ABERDEEN, Scotland -- At one of the largest oil
shows in the world in Scotland’s oil town of Aberdeen, hundreds of
companies vied for new recruits, flaunting shiny drill bits and
simulators amid free beers and women in tight work overalls.
The global battle for talent in the oil
industry was clear at the SPE Offshore Europe Conference and Exhibition
last Sept. 8-11 that was set on a site bigger than four football
pitches.
At a time when oil and gas firms are cutting costs to try to improve
profits and save cash for dividends, they face a skills shortage that is
leading to runaway wage increases.
A recent survey by Oilcareers.com estimated the UK alone would need to
attract 120,000 personnel over the next decade to carry on production in
the North Sea and replace a retiring workforce.
Exhibiting at the show, which feels like a giant freshers’ fair, was one
way for the companies to attract young people into their ranks.
“Having a stand here is good for raising awareness of the company,
particularly among students who might be looking for jobs,” Bruce
Ferguson, managing director at equipment maker Hunting, told Reuters.
A group of six students from Perth High School in Scotland -- weighed
down with branded bags stuffed with brochures, sweets and stress balls
-- told Reuters they were on the hunt for scholarships to pay their way
through university.
Starting salaries, which in oil and gas rank third behind investment
banking and law according to Graduates.co.uk, are getting in the way of
efforts to lower costs.
The problem is a global phenomenon with hourly earnings in the oil and
gas sector in the United States having risen 62% over the past decade,
according to that country’s Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Job site Rigzone puts the global average salary in the sector at $98,000 per year.
Despite graduates struggling to get jobs in most sectors in recent
years, oil and gas has bucked the trend with engineers and geologists in
hot demand.
Bob Keiller, chief executive of oil services firm Wood Group, told the
conference in Aberdeen that pay needed to come down to accommodate the
now-declining nature of the North Sea, where output has fallen by
two-thirds since 2000.
“If we’re going to be truly successful in the second half of the North
Sea industry, we really need to re-baseline our cost base, and quite
frankly we need to do our business using fewer people and paying them
less,” he said during a talk.
But with oil and gas employers telling an industry survey earlier this
year that their major concern in the current employment market was a
skills shortage, it doesn’t look like there will be room for maneuver.
“The money, that’s always got to be a consideration, it’s very good,”
Nicholas Dubourg, 23 and studying engineering at Aberdeen University,
said as he walked around an exhibition hall, chatting to potential
employers.
He said he expected a starting salary of between £25,000 and £30,000 ($39,000 to $46,800).
Lynsey Angus, about to start studying geology at Edinburgh University and at the show to secure summer placements, agreed.
“I’m told everyone wants petroleum geologists right now, so that makes
my degree feel useful. Some people study something and then just end up
working in a supermarket.”
One longer-term solution to the skills shortage is more automated and
remote-controlled equipment, enabling unmanned platforms and cutting
significantly the number of workers needed per barrel.
Andrew Gould, chairman of BG Group, said a technological jump was needed to keep North Sea production a viable business option.
“The solution to many of today’s problems with logistics is to use
technology to reduce the number of people offshore,” Mr. Gould said. -- Reuters
source: Businessworld
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