Rotating Equipment Specialist
Neste is seeking a Rotating Equipment Specialist to join their Asset Management team in Tuas South, Singapore. The role involves ensuring the reliability and safety of rotating equipment through predictive maintenance, root cause analysis, and cross-departmental collaboration. Candidates must have a mechanical engineering degree and extensive experience in refinery or petrochemical environments. You will play a key role in managing maintenance strategies and supporting major projects at the refinery.
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Experience
5+ years
Function
Engineering
Work mode
Onsite, Singapore
Company
Tier 2
What you will work on
Neste is seeking a Rotating Equipment Specialist to join their Asset Management team in Tuas South, Singapore. The role involves ensuring the reliability and safety of rotating equipment through predictive maintenance, root cause analysis, and cross-departmental collaboration. Candidates must have a mechanical engineering degree and extensive experience in refinery or petrochemical environments. You will play a key role in managing maintenance strategies and supporting major projects at the refinery.
Must haves
- Degree in Mechanical Engineering
- Minimum 5 years experience in Refinery and Petrochemical environment
- Focused experience on Rotating Equipment
- Experience in Turnarounds and maintenance execution
- Proficient in Vibration and Lube Oil Analysis
- Knowledge of ASME and API standards
Tools and skills
About the company
Established global energy company, but not within the core tech/software tier 1 definitions.
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Nestlé’s baby food brands including Cerelac and Nido added sugar in the form of sucrose, in lower and lower-middle income countries including India — but not in the products sold in Europe or UK, according to a report by Swiss investigative organisation Public Eye and International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN). The research was conducted at a lab in Belgium, and examined Nestlé’s baby food products from Asia, and Africa branded as Cerelac, Nido, Mucilon and Dancow. These contained an average of 3 grams per serving, and in some cases up to 6 grams. Similar products tested in the European markets showed no added sugar. A Nestlé India spokesperson has attested that the company has reduced the sugar content in the baby product portfolio by 30% over the past five years, NDTV reported. In 2022, the sales on these products exceeded Rs.20,000 crore in India alone. Nestlé has been under the scanner in the past for similar violations in several African countries. Reports from the 1970s raised the alarms on their unethical marketing practices in an effort to push artificial feeding over breastfeeding.
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