Carbon Removal MRV Engineer
About the Position
CarbonCure Technologies develops carbon removal and utilization solutions for the concrete industry. Their patented technology injects captured CO2 into fresh concrete, where it mineralizes permanently, reducing the carbon footprint of concrete while improving its strength. CarbonCure’s technology is used in over 700 concrete plants worldwide.
As a Carbon Removal MRV Engineer, you will develop and maintain the measurement, reporting, and verification systems that quantify the carbon removal achieved by CarbonCure’s technology. Your work will underpin the company’s carbon credit generation and customer sustainability reporting.
Responsibilities
- Develop and validate methodologies for quantifying CO2 mineralization in concrete
- Build and maintain MRV data pipelines and reporting systems
- Conduct life cycle assessments for CarbonCure’s products and processes
- Support carbon credit verification audits with third-party registries
- Collaborate with R&D and product teams to integrate MRV into new technology deployments
What You’ll Work On
- Scaling MRV systems to support CarbonCure’s rapid expansion to new markets and product lines
- Developing real-time carbon accounting dashboards for customers
- Contributing to industry standards for carbon removal quantification in building materials
- Supporting CarbonCure’s participation in voluntary and compliance carbon markets
Requirements
- BSc or MSc in Chemical Engineering, Environmental Engineering, or Materials Science
- 2-4 years of experience in carbon measurement, reporting, and verification (MRV)
- Understanding of carbon credit methodologies and life cycle assessment (LCA)
- Experience with data analysis using Python, R, or similar tools
- Knowledge of concrete chemistry or mineral carbonation is a strong asset
What They Offer
- Stock options in a growing climate tech company
- Comprehensive health and dental benefits
- Flexible hybrid work arrangements
- Professional development budget
- Meaningful work reducing carbon emissions in the built environment