Jobs on TAL
All jobsOnsiteFinanceenergy and industrial infrastructure2-8 yearsfinancial modeling
OnsiteMid Levelenergy and industrial infrastructure

Financial Analyst /Advisor - Financial Modelling & Evaluation of Utility Scale Solar Renewable Projects

ENGIE IndiaPune, Maharashtra, IndiaPosted 18 May 2026

This role at ENGIE India focuses on financial modeling, valuation, and risk analysis for greenfield and M&A solar projects within the AIFA team. The incumbent will be responsible for preparing financial models, managing financing plans, and performing tax and accounting impact assessments. Candidates should possess strong financial modeling skills, expertise in excel, and a deep understanding of renewable energy business frameworks. This is an independent contributor role based in Pune.

Matched by TAL

50k new jobs listed every day. Install TAL to find more jobs like this.

Install TAL

Experience

2-8 years

Function

Finance

Work mode

Onsite, India

Company

Tier 2

What you will work on

This role at ENGIE India focuses on financial modeling, valuation, and risk analysis for greenfield and M&A solar projects within the AIFA team. The incumbent will be responsible for preparing financial models, managing financing plans, and performing tax and accounting impact assessments. Candidates should possess strong financial modeling skills, expertise in excel, and a deep understanding of renewable energy business frameworks. This is an independent contributor role based in Pune.

TAL's take

Quality 65/1005/5 clarityTier 2 company

Solid role within a reputable global energy firm with well-defined responsibilities in project finance and financial modeling.

The JD is very specific about the team function (AIFA), responsibilities, and necessary background in project finance/renewable energy.

Must haves

  • 2-8 years experience in financial modelling
  • Proficiency in excel including writing basic macros
  • Understanding of renewable energy business and risk allocation
  • Proficiency in financial valuation methodology
  • Finance or economics based degree or professional qualification

Tools and skills

financial modelingexcelfinancial valuation methodology

Nice to have: macros.

About the company

ENGIE is a well-established multinational energy company with a significant presence in India.

Posts mentioning ENGIE India

Vehicle Recommendation

I have my mother's 8-year-old scooty activa—50k around km. Good condition. One minor problem that mileage is little low due to old engine. Can anyone recommend what I should do? Should I bring it to Banglore from Rajasthan? Or buy new one?

Bangalore79

Waves of corporatisation in India

Corporatisation can be generally referred to as standardisation and formalisation of a business firm along the modern techno-industrial lines. This practice of corporatisation began in Britain during industrial revolution when big companies based on coal, iron and steam engine set up industries across England and there was a need for standardisation of business operation of a particular company all across the country. This later spread to United States (beginning from Cotton textiles and plantation firm having large holdings), France and Germany during 19th century. As far as India is concerned, it has witnessed four waves of corporatisation First wave of corporatisation was based on Kolkata beginning with East India Company, which gradually opened up for multiple English companies after 1858 GoI Act. Later on several companies of textiles, chemicals and heavy industries opened their offices in Kolkata, of whom many beginning to be owned by Indians too. Second wave of corporatisation began in Bombay Mumbai when Manchester based textiles companies opened up their head offices in Mumbai in purpose of handling export of raw cotton from Gujarat and Maharashtra and importing finished textiles from England through Mumbai port. Later on several Gujrati Marwari textile companies opened factories and offices in Mumbai. Corporatisation in Mumbai went for a long period of time I would say, even after independence. It benefitted from spread of communism in Bengal, which made Kolkata unattractive destination for investment, and LPG reforms, after which companies boomed in India who subsequently only found Mumbai as most suitable site for office. Third wave of corporatisation began in Delhi-NCR, Bangalore and Hyderabad coinciding with IT boom in India. Availability of talent pool became the biggest common factor triggering corporatisation in these three cities. We are currently in fourth wave of corporatisation which is not limited to handful of big cities. Corporate world also streching their roots to multiple cities like Chennai, Vishakhapatnam, Ahemdabad, Bhubaneswar, Indore, Jaipur, Lucknow etc as well. Companies are opening their offices in other cities as well for managing their operations in regional level. Several start-up companies are also emerging. In future companies likely to shift their peripheral operations involving technical staff in other cities and limit only managerial level tasks in respective offices in big cities.

Indian Startups51

Billion Indians have no money to spend

The country's central bank has also cracked down on easy unsecured lending that propped up demand after the Covid pandemic. Much of the consumption spending of the "emerging" or "aspirant" class of Indians was led by such borrowing and "turning off that tap will definitely have some impact on consumption", says Pai. In the short run, two things are expected to help boost spending - a pick-up in rural demand on the back of a record harvest and a $12 billion tax give-away in the recently concluded budget. It will not be "dramatic" but could boost India's GDP - largely driven by consumption - by over half a percent India's middle class - which has been a major engine for consumer demand - is being squeezed out, with wages pretty much staying flat, according to data compiled by Marcellus Investment Managers. "The middle 50% of India's tax-paying population has seen its income stagnate in absolute terms over the past decade. This implies a halving of income in real terms [adjusted for inflation]," says the report, published in January.

News Discussion2211