Technical Project Manager - Grid Connection / Clean Energy / Grid Interface Management / High Voltage / Power Connection / Hydrogen / Grid Coordination / Grid Project Manager / Electrical Engineering / Electrolyzers
Interested in taking ownership of the Grid Connection for one of Europe’s most ambitious clean energy rollouts?
As an experienced Technical Project Manager (Grid Integration / Connection Manager), you'll be responsible for managing all high-voltage grid connections for several ~100MW electrolyzer projects, overseeing the relationships with DSOs, TSOs, and regulators to ensure grid connection agreements are secured.
What’s on offer?
This is a true greenfield opportunity, and you'll have the opportunity to establish processes and structure from from scratch, not just follow existing routine workflows.
It’s also a highly visible role with a lot of autonomy - ideal for someone interested in navigating complex grid connection challenges (negotiating bespoke agreements with TSOs/DSOs etc), and wants a broader scope of responsibility than what’s typically available in TSO/DSO or OEM environments.
The chance to work with one of Germany's most established Clean Energy teams, who following their most successful year to date in 2024, now have plans underway for the construction of multiple Hydrogen Electrolyzer plants over the next 12 months.
Flexibility - the team offer as remote working flexibility as feasible, and you'll be able to work from anywhere in Germany when you're not meeting external stakeholders in-person.
Ideally, you’ll have a combination of:
Exposure to High Voltage / High Power technology or infrastructure.
Experience working in power infrastructure or grid connection projects, from either a technical or commercial standpoint.
Strong communication and collaboration skills, with a background in negotiation and acting as an interface between parties with multiple competing interests.
Bonus: A background working with DSO's, TSO's, regulators or grid operators.
Language skills: Fluent German and English is required (native German isn't a necessity, but must be good enough to discuss regulatory frameworks - likely B2 minimum)