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.
The government of Iraqi Kurdistan has reiterated that the oil agreements it signed with foreign companies this year are legal and said most of the returns would be shared with the rest of Iraq.
Nechirvan Barzani, Prime Minister of the Kurdistan Regional Government, told Al Jazeera that he had waited a long time for Baghdad to pass a long-awaited law organising the country's oil sector.
He said the regional government decided to move ahead with its own legislation following lengthy delays.
"We waited a lot for Baghdad but there was a lot of pressure on us and on me personally to pass a law .... yet there was no response from Baghdad," Barzani said in an interview aired on Sunday.
"Everything was meant to come from Baghdad but by May or June nothing had happened so we presented a law and ... it was passed unanimously by the Kurdish parliament."
Iraq's central government agreed on a draft oil law early this year, under which control and revenue from Iraq's oil reserves are to be shared among Baghdad and Iraq's provinces, but the law has since been stalled by political infighting.
The draft has yet to be approved by the national parliament in Baghdad and Barzani said amendments had since been made which the Kurds had not agreed to, and it was not clear what the law in its current form contained.
Frustrated by delays, the Kurdish Regional Government approved its own oil law in August and said last month it had signed a production-sharing contract with a unit of US-based Hunt Oil and with Impulse Energy.
It has signed eight contracts so far and expects to sign two more soon.
Barzani said the contracts were in line with Iraq's constitution, which allows provinces substantial control of natural resources, and with the revenue-sharing provisions of the draft oil law.
"If we are convinced that the Iraqi constitution is federal ... then what we did is according to the constitution, no more no less," Barzani said.
Iraq's Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani has repeatedly said the contracts were illegal and complained about a lack of transparency by the Kurdish authorities.
He said crude from the deals could not be legally exported because the draft law states that only Iraq's State Oil Marketing Organisation holds the right to export oil, Reuters reported.