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.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) has said that oil prices would be 50% that today by 2030 if Saudi Arabia did not muster the political will to invest billions of dollars in new production.
Fatih Birol, the group's chief economist, told London daily the Financial Times that Saudi Arabia might not make the investment needed to ensure production met the strong demand growth in China and India.
“It is not a problem of availability of reserves or capital. We need to be sure that the increase in production will be high enough and a sustained production capacity increase policy is in place. That will need sustained political will,” he said.
Saudi Arabia has plans to invest $14 billion to raise output capacity from 11 million barrels a day to 12.5 million bpdby 2009, according to a report by Samba Financial Group, a Riyadh-based bank.
The IEA said Saudi Arabia would need almost to double current output of 10 million bpd to meet the expectations of demand in 2030. But Birol said the kingdom might muster the long-term political will only to produce just over half the extra barrels deemed necessary.
Iran and Iraq are also vital to ensuring adequate oil and natural gas supplies in the next 25 years. But both face political hurdles to achieving the necessary investment. Many Middle East countries fear that investing heavily in new oil supplies will deplete fields too quickly and cut revenues by depressing oil prices.
Birol said: “We may end up with much less oil from the Middle East than we demand. There is substantial risk of substantially high oil prices if current investment in the Middle East is not stepped up substantially.
“Such high oil prices would be an additional trigger for major consuming nations to introduce policies to save oil and look for alternative sources. If they don't, the global economy but mainly the economies of the consuming nations will suffer.”
The IEA's price forecast, which is often conservative, forms the benchmark for many other forecasts, including those made by central banks, oil companies and big oil producers.
The agency's near-term forecasts are below crude oil's current price range of about $60 a barrel because the IEA, which releases its World Energy Outlook next week, expects new supplies of oil and investment in platforms, pipelines and refineries to ease the current crunch.
Oil demand is expected to more than double by 2030. Much of the increase will have to be met by countries in the Middle East and Africa.
Meanwhile, natural gas demand will grow at a faster rate, with Qatar, Algeria and Iran as its biggest producers.