Technology a key to the future of offshore Middle East production

Technology is a key to finding and producing oil in the Middle East, Stephane Michel, Total E&P Qatar managing director, told an audience at the 2013 Offshore Middle East Conference & Exhibition in Doha.

Whether new reserves or enhance recovery, many Middle East fields are mature and do not produce as readily as when new, and lend themselves to new approaches, he said.

Finding safe, new ways to increase production will only happen if the industry has good geoscientists, engineers, and skilled workers to invent, develop, and operate the new technology, he said. “Human resources are going to be a constraint, and the competition is going to be fierce,” Michel said. Industry needs to broaden its recruitment base to develop more competence, he added, but the future is optimistic, with a real demand from the population in Qatar to contribute to the solution by taking training.

He used Total’s LNG plant in Yemen as an example, pointing out that it is operated 90% by Yemenis who were groomed for the jobs in a two to three year training program.

Source: http://www.offshore-mag.com/articles/2013/jan/-b-ome-2013–b—technology-a-key-to-the-future-of-offshore-midd.html

SNF Oil and Gas hope to bring jobs to Billingham

UP to 250 oil and gas jobs could be created if a global oil and gas company is granted  permission to open its doors on Teesside.

SNF Oil and Gas is hoping to move onto a site on Belasis Avenue in  Billingham, on part of the old ICI site.

The company, which will produce Polyacrylamide Emulsion to be used in the oil  trade, has applied to Stockton Council for permission to have hazardous  materials on site, which are used in the process of making it’s products.

Simon Tearle, managing director of SNF Oil and Gas, who is currently based in  Normanton, near Leeds, said: “We have begun the planning process and pending  approval by the council and achieving Government support, we hope to be up and  running by 2014 with up to 249 jobs being created in stages.”

The new firm, part of SNF’s worldwide group which employs in excess of 3,000  people, is reliant on being accepted for a Government Regional Growth Fund (RGF)  grant, eligible to businesses which can help  transform areas earmarked for development.

Mr Thearle added: “Billingham is one of those development areas and we do  hope to be accepted for Government assistance.

“We have dispatched a wide number of leaflets and information locally, in  accordance with planning requirements, and hope to be given the go-ahead  soon.”

The £1.4bn national RGF fund to boost growth was slated by a powerful Commons  committee earlier this week after it found just £60m had reached UK businesses  so far.

A further £470m of awards has been “parked” in organisations like banks and  local authorities that ministers have little control over, according to the  public accounts committee.

But on Teesside, five projects have been awarded funding under RGF so far and  a further 11 are at “varying stages” of implementation.

Neil Kenley, inset, Tees Valley Unlimited’s director of business investment,  said Teesside has seen a number of successes in securing Regional Growth  Funds.

He added that the proposals by Teesside’s Local Enterprise Partnership to the  RGF have the potential to lever in an additional £1bn of private sector  investment and create more than 8,000 Teesside jobs, which would “undoubtedly  form a platform for greater economic growth and stability”.

Read More http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teesside-news/2012/09/15/snf-oil-and-gas-hope-to-bring-jobs-to-billingham-84229-31840509/#ixzz26jeQ0fD3

Drilling for jobs: Oil and gas industry will yield employment

Colorado Springs politicians and business leaders are hoping to capitalize on the increasing global thirst for oil and gas, opening the way to many new local oil and gas jobs.

Their hope rests largely on Ultra Petroleum’s efforts to find oil and gas in eastern El Paso County’s Niobrara shale. The company holds most of the county’s 2,500 oil and gas leases and owns 18,000 acres in Banning Lewis Ranch.

Ultra started drilling in the county in February. Colorado Springs City Council, however, has yet to approve regulations that would allow drilling inside city limits at Banning Lewis.

As Ultra prepares to back its multi-million investment in Banning Lewis with exploratory drilling, local economic developers are counting on that drilling to cut a pathway from the city’s 9.8 percent unemployment rate back toward a more acceptable 5 percent rate.

Reliance on drilling, however, is a gamble.

A successful well has never been drilled in El Paso County, but new technology has unlocked oil and natural gas in other places once thought to be barren, which gives reason for renewed optimism locally.

According to the Western Energy Alliance, the oil and gas industry already represents a $1 billion economic impact in the Fifth Congressional District, which includes Colorado Springs.

“The region already benefits,” said Kathleen Sgamma, vice president for government and public affairs for the alliance, an industry trade group. “There are 4,270 jobs already — and that includes places like El Paso Gas in the Springs.”

Sgamma said the potential for more jobs in the Springs could be dramatic. Each well has the potential for 26 direct and indirect jobs. If oil or gas is found, the rigs will create 150 jobs.

“And that’s not for a single year,” she said. “Those jobs are good for 20 or 30 years.”

New technology and techniques have led gas production to increase nationally by nearly 50 percent between 2008 and 2009 alone, according to a Brookings Institution report. Employment in natural gas extraction increased by 28,000 from 2007 to 2011, with an additional 45,000 jobs in mining support activities.

“During this period of economic recovery, these jobs have also boosted employment in a wide variety of other industries that likely add up to tens of thousands of additional jobs,” the report said.

Local potential

It could be exactly what’s needed for Colorado Springs’ ailing economy and unemployment rate, said City Councilor Tim Leigh, who recently made a trip to his native North Dakota to explore the oil and gas boom there.

“People don’t realize what the potential is. They haven’t got a clue what is about to happen,” he said. “When Romney says he can create 12 million jobs in four years — he can do it easily if he eases the oil and gas caps. This is a growth industry.”

Closer to home, Mayor Steve Bach has promised to create 6,000 jobs a year for the next three years, and has publicly said he supports growth in oil and gas in the Springs. Bach declined interview requests for this story.

But the oil and gas jobs created if Ultra hits a gusher have a further reach than Colorado Springs, Sgamma said. In fact, the 13 states in the Western Energy Alliance create jobs all over the country — even as far away as Brooklyn, N.Y.

“Oil and gas jobs touch the entire country,” she said. “So it’s definitely a growth industry, a job-creating enterprise. These aren’t jobs like government jobs, using taxpayer money. Instead, each new job creates new wealth — and that’s something that’s desperately needed.”

Fred Crowley, professor of economics at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs and principal of the Southern Colorado Economic Forum, said the city should be rolling out the red carpet for Ultra.

“These are jobs that have good wages,” he said. “And there’s a strong secondary job market. Those machines break down, they need mechanics. They need truck drivers. They need machinists and engineers. They need to buy replacement parts. Oil and gas jobs are great jobs to have. Not because they create that many jobs to begin with, but because of the multiplier effect that they bring.”

And there’s no reason to worry about the historical boom-and-bust cycle of the oil industry, Leigh said. He believes those days are gone.

“There is a global demand for power and energy,” he said. “It’s going up faster than we can meet the need. So, this isn’t like the oil shale up in Rifle. This is different — the gross demand is global for oil and gas. If it’s here, it’ll be a big economic boost.”

Success elsewhere

Leigh said the growth in North Dakota’s oil field has to be seen to be believed. People are buying commercial property at unheard-of rates, hotel rooms are always full and restaurants have hours-long waits. According to the Brookings report, mining employment has tripled in North Dakota.

“They have a billion-and-a-half surplus every year,” Leigh said. “And they’re putting it in a trust fund for infrastructure. And, they’re talking about taking $100,000 (in assessed value of each home) off property taxes statewide. Imagine the economic impact if you didn’t have to pay that property tax — you could invest it in the economy.”

North Dakotans believe that the next level — below their current drilling — will produce five or 10 times as much oil and gas as they are producing today, Leigh said. Colorado Springs’ oil and gas fields are at that lower level, about 5,000 feet down.

“We’re on the edge of it,” he said. “So if it extends this far, we’ll definitely benefit.”

City Council is scheduled to hear suggested oil and gas regulations this month, and Leigh hopes the city “won’t outsmart itself.”

“We want to be reasonable,” he said. “We want to welcome them; we want to make it as easy as possible. We shouldn’t over-regulate. The state and the federal government already have regulations — and those are working.”

Leigh said the stories of hydraulic fracturing fluid bleeding into water tables are largely exaggerated.

“The people who are making these claims — the facts don’t add up to the hyperbole,” he said. “Oil and gas is being drilled in large volumes, and it’s largely very safe. You can’t regulate for every instance, because you just over-regulate and people can’t do business.”

If the oil and gas boom takes place in Colorado Springs, it could be the answer to job woes. Without it, the Brookings Institution says it could take a decade to regain the jobs lost during the recession.

And if the drilling finds oil on the eastern plains, Crowley said Ultra will end up creating not only jobs — but millionaires.

“That’s if they find it,” he said. “And they seem to be placing a lot of resources behind finding it. If they find oil, they’ll definitely create jobs, create wealth.”

Source: http://csbj.com/2012/09/07/drilling-for-jobs/

Second NZ oil basin could create 5,500 jobs

Developing another oil and gas basin in New Zealand could grow exports by $1.5 billion a year and create a further 5,500 oil jobs, according to a Government report.

A new paper released today by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) looked at the potential benefits of oil and gas in terms of export growth, GDP growth, Government revenue and regional development opportunities.

New Zealand currently had only one producing petroleum basin in Taranaki.

Developing a second could have major outcomes for the country, said Simon Lawrence, MBIE manager of resources.

“Exports could grow by $1.5 billion per annum, royalty payments increase by $320 million per annum, and a further 5,500 jobs created,” he said.

A new basin could also, through direct and indirect effects, boost national GDP by an average $2.1 billion each year of a 30-year development.

It was estimated that a single field could generate between $557 million and $3.2 billion in regional GDP over that time.

“While the scenarios are hypothetical, the potential for growth of the oil and gas sector is real.

“There is reason to be confident that ongoing exploration investment will lead to new field discoveries and that local economies can benefit from such developments.”

According to GNS research, New Zealand had sovereign rights to a land area of 270,000 square kilometres and more than 5.7 million square kilometres of seabed.

Today’s report states that the oil and gas industry generated about $400 million in annual royalty and around $300 million in annual company tax revenue for the government.

Analysis by Edison Investment Research in its inaugural New Zealand Petroleum Sector Yearbook, out last week, found that nearly $7 billion had been invested in the oil and gas sector during the past five years.

“No other local sector comes close to matching the magnitude of this investment in new productive capacity,” the report said.

The yearbook found that exports from petroleum sales in 2004 totalled $502 million but by 2008 this had surged five-fold to $2.63 billion.

Despite falling production at the offshore Taranaki Tui field and the collapse of the oil price at the height of the global financial crisis, exports remained above $2 billion for each of the past three years.

Oil was New Zealand’s fourth-largest merchandise export.

The report comes in the same week as legislation regulating deep sea oil drilling inside New Zealand’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) passed into law.

The Exclusive Economic Zone and Continental Shelf (Environmental Effects) Act passed its third reading, with 72 votes in favour and 49 votes opposed.

The  Act establishes a framework for permits allowing oil, gas and mineral exploration and extraction in New Zealand’s exclusive economic zone, which lies between 12 and 200 nautical miles off the coast.

America cannot afford “Green Energy” We must drill, drill, drill!

his article explains that given America’s economic position the country must first think about jobs and put the environment least.
by Kevin C. Caffrey

The Great Green Fleet is the most ludicrous and dangerous thing that our Commander and Chief, King Obama has foisted on the Defense Department, Navy, and American people. It takes 46 bushels of corn to make one gallon of ethanol. At this time the Navy will pay twenty six dollars a gallon for a 50/50 gas, ethanol mix to fuel a fleet of ships. The fleet of ships could be filled for the price of three dollars and sixty cents using the regular fuel the Navy has used since the beginning of gas powered ships. President Obama has cut, cut, cut defense and now he wants to waste Defense Department money on a product that costs over seven times the price of what the Navy needs to pay. In both the World Wars the United States needed to send food to the American allies so that the civilian populations would not starve. In World War I food was used as an effective weapon.

America needs to drill, drill and have more drilling, because that would create hundreds of thousands of American jobs at home. Drilling would also keep the American dollar out of the hands of foreign nations. The housing market will not revive and America will not be building new homes anytime soon. There are millions of Americans out of work in the electrical, pipe fitting, and all other types of oil jobs that drilling will create. More jobs would be created in the actual drilling of oil, and work in the Companies that make the products and materials that are needed. Drilling will take America off the leash of the Middle East, and make the dollar more stable. With Americans back to work and paying taxes the United States Treasury would bring in more money and America can then start making some inroads into paying down the Federal Debt.

The course the President is now taking begs the question of why the President doesnt socialize the entire Green Energy program in America. The Bush administration may have started with the ethanol subsidies, but President Obama has turned Green Energy into a crusade. The job stimulus package created huge subsidizes and guaranteed government loans for green energy. All the costs are on the back of the American taxpayer. The American taxpayer has paid for plenty of Obamas Green Energy boondoggles: Solar, Wind, Electric Cars and Ethanol. One would think that environmentalists would care about top soil, but the federal government and ethanol production continues to ruin good top soil. The federal government keeps turning corn into ethanol rather than utilizing and developing are fossil fuel capacities. Many scientific tests have proven that America has hundreds of years of oil, natural gas, and coal deposits that can be tapped for production. However, the federal agencies that the Obama administration controls are trying to kill the fossil fuel industries in America. The various governmental agencies that should be helping American business are instead hindering and actually hurting the fossil industries, especially coal. Once are top soil is depleted Americans will all starve.

America needs to stop using thousands of acres of corn to make ethanol: Last year, (2011) for the first time ever, more corn in this country was used to make ethanol than to make livestock feed. What the previous means is that food prices go up on all livestock products. This perpetuates an increase price that farmers must pay for feed and that is passed on to the consumer at the grocery store. Increased food costs are due directly to ethanol production. It is this writers opinion that higher food prices are a tax on the lower middle, middle, and upper middle class families who are paying much more than they need to be paying for food. The aforementioned groups are also paying too much for gasoline. President Obama and his Energy Czar will not allow American companies to drill on Government land. Earth to Obama that government land is owned by the American people as a whole, and not just your little green friends who support your campaign coffers.

America is over fifteen trillion dollars in Federal Government debt. President Obama, if reelected will continue to run trillion dollar deficits for the next four years. America cannot bail itself out of that much debt; hence America in the future will be a junk bond nation, probably by the end of Obamas Presidency. if he is reelected. The EPA headed by Lisa Jackson and the Secretary of Energy Steven Chu are developing regulations that are causing the loss of thousands of American coal jobs. Luckily the United States Senate was able to stem the EPAs attempt to kill the coal industry: Republicans said the regulations are the most expensive rules ever created by the EPA, and will cost consumers $10 billion a year in addition to killing 50,000 jobs. The President wants to double down on Green Energy. The President thinks that he understands economics. However, does nine billion dollars in stimulus money for Solar and Wind that creates nine hundred and ten jobs or what is equal to nine point eight million dollars per job good economics. This is a crime. Much more can be said about the Presidents failures to stimulate the American economy, but lets stick to Green Energy.

A big scam that large corporations are utilizing in order to pay no corporate income tax is the federal Green Energy Tax Credit. For example, General Electric did not pay any corporate income tax in 2010, because of all the green energy tax credits the company bought from other companies. For instance, One of the reasons that GE did not pay any taxes in 2010 was their mass accumulation of tax credits from things like wind turbines. However, General Electric was not really the company responsible for building these wind turbines, they were just the organization that gets credit for it. One interesting study about the wind turbine industry demonstrates that since the early 2000s the tax subsidies for wind turbines have had no effect on the price of energy. In fact, the price of energy for the wind turbines continues to go up. One of the main reasons for this phenomenon is due to the third-party development of the industry by corporations like General Electric who are using the energy tax credits and doing absolutely nothing in order to further the wind turbine industry.

The two things the Federal Government of the United States should do is put Green Energy on a back burner until the country is out of federal debt and running a surplus. Green Energy is a Luxury America cannot afford at this time. Secondly, America must tell the United Nations to get out of New York. President Obama should suggest China, since Chinese communism is more in line with the United Nations aspirations for personal freedom under an international government. The United States must rescind membership in the United Nations, which would null and void all environmental treaties from the past and those that are in the works at the moment. Those two measures are good for America; the working people in America rich and poor, and all true blue Americans.

Source: http://www.nolanchart.com/article9737-america-cannot-afford-green-energy-we-must-drill-drill-drill.html

Oil boom jobs depleting Texas fire volunteers

Volunteer fire departments across south Texas are losing firefighters at an alarming rate to oil jobs.

These high-paying oil jobs require long hours leaving little, if any, time to be on stand-up for a volunteer fire department.
Pleasanton Fire Chief Chuck Garris said his department has become extremely vulnerable.
In the past year, he lost half of his volunteers to the oil fields. “It’s a major concern,” he said. “If we have a major fire during the daytime, Pleasanton may get five or six firemen to respond.” A year ago, Garris said a dozen volunteers would have been available to respond. The volunteer chief said his department has been left short-handed at the worst of times.
Pleasanton is experiencing record construction, a record number of vehicle wrecks, and is responding to more oil field related emergencies.
For the first time in the department’s near 80-year history, the city is looking at staffing paid positions.
The flight to oil jobs is also impacting the city’s other departments.
Pleasanton has lost nearly a third of all its city employees in the past year to oil companies.

Yards fury at firms’ UK jobs snub

BOSSES at a major Tyne offshore yard claim global energy giants will cause the loss of 350 North-East offshore jobs because they refused to give contracts to UK firms.

Dennis Clark, chairman of Tyneside’s OGN group, which makes frames for offshore oil and gas platforms in North Tyneside, says the losses are down to firms not fulfilling “a moral duty” to link UK drilling licences to jobs in Britain on contracts worth more than £500m.

Mr Clark said: “We will shed 350 jobs because of oil companies awarding contracts overseas.

“I gave Vince Cable the example of Shell, which did not even approach any UK companies. We also told the Secretary of State for Climate Change, Ed Davey, about this.

“The UK Government awards these licences, and I think these firms do have a moral responsibility to award contracts to UK firms.

“If we were in Norway it would not be a problem. They do not allow work to go out of Norway for their offshore, unless they are full.”

Dr Cable said: “Supply chains have not been developed in the past as they should have been and big contacts have slipped through and gone abroad.

“I’m trying to fix that, and see us think of UK suppliers in a more integrated way.

“I was appalled to discover Shell and BP just have not gone to the effort of seeking out British companies. It is an enormous missed opportunity.”

OGN is already using a section of Hadrian Yard in Wallsend to build an oil production platform for American firm Apache – a deal worth £150m which has seen about 700 workers brought to the site.

It recently announced it had been awarded £640,000 to research and build offshore wind turbine foundations in a custom-built factory.

Shell did not wish to comment.

Source: http://www.shieldsgazette.com/news/business/latest-news/yards-fury-at-firms-uk-jobs-snub-1-4716863

Repairs for oil, gas rigs could create 5 000 jobs

South Africa can create at least 5 000 oil jobs by providing ship and oil rig repair and maintenance, Minister of Transport Ben Martins says. Addressing the 2012 South African Maritime Industry Conference at the Cape Town International Convention Centre (CTICC) yesterday, Martins said a reinvigorated maritime industry in South Africa could become a key driver of economic growth and job creation, the SA News agency (formerly BuaNews) reports. He said one of the biggest opportunities that had been identified in the maritime sector was that of positioning South Africa as a centre for ship and oil rig repair and maintenance. Cape Town’s harbour is already involved in the repair of a number of rigs each year, but this could escalate with 250 oil and gas explorations set to take place off the coast of West Africa in the next five years. Repair work driven by the expected explorations could create about 4 000 to 5 000 direct jobs and a further 1 000 indirect jobs, said Martins. He said the government had developed a Draft Green Paper on maritime shipping which would be tabled before the Cabinet shortly. Research had been done on, among other things, SA as a hub for the oil industry, marketing of cargo, logistics and passenger shipping. A draft policy on making ports more competitive was also being compiled, Martins said. He said one consideration was to set up a transhipment hub in a special economic zone (SEZ) to, among other things, carry out re-labelling and container repairs. Over the next two days, delegates at the conference, which is hosted by the SA Maritime Safety Authority, are expected to debate how to make the maritime industry more competitive, including lessons from the Philippines and Nigeria. Addressing the conference earlier, the chairperson of Parliament’s portfolio committee on transport, Ruth Bhengu, said the country was robbed of creating jobs and building the maritime industry when the decision to sell 57 ships in its maritime fleet was taken in 1993. She believed the time was right for the country to review the industry, particularly as it had the longest coastline of any African country, with an area of sea under its sovereignty of three times its land size. Martins said that at present, the government had no plans to purchase a new merchant-shipping fleet. He said any further decisions around the direction the government intended to take in the maritime industry, would be made following the release of Green Paper on maritime shipping. He said over the next two weeks, his department would be talking to the chief executives and boards of the 12 public entities that report to the department to discover what improvements were needed. “We don’t want a nation that is dependent on charity. We want a nation that works, that has dignity,” he said. The Minister of Labour Mildred Oliphant said a reinvigorated maritime industry had provided a huge opportunity to create jobs. Oliphant said her department was still considering whether to craft a sectoral wage determination for seafarers.

Source: http://www.oilandgaseurasia.com/news/p/0/news/15418

Oil company Wood Group plans to create 150 jobs in Aberdeen

Aberdeen could benefit from 150 new oil jobs after Wood Group PSN outlined plans to open a dedicated project delivery arm for its business.

The move, which is designed to enhance the company’s ability to secure and deliver large-scale North Sea projects, will see the majority of the oil jobs offered in Aberdeen with opportunities extending to the company’s offices in Glasgow, Runcorn and Hull.

The oil and gas project market worldwide is valued at near £100bn per annum and WGPSN estimates around 30% of this to be opportunities in the brownfield projects sector, with a value of £30bn annually.

Andy Mackay, projects business manager at WGPSN, said: “We have had great success winning and retaining engineering and construction, operations and maintenance and integrated service contracts, establishing a reputation for our capability in these areas.

“Many of our current and potential customers are making significant capital investments in their installations to maximise production volumes.

“Such projects include subsea tie-backs, the addition of new modules and in some cases new bridge linked platforms to extend the life of existing infrastructure.

“We are identifying and pursuing project delivery opportunities with both existing UK customers and potential new customers.

“Our investment and commitment is designed to demonstrate to our customers that we have the competence to successfully deliver larger integrated projects, mobilise a separate project resource without jeopardising modification programmes and, if necessary, execute the project at a different location under a different management structure.”

WGPSN has employed over 1000 new employees year to date in the UK. This brings the company’s UK-based onshore and offshore workforce to over 8300.
Source: http://news.stv.tv/scotland/109175-oil-company-wood-group-plans-to-create-150-jobs-in-aberdeen/