It’s not a scarcity of oil the world should be worried about but more importantly a desperate skills shortage
of engineers. This is especially so for the global energy industry. For many jobs, the number of vacancies
exceeds the number of skilled experienced engineers that are available. Already, such shortages are causing
significant delays and costs for major projects including development of offshore oil fields off Angola. Whilst
in Brazil, the home of samba, tropical rainforest and traffic jams, this developed county is in a desperate
search for engineers to construct 12 super tanker sized FPSO’s over the next decade. Such skills deficiencies
are harming energy security, harming economic recovery and the ability of the world to meet its ambitious CO2
targets.
The only solution the energy industry has is to pay higher salaries and offer better conditions. Already, in
Australia many engineers with energy related expertise are starting on salaries of AUS$20,000 a month. Even in
the remotest desert locations of Australia or Iraq, the camps offer the best in accommodation and food.
Ironically, sub sea engineers are the amongst those in greatest demand. As to why there is a shortage of energy
engineers, in part, it is due to lack of sufficient support governments, universities and industry to ensure
adequate levels of people are trained every year. It is also due demographics, as the workforce ages and to the
cyclical nature of the industry. Today, it is not helped that the sheer number of new projects worldwide that
are being developed and coming on stream. In Australia, for instance the boom in mining of coal, iron ore and
uranium is taking place at the same time there is also a boom in oil, gas, solar, power and unconventional gas
projects. Because of poaching between the different energy sectors, pay and conditions have had to be
drastically improved, in a desperate attempt to overcome such work force shortages.
Due to it being a sellers’ market for engineers, energy companies are having to becoming more sophisticated in
recruitment practices. Increasingly they are relying on experts talent scouts to find, identify and select as
well as maintain the loyalty of the engineers in this very competitive global market. In addition, many
recruitment agencies are proactively working on behalf of their clients Total, Shell, ENI to co-ordinate the
development of the skilled candidates in their energy related studies at engineering colleges and universities
throughout the world.
While governments such as Australia, Angola and Brazil are actively using local content policies to ensure that
the energy industry makes sufficient investment in local training, in order to over come the global energy
sectors current labour shortages. Until this problem is resolved pay for energy engineers on these projects is
likely to continue to climb.
For more info on energy engineering jobs see
http://www.nesglobal.com/
http://www.hays.com.au/main/default.aspx
http://walterhewitt.com/
http://www.energyinst.org/home