CE&I Designer

Warrington
1 month ago
Create job alert

CE&I Designer – Nuclear Decommissioning Projects (General Overview)

Role Summary:
The CE&I (Control, Electrical & Instrumentation) Designer supports nuclear decommissioning and legacy facility projects by producing high-quality design packages, drawings, and technical documentation. The role involves working within multi-disciplinary teams to develop safe, compliant, and fit-for-purpose CE&I solutions aligned with project requirements, industry standards, and regulatory expectations.

Key Responsibilities



Develop CE&I design deliverables including:

*

Electrical schematics

*

Cable routing layouts

*

Loop diagrams and termination drawings

*

Instrumentation data sheets

*

Control system architecture drawings

*

Support the production of design documentation such as Basis of Design, Technical Specifications, Calculations, and Design Justification Reports.

*

Work within established nuclear design processes including configuration control, quality assurance procedures, and engineering change systems.

*

Collaborate with engineers from CE&I, mechanical, civil, and process disciplines to develop integrated design solutions for decommissioning equipment, handling systems, remote operations, and plant modifications.

*

Participate in design reviews, hazard studies (e.g., HAZOPs), and constructability assessments.

*

Produce designs suitable for construction, ensuring clarity, accuracy, and maintainability.

Essential Skills & Experience

*

Experience in CE&I design within regulated industries, ideally nuclear or similarly high-hazard environments.

*

Proficiency in design software such as AutoCAD, MicroStation, or other electrical drafting tools.

*

Understanding of:

*

Low-voltage distribution

*

Instrumentation and control systems

*

Safety-related systems

*

Cable selection and routing

*

Familiarity with nuclear quality standards (e.g., BS, IEC, IEEE).

*

Ability to interpret engineering drawings and work within formal change-control processes.

Desirable Experience

*

Previous involvement in decommissioning, remote handling, waste retrieval, or legacy plant upgrade projects.

*

Knowledge of Sellafield, Magnox, or other UK nuclear site processes and engineering workflows.

*

Experience supporting installation, commissioning, or testing phases.

*

Awareness of cybersecurity considerations for control systems.

Personal Attributes

*

Detail-focused with a commitment to producing high-quality, compliant design output.

*

Strong problem-solving ability with a practical, safety-driven approach.

*

Able to work independently as well as collaboratively.

*

Comfortable working within structured, highly regulated environments

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Electrical Maintenance Engineer

IT Security Officer (Governance & Compliance)

Compliance & Sustainability Manager

Quality Assurance Manager

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Cyber Security Jobs for Career Switchers in Their 30s, 40s & 50s (UK Reality Check)

If you’re thinking about switching into cyber security in your 30s, 40s or 50s, you’re in good company. Across the UK, organisations of all sizes are hiring people from diverse backgrounds to protect systems, data & customers. But with hype around “hackers” & quick-win courses, it’s hard to separate reality from fiction. This guide gives you a UK reality check: which roles genuinely exist, what employers actually want, how training really works, what to expect on salary & progression & whether age matters. Whether you come from finance, project management, operations, law, HR or customer service, there is a credible route into cyber security if you approach it strategically.

How to Write a Cyber Security Job Ad That Attracts the Right People

Cyber security is now a board-level priority for organisations across the UK. From financial services and healthcare to critical infrastructure, SaaS platforms and the public sector, demand for skilled cyber security professionals continues to grow. Yet despite this demand, many employers struggle to attract the right candidates. Cyber security job adverts often generate large volumes of applications, but few are a genuine match. Meanwhile, experienced security engineers, analysts and architects quietly ignore adverts that feel vague, unrealistic or disconnected from real security work. In most cases, the problem is not a lack of talent — it is the quality of the job advert. Cyber security professionals are trained to assess risk, spot weaknesses and question assumptions. A poorly written job ad signals organisational immaturity and weak security culture. A well-written one signals seriousness, competence and trust. This guide explains how to write a cyber security job ad that attracts the right people, improves applicant quality and positions your organisation as a credible security employer.

Maths for Cyber Security Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them)

If you are applying for cyber security jobs in the UK it can feel like “real security people” must be brilliant at maths. The reality is simpler: most roles do not need degree-level pure maths. What they do need is confidence with a small set of practical topics that show up repeatedly in day-to-day work across SOC, incident response, cloud security, AppSec, threat detection, IAM & security engineering. This guide strips the maths down to what actually helps you get hired. It includes a 6-week learning plan plus portfolio projects you can publish to prove the skills. You will focus on: Number systems & bitwise thinking (binary, hex, bytes, XOR) Modular arithmetic basics (enough to understand how modern crypto “works”) Probability & statistics for detection, triage & risk Discrete maths for logic, sets, graphs & complexity Security maths habits: estimation, false positive control & evidence-led reporting You will not waste time on heavy theory that rarely appears in junior or mid-level cyber security roles.