As Director of European Operations, you will be responsible for actively supporting a wide variety of membership interests across Europe with a focus on HSE, training and regulatory issues.
This full-time contract position will allow you to use your in-depth knowledge of the global oil and gas industry to build a substantial network within the association and the industry within Europe.
You will take on a Project Management lead role and be responsible for managing and delivery within budget. You are to deliver Prospect projects, using your own technical expertise and experience in Engineering Design and Computational Analysis as well as group-wide technical support.
Design and specification of hydraulic systems for marine and offshore cranes.
Calculations in accordance with the regulations of the classification companies.
Follow-up of workshops and subcontractors at home and abroad.
Participation in design and product development for our projects.
You will report to the Principal Engineer, you will support the execution of Prospect projects, using your own technical expertise and experience in Engineering Design, Computational Analysis as well as group-wide technical support.
In this key role, you’ll have an important part to play in the wide range of new Oil and Gas developments we’re rolling out across the globe. And when you realise the scale and scope of what will often be $multi-billion projects, you’ll understand what an exciting opportunity that presents. Providing technical expertise on every aspect of Process Control, the challenges you’ll face will be as diverse as the projects you’re involved in. As well as working closely with Development Managers and Subsurface professionals to make the most of our existing sites and develop new proposals, you’ll oversee the work of contractors from conceptual studies all the way through to the detailed design stage. You’ll also contribute significantly to the development of less experienced colleagues.
Iraq's draft oil law has gaping holes that must be filled before foreign players will invest their capital or technology in the country's oil play, one of its authors claimed today.
Tariq Shafiq, together with two other oil experts, spent months last year drawing up the rules Baghdad hopes will lure major oil companies to the country.
The law, which parliament could pass by the end of this month, has been threatened by Kurds in the north who say they are not getting their fair share.
"Technically, the law leaves much to be desired," Shafiq, a founder of the Iraq National Oil Company (INOC) in 1964, told Reuters in an interview today.
He left Iraq a few years later and returned in 2003 after the US-led invasion ousted Saddam Hussein.
"Why would a respectable major oil company go to Iraq? If they get a contract, what would they use it for? They can't operate under the current circumstances and this is neither in the interest of the companies nor the country."
He told the news agency the biggest problem is the federal versus the regional government of Kurdistan and, even after months of wrangling, the legislation before parliament can offer no protection to a company that has only secured a regional deal.
"There are many procedural things that can go wrong - and that will cost time, effort and money," said Shafiq, who directs oil consultancy Petrolog & Associates.
Backed by Washington, the law is vital to securing the billions of dollars needed to boost Iraq's oil output - now stuck at 2 million barrels per day - and rebuild its economy.
But some of Iraq's law-makers still resent the UK, US and French companies that controlled their oil industry for half a century through the Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC).
From the time it struck oil at the huge Kirkuk field in 1927 until nationalism forced it out in 1972, IPC - made up of BP, Exxon, Mobil, Shell, CFP (Total) and Partex - was in charge.
Shafiq said Baghdad should not let foreign companies regain the upper hand.
"We learned our lessons from the concession era before nationalisation in the 1970s. We lost a lot of money and market share," he said.
The draft law calls for a newly-created INOC to control the country'sproducing oilfields and creates a federal oil and gas council, which will be the ultimate policy-setter.
Shafiq said the oil and gas council, which would draw representation from across the regions, would lack the required managerial competence to run an industry battered by years of chronic mismanagement, wars and sanctions.
"The decision-making process has got to be corrected," he said. "You can't ensure capable management and decision-making from them."
As for INOC, Kurdish officials say annexes in the draft are unconstitutional because they wrest oilfields from the regions and place them under a state company.
Politics aside, Shafiq told Reuters some of the oil legislation was ambiguous. Its terminology and style of agreements lack clarity.
"We must be clear and honest about what type of contract we want," he said.
Major oil companies - keen to get drilling, especially in southern oilfields such as Bin Umar, Majnoon and West Qurna - could have their own reservations about the terms.
Shafiq said these already-producing fields earmarked for INOC should be awarded by the national company on terms similar to those on offer in neighbouring Iran.
"These are known, producing fields. The risk is gone. I strongly believe they should be service contracts," he said.
What Iraq desperately needs from the international oil companies is their technical expertise, Shafiq added.
"That's the strongest card they have," Shafiq said. "Middle East producers today need technology, not capital."
When passed in February by Iraq's Cabinet, Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki hailed the draft oil law as a pillar of Iraqi unity.
But Shafiq was doubtful.
"It's very difficult to predict whether the oil law will pass or not. If I were to make a guess - perhaps it will after an uproar," he said.