Midstream Infrastructure Engineer
ProSidian is seeking a Midstream Infrastructure Engineer for technical due diligence and engineering validation for downstream oil and gas, midstream, and pipelines. This role is for program support on an exempt 1099 contract with no overtime pay basis,remote within the USA with on-site meetings expected. The position is located in Washington, DC, nationwide, and supports a department within the US Department of Energy (DOE) that provides attractive debt financing for high-impact, large-scale energy infrastructure projects in the United States.
The Midstream Infrastructure Engineer will provide services and support as an independent engineering advisory services specialist, focusing on risk management solutions for clients such as the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). The role involves delivering bankable, technically defensible independent engineering advisory services by converting discipline-specific engineering, construction, compliance, operating, commercial, and risk findings into lender-ready due diligence, monitoring, certification, and decision-support outputs.
Responsibilities include providing independent engineering advisory support for energy dominance financing (EDF) program technical due diligence, credit evaluation, lifecycle monitoring, and assurance activities. This includes reviewing project documentation, evaluating technical and commercial interfaces, identifying risks and mitigations, validating assumptions, supporting conditions precedent and disbursement readiness reviews, and preparing defensible work products including facility reviews, flow assurance, capacity checks, equipment evaluations, and operational readiness reports. Coordination with engineering, finance, legal, construction, operations, environmental, HSE, and project controls stakeholders is essential to support timely lender and DOE decision-making.
Desired qualifications for the Midstream Infrastructure Engineer include 10+ years of relevant engineering, construction, operations, compliance, risk, finance, or energy infrastructure advisory experience; demonstrated work on oil and gas, power, utilities, or large-scale infrastructure projects for owners, lenders, independent engineers, or federal clients. A bachelor's degree in engineering, geoscience, petroleum engineering, mechanical, electrical, chemical, civil, environmental, or related technical field is required. PE, PMP, CSP, API, NACE/AMPP, PMI, or discipline-specific credentials are preferred where applicable.
Skills required include independent engineering review, U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Loan Programs Office (LPO)-style documentation discipline, technical due diligence, risk assessment, midstream gathering, processing, compression, storage, and transportation systems, data room review, information request tracking, report writing, Excel-based analysis, stakeholder coordination, and clear presentation of findings for credit, construction, monitoring, and certification decisions.
Competencies required include technical judgment, independence and objectivity, analytical rigor, attention to detail, defensible documentation, client service orientation, cross-functional collaboration, issue escalation, quality mindset, schedule discipline, and ability to translate technical evidence into actionable risk, compliance, and financing implications.
Midstream Infrastructure Engineer
ProSidian is seeking a Midstream Infrastructure Engineer for technical due diligence and engineering validation for downstream oil and gas, midstream, and pipelines. This role is for program support on an exempt 1099 contract with no overtime pay basis,remote within the USA with on-site meetings expected. The position is located in Washington, DC, nationwide, and supports a department within the US Department of Energy (DOE) that provides attractive debt financing for high-impact, large-scale energy infrastructure projects in the United States.
The Midstream Infrastructure Engineer will provide services and support as an independent engineering advisory services specialist, focusing on risk management solutions for clients such as the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). The role involves delivering bankable, technically defensible independent engineering advisory services by converting discipline-specific engineering, construction, compliance, operating, commercial, and risk findings into lender-ready due diligence, monitoring, certification, and decision-support outputs.
Responsibilities include providing independent engineering advisory support for energy dominance financing (EDF) program technical due diligence, credit evaluation, lifecycle monitoring, and assurance activities. This includes reviewing project documentation, evaluating technical and commercial interfaces, identifying risks and mitigations, validating assumptions, supporting conditions precedent and disbursement readiness reviews, and preparing defensible work products including facility reviews, flow assurance, capacity checks, equipment evaluations, and operational readiness reports. Coordination with engineering, finance, legal, construction, operations, environmental, HSE, and project controls stakeholders is essential to support timely lender and DOE decision-making.
Desired qualifications for the Midstream Infrastructure Engineer include 10+ years of relevant engineering, construction, operations, compliance, risk, finance, or energy infrastructure advisory experience; demonstrated work on oil and gas, power, utilities, or large-scale infrastructure projects for owners, lenders, independent engineers, or federal clients. A bachelor's degree in engineering, geoscience, petroleum engineering, mechanical, electrical, chemical, civil, environmental, or related technical field is required. PE, PMP, CSP, API, NACE/AMPP, PMI, or discipline-specific credentials are preferred where applicable.
Skills required include independent engineering review, U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Loan Programs Office (LPO)-style documentation discipline, technical due diligence, risk assessment, midstream gathering, processing, compression, storage, and transportation systems, data room review, information request tracking, report writing, Excel-based analysis, stakeholder coordination, and clear presentation of findings for credit, construction, monitoring, and certification decisions.
Competencies required include technical judgment, independence and objectivity, analytical rigor, attention to detail, defensible documentation, client service orientation, cross-functional collaboration, issue escalation, quality mindset, schedule discipline, and ability to translate technical evidence into actionable risk, compliance, and financing implications.