r/ChemicalEngineering • u/MistakeSea6886 • Sep 21 '23
Salary What’s the most profitable career path?
I’m a freshmen Engineering major that is taking gen Ed’s. I am thinking of switching to chemical engineering next year. I really like ChE but but want to pick a profitable career path, which is why I’m on the fence between it and Computer science. I did research and found that petroleum engineering is very profitable, and ChE can pick it pretty quickly. However with the way the world is going(more green energy), are renewable energy jobs such as nuclear power plants going to experience a boom in demand and become more profitable?
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u/[deleted] Sep 21 '23 edited Sep 22 '23
If you want nothing out of a major other than the most money possible, I can advise you to look elsewhere. Not in saying that ChemE is a desolate career field; on average, it’s far from it. But there are definitely more profitable majors to choose from if all you want is money out of a career (compsci, compE, tech sales).
We are chemical engineers because we want to solve the worlds problems. We’re intelligent in chemical processes, thermodynamics, fluids, reactor design, separations, and material balances, and utilising this knowledge, we make the world a better place by solving problems, scaling up commercial processes, and managing and designing reactors. If this sounds like something you’re interested in, I’d look deeper into the coursework of a BS and the career fields available to you in ChemE.
You’ll make good money as a ChemE, enough to live comfortably. But do you ENJOY what you do? Trust me, and everyone else who’s made the same mistake, that that is a more important question.