Videos

By Roadtrip Nation

Daniella Piper

Milestones

My road in life has been direct.
I was born in Trinidad and Tobago.
I grew up watching my dad, an electrician, work on projects around the house, which inspired my interest in electrical engineering.
I earned my associate degree in electrical and electronics engineering and then spent a few years working on the construction of process plants in Trinidad and Tobago.
I came to the U.S. and attended the City College of New York, where I studied electrical engineering.
I learned about the New York Power Authority because they were doing energy efficiency updates at my college—I applied for an internship and was able to start my career with the organization.
I started at the New York Power Authority as an electrical engineer and have worked my way up through various engineering roles to my current role as regional manager and chief transformation officer.
Keep following my journey

Education

High School
Associate's Degree
Electrical and Electronics Engineering
San Fernando Technical Institute
Bachelor
Electrical Engineering
The City College of New York
Graduate
Power Systems
New York University - Polytechnic School of Engineering
Graduate
Construction Management
Manhattan College
Certification/License
Energy Executive Program
University of Idaho
Certification/License
Executive Education, Advanced Management Program
Harvard Business School

Career

Chief Transformation Officer & Regional Manager of Western New York

I lead the team at the Niagara Power Project to transform the energy landscape in New York.

Career Roadmap

Roadmap
My work combines:
My work combines:
Engineering
Environment & Nature
Accomplishing Goals

Day to Day

We have multiple facilities spread across a large area that I may be working at. For example, if there's maintenance at one of the units, I'll go speak with the supervisor and team to see how the job is going. I'm also involved in making decisions around investments and assets. I may be on a call with headquarters talking about large project investments, the scope of the project, what the priority is, etc. We're also always working toward improving safety so I may be in conversations about that.

Advice for Getting Started

Here's the first step for college students

Do some research to see what large organizations are doing in sustainability and get some ideas of where you can work. Every company is confronted by this now, so there will be lots of opportunities—you just have to decide which area you want to go into.

Interviewed By

Empowered State

Empowered State

The state of New York leads a clean energy revolution