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Epc Jobs (NOW HIRING)

This role leads the Procurement - EPC and oversees a team of Procurement Managers responsible for sourcing, negotiating, and administering EPC contracts, engineering and construction services ...

AES Clean Energy is currently seeking an EPC Project Manager to oversee high impact photovoltaic solar and energystorage projects through development, construction, commissioning, and turnover to ...

AES Clean Energy is currently seeking an EPC Project Manager to oversee high impact photovoltaic solar and energystorage projects through development, construction, commissioning, and turnover to ...

AES Clean Energy is currently seeking an EPC Project Manager to oversee high impact photovoltaic solar and energystorage projects through development, construction, commissioning, and turnover to ...

AES Clean Energy is currently seeking an EPC Project Manager to oversee high impact photovoltaic solar and energystorage projects through development, construction, commissioning, and turnover to ...

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How much do epc jobs pay per hour?

As of Jun 1, 2026, the average hourly pay for epc in the United States is $21.05, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $14.42 and $17.31 per hour, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive as an EPC (Engineering, Procurement, and Construction) Project Manager, and why are they important?

To thrive as an EPC Project Manager, you need expertise in project management, engineering principles, and procurement processes, typically supported by a degree in engineering or construction management and relevant certifications like PMP. Familiarity with project management software (e.g., Primavera P6, MS Project), contract management systems, and industry standards is crucial. Strong leadership, communication, and problem-solving skills set outstanding EPC Project Managers apart. These skills ensure projects are completed on time, within budget, and to quality standards while managing risks and coordinating multidisciplinary teams.

What are some common challenges faced by professionals working in EPC (Engineering, Procurement, and Construction) roles, and how can they be addressed?

Professionals in EPC roles often encounter challenges such as managing tight project timelines, coordinating among multidisciplinary teams, and ensuring compliance with safety and regulatory standards. Effective communication and strong project management skills are essential to navigate these complexities. Staying proactive in risk assessment and leveraging digital project management tools can help mitigate issues before they escalate. Collaboration and regular updates with stakeholders also play a crucial role in keeping projects on track and within budget.

What are EPC jobs?

EPC stands for Engineering, Procurement, and Construction. EPC jobs involve overseeing and executing large-scale projects from the initial design and engineering phase, through the procurement of materials and equipment, to the final construction and commissioning. Professionals in EPC roles work in industries such as oil and gas, power generation, infrastructure, and manufacturing. These positions require strong project management skills and often involve coordinating multidisciplinary teams to ensure projects are completed on time and within budget.
More about Epc jobs
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What states have the most Epc jobs? States with the most job openings for Epc jobs include:

Director, Project Management & EPC Procurement

Recurrent Energy

Walnut Creek, CA • Hybrid

Full-time

Posted 10 days ago


Job description

Role Summary 
The Director, Project Management & EPC Procurement is accountable for
end‑to‑end project delivery readiness and EPC procurement strategy across
Recurrent Energy’s utility‑scale solar and storage portfolio in North America.
 
This role sits at the critical intersection of Development handoff, EPC contracting,
owner‑procured equipment (OPE), and execution risk, ensuring that projects
transition from development into construction with clear scope, controlled cost,
defensible schedule, and disciplined capital deployment.
 
The Director owns:
• EPC procurement strategy and execution (RFP → negotiation → award),
• Project management standards and governance, and
• Portfolio‑level coordination of long‑lead and owner‑procured equipment in
alignment with IC decision gates.
 
Core Responsibilities:
 
1. EPC Procurement & Contracting Leadership
• Lead and govern the EPC RFP, bid evaluation, and contractor selection
process in accordance with Recurrent’s EPC Committee and approval
frameworks.
• Set portfolio‑wide EPC contracting strategies (full wrap vs. split scope, EPCm,
hybrid models).
• Oversee commercial negotiations, risk allocation, LD structures, guarantees,
and schedule protections.
• Ensure EPC contracts are execution‑ready before NTP (clear scope, exhibits,
milestones, pricing, and interfaces).
 
2. Project Management & Execution Readiness
• Establish and enforce project management standards from handoff through
COD.
• Ensure each project has:
o an integrated schedule (development, procurement, construction),
o a validated cost baseline,
o defined interface ownership (EPC, OPE, utility, IE).
• Provide portfolio‑level oversight of cost, schedule, risk, and change
management.
• Act as executive escalation point for claims, disputes, LD exposure, and
recovery strategies.
 
3. Owner‑Procured Equipment (OPE) & Long‑Lead Strategy
• Coordinate with Supply Chain and Engineering on modules, inverters, MPTs,
breakers, and HV equipment procurement.
• Align OPE commitments with IC approval gates to avoid premature capital
lock‑in.
• Ensure clear contractual interfaces between EPC contractors and
owner‑procured vendors.
• Manage portfolio exposure to supply chain risk, storage, logistics, and
schedule dependencies.
 
4. Development → EPC Transition Governance
• Partner with Development and Engineering to ensure projects entering EPC are
technically and commercially mature.
• Validate that land, permitting, interconnection, and design status support EPC
pricing and schedules.
• Prevent EPC awards on unsupported assumptions or binary development
risks.
 
5. Portfolio & Investment Committee Support
• Provide IC‑grade inputs on:
o CAPEX readiness,
o procurement exposure,
o schedule risk,
o sequencing of capital commitments.
• Support IC decision‑making with clear trade‑offs (optionality vs. commitment).
• Maintain transparency on where capital becomes irreversible across the
portfolio.
 
6. Team Leadership & Capability Building
• Lead and mentor Project Directors, Senior Project Managers, and EPC
Procurement resources.
• Build a consistent, high‑performing PM discipline across regions.
• Serve as a senior interface to EPC partners, Independent Engineers, lenders,
and tax equity.
Key Interfaces
• Development
• Engineering
• Supply Chain / Procurement
• Finance & Project Finance
• Legal & Risk
• Independent Engineers
• EPC Contractors & Major OEMs
 
Qualifications & Experience
Required
• 15+ years of experience delivering utility‑scale solar and/or battery projects.
• Deep hands‑on experience with EPC procurement and contract negotiation.
• Proven leadership of multi‑project portfolios ($1B+ cumulative EPC value
preferred).
• Strong understanding of owner‑procured equipment and HV interconnection
scope.
• Ability to operate at both executive and execution detail levels.
Preferred
• Experience across multiple procurement models (EPC, EPCm, split scope).
• Track record managing claims, schedule recovery, and distressed projects.
• Familiarity with Project Finance, lender, and tax equity requirements.
What Success Looks Like (12–18 Months)
• EPC awards occur with fewer post‑NTP change orders and pricing surprises.
• Projects reach NTP with clean scope, schedule, and procurement alignment.
• Clear linkage between IC approvals and procurement commitments.
• Reduced portfolio exposure to long‑lead equipment bottlenecks.
• Strong, consistent project leadership bench across regions.
 
Why This Role Matters at Recurrent
This role exists to ensure that Recurrent does not confuse momentum with
readiness.
The Director provides disciplined governance so that capital is committed
intentionally, risks are owned explicitly, and EPC execution starts on solid ground.