Planning Engineer
RigUp
Job Description
Title : Planning Engineer II Location : Edmonton or Calgary Start : ASAP Duration : 1 year Work Model: Mon, Tues, Thurs in office. This role is best suited for experienced Engineers (Project Engineers, Field Engineers, Construction Engineers, or Executionâfocused Planning Engineers) who are comfortable working across many stakeholders simultaneously and who take ownership for advancing work, increasing inâyear execution, and seeing plans carried through to the field. The Planning Engineer enables safe, accelerated execution of a large, multiâbillionâdollar brownfield pipeline and facilities portfolio across multiple states and provinces.
The role focuses on advancing mechanical, electrical, and civil projects into service earlier by identifying risks, unlocking opportunities, and aligning engineering, procurement, construction, operations, supply chain, and investment owners. A core accountability is site layout planning and owning programâlevel risk and opportunity identification and driving executionâfocused optimizations, targeting gaining months or years of schedule through early enablement, sequencing, and stakeholder alignment. This is a senior executionâenablement engineering role, not a traditional scheduling or program reporting position.
Roles & Responsibilities Collaborate closely with Project Managers, Project Controls, Project Schedulers, Construction Managers, Regional Engineers, Regional Pipeline Maintenance teams, Supply Chain, and Investment Owners (Sponsors) to drive execution readiness, alignment, and followâthrough across the portfolio. Own execution readiness across a large, multiâyear portfolio of pipeline and facilities projects, ensuring work is mature, coordinated, and ready to execute when windows open. Identify programâlevel risks and opportunities and actively drive optimization actions that improve schedule certainty, resource capacity, and business investment value.
Identify opportunities to increase inâyear capital execution by advancing inâscope work, accelerating ISDs, and unlocking execution readiness ahead of plan. Proactively identify and enable new, highâvalue work that can be executed in conjunction with currently sanctioned scopes, improving capital efficiency, execution productivity, and business value. Evaluate capital vs. schedule tradeâoffs, including early engineering, longâlead materials, contractor capacity, procurement strategies, and enabling works.
Work with Supply Chain to align procurement strategies, vendor capacity, and material delivery timelines with execution and advancement opportunities. Engage Investment Owners / Sponsors to align scope, timing, funding, and valueârealization decisions in support of optimized and accelerated execution. Maintain the departmentâlevel Golden Project List, ensuring priorities reflect execution readiness, advancement opportunities, supplyâchain realities, and sponsor objectives.
Manage planning and progress data across 200+ projects, ensuring accuracy, consistency, and usability across regions. Develop and maintain spatial plot plans in GIS to manage congestion, sequencing, and resource constraints. Act as a central integration point between Engineering, Construction, Operations, Project Controls, Supply Chain, and Sponsors, bridging gaps between planning and field execution.
Apply negotiation and relationshipâbuilding skills to resolve constraints and ensure commitments translate into action, execution, and inâservice results. Travel up to 15% to engage field teams, facilities, suppliers, and regional offices across the pipeline system. What Success Looks Like Inâyear capital execution is increased through ISD advancement and scope pullâforward, not deferred.
Highâvalue tuckâin and complementary scopes (including across disciplines of electrical, civil and mechanical) are identified early, bundled as appropriate, and executed efficiently alongside sanctioned work. Materials, funding, and execution windows are aligned and not reactive. Risks are surfaced early and resolved collaboratively.
Commitments made in planning and sponsor forums are carried through to the field and into service.