23, Electrical Engineer doing Instrumentation, Controls and Electrical (ICE) engineering work for the Oil & Gas industry. We also have some alternative energy projects as well.
I currently keep 6 cogeneration facilities in the state of California running. Each plant generates from 75 to 300 MW of power on demand, which is enough to power from 75000 to 300000 homes.
The energy is sold dirt cheap to power grids in the local area in order to help offset peak demand, and the steam generated is sold to the oil fields in order to help them get the crude oil out of the ground.
We pride ourselves on efficiency, low emissions, and rapid response to energy demands.
I make 91,000 a year before taxes. After taxes, insurance, etc. I probably see around 45% of that.
I have little living expenses beyond a modest rent (still at home with parents), car, student loans, and bills like phone, storage space, etc.
I'm pretty content, the work is challenging but the work/life balance is good, and I feel the pay is great for where I live.
I just hate when I'm asked because my friends and some of my family don't all make nearly as much so it becomes awkward. I'd just rather pay for meals and stuff when we're all out to show my appreciation for having me spend my time off with them.
THIS is why this thread is depressing, and how much luck plays into it. Someone worked hard with no certs and is doing well (which is awesome), i murdered myself in shit jobs WITH certs, and im making literally HALF of some other posters here.
Luck definitely has a play in these things, which is why I always chuckle when people say all they had to do is "work hard." I mean granted, I've worked really hard to be here, but I was fortunate to get one of the few temp work positions right out of high school with this company that led to my two summer internships that led to the position I'm in now. Hard work only gets you so far, you have to know when to make that lucky break work.
Good grief, please go work in the private sector. You don't solve Navier-Stokes transport phenomena problems to make $50k a year with 15 years of experience.
Yeah I'd agree with that. If you have any certifications, you'd be valuable basically anywhere with that kind of credentials.
I need to work on my credentials, but my job has had me training so much I've been lazy about anything else.