Deputy General Counsel, Energy

Weights & Biases Weights & Biases · Data AI · Bellevue, WA +4 · Legal & Government Affairs

This role is for a Deputy General Counsel, Energy, at CoreWeave, a company that provides cloud infrastructure for AI. The role focuses on complex commercial power and related infrastructure transactions to support the deployment and operation of hyperscale data centers and high-performance compute environments. Responsibilities include advising on energy and power procurement, negotiating power agreements, and understanding regulatory frameworks. The role requires significant legal experience in energy and infrastructure transactions.

What you'd actually do

  1. Serve as a trusted legal advisor to C-Level and senior management on power strategy and transactions and solutions critical to CoreWeave’s global data center, infrastructure, and service offering growth. Advise on energy and power procurement for the company’s growing portfolio of data centers, sourcing of all energy resources, and contracting strategies with counterparties to support high-density compute workloads and data center operations.
  2. Lead and negotiate complex power agreements and programs supporting CoreWeave’s cloud and data center operations, including power purchase agreements (PPAs), LOI’s, build-to-transfer, renewable energy and other power generation sources, utility service, colocation, interconnection, and other energy infrastructure and development-related contracts and transactions involving the environmental attributes of clean power sources.
  3. Negotiate directly with utilities, energy providers, data center operators, contractors, suppliers, and strategic partners across domestic and international geographic markets.
  4. Partner closely with internal cross-functional working groups across strategic financing, commercial, data center operations, government affairs, sustainability, real estate, and finance teams to drive strategic infrastructure, energy, and capacity initiatives. Help execute long-term, scalable, cost-effective solutions.
  5. Support corporate development and project financing transactions, and help to coordinate legal aspects of energy and power procurement, infrastructure development, global data center construction, and ongoing operations.

Skills

Required

  • Juris Doctor (JD) from an accredited law school; active bar admission in at least one U.S. jurisdiction.
  • 15+ years of experience at a law firm and/or in-house legal department
  • Expertise in negotiating power purchase agreements and other commercial energy and power transactions.
  • Expertise in and knowledge of State and Federal statutes affecting the power sector, including the Federal Power Act, Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act and the Public Utility Holding Company Act.
  • Knowledge of PUC and FERC rules impacting the power sector and administrative procedures.
  • Knowledge of Independent System Operators and Regional Transmission Groups, including energy and capacity market participation and power markets.
  • Knowledge of transmission, including interconnection and transmission service agreements.

Nice to have

  • Experience with power and energy transactions and regulatory frameworks in international markets (e.g., EMEA, APAC, LatAm, Canada)
  • Strong background in energy, renewables, electric infrastructure development, and utility regulation, and their relationship with hyperscale cloud and data center infrastructure operations, expansion, and global growth
  • Experience with emerging technologies such as advanced nuclear and geothermal, and with legislation and regulatory matters affecting such technologies

What the JD emphasized

  • significant experience supporting complex cloud infrastructure, data centers, energy and power procurement, and large-scale commercial energy transactions
  • Expertise in negotiating power purchase agreements and other commercial energy and power transactions
  • Expertise in and knowledge of State and Federal statutes affecting the power sector, including the Federal Power Act, Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act and the Public Utility Holding Company Act.
  • Knowledge of PUC and FERC rules impacting the power sector and administrative procedures.
  • Knowledge of Independent System Operators and Regional Transmission Groups, including energy and capacity market participation and power markets.
  • Knowledge of transmission, including interconnection and transmission service agreements.