National Laboratory of the Rockies is the Department of Energy's primary research facility for energy systems. Their tech stack—PSCAD, RTDS, PowerFactory, OpenDSS, plus Python, R, Julia, and Gurobi—reflects deep domain modeling and optimization work. The hiring mix skews heavily toward interns and researchers (69 of 67 active roles), with security roles (7) and active projects around grid cybersecurity and inverter-based resource integration, indicating sustained focus on grid stability under high-penetration renewable scenarios.
Notable leadership hires: Laboratory Director
Established in 1977, National Laboratory of the Rockies operates as a nonprofit research facility under the U.S. Department of Energy from Golden, Colorado. The organization conducts fundamental and applied research across energy efficiency, systems integration, grid security, and emerging energy technologies. Current work spans power-system stability analysis, distributed energy cybersecurity assessment, data center load modeling, and grid resilience modeling—serving internal DOE programs and supporting national energy infrastructure planning. The lab employs 1,001–5,000 staff across engineering, research, security, and data functions.
Primary tools include PSCAD, RTDS, AspenPlus, OpenDSS, DIgSILENT PowerFactory, and SimaPro. Optimization is handled via Gurobi and Pyomo. Analysis languages: Python, R, Julia.
Yes. Engineering roles represent the largest active department (31 of 67 total open roles), with recent postings skewing toward intern and mid-level positions. Hiring is concentrated in the United States.
Active projects focus on power-grid stability with high inverter-based resource penetration, grid cybersecurity, distributed energy system resilience, data center load modeling, and cyber-attack mitigation for power distribution networks.
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