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.
US officials condoned Hunt Oil efforts to obtain an exploration deal with Iraq's Kurdish regional government contrary to public statements discouraging it, according to documents cited by a congressional committee.
When the agreement was announced in September, it was criticised as undermining efforts to strengthen Iraq central government, which still had no national oil revenue-sharing law.
Bush administration officials expressed public concern and denied any knowledge of the contract.
Yesterday, US Republican Henry Waxman released e-mails and letters obtained by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee that appeared to show the opposite.
"Contrary to the denials of administration officials, advisors to the president and officials in the State and Commerce Departments knew about Hunt Oil's interest in the Kurdish region months before the contract was executed," Waxman, a California Democrat, wrote in a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
In one e-mail, Hunt Oil's general manager wrote: "There was no communication to me or in my presence made by any of the nine state department officials with whom I met ... that Hunt should not pursue our course of action leading to a contract. In fact, there was ample opportunity to do so, but it did not happen."
Spokesmen for the State Department and Hunt Oil were not immediately available for comment.
State Department spokesman Tom Casey said yesterday that "we continue to stand by our previous statements that the US government made its objections to this arrangement known both to the company as well as to the KRG (Kurdistan Regional Government)," The Washington Post reported.
Waxman's office released documents dating to June 2007, saying they raised questions about US involvement in recently announced negotiations between the Iraqi government and major US and multinational oil companies.
He told Rice he was seeking information about a possible US role in the efforts of those companies to obtain Iraqi contracts.
"You and other administration officials have denied playing any role in these contracts. In the case of Hunt Oil, however, similar denials appear to have been misleading," Waxman wrote.
The government of Iraq's northern Kurdish region announced on 8 September 2007, that it had signed a gas and oil production sharing contract with a unit of Hunt Oil and with Impulse Energy.
Hunt Oil chief executive Ray Hunt denied that his ties to the Bush family and the Republican Party helped his company cut a deal with the largely autonomous region.
Hunt said in a Wall Street Journal interview in October the company received no government advice before striking the deal.
"The fact is, as a matter of policy, we never have and never will go to the government of the US and ask the government's advice on anything we do from a business point of view," he was quoted as saying.
Iraq has the world's third-largest oil reserves, which are mainly in the north and the south of the country.
Kurdish officials have clashed with Baghdad over the national oil law, which will determine how contracts are awarded and how revenues are distributed. The northern Iraqi region has signed several exploration deals with foreign outfits, which Baghdad says are illegal, reported Reuters.