Senior Project Engineer (Utilities, Water, and Energy) Senior Project Engineer (Utilities, Water, and Energy)

Nestle Operational Services Worldwide SAFort Dodge, IA
22h$91,000 - $138,000

About The Position

Join our Corporate Engineering team in Ft. Dodge, IA, where you’ll play a key role in delivering major capital initiatives. As a Senior Project Engineer (Utilities, Water, and Energy) you’ll lead the design, documentation, and commissioning of mechanical utility systems that support industrial operations. This includes steam, hot water, cooling tower water, chilled water, refrigeration, compressed air, wastewater, process water, and HVAC systems. You’ll collaborate with internal engineering teams, third-party consultants, and factory personnel to ensure safe, efficient, and compliant system implementation. This is a high-impact role with opportunities to collaborate with design, construction, and commissioning to deliver the Industrial Services for a major CAPEX project.

Requirements

  • Bachelor’s Degree in Engineering or related field and 5+ years of engineering experience in a manufacturing, industrial, military or related field
  • OR
  • Associate's Degree and 7+ years of engineering experience in a manufacturing, industrial, military or related field

Nice To Haves

  • Ability to relocate to other project site locations after project completion

Responsibilities

  • Lead engineering design and documentation for mechanical industrial services systems.
  • Size equipment, piping, ducts, valves, and accessories for utility systems.
  • Generate specifications and support equipment procurement.
  • Conduct field verification and red-line P&IDs; review piping layouts.
  • Verify installation quality and support commissioning activities.
  • Coordinate installation quality control, equipment checkout, and startup activities.

Benefits

  • 401k with Company match
  • healthcare coverage
  • performance-based incentives
  • competitive total rewards package
© 2024 Teal Labs, Inc
Privacy PolicyTerms of Service