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 process engineering support, 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.
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.
Russian prosecutors have said that fugitive oil tycoon Mikhail Gutseriyev, who has been the focus of an international manhunt since he accused to Kremlin of trying to steal Russneft, has been traced to Turkey, a Moscow court heard today.
However, Gutseriyev's lawyer Alla Yaminskaya said there was no evidence he had left Russia, adding he was at an undisclosed location undergoing medical treatment.
Gutseriyev, former owner of oil player Russneft, disappeared from view soon after accusing the authorities of fabricating criminal charges to force him out of his company.
Gutseriyev is wanted on tax evasion charges in a case observers say is a new front in a long-standing Kremlin campaign to wrest back control of Russian energy assets from private investors.
Prosecutors at a court hearing today said Gutseriyev travelled from Russia to ex-Soviet neighbour Belarus, and from there flew to Antalya, a resort city in southern Turkey.
"There is no doubt that it is him that left the country," Reuters quoted prosecutor Viktor Gvozdyev as telling the court.
"Gutseriyev is not the sort of person you could get mixed up with someone else."
It was not clear if Gutseriyev had travelled onward from Turkey. Unconfirmed media reports have placed him in London while others have said he is in Azerbaijan.
The court turned down an application from Yaminskaya to revoke his arrest warrant.
She said border police may have mistaken someone else for Gutseriyev, and there was no evidence he had left Russia.
"He is undergoing medical treatment," she said, though she did not say where.
Shortly before he disappeared, Gutseriyev agreed to sell Russneft to Kremlin-friendly tycoon Oleg Deripaska for a price market sources put at $6 billion.
Gutseriyev's 21-year-old son Chingiskhan died suddenly last month in Moscow after what the family said was a car accident. A leading newspaper called the death mysterious, saying police and ambulance services had no records of such a crash.
Yesterday Deripaska asked Russian anti-trust authorities to approve the purchase of Russneft.
But the sale has been complicated because of a separate court ruling ordering the seizure of Russneft shares. A Russneft appeal against the seizure was rejected by a Moscow court today.
Some market sources told Reuters a power struggle is under way inside the Kremlin between those happy for Deripaska to buy the company and hawks who want to use the courts to nationalise it outright, passing the assets to a company such as Rosneft.