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 Oil & Gas Careers V8, Upstream and Downstream, Crude Oil (WTI): USD 45.22/bbl

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marczeman2
post May 28 2015, 11:44 AM

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Any reservoir engineers here with experience using Roxar's Tempest suite (MORE, ENABLE etc)?
marczeman2
post May 29 2015, 10:40 AM

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..

This post has been edited by marczeman2: Oct 6 2015, 04:03 PM
marczeman2
post May 31 2015, 08:43 PM

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QUOTE(azraeil @ May 31 2015, 07:07 PM)
1st off, Petronas as a group still made a bazillion ringgit in PROFIT. If my underlings makes the above kind of comparisons, I would have taken his presentation and throw it into the bin. Why in the world are you comparing PETRONAS group with Shell Refinery? Why would you compare a Company that made 11.4 BILLION ringgit PROFIT in the Quarter against a Refining company who made 85 MILLION ringgit for the same quarter and then CONFIDENTLY say that Shell is making MORE money that PETRONAS?

See what I am getting here?

PETRONAS made a smaller reduction in PROFIT percentage wise as compared to SHELL and EXXONMOBIL (i.e. PETRONAS perfoms better than SHELL and EXXONMOBIL)

PROFIT for PETRONAS slumped by 39% as compared to a 56% slump by SHELL and a slump of 46% of Q1 PROFIT by EXXONMOBIL

So before you CONFIDENTLY say that only PETRONAS is losing money, you might want to check your facts again.
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Well said Mr Azraeil! rclxms.gif
marczeman2
post Jun 17 2015, 10:10 AM

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Do you think a post grad degree is important/common for reservoir engineers?
marczeman2
post Jan 11 2016, 05:22 PM

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QUOTE(meonkutu11 @ Jan 11 2016, 09:00 AM)
High-flying oil workers now scraping by amid layoffs
KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 11 — Haqim Nawawi thought he had it all when an international oil services firm poached him from a biochemical company and hired him as a logging-while-drilling field specialist with a monthly salary of more than RM10,000.

But just 11 months into his dream job, the 26-year-old took a phone call last June that would crush all hopes for a comfortable life. Now, he is jobless and makes a scanty side income of RM540 a month teaching secondary school students maths or science.

“When they hired me I was so happy,” Haqim told Malay Mail Online. “I even bought a house”.

Haqim is now based in Kuantan, Pahang, to help his parents manage their homestay business.

“But now, well, they just called me to the office and told me [that I was going to be laid off]. But I sort of expected it. We had heard about it and when I got the call... I knew it. I was laid off in June last year and I have been jobless since,” added the 26-year-old who graduated with a biochemical engineering degree from the International Islamic University of Malaysia.

Haqim’s plight is a microcosm of the nightmare that has hit the oil and gas industry following the prolonged slump in crude oil prices that began in late 2014.

According to a Forbes report last October, today’s “great depression” in the oil market has claimed more than 200,000 jobs worldwide, with 2 per cent of the casualties from Malaysia.

While the trail of devastation the oil price crisis has left may not be too visible when presented in numbers, Haqim’s anecdote provides a chilling glimpse into the post-retrenchment lives of those who have fallen victim to the oil market’s massive spending cuts.

As many of those laid off have skills limited only to the industry or non-mainstream fields like marine technology or biochemistry, landing new jobs will be an uphill battle.

The sudden loss or lack of income means more debt, especially for people with high financial commitments like Haqim who was once among the top income earners.

“I went for so many interviews. In various different fields. I even asked for a job in electrical engineering in Johor. But I haven’t heard from them until now.

“My side income from tutoring is about RM540. I charge students RM50 per head. But my mortgage is about RM600 plus. I never expected this to happen of course,” he said, adding that the severance package he received was barely “helpful.”

According to workers in the oil and gas industry, companies will likely begin another cycle of retrenchments this year as the oil price is expected to hover around  (RM109.45) a barrel throughout 2016.

This has frightened workers and even high-performing staff who told Malay Mail Online that nothing can guarantee their employment as the industry has never experienced a rout of this magnitude since the energy crisis in the late 1980s.

“I am scared, to be honest. In one division alone, they have fired 200 staff. Among those fired are the regional HR (human resources department). He was replaced because he was paid too high. So to cut cost, they had to replace him,” said an employee of a local oil contractor.

Skilled foreign workers were the first to be laid off due to their high salaries, according to a source who works for another local oil services contractor. Although this gives Malaysian staff temporary relief since their lower salaries means their employers can still afford to keep them, uncertainties remain.

“There is this great sense of uncertainty. If the market continues the same way, then I am not surprised if there will be another round,” said a staff member of a geoscience company that provides seismic data acquisition and other services in the oil and gas exploration and production business.

“And for me, I work in seismic data. It won’t be easy for me to look for another job, so it can be scary,” he added.

The layoffs among service providers like these reflect the far-reaching effects the current oil glut crisis has on the energy industry, stretching all the way to the bottom of the supply chain.

Since most major oil players were forced to halt new oil field explorations as the crude oil price bust took a toll on revenue, smaller suppliers have been affected by the lack of demand.

But amid the gloom, some have found opportunities, such as the proposed merger between Halliburton and Baker Hughes, the world’s number two and number three oil field services companies respectively.
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Damn what a bad year for me to graduate
marczeman2
post Jan 11 2016, 06:38 PM

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QUOTE(MEngineer @ Jan 11 2016, 06:27 PM)
Not the end of the world. Few big O&G companies are still hiring fresh graduates. You got 3 years to secure a job in O&G from now as less than 3 years experience still considered fresh grad.
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Thanks for the tip.. didn't know up to 3 years still considered fresh (is it true for all industries?)

 

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