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Hoarding is exactly what the government is doing right now by filling the SPR, and frankly it's the best thing that could happen. It drives prices up. High prices encourage demand destruction. They also finance new well development. The hoarded oil gives us a buffer to fall back on once shortages become more prevalent. High prices are what we need in order to adapt to what's coming, and the sooner they happen, the better.

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Oil, gas grads get hefty salaries
Business News; Market ResearchFreshly graduated petroleum engineer majors from the Golden school last year received average salaries of $63,000. This year's grads will earn about $67,000, Van Kirk estimated. Plus, employers are offering signing bonuses of $10,000 to $30,000, he said.

Graduate degrees command higher salaries. Van Kirk said master's degrees generate starting salaries of $80,000 to $85,000. One Mines student who graduated this month with a doctorate in petroleum engineering got a job offer of $111,000, he said.

Lucrative salaries and high levels of college enrollment tend to mirror increases in oil and gas prices. At the nation's 10 largest petroleum-sciences schools, undergraduate enrollment surged in the early 1980s when crude oil was trading at a then-record level of $37 a barrel.

Oil, gas grads get hefty salaries Energy boom: They are again in demand as the workforce grows older By Steve Raabe The Denver Post

A resurgent interest in oil and gas careers may help avert a looming labor crisis in the energy industry.

Students are flocking back to petroleum education programs, enticed by plentiful job prospects, handsome salaries and cash bonuses. The Colorado School of Mines and the nation's other top engineering schools this year enrolled the largest number of undergraduate petroleum engineering students since 1987.

Ben Turner graduated last spring from the School of Mines with a degree in chemical engineering and an emphasis in petroleum refinement. His timing couldn't have been better, as oil prices were rising dramatically. On Tuesday, a barrel of oil was priced at more than $41.

Many of the recruiters on campus during job fairs last spring came from the energy industry. "That was the big hiring force," said Turner. "Those were the only companies I interviewed with."

Turner, 22, landed a job as a lab manager at TIORCO Inc., an oil-recovery company based in Englewood, Colo. He said many of his friends have had similar success, some netting substantial signing bonuses.

The boom is coming after warnings that the graying of the oil and gas industry could lead to a serious shortage of skilled professionals. "This is an industry concern," said Dave Hager, senior vice president for oil and gas exploration and production with Kerr-McGee, a large natural-gas producer. "The average age for critical skilled workers in the industry is about 50 years old with a shortage of young engineers, geologists and geophysicists in the labor pool."

Years of energy-worker attrition from retirement, corporate consolidations and layoffs has left the industry with a deficit of professional employees. But with high prices for oil and gas, companies are looking to shore up staffing to handle increased exploration and production. "It's very common for our petroleum engineering students to get multiple job offers," said Craig Van Kirk, chairman of the Colorado School of Mines petroleum engineering department.

Freshly graduated petroleum engineer majors from the Golden school last year received average salaries of $63,000. This year's grads will earn about $67,000, Van Kirk estimated. Plus, employers are offering signing bonuses of $10,000 to $30,000, he said.

Graduate degrees command higher salaries. Van Kirk said master's degrees generate starting salaries of $80,000 to $85,000. One Mines student who graduated this month with a doctorate in petroleum engineering got a job offer of $111,000, he said.

Lucrative salaries and high levels of college enrollment tend to mirror increases in oil and gas prices. At the nation's 10 largest petroleum-sciences schools, undergraduate enrollment surged in the early 1980s when crude oil was trading at a then-record level of $37 a barrel.

Undergraduate petroleum-engineering enrollment at the schools peaked at 6,928 in 1983, then fell dramatically in subsequent years as oil prices dropped. Enrollment declined to a modern-day record low of 881 in 1990.

But with oil and gas prices rising sharply over the past three years, energy companies are scrambling to attract new professional workers.

SLT

Posted on Friday, December 31 @ 03:22:40 PST by aaron
 
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Re: Oil, gas grads get hefty salaries (Score: 1)
by sm008 on Friday, December 31 @ 09:21:39 PST
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maybe colorado school of mines is having great offers in petroleum dept this fall. Not the case in all other top 10 petroleum schools.

Graduate students are not getting this high salaries, most of undergrads are breaking into SLB, Halliburton or oil and gas service companies as field engineer where they make about 50K.

Many grad students (MS) are staying in to continues into Ph.D programs since not getting any offers!!.

US grad schools (in petroleum engr.) comprise of about 60-70% international students and they all are not getting hired at all (visa issue).

Petroleum industry does look like an good career prospect but it fluctuates depending on energy requirements, when it's down, all the undergrads/grad end up changing there careers to other industries..

hope things gets better!



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