Wood Mackenzie has been a respected adviser to the energy industry for over 30 years. We combine experience with industry knowledge to provide clients with valuable analysis and unique insights. With its headquarters in Edinburgh, Wood Mackenzie also has offices in London, Houston, Boston, New York, Moscow, Beijing, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and Sydney and currently employs around 550 people.
Maersk Oil is seeking a Drilling Superintendent for a key position in the DUC Operations Drilling Group located at our headquarters in Copenhagen. The group, which consists of five rig teams each with a Drilling Superintendent and an Operations Engineer, supports the Danish North Sea drilling activities of Maersk Oil. Maersk Oil is the operator in the DUC partnership with Shell and Chevron.
For this position you will be in direct contact with all of Gaz de France subsidiaries in France and abroad. Our group offers many personal development opportunities in the short and mid-term. Your English is fluent.
Innovative and dedicated people who believe that nothing is impossible have solved tomorrow’s challenges for over 150 years. Are you ready to roll up your sleeves?
The US is holding talks with Iraq and Turkey to drum up investment to restart Iraqi gas production and subsequent exports to Europe, US State Department Deputy Assistant Secretary Matthew Bryza said today.
"It could be linked up to the [Azeri-Turkish] Baku-Erzerum pipeline," Bryza told a conference in the Azeri capital Baku.
Channelling Iraqi gas through the pipeline would add a new source of gas to Europe's supply mix and weaken the dominance of Russian gas monopoly Gazprom, which will increase its 25% share of the European market in decades to come.
It could also provide gas for the Nabucco pipeline, a European project which is under threat because of Gazprom's boycott and Russia's control of gas flows from Central Asia.
An industry source told Reuters in March that Turkish firms TPAO, Botas and Tekfen and Shell had set up a consortium to bid for a gas production licence in Iraq and build a pipeline to Turkey's energy hub of Ceyhan.
The pipeline would run parallel to an existing oil pipeline from Iraq's Kirkuk to Ceyhan on the Mediterranean.
Turkey has a complex relationship with the mainly Kurdish north of Iraq.
Its army generals and politicians have sometimes threatened to take military action to crush separatist Turkish Kurdish rebels hiding in the mountains there.
Despite such political tensions, more than 600 Turkish companys are operating in northern Iraq.
Analysts say Turkish exports to the Kurdish government there, including fuel, totalled about $5 billion in 2006 alone.
Meanwhile, Azeri president Ilham Aliyev told the same conference his country will increase gas output to 16 billion cubic metres in 2008 from 12 Bcm this year and start large-scale exports to Europe via the Baku-Erserum pipeline.
The pipeline will get most of its volumes from the giant Azeri Shakh-Deniz field on the Caspian Sea, operated by BP and Norway's Statoil and involving Russia's Lukoil, France's Total and Iranian and Turkish state oil companies.