERC Compliance Specialist$85K–$135K
NERC Compliance Specialists ensure that electric utilities, transmission operators, and generation owners meet the mandatory reliability standards enforced by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation and its regional entities. They interpret Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) and Operations and Planning standards, manage evidence collection, prepare for audits, and translate regulatory requirements into operational procedures that keep the bulk electric system reliable and the organization out of penalty exposure.
- Nuclear Engineer$90K–$155K
Nuclear Engineers design, analyze, and oversee the systems and components used to derive benefit from nuclear energy and radiation — primarily commercial power reactors, naval propulsion systems, research reactors, and radiological medicine equipment. They work at the intersection of neutron physics, thermodynamics, materials science, and regulatory compliance, ensuring that nuclear systems operate safely, efficiently, and within NRC or DOE regulatory boundaries throughout their operational life.
- Nuclear Fuel Engineer$88K–$145K
Nuclear Fuel Engineers design, analyze, and manage the nuclear fuel assemblies that power commercial reactors and research facilities. They perform neutronics and thermal-hydraulic calculations to ensure fuel operates within regulatory limits, support fuel cycle optimization to reduce operating costs, and serve as the technical bridge between fuel vendors, reactor operators, and the NRC licensing process.
- Nuclear Plant Restart Engineer$105K–$175K
Nuclear Plant Restart Engineers lead the engineering, licensing, and operational readiness activities required to return a dormant or partially decommissioned nuclear power plant to commercial service. Working at the intersection of NRC regulatory compliance, plant systems engineering, and outage planning, they coordinate across disciplines to rebuild the technical basis — updated safety analyses, equipment qualification records, procedure revisions, and workforce training programs — that a plant must demonstrate before the NRC authorizes restart.
- Nuclear Safety Engineer$95K–$155K
Nuclear Safety Engineers analyze, evaluate, and document the safety basis of nuclear facilities — commercial power reactors, research reactors, fuel cycle facilities, and DOE weapons complex sites. They develop and maintain the licensing basis documents, perform deterministic and probabilistic risk assessments, and ensure that design changes, operating procedures, and plant modifications don't compromise the safety margins regulators and the facility design require.
- Nuclear Technician$68K–$105K
Nuclear Technicians support the operation, maintenance, and safety monitoring of nuclear reactors and radiation-producing equipment at power plants, research institutions, and medical facilities. They monitor radiation levels, handle radioactive materials, and assist nuclear engineers and health physicists in keeping plants running within regulatory limits.
- Offshore Wind Engineer$95K–$155K
Offshore Wind Engineers design, install, commission, and maintain the turbines, foundations, and electrical infrastructure that generate power from wind installations in ocean environments. They work across the full project lifecycle — from geotechnical and structural assessments during development, through procurement and construction management, to operations and maintenance once a project is generating. The role sits at the intersection of marine engineering, electrical systems, and project execution in one of the most actively expanding segments of the energy sector.
- Oil and Gas Operations Manager$110K–$175K
Oil and Gas Operations Managers oversee the day-to-day production operations of oil and gas assets — wells, pipelines, facilities, and field personnel. They are accountable for production targets, operating budgets, regulatory compliance, and the safety performance of everything in their area.
- Oil and Gas Production Engineer$95K–$165K
Oil and Gas Production Engineers are responsible for maximizing hydrocarbon recovery from producing wells and surface facilities while controlling costs and meeting regulatory requirements. They sit at the intersection of reservoir performance, surface equipment, and economics — designing artificial lift systems, diagnosing well underperformance, and recommending workovers and stimulation treatments to optimize each barrel produced. The role spans both office-based analysis and regular fieldwork, and carries direct accountability for production performance against plan.
- Oil Surveyor$58K–$92K
Oil Surveyors — also called petroleum measurement technicians or gaugers — measure, verify, and document the volume and quality of crude oil, condensate, and natural gas liquids transferred between producers, pipelines, and refineries. Their readings are the legal basis for custody transfer transactions worth millions of dollars per day.
- Outage Coordinator$72K–$118K
Outage Coordinators plan, schedule, and manage the complex maintenance shutdowns — called outages — that keep power plants, substations, and generation facilities running safely and efficiently. They synchronize the work of operations, maintenance, engineering, contractors, and regulators across compressed timelines where every hour of unplanned delay costs real money. The role sits at the intersection of project management, plant operations, and utility grid reliability.
- Petroleum Engineer$115K–$185K
Petroleum Engineers design and oversee the operations that extract oil and gas from underground reservoirs — drilling wells, designing completions and stimulation jobs, optimizing production, and economically evaluating projects. They work for upstream operators, oilfield service companies, and consulting firms across the full lifecycle from prospect evaluation to plug and abandonment.
- Petroleum Geologist$95K–$165K
Petroleum Geologists identify, evaluate, and de-risk subsurface hydrocarbon accumulations to guide drilling and development decisions in upstream oil and gas. Working with seismic data, well logs, core samples, and basin models, they define reservoir geometry, estimate recoverable resources, and recommend drilling locations — converting geologic uncertainty into actionable capital decisions for operators and exploration companies.
- Photovoltaic System Inspector$58K–$95K
Photovoltaic System Inspector verify that residential, commercial, and utility-scale solar installations meet electrical codes, fire codes, manufacturer specifications, and applicable jurisdictional requirements before and after energization. Working for utilities, municipalities, third-party inspection firms, or as independent consultants, they serve as the final authority on whether a PV system is safe, code-compliant, and ready to interconnect to the grid.
- Pipeline Controller$78K–$128K
Pipeline Controllers monitor and operate interstate and intrastate transmission pipelines from centralized control rooms, managing the flow of natural gas, crude oil, or refined products across hundreds or thousands of miles of infrastructure. They adjust pressures, control compressor and pump stations remotely, respond to alarms, and execute emergency procedures to protect public safety, environmental compliance, and delivery commitments — 24 hours a day, every day of the year.
- Pipeline Inspector$65K–$110K
Pipeline Inspectors verify the structural and operational integrity of oil, gas, and liquids pipelines — examining welds, coatings, cathodic protection systems, and inline inspection (ILI) data to identify defects before they become incidents. They work for operators, third-party inspection firms, and regulators under PHMSA pipeline safety rules and serve as the technical eyes on assets that often run thousands of miles underground.
- Pipeline Integrity Engineer$95K–$155K
Pipeline Integrity Engineers design, implement, and manage programs that ensure the safe and reliable operation of oil, gas, and liquid transmission pipeline systems. They analyze inspection data from inline inspection tools, corrosion surveys, and hydrostatic tests to identify threats, prioritize repairs, and demonstrate regulatory compliance under PHMSA's Pipeline Safety regulations. The role sits at the intersection of materials engineering, data analysis, and federal compliance — with real consequences for public safety and environmental protection.
- Plant Maintenance Engineer$78K–$125K
Plant Maintenance Engineers design, manage, and execute maintenance programs that keep power generation and energy processing facilities running at peak reliability. They own the preventive and predictive maintenance strategy for rotating and static equipment, lead root cause analyses on failures, and coordinate with operations to minimize unplanned downtime. The role sits at the intersection of mechanical engineering judgment and daily operational pressure.
- Power Markets Analyst$75K–$130K
Power Markets Analysts research, model, and forecast wholesale electricity market dynamics to support trading decisions, asset valuation, and regulatory strategy for utilities, independent power producers, and energy trading firms. They combine quantitative modeling, knowledge of FERC-regulated market rules, and real-time market surveillance to translate raw ISO/RTO price signals into actionable intelligence for commercial and operational teams.
- Power Plant Operator$72K–$118K
Power Plant Operators control and monitor the generators, boilers, turbines, and auxiliary systems that produce electricity at fossil, combined-cycle, biomass, and increasingly hybrid renewable facilities. They run rotating shifts from a control room, respond to system frequency and dispatch instructions, and keep the plant available to meet load while staying within emissions and reliability limits.
- Power Purchase Agreement Manager$95K–$155K
Power Purchase Agreement Managers structure, negotiate, and administer long-term contracts for the sale and purchase of electricity between generators and offtakers — utilities, corporations, municipalities, and grid operators. They sit at the intersection of energy law, project finance, and market operations, translating complex regulatory and commercial terms into bankable agreements that move renewable and conventional power projects from development into construction and operations.
- Power Systems Engineer$85K–$145K
Power Systems Engineers design, analyze, and optimize electrical generation, transmission, and distribution systems — from utility-scale grid infrastructure to industrial power networks and renewable energy interconnections. They model load flows, evaluate fault conditions, specify protection schemes, and ensure that complex electrical systems operate reliably within regulatory and reliability standards set by NERC, IEEE, and applicable utility tariffs.
- Radiation Protection Technician$62K–$98K
Radiation Protection Technicians — often called RP Techs or Health Physics Technicians — monitor, measure, and control radiation hazards at nuclear power plants, DOE national laboratories, medical facilities, and industrial radiography sites. They implement radiological work permits, conduct contamination surveys, manage personnel dosimetry programs, and enforce ALARA principles to keep workers and the environment within regulatory dose limits set by the NRC and DOE.
- Reactor Decommissioning Specialist$85K–$140K
Reactor Decommissioning Specialists plan and execute the safe, compliant dismantlement of nuclear reactors and associated radioactive systems at end-of-life power plants, research reactors, and government facilities. They manage radiological characterization, waste stream classification, structural demolition sequencing, and NRC license termination requirements from initial planning through final site release.
- Reactor Operator$98K–$165K
Reactor Operators are NRC-licensed control room professionals who directly operate the reactor and primary plant systems at commercial nuclear power plants. They manipulate the controls during normal operations, startups, shutdowns, and transients, execute emergency operating procedures, and carry personal regulatory accountability for keeping the reactor within its licensed operating envelope.
- Refinery Operator$72K–$115K
Refinery Operators control and monitor the equipment and processes that convert crude oil into gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and petrochemical feedstocks. Working from control rooms and in the field, they maintain process conditions within specification, respond to upsets, perform equipment rounds, and keep their unit running safely and efficiently around the clock.
- Refining Process Engineer$90K–$145K
Refining Process Engineers design, optimize, and troubleshoot the chemical and mechanical processes that convert crude oil into fuels, petrochemicals, and specialty products. They own the technical performance of process units — from atmospheric distillation and fluid catalytic cracking to hydrotreaters and reformers — and work daily at the intersection of process safety, yield optimization, and capital project execution. The role sits between operations and engineering leadership, translating unit data into actionable process improvements.
- Relay Protection Engineer$85K–$140K
Relay Protection Engineers design, test, commission, and maintain protective relay systems that safeguard electrical power equipment — transformers, generators, transmission lines, and buses — from faults, overloads, and abnormal operating conditions. They work at utilities, independent power producers, and engineering consulting firms, ensuring that protective devices operate correctly and that the bulk electric system stays stable during disturbances.
- Renewable Energy Credit Trader$85K–$160K
Renewable Energy Credit Traders buy and sell RECs, SRECs, I-RECs, and related environmental attributes on behalf of utilities, corporations, and financial intermediaries seeking to meet renewable portfolio standards or voluntary sustainability commitments. They manage a book of bilateral and exchange-traded positions, monitor state and federal policy developments that move credit prices, and execute transactions that align supply from renewable generators with compliance and voluntary demand.
- Renewable Energy Sales Manager$85K–$160K
Renewable Energy Sales Managers lead teams that sell solar, wind, battery storage, and related clean-energy products and services to commercial, industrial, utility, and residential customers. They own revenue targets, manage sales pipelines, coach account executives, and coordinate with engineering and finance to get complex deals across the line. The role sits at the intersection of technical product knowledge, project finance fluency, and traditional sales leadership.
- Renewable PPA Originator$95K–$175K
Renewable PPA Originators develop and close long-term power purchase agreements between renewable energy project developers and corporate or utility offtakers. They source new deal opportunities, structure contract terms, run financial models, negotiate directly with buyers and sellers, and shepherd transactions through credit approval and internal risk review — functioning as the commercial engine that converts megawatts of generation capacity into contracted revenue streams.
- Reservoir Engineer$120K–$190K
Reservoir Engineers characterize and forecast the subsurface behavior of oil and gas accumulations. They build numerical reservoir simulation models, history-match production data, generate EUR forecasts, evaluate development scenarios, and book reserves under SEC and SPE-PRMS standards. Their work shapes capital allocation, A&D valuations, and recovery strategies across the asset lifecycle.
- Roustabout$40K–$70K
Roustabouts are the general laborers of oil and gas rigs and production facilities — moving equipment, mixing chemicals, painting and maintaining surface infrastructure, assisting drilling and workover crews, and keeping the rig deck or lease tidy and operational. The job is physically demanding, entry-level, and the standard starting position for a career that can lead to derrickhand, driller, and beyond in the upstream oilfield.
- SCADA Engineer$85K–$140K
SCADA Engineers design, configure, maintain, and troubleshoot the supervisory control and data acquisition systems that monitor and control critical energy infrastructure — pipelines, substations, power plants, and distribution networks. They sit at the intersection of industrial control systems (ICS), communications networking, and operations technology (OT) cybersecurity, translating field device data into real-time visibility for operators and ensuring that control commands execute reliably around the clock.
- Small Modular Reactor Engineer$95K–$165K
Small Modular Reactor Engineers design, analyze, and support the licensing and deployment of nuclear reactors rated below 300 MWe — compact, factory-fabricated units intended for grid decarbonization, industrial heat, and remote power applications. They work across neutronics, thermal-hydraulics, systems engineering, and regulatory interface to move SMR concepts from design certification through construction and commercial operation.
- Smart Grid Data Analyst$72K–$115K
Smart Grid Data Analysts extract actionable intelligence from the massive data streams generated by advanced metering infrastructure (AMI), SCADA systems, and distributed energy resources. They build models that identify outage patterns, detect meter tampering, optimize demand response programs, and inform grid investment decisions. The role sits at the intersection of power systems engineering and data science, and is growing in importance as utilities deploy millions of smart meters and integrate variable renewable generation.
- Smart Meter Technician$48K–$82K
Smart Meter Technicians install, test, troubleshoot, and replace advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) at residential, commercial, and small industrial accounts. They handle meter changeouts, communications module replacements, head-end provisioning, and the field investigations that follow when a meter stops reporting or returns suspect data.
- Solar Engineer$78K–$130K
Solar Engineers design, analyze, and optimize photovoltaic and solar thermal energy systems for utility-scale, commercial, and residential applications. They translate site data and electrical load requirements into technically sound and financially viable system designs, working across the project lifecycle from feasibility through commissioning. Their work sits at the intersection of electrical engineering, energy modeling, and project development.
- Solar O&M Technician$52K–$88K
Solar O&M Technicians maintain, troubleshoot, and repair photovoltaic systems at utility-scale solar farms, commercial rooftop installations, and distributed generation sites. They perform preventive maintenance, diagnose inverter and array faults, and restore systems to full production capacity — keeping megawatts online and performance ratios within contract specifications. The role sits at the intersection of electrical craft work, data-driven diagnostics, and outdoor fieldwork across all weather conditions.
- Solar Panel Installer$42K–$72K
Solar Panel Installers — also called PV installers — mount, wire, and commission photovoltaic systems on rooftops, ground mounts, and carports. They handle the physical installation of racking, modules, inverters, and conduit while coordinating with electricians on the AC side of the system.
- Solar Plant Operator$52K–$88K
Solar Plant Operators monitor, control, and maintain utility-scale solar power facilities — photovoltaic (PV) arrays, inverter banks, substation equipment, and balance-of-plant systems — to maximize energy output and keep the facility within grid and regulatory requirements. Working from control rooms and in the field, they respond to alarms, perform equipment rounds, coordinate with grid operators, and support maintenance activities that keep hundreds of megawatts online around the clock.
- Solar Plus Storage Integration Engineer$95K–$155K
Solar Plus Storage Integration Engineers design, specify, and commission co-located photovoltaic and battery energy storage systems (BESS) for utility-scale, commercial, and industrial applications. They sit at the intersection of power electronics, grid interconnection, and energy management software — translating developer energy yield targets and utility interconnection agreements into functioning assets that deliver contracted capacity and ancillary services reliably over a 20-to-30-year project life.
- Solar Project Developer$95K–$170K
Solar Project Developers originate and shepherd utility-scale solar (and increasingly solar-plus-storage) projects from greenfield site identification through notice-to-proceed. They secure land control, navigate interconnection queues, manage permitting and community engagement, and structure offtake agreements that get projects financed.
- Solar PV Designer$62K–$105K
Solar PV Designers produce the engineering drawings, system layouts, and electrical designs that turn a rooftop or ground-mount solar proposal into a permitted, buildable project. Working across residential, commercial, and utility-scale segments, they use CAD and PV simulation software to optimize system performance, satisfy interconnection requirements, and generate permit-ready document packages that move projects from sales to installation.
- Solar Sales Consultant$55K–$120K
Solar Sales Consultants sell photovoltaic systems and battery storage solutions to homeowners, businesses, and institutions. They assess energy needs, design system configurations, present financial proposals, and guide customers from initial consultation through signed contract. The role sits at the intersection of energy technology, financial analysis, and relationship-driven selling, and compensation is heavily commission-weighted.
- Solar Sales Representative$55K–$120K
Solar Sales Representatives prospect, qualify, and close contracts for rooftop and ground-mount solar installations — primarily residential systems but increasingly commercial and industrial accounts. They educate homeowners and business owners on energy economics, design preliminary system proposals, walk customers through financing options, and hand off signed agreements to engineering and installation crews. The role is heavily commission-driven, field-based, and sits at the revenue front end of the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. energy industry.
- Substation Electrician$78K–$132K
Substation Electricians construct, commission, test, and maintain the equipment inside electric transmission and distribution substations — power transformers, breakers, switchgear, protective relays, batteries, and SCADA. They keep substations available and reliably switching power between transmission and distribution systems, often working on energized buses and in close coordination with system operators.
- Terminal Operator$52K–$85K
Terminal Operators control the loading, unloading, storage, and transfer of petroleum products, chemicals, and liquid bulk commodities at fuel terminals, tank farms, and distribution hubs. Working across control rooms and outdoor facilities around the clock, they maintain product quality, execute transfer orders, and keep hazardous-material handling within regulatory limits. The role is the operational backbone of the downstream petroleum supply chain.
- Transmission Planning Engineer$105K–$150K
Transmission Planning Engineers design the long-term electrical pathways that move power from generators to load. They run steady-state, dynamic, and short-circuit studies to identify reliability needs, evaluate generator interconnection requests, and develop the transmission upgrades that keep the grid compliant with NERC TPL standards a decade or more into the future.
- Underground Cable Splicer$62K–$108K
Underground Cable Splicers install, terminate, and splice high-voltage and medium-voltage power cables buried in conduit systems, duct banks, and direct-buried installations across electric utility distribution and transmission networks. They work in manholes, vaults, and trenches to join conductors, apply insulation systems, and restore cable circuits that keep residential, commercial, and industrial customers supplied with power.
- Utility Account Manager$72K–$118K
Utility Account Managers serve as the primary relationship interface between an electric, gas, or water utility and its commercial, industrial, or key account customers. They manage a portfolio of large-volume accounts, help customers navigate rate structures and demand response programs, coordinate service requests, and act as the customer's internal advocate when outages, billing disputes, or tariff changes arise. The role sits at the intersection of sales, technical consulting, and account retention.
- Utility-Scale Solar Project Manager$95K–$155K
Utility-Scale Solar Project Managers lead the development, engineering, procurement, and construction of solar power plants ranging from 20 MW to 500+ MW. They own project schedules, budgets, and contractor relationships from Notice to Proceed through commercial operation, coordinating landowners, utilities, permitting agencies, and EPC contractors while managing the financial and technical risks that determine whether a project gets built on time and within budget.
- Vehicle-to-Grid Systems Engineer$95K–$155K
Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) Systems Engineers design, integrate, and optimize bidirectional EV charging systems that allow electric vehicles to export stored energy back to the power grid or building loads. They sit at the intersection of power electronics, grid operations, and EV communication protocols, working with utilities, automakers, fleet operators, and building energy management systems to turn parked vehicles into dispatchable grid assets.
- Virtual Power Plant Engineer$95K–$155K
Virtual Power Plant Engineers design, operate, and optimize software-defined power systems that aggregate distributed energy resources — batteries, rooftop solar, controllable loads, and EV chargers — into a coordinated grid asset. They sit at the intersection of power systems engineering, real-time controls, and energy market participation, translating megawatts of scattered capacity into dispatchable grid services that compete alongside conventional generation.
- Weatherization Technician$38K–$62K
Weatherization Technicians assess, retrofit, and seal residential and commercial buildings to reduce energy loss and lower utility costs for homeowners and tenants. Working under DOE Weatherization Assistance Program guidelines or private contractors, they install insulation, air seal building envelopes, upgrade HVAC systems, and conduct diagnostic testing to verify energy performance improvements.
- Wellsite Geologist$100K–$220K
Wellsite Geologists work on active drilling rigs interpreting cuttings, LWD/MWD data, and gas shows in real time to track the bit's position within the target formation. They guide the directional driller on geosteering decisions, identify formation tops, recommend coring or logging points, and serve as the operator's geoscience presence at the rig. Most work on contract day rates rather than salary, rotating through wells for independent and major E&P companies.
- Wind Farm Operations Manager$95K–$155K
Wind Farm Operations Managers oversee the safe, compliant, and profitable operation of utility-scale wind energy facilities — typically 50 to 500+ turbines — including maintenance programs, grid interconnection compliance, HSE performance, and the field teams responsible for executing all of it. They sit at the intersection of asset performance, regulatory accountability, and people management, and they are directly answerable for the revenue impact of every hour a turbine sits idle.
- Wind Plant Asset Manager$95K–$155K
Wind Plant Asset Managers oversee the operational, financial, and contractual performance of wind energy facilities on behalf of owners and investors. They sit at the intersection of engineering, finance, and regulatory compliance — responsible for maximizing energy production, managing service contractors, protecting asset value, and reporting performance to ownership groups ranging from utilities to private equity funds.
- Wind Project Developer$85K–$145K
Wind Project Developers identify, acquire, and advance utility-scale wind energy projects from initial site prospecting through land control, permitting, interconnection, and financial close. They sit at the intersection of real estate, environmental law, grid engineering, and project finance — managing multiple project tracks simultaneously while negotiating with landowners, regulators, utilities, and offtake counterparties to bring renewable energy capacity online.
- Wind Resource Assessment Analyst$72K–$115K
Wind Resource Assessment Analysts evaluate the wind energy potential of prospective and operating wind farm sites by processing meteorological data, running mesoscale and microscale flow models, and producing uncertainty-quantified energy yield estimates. Their analyses are the technical foundation for multi-hundred-million-dollar investment decisions, project financing, and turbine layout design. The role sits at the intersection of atmospheric science, data engineering, and project development.
- Wind Turbine Blade Inspector$58K–$95K
Wind Turbine Blade Inspectors assess the structural integrity of rotor blades on utility-scale wind turbines, identifying damage such as leading-edge erosion, delamination, lightning strike damage, and surface coating failures. Working at heights up to 300 feet via rope access, drones, or elevated platforms, they document findings with standardized imaging and written reports that drive repair prioritization and maintenance budgets. Their assessments directly affect turbine availability, energy output, and asset lifespan for wind farm operators.
- Wind Turbine Technician$48K–$85K
Wind Turbine Technicians — also called wind techs or windsmiths — inspect, troubleshoot, repair, and maintain the mechanical, electrical, and hydraulic systems inside utility-scale wind turbines. The job is part heavy industrial mechanic, part electrician, and part rope-access technician, performed 80 to 100 meters above the ground.