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Offshore Planner Jobs (NOW HIRING)

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Offshore Planner information

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$23.5K

$75.9K

$155.5K

How much do offshore planner jobs pay per year?

As of Jun 8, 2026, the average yearly pay for offshore planner in the United States is $75,929.00, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $48,000.00 and $87,500.00 per year, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What does an Offshore Planner do?

An Offshore Planner is responsible for coordinating and scheduling offshore operations, ensuring resources, personnel, and materials are efficiently allocated. They create work plans, monitor project progress, and collaborate with various stakeholders to maintain timelines and budgets. Offshore Planners also manage logistics, regulatory compliance, and risk assessments to support safe and effective offshore activities. Their role is crucial in industries like oil and gas, renewable energy, and marine construction.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive in the Offshore Planner position, and why are they important?

To thrive as an Offshore Planner, you need strong project management skills, experience with scheduling and resource allocation, and a background in engineering or logistics—often supported by a relevant degree or certification. Familiarity with planning software such as Primavera P6 or MS Project, as well as safety certifications like BOSIET or HUET, is typically required. Excellent communication, problem-solving, and attention to detail help you coordinate effectively with multidisciplinary teams and adapt to rapidly changing offshore environments. These capabilities are crucial for ensuring project timelines are met, resources are optimized, and safety and regulatory standards are maintained in challenging offshore operations.

What does a typical day look like for an Offshore Planner?

A typical day for an Offshore Planner involves preparing and updating project schedules, coordinating logistics for personnel and equipment movements, and monitoring the progress of ongoing offshore operations. You’ll regularly communicate with onsite supervisors, engineers, and procurement teams to resolve scheduling conflicts and ensure project milestones are achieved. Daily tasks may include reviewing data from offshore reports, adjusting resource allocations, and participating in planning meetings to address project risks or changes. The role is dynamic and requires flexibility to adapt to evolving project requirements and operational challenges.

More about Offshore Planner jobs
What cities are hiring for Offshore Planner jobs? Cities with the most Offshore Planner job openings:
What are the most commonly searched types of Offshore Planner jobs? The most popular types of Offshore Planner jobs are:
What states have the most Offshore Planner jobs? States with the most job openings for Offshore Planner jobs include:
Infographic showing various Offshore Planner job openings in the United States as of May 2026, with employment types broken down into 94% Full Time, 1% Part Time, 1% Temporary, and 4% Contract. Highlights an 90% Physical, 3% Hybrid, and 7% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $75,929 per year, or $36.5 per hour.
Offshore Site Safety Technician

Offshore Site Safety Technician

Total Safety

Broussard, LA • On-site

Full-time

Posted 28 days ago


Total Safety rating

6.5

Company rating: 6.5 out of 10

Based on 24 frontline employees who took The Breakroom Quiz

26th of 32 rated health and safety providers


Job description

Total Safety is looking for full time Offshore Site Safety Technicians to support various Offshore Gulf of Mexico Upstream Operations. Jobs openings vary from supporting Drilling, Construction, P&A and Production Operations.
Total Safety is the world's premier provider of integrated safety and compliance services and the products necessary to support them, including gas detection, respiratory protection, safety training, fire protection, compliance and inspection, industrial hygiene, onsite emergency medical treatment/paramedics, communications systems, engineered systems design, and materials management. Our Core Values are People, Safety & Wellbeing, Accountability, Responsibility, Empowerment, Honesty, Transparency, and Integrity.
An offshore site safety technician is responsible for ensuring the health, safety, and environmental (HSE) compliance of offshore operations. This is done by ensuring the work is being done in accordance with a customer's HSE policy and procedures as well as staying within compliance of B.S.E.E. regulations. This technician acts on behalf the customer as a representative for their HSE department under the guidance of a customer HSE manager. Being an extension of the customer's HSE group allows our technician to be the bridge for a customer's office to a site located on an offshore facility/rig.
Duties on the Job
An offshore site safety technician has a range of daily duties focused on ensuring the safety and well-being of personnel and the environment. The following is a snap shot of their typical daily responsibilities:
  • Toolbox Talks: Leading daily safety briefings to discuss potential risks, safety measures, and updates for the day's operations.
  • Job Safety Analysis (JSA): Review and oversee all JSAs on location by ensuring they meet the standards of our customer and helping to identify hazards and preventive measures that should be taken.
  • Permits (Hot Work and Confined Space): Oversee the permits on location to ensure they follow the customer's policies as well as are within the government regulations.
  • Monitoring Compliance: Ensuring all personnel are following safety procedures and using the proper personal protective equipment (PPE) in accordance with both, customer policies and government regulations.
  • Incident Response: Responding to and managing any safety incidents or emergencies that arise, such as spills, injuries, or equipment malfunctions by doing initial incident reports and reporting to HSE management for the customer.
  • Hazard Assessments: Continuously assessing tasks and areas for new or evolving risks and implementing control measures.
  • Training Support: Assisting in on-site safety training sessions for both new and experienced personnel.
  • Equipment Checks: Verifying that job/task equipment, safety equipment, like fire extinguishers, alarms, and lifeboats, are inspected as per the policy of the customer and government regulations.
  • Documentation: Keeping detailed records of safety activities, inspections, audits, and any incidents.
  • Communication: Reporting safety observations, incidents, and recommendations to supervisors and relevant teams.
  • B.S.E.E.: Assist in site preparations and on-site inspections from auditors as requested by HSE management and site leadership.

Training Requirements
  • T-HUET w/CA-EBS and Swing Rope (water survival)
  • Rigger API RP 2D
  • Confined Space: Entry, Attendant, Rescue
  • Air Monitoring
  • Fall Protection with Rescue Planning
  • Fire Fighting - Incipient
  • First Aid - CPR - AED - BBP
  • Hazardous Materials Shipping
  • Marine Trash and Debris
  • Offshore Safety Awareness (SafeGulf)
  • Scaffolding
  • Piping & Vessel Isolations (LOTO)
  • SEMS II Awareness Training
  • NORM / NORM Surveyor

Skills and Experience:
  • The Offshore Safety Technician must display a thorough understanding of all federal, state, local, company and client regulations. The ability to recognize hazardous situations and recommend corrective measures is essential.
  • Computer literacy must be sufficient to communicate effectively through emails and prepare written reports and summarize observations, prepare incident reports and statements, basic spreadsheets and time and expense reporting.
  • Employees will be required to climb and work from ladders, scaffolds, and elevated platforms. The scope may require climbing access ladders on plant equipment to various heights. At times, the employee must enter several types of process equipment where work is being performed. Work will occur on hard and uneven surfaces like gravel, asphalt, and cement. Where excavations are present soil conditions will be slippery at times and change as work progresses throughout the project. Work will occur in all weather conditions in an outdoor environment. Some projects require work at night.
  • Employee will be required to perform the scope of the assignment while wearing the appropriate personal protective equipment, including but not limited to flame retardant clothing, chemical suits, respirators, breathing air equipment, rescue harness, safety harness with lanyards, hardhats, and other equipment required for personal safety.

Working Environment:
  • Able to work at various heights, the employee will be exposed to heat, cold, dust, fumes, or gases and to changes of weather.
  • Able to work and support various Offshore Gulf of Mexico Upstream Operations.

Educational Requirements:
  • Occupational safety/health degree or equivalent combinations of technical training and/or industrial related safety and health experience.

Total Safety and its subsidiaries afford equal opportunity in employment to all individuals regardless of race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, pregnancy, familial status, disability status, veteran status, citizenship status, genetic information or any other characteristic protected under Federal, State or Local law. Total Safety is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
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Equal Opportunity Employer
This employer is required to notify all applicants of their rights pursuant to federal employment laws.
For further information, please review the Know Your Rights notice from the Department of Labor.

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