Careers in Ocean Engineering
The Ph.D. in ocean engineering prepares graduates for advanced technical and leadership roles where they design, direct and innovate. They lead research teams and serve as experts in academia, government and industry worldwide.
Doctoral training builds deep expertise in hydrodynamics, coastal processes, marine materials, ocean energy, instrumentation and underwater systems, equipping graduates to address complex global challenges in ocean infrastructure, exploration and resource management.
Graduates pursue roles across a variety of sectors:
- Industry and innovation: senior ocean engineer, naval architect (R&D), offshore renewable energy engineer, ROV/AUV systems engineer, subsea pipeline engineer, marine operations director
- Government and regulation: coastal or hydrographic engineer, research engineer (e.g., national laboratories), environmental and coastal resilience engineer, ocean data scientist/analyst.
- Academia and consulting: university faculty/researcher, postdoctoral fellow, project manager—offshore or coastal systems.
With doctoral-level skills in advanced numerical modeling, experimental methods and specialized field research, graduates contribute to innovation in offshore engineering, ocean-technology companies, national laboratories and critical environmental and regulatory agencies.
Note: Employment data reflect positions commonly associated with this field. Many Ph.D. graduates go on to academic, leadership and advanced research, technical and analytical roles not captured here.