Post by Palma Kocsis

Process Engineer | Biotechnology & Polymer Processes | Cross-functional Team Player | Pilot Plant & Process Optimization | Project Engineering | P&ID • Scale-up • HAZOP • Continuous Improvement

One lesson that engineering projects continue to teach me is that no one builds a successful plant alone. šŸ¤ Recently, while reading the 2025 Sustainability Report from Technip Energies, one message particularly resonated with me: creating lasting impact requires collaboration across people, disciplines, and organizations. šŸŒāš™ļø As a Process Engineer šŸ‘·ā€ā™€ļø šŸ‘©ā€šŸ’» , I regularly work with colleagues from piping, instrumentation, R&D, and other engineering disciplines šŸ¤. While we may all be looking at the same system, each discipline sees it from a different perspective. šŸ” The more project documentation I review, the more I realize how much knowledge is distributed across different teams. Questions about an instrument may be answered by instrumentation specialists. Details about equipment may be found in mechanical documentation. Process-related decisions often require input from several experts. šŸ‘©ā€šŸ”¬šŸ‘©ā€šŸ’»šŸ‘©ā€šŸ’¼ What makes engineering fascinating is not only solving technical challenges, but also bringing together different areas of expertise to achieve a common goal. šŸ“āš’ļøšŸ’» Successful projects are rarely the result of individual effort. They are the result of collaboration, communication, and the willingness to learn from one another. šŸ’”šŸŒ± Every conversation adds another piece to the bigger picture. 🧩 For anyone interested in learning more about Technip Energies' sustainability journey and future ambitions, I highly recommend taking a look at the 2025 Sustainability Report. šŸ‘‰ https://lnkd.in/dcw55Ykq #Engineering #ProcessEngineering #Teamwork #Collaboration #Sustainability #TechnipEnergies

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