Amir Rohi
Manager, Electrical Engineering BorgWarner
Amir Rohi was born in Tehran, Iran, and grew up in Germany near Heidelberg. He holds a B.Sc. in Mechatronics from TU Darmstadt and a M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Mannheim.
He currently leads a mechatronic product engineering team within eLine, part of the Global Product Engineering organization at the Kibo Tech Center, BorgWarner Systems Engineering GmbH, in Kirchheimbolanden, Germany.
In his role, Amir is responsible for electromagnetic motor design, industrialization and launch of electrical systems, and product sustainability initiatives, contributing to advanced high-voltage solutions such as HV eTurbo and HV eFan systems.
His work focuses on translating sustainability targets into robust, scalable engineering solutions across the product lifecycle.
2026 Event Agenda Sessions
Sustainability Engineering: Designing for Circularity in Electrical Systems
- EU regulation is moving fast, demanding durability, repairability, and recyclability by design - circularity can no longer be an afterthought, so what skills do young engineers need to develop?
- A deep dive into the specific challenges the industry needs future engineers to solve: rare earths in permanent magnets, complex composites in power electronics, and long-life assets like transformer cores that outlast the insulation around them.
- What does circularity look like as a practical engineering discipline, not just a compliance exercise?
Thursday 21 May 13:00 - 13:30 Central Grid
Diversity & Inclusion - Bridging the Talent Gap
- EU regulation is moving fast, demanding durability, repairability, and recyclability by design - circularity can no longer be an afterthought, so what skills do young engineers need to develop?
- A deep dive into the specific challenges the industry needs future engineers to solve: rare earths in permanent magnets, complex composites in power electronics, and long-life assets like transformer cores that outlast the insulation around them.
- What does circularity look like as a practical engineering discipline, not just a compliance exercise?



















