Overview :
- This Electrical Engineer 3 position is located within the Substation Design organization, which is responsible for developing technical electrical designs and standards for substation projects such as reactor groups, capacitor groups, station service overhauls, power transformer replacements, power circuit breaker replacements, fiber optic cabling, motor operated disconnects, Sequential Events Recorder (SER), Supervisory Control and Data Acquisitions (SCADA), relaying, metering, Digital Fault Recorder (DFR)s and Remedial Action Schemes (RAS).
- Substation design engineers’ responsibilities begin with leading a technical team that develops the scope of the project and then continues by developing technical designs for applicable project and continue as a subject matter expert through the construction and closeout phases.
- This position will perform electrical engineer design services for multiple complex high voltage substation projects and will work closely with the assigned Project Managers (PM), Real Property Services (TER), the Construction Acquisition Team (NSSV), Environmental and Cultural Resources (EC) and other representatives from a wide variety of organizations.
- This position may also provide technical expertise in one or more areas relating to substation engineering including outdoor design, data systems, protection and control, (RAS) etc. to the Substation Design (TEEC) organization.
REQUIREMENTS
Education & Corresponding Experience (required)
A Bachelor’s Degree in Electrical Engineering or other closely related Engineering field is required.With an applicable Bachelor’s degree, 10 years of experience is required.Experience should include engineering design development closely related to some or all the following (High Voltage Substation, Telecommunication system or high voltage transmission line systems).Required Technical Skills & Experience (required)
3 years working knowledge of High voltage systems, System Control, Communications, Relay planning, functional and technical specifications in a typical electric power system.