A company called in to deliver
On a smaller, 62.5-megawatt project in 2023 in Jicarilla, New Mexico, Black & Veatch was brought in by Repsol to complete construction and commission the project. Repsol needed a partner who could step in, solve complex challenges and execute efficiently.
The project was finished in a safe, timely manner, and Repsol entrusted Black & Veatch with Pinnington, its largest solar effort yet.
“The Jicarilla and Pinnington projects are perfect examples of how Black & Veatch collaborates with our clients to solve their most complex and urgent challenges” said Anand Pattani, managing director of the energy majors segment at Black & Veatch.
Urgency to action: the Pinnington Solar ramp up
As Repsol’s flagship U.S. project, Pinnington Solar helped anchor its renewable energy portfolio. But the challenges in making it a reality were immediate and significant: an aggressive deadline and a project scale stretching beyond anything Black & Veatch had ever built in the renewable space.
To meet the schedule, the team began engineering work before the full contract was finalized, creatively progressing portions of the work to keep momentum advancing.
Once the full agreement was signed in May 2024, transitioning to action was nearly instantaneous. Crews mobilized within four days, equipment began arriving and the site transformed almost overnight into a coordinated construction effort.
Marshaling a workforce built for speed
Delivering at this scale required more than manpower. It required the right manpower.
As a Black & Veatch construction subsidiary, Overland Contracting Inc. (OCI) brought together experienced craft professionals who previously had worked alongside trusted leaders and had established chemistry, shared standards and a deep understanding of how to execute under pressure.
Daily operations revolved around detailed planning and constant communication. Teams worked from tightly coordinated look-ahead schedules, ensuring that materials, labor and equipment aligned precisely with construction needs.
Vendors were held accountable. Deliveries were sequenced carefully. And across the site, hundreds of workers moved with a shared understanding of what needed to happen — and when.
The result: a level of efficiency that allowed the project to maintain its aggressive pace without sacrificing safety or quality.
When disaster struck, momentum held