Full-Time

Wind Technician

Posted on 12/13/2025

Invenergy

Invenergy

1,001-5,000 employees

Develops and operates renewable energy projects

Compensation Overview

$28.67 - $48.58/hr

+ Bonus (0%-10%)

No H1B Sponsorship

Hermiston, OR, USA

In Person

Category
Mechanical Engineering (1)
Requirements
  • High school diploma or equivalent
  • One (1) year technical experience (mechanical, electrical, etc.) and/or technical education.
  • Must be able to work outdoors in inclement weather, climb ladders without assistance, and work at heights greater than 80 meters (250 feet).
  • Ability to move and manipulate up to 45 kg (100 pounds).
  • Weight must not exceed 120 kg (265 lbs.) excluding equipment/gear worn when performing job related tasks.
  • Valid driver’s license and acceptable driving record.
  • Eligible to work in the United States without the need for employer visa sponsorship now or in the future.
  • This is a safety sensitive position. Individuals receiving conditional offers of employment will be subject to drug testing and must receive a negative result to begin working for the company.
Responsibilities
  • Perform routine mechanical and electrical maintenance on GE wind turbine and associated equipment
  • Climb wind turbine towers daily, wearing all required safety equipment, to inspect, maintain, or repair equipment.
  • Understand electrical and mechanical functions of all components of a wind turbine generator and associated equipment
  • Troubleshoot mechanical and electrical faults; repair and/or replace components
  • Maintain company tooling, facilities and equipment and a clean safe work environment
  • Work a 40-hour work week and be subject to scheduled and unscheduled overtime. The work schedule will vary during the peak maintenance periods

Invenergy develops and operates large-scale sustainable energy projects worldwide. It covers the full lifecycle from development and construction to ongoing operations, selling the generated energy to utilities and large industrial customers. Its portfolio includes wind, solar, energy storage, natural gas, and clean water solutions across 176 projects on four continents, serving about 8.2 million homes. The company differentiates itself with in-house, end-to-end project execution and long-term partnerships, and aims to expand its clean-energy portfolio while applying digital tools to improve efficiency and reliability.

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

Debt Financing

Total Funding

$8.9B

Headquarters

Chicago, Illinois

Founded

2001

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Three 3 GW Arizona gas plants online 2027-2029 power AI data centers.
  • 240-MW Ohio solar and 300-MW Texas solar boost renewable capacity.
  • $2.5B Natixis credit facility and GFH investment fuel expansion.

What critics are saying

  • 2028 climate administration imposes carbon taxes stranding Arizona gas assets.
  • Battery costs drop below $50/kWh by 2028 cancels gas contracts.
  • $2.5B facility refinancing spikes 300 bps in 2028 amid high rates.

What makes Invenergy unique

  • Invenergy develops 36 GW across wind, solar, gas, storage globally.
  • Largest privately-held power producer handles full project lifecycle.
  • Combines renewables with gas plants for 24/7 baseload reliability.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

Paid Vacation

Performance Bonus

Company News

RENEW Wisconsin
Feb 27th, 2026
2026 RENEW Wisconsin Summit Recap

2026 RENEW Wisconsin Summit recap. On Thursday, February 5, 2026, RENEW held its 15th annual RENEW Wisconsin Summit, presented by Invenergy and Dimension Energy. More than 600 Attendees from across the country joined RENEW Wisconsin to discuss policy, legislation, and the future of energy, and how RENEW Wisconsin will use clean energy to make Wisconsin more resilient! It's hard to believe this event has been going on for so long, but it serves as proof that its industry is a resilient one. This year, RENEW Wisconsin made some small changes to its Summit, and RENEW Wisconsin were happy to hear that most of them went unnoticed. That's what RENEW Wisconsin had hoped for! What changed, you ask? For the most part, RENEW Wisconsin cut back on things that felt excessive, like the overall amount of food and some similar small parts of the Summit. Though RENEW Wisconsin is all about clean energy, RENEW Wisconsin also understand the importance of reducing waste in everything RENEW Wisconsin do. Besides that, RENEW Wisconsin did what RENEW Wisconsin do every year - RENEW Wisconsin focused on programming that RENEW Wisconsin felt best represented current events so that RENEW Wisconsin could have timely conversations about its industry, however difficult. RENEW Wisconsin certainly did have some interesting conversations this year, as well as a couple that might have been difficult or uncomfortable for some. That said, RENEW Wisconsin hope you walked away from its programming with a stronger idea of the energy issues facing RENEW Wisconsin in 2026 and some ideas of how RENEW Wisconsin can address them. It's its hope that the Summit serves as a launching pad for the remainder of the year. If its sessions on data centers, nuclear power, community benefits of utility-scale renewables, financing, or any of the others spurred an idea, RENEW Wisconsin'd love to hear it. Together, RENEW Wisconsin can turn these ideas into action as RENEW Wisconsin continue to build a more resilient Wisconsin by expanding renewable energy. And finally, RENEW Wisconsin'd like to share some gratitude. The RENEW Wisconsin Summit comes together through the tireless efforts of its staff, board, volunteers, the many speakers who join RENEW Wisconsin, its generous sponsors, and even its many attendees. The collective effort of the renewable energy industry is what makes this event so special, at least RENEW Wisconsin certainly consider it special. It's its hope that this event means something to all of you as well, because RENEW Wisconsin is doing it again. RENEW Wisconsin admittedly don't have many of the details worked out just yet for the 16th RENEW Wisconsin Summit, but RENEW Wisconsin do know that RENEW Wisconsin'll be back on February 4, 2027. RENEW Wisconsin hope you'll join RENEW Wisconsin then! I know I already said "and finally," but I do have one more thing. Below is a gallery of photos from the event. RENEW Wisconsin know that photos don't quite do it justice. RENEW Wisconsin promise to have session recordings available within the next couple of weeks. Thanks again to everyone, you all make the yearly effort worth it!

Trading Market Signals
Feb 23rd, 2026
Natural Gas Power Plants Surge as AI Data Centers Drive Unprecedented Energy Demand

Natural Gas power plants surge as AI data centers drive unprecedented energy demand. Natural gas power plants are rapidly becoming the backbone of America's energy expansion, driven by an unprecedented surge in electricity demand from AI data centers, industrial reshoring, and electrification trends. Invenergy's announcement of three new gas-fired facilities in Arizona underscores a broader shift that investors cannot afford to ignore. As the United States races to meet soaring power needs, natural gas is emerging as the pragmatic bridge fuel that keeps the lights on while renewable capacity catches up. This week's developments in the energy sector paint a clear picture: the era of declining US power demand is over. From tech giants scrambling to secure electricity for their AI operations to utilities fast-tracking new generation capacity, the implications for energy stocks, infrastructure plays, and the broader market are substantial. Natural Gas power plants take center stage in Arizona. Invenergy, one of the largest privately held energy companies in North America, has finalized supply agreements for three new natural gas-fired power plants in Arizona. The projects, expected to come online between 2027 and 2029, represent a combined capacity exceeding 3 gigawatts - enough to power roughly 2.3 million homes. Arizona has become a hotspot for energy development, thanks to its booming population, favorable business climate, and the explosive growth of data center campuses in the Phoenix metropolitan area. Companies like Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, and Google have all announced major data center expansions in the state, each requiring enormous amounts of reliable, around-the-clock power. The choice of natural gas over purely renewable sources reflects a hard reality: solar and wind power, while increasingly cost-competitive, cannot yet deliver the 24/7 baseload reliability that data centers and industrial facilities require. Natural gas plants can ramp up and down quickly, complementing intermittent renewable generation and ensuring grid stability during peak demand periods. Why AI data centers are reshaping energy demand. The artificial intelligence revolution is not just transforming the tech sector - it is fundamentally altering the energy landscape. Training large language models and running inference at scale requires staggering amounts of electricity. A single large AI data center can consume as much power as a small city, and the number of these facilities is growing exponentially. According to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), US electricity demand is projected to grow by 15-20% over the next decade, reversing two decades of relatively flat consumption. Data centers alone could account for 8-10% of total US electricity consumption by 2030, up from roughly 4% today. This surge has caught many utilities and grid operators off guard. Permitting and building new generation capacity takes years, creating a supply bottleneck that natural gas is uniquely positioned to fill. Unlike nuclear plants, which take a decade or more to build, or large-scale battery storage, which remains expensive at grid scale, gas-fired plants can be constructed in 2-3 years and deliver reliable power immediately. The numbers behind the power crunch. Consider the scale of what's happening. In 2025 alone, US utilities announced over 50 gigawatts of new natural gas generation capacity - the highest figure in over 15 years. Major players like NVIDIA, whose chips power the AI revolution, are indirectly driving this energy buildout. Every new AI training cluster requires a reliable power source, and natural gas delivers. The Reuters Energy desk reported last week that natural gas futures have firmed significantly in 2026, with Henry Hub prices trading above .50 per million BTU - a level that makes new gas plant construction highly profitable for developers and attractive for the utilities that sign long-term power purchase agreements. Energy stocks positioned to benefit. For investors, the natural gas power buildout creates opportunities across multiple segments of the energy and utility sectors. Here are the key areas to watch: Independent Power Producers (IPPs): Companies like Vistra Energy (VST), NRG Energy (NRG), and Constellation Energy (CEG) own and operate large fleets of gas-fired power plants. As electricity prices rise and demand contracts grow, these companies stand to see significant earnings growth. Vistra, in particular, has seen its stock price more than double over the past 18 months as the market prices in higher power demand. Natural Gas Producers: Upstream companies like EQT Corporation (EQT), Coterra Energy (CTRA), and Antero Resources (AR) benefit from higher gas prices and increased demand. The shift from coal to gas, combined with LNG exports and domestic power generation, creates a multi-decade tailwind for US natural gas production. Pipeline and Midstream Operators: Companies like Williams Companies (WMB), Kinder Morgan (KMI), and ONEOK (OKE) transport natural gas from production basins to power plants and export terminals. New generation capacity in states like Arizona, Texas, and Virginia means more gas must flow through pipelines, boosting volumes and revenues for midstream operators. Utilities with Gas Exposure: Regulated utilities such as NextEra Energy (NEE), Southern Company (SO), and AES Corporation (AES) are investing heavily in new gas-fired capacity to meet growing demand in their service territories. These stocks offer a more defensive way to play the theme, with steady dividends and regulated returns. The policy and regulatory landscape. The political environment has shifted meaningfully in favor of natural gas development. The current administration has taken a pragmatic approach to energy policy, recognizing that meeting AI-driven electricity demand requires all available resources. Permitting reform efforts are streamlining approvals for new gas plants and pipelines, reducing the regulatory timeline that previously delayed projects by years. At the state level, economic competition for tech investment is pushing governors to fast-track energy infrastructure. Arizona, Texas, Virginia, and Georgia are all competing to attract data center campuses, and reliable, abundant electricity is a key differentiator. States that can deliver power quickly are winning the race for billions in tech investment. Environmental groups have raised concerns about the expansion of gas-fired generation, arguing it locks in fossil fuel emissions for decades. However, the industry counters that modern combined-cycle gas plants emit roughly 50-60% less carbon dioxide than coal plants and that natural gas provides essential grid reliability while renewable energy and storage technology continue to mature. Investment risks to consider. While the outlook for natural gas power is compelling, investors should be aware of several risks. Regulatory changes could increase costs or slow permitting. A faster-than-expected buildout of renewable energy and battery storage could reduce the need for gas generation over time. Natural gas prices are inherently volatile, and a sustained downturn could squeeze margins for producers and developers alike. Additionally, the broader market environment matters. Rising interest rates increase the cost of capital for energy infrastructure projects, potentially slowing the pace of new construction. Investors should monitor Federal Reserve policy and credit markets alongside energy fundamentals. What this means for your portfolio. The convergence of AI-driven electricity demand, favorable policy, and constrained power supply creates a multi-year investment theme in natural gas infrastructure. For portfolio positioning, consider a diversified approach: * Growth exposure: IPPs like Vistra and Constellation offer the most direct upside to rising power prices and data center contracts. * Income plays: Midstream operators like Williams and Kinder Morgan provide attractive dividend yields (typically 4-6%) with volume-driven growth. * Defensive positions: Regulated utilities offer stable returns and dividend growth, though with less upside than pure-play gas stocks. * Upstream optionality: Gas producers benefit from higher prices but carry commodity price risk. EQT and Coterra are well-positioned with low-cost Appalachian and Permian Basin assets. The key takeaway is that natural gas is not a sunset industry - it is experiencing a renaissance driven by the same technological forces that are reshaping the global economy. Investors who position early in this theme could benefit from years of structural demand growth. Looking ahead: the week in energy. This week, markets will be watching for several key catalysts. The Bloomberg Energy team notes that EIA natural gas storage data, due Wednesday, will provide insight into supply-demand dynamics heading into the spring shoulder season. Additionally, several utility companies report quarterly earnings this week, offering forward guidance on capital spending plans and demand outlooks. With the S&P 500 trading near record highs above 6,900 and the Dow Jones approaching the 50,000 milestone, energy infrastructure stocks remain relatively undervalued compared to the AI darlings that dominate market headlines. That disconnect may not last as the market increasingly recognizes that every AI chip needs a power plant behind it.

CD Recycling Center of America
Oct 13th, 2025
Arcwood Environmental appoints chief communications and sustainability officer

Arcwood Environmental appoints chief communications and sustainability officer. Arcwood Environmental, an Indianapolis-based EQT Infrastructure portfolio company, has appointed Carol Roos to chief communications and sustainability officer (CCSO), effective October 13. Roos joins from Invenergy, where she served as senior vice president of corporate affairs and brand. In this role, Arcwood says she led corporate, executive and policy communications, brand development and local impact for the company's portfolio of clean energy, manufacturing and infrastructure projects. "We are thrilled to welcome Carol," Arcwood CEO HP Nanda says. "Working across the spectrum of communications, investor relations and reputation management, Carol brings a multi-faceted understanding of the importance of engagement with a diverse range of stakeholders. Her ability to craft compelling narratives and drive sustainability strategy will help us better connect with our customers, meeting their evolving expectations with transparency, innovation and impact." As CCSO, Roos will lead Arcwood's corporate communications, public affairs and sustainability strategy while working with executive leadership to elevate the company's voice, strengthen stakeholder trust and embed sustainability into the business. "Environmental waste management is central to building a more sustainable and resilient future," Roos says. "Arcwood is demonstrating that innovative and responsible resource management can create real value for businesses and communities alike. I'm excited to work with the Arcwood team and our customers to expand that impact and help shape a cleaner, more efficient world." McLanahan offers complete C&D Recycling systems designed to transform construction and demolition debris into reusable aggregate. Their tailored systems include feeding, crushing, screening, scrubbing, washing, classifying, dewatering, sampling, water recycling and tailings management, leading to sustainable, circular-economy operations while reducing reliance on landfills and the need for virgin aggregates. Get curated news on YOUR industry.

Crooks and Liars
Oct 11th, 2025
Solar Company Donates Millions To Trump's Ballroom, He Cuts Funding To Their Projects

NextEra Energy, one of the largest utility companies in the country, was partnering with Invenergy, a solar and wind farm company.

List Solar
Jun 16th, 2025
Invenergy Starts Building 240-MW Pleasant Prairie Solar Project in Ohio

Invenergy breaks ground on the 240-MW Pleasant Prairie Solar Energy Center in Franklin County, Ohio, investing USD 230 m and creating 300 construction jobs.

INACTIVE