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Petroleum engineer is the new hot job

Posted May 06 2008, 03:05 AM by Jon Markman
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If soaring gasoline prices are blowing a hole in your commuting budget, perhaps you ought to consider going to work for an oil company. That seems to be the employment road to riches these days, as the industry reportedly faces the loss of half of its aging work force over the next decade.

According to a report by Cambridge Energy Research Associates, the energy industry will lose as many as 15% of its engineers in just two years to retirement, and has therefore launched an all-out assault on finding, training and retaining new young staffers. It sounds like the boom in demand for software developers in Silicon Valley in the '90s. Bonuses and perks are escalating as companies vie for talent. Report author Pritesh Patel said new workers will stream into the industry from around the world, but there will still be a “knowledge gap” that will hamper efforts to find and exploit new oil and gas reserves.

It sounds like this is a better direction for college graduates to head than the traditional havens of medicine and law. The Society of Petroleum Engineers has published a survey that shows the average base salary for petroleum engineers was $122,458 in 2007, up 5% from 2006. Bonuses, housing allowances, retirement plan contributions and the like reportedly push the average compensation to $167,712. All this at a time when doctors and IT pros are facing cutbacks.

The Financial Times reports that the talent shortage will worsen soon, as fewer than 1,000 students are being produced annually by geociences grad schools, a figure that’s down 90% from 1982. With talent so hard to find, The FT reports that oil and gas companies have begun to scour high schools to offer internships and scholarships to entice kids to enter the field. Also sought-after: financial support staff skilled in the special needs of the industry. 

So if you’ve got a son or daughter entering college next fall who’s as comfortable with an HP 35 scientific calculator as with an iPod, point them in the direction of the geophysics department on their new campus. That’s where the jobs are going to be when they’re ready to graduate. It's actually a pretty cool occupation for young people, as they are virtually guaranteed to travel the world, from Angola and Kazakhstan to Indonesia and Brazil, to help energy companies slake the world's insatiable thirst for new oil and gas sources.

Comments

 

Oh please!  There is nothing HOT about engineering for the American worker!  Outsourcing has gutted the entire career field and it will only get worse.  Play it safe with business and medicine.

Hey Joe--quick question where can I find jobs like that?  I"m a business major & would like to take a look--where are you employed?

I have a degree in mechanical engineering and I am working in automotive industy which here in Nord America is in slow down. I would like to know what corses and where should I take to become a petroleum engineer.

Any engineering field work is very well compensated. Some of my friends went overseas for salaries over 320k/year and they are piping designers (not degrred engineers).  I expect the boom to keep going for a few years since the demand will not slow down. Alternative forms of energy is a pie in the sky...I certainly don't see it happening in my life time, eventhoughh it is a must. The economies of China and India will make it even harder to keep up supply of hydrocarbons, hence the demand for engineering types..

I am back going to school, myself, but I have children at my heels getting ready for their high school career choices. I think that they are pretty well rounded, and very smart. Hopefully they will pursue these types of jobs but also remember that these are not renewable, and once these are gone and all used up? what are our alternatives? I would love for my four children to be the first on the wagon to get more wind and solar powered things in play, and help the refineries to clean up and help out!

How hard is it to find employment as a PE if you already have a masters degree in Mechanical Engineering?  

I see programs like this searching around the web;

www.pe.tamu.edu/.../Degrees.html

It is a distance learning program which advertises a masters in PE

Would this program get you employment in the industry?

Is it even required if you are a mechanical engineer with 4 yrs exp

in a different industry?

What kind of starting salary could you expect with this degree and some

professional experience?

Anyone working in the O&G industry please weigh in.

This article sends the wrong message... yes the pay is obviously good, but Solar energy, wind energy, alternative fuels should be the one and only focus of the energy market in the US right now.  Think how much better off the entire country would be if we weren't dependent on foreign oil.  There is much more to a great job than money, like feeling good about what you do for a living when you go to sleep at night.  If I worked for big oil... I would have constant nightmares.  

well my husband has been working for a oil drilling company for over 17 years. no complaints as of yet. the world will always dig for oil and gas, it is ongoing.it is needed not only to run your cars on... but to supply your house as well....Refineries as well supply the world with much needed resources. I must say that as far as hot jobs oil drilling should rank up there. my son who is 12 is learning the trait from his father, it is a guaranteed job..not that many careers can say that.

Jeff and Alex got it right, Jon, but keep in mind just a bachelor's won't have any stability or top pay.  Big oil (or any other) companies are looking for shooting stars out of college, like the top draft picks in the NFL.  The bigger bucks in engineering come along with a masters or doctorate, unless the individual has a knack for management.

If a student is bright enough to complete post-grad work in a technical field, there's lots of opportunities for successful and rewarding employment, not just any one specialty, like "petroleum".

Hey Jens, some advice: if you can't do a 15-minute search on the web for your questions, you don't have what it takes to succeed in anything, let alone  engineering, unless you're impressed with how space shuttles drop out of the sky.

Yeh right....by the time your kids will graduate, these oil companies will start hiring  a cheaper and smarter Asians or their research will shift to third world companies where they will get cheaper labor.

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