Education & the Big Crew Change Lloyd R. Heinze Texas Tech University 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 1
Our Situation Employment levels at historic lows Aging, highly experience workforce nearing retirement (5 to 7 years) Pipeline shortage of new Engineering & Applied Science Majors Manpower crisis is on horizon 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 2
Petroleum Industry Facts Average age of SPE member is 49 50% of current workers will retire in 6 years 65% reduction in staff in past 20 years Companies have closed down in-house training programs along with research Independent s access to trained personnel is limited Industry is having difficulty attracting & keeping the best engineers 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 3
How Did This Happen? Petroleum Industry Hiring/Layoff High salaries don t attract individuals Alternate career choices Business Computer, Telecommunication Oil Patch bad reputation 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 4
Petroleum Education in USA BS programs down 53% 34 in 1983 to 16 in 2004# BS enrollment down 85% 11014 in 1983 to 1602 in 2002# Up slightly in 2004 to 1732 BS degrees granted down 83% 1529 in 1983 to 259* in 2003# # Academic year 2002 ends 21 August 2002 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 5
# of Students 700 650 600 550 500 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 US Petroleum Engineering Enrollment 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 0 1 2 3 4 Academic Year (2003=Sept2002-Aug2003) FRESHMAN SOPHMORE JUNIOR SENIOR MASTER DOCTOR 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 6
Degrees Granted 350 325 300 275 250 225 200 175 150 125 100 75 50 25 0 US PE Degrees Granted B.S. M.S. Ph.D. 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 0 1 2 3 Academic Year (2002=Sept2001-Aug2002) 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 7
Enrollment 350 325 300 275 250 225 200 175 150 125 100 75 50 25 0 Undergrad Enrollment US PE 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 0 1 2 3 4 Academic Year (2003=Sept2002-Aug2003) Texas Tx AM Tx Tech La State Mt Tech Co Mines Oklahoma Tulsa Marietta La Lafayette Penn State Mo Rolla Alaska W Va NM Tech Kansas 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 8
Number of Students 13000 12000 11000 10000 9000 8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 US Petroleum Engr Enrollment 72 74 76 78 80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 0 2 4 Academic Year DOCTOR MASTER SENIOR JUNIOR SOPHMORE FRESHMAN 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 9
1600 BS PE degrees shown, however Total BS Engr degrees has similar shape 1975 low of 37,000; 1985 peak of 78,000; 2000 value of 64,000 Petroleum Degrees Granted in USA 1400 Number of Degrees 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 BS PE MS PE PhD PE 0 72 74 76 78 80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 0 2 Academic Year 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 10
from US dept of Education (SPE reported 245 PEs) 20000 19843 18000 16000 14000 13082 BS Degrees by Engineering Discipline 1999-2000 12000 10000 8000 6000 9438 7658 6009 4000 3467 2000 1230 1058 798 404 256 233 153 102 0 Electrical/Computer Mechanical Civil Other Chemical Industrial Aerospace Biomedical Metallurgical & Materials Agricultural Eng. Science & Eng. Physics Petroleum Mining Nuclear 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 11
Why don t more good students join the Petroleum Industry? Job prospects ~100% placement for the past 12 years Salaries Highest major in engineering for new hires 300 grads per year is right number? Perceptions??? 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 12
The Oil Patch Perceptions? Not high tech or creative Running out of oil & gas No industry growth or advancement opportunity Not enough jobs for graduates PE is a narrow discipline E&P industry has a hire & fire mentality E&P industry is environmentally unfriendly & unpopular 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 13
What do we do? Get the message out: Stable jobs for the future Jobs are high tech & exciting Fossil fuels will continue to play a central role in our energy future PE is a core engineering discipline that can handle a broad array of subsurface problems Fiscally & environmentally responsible use of fossil fuels is our best energy option Prove it! 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 14
Alternatives Considered Retain current employees Change layoff practices, Packages Work environment High more non traditional employees Rehire as Consultants Engineers & Applied Science from outside oil industry Foreign Nationals as employees Computer / high tech will take up slack Pump up Engineering Enrollments 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 15
Dilbert's "Salary Theorem" states that "Engineers and scientists can never earn as much as business executives and sales people. This theorem can now be supported by a mathematical equation based on the following two postulates: Postulate 1: Knowledge is Power. Postulate 2: Time is Money. As every engineer knows Power = Work / Time Since Knowledge = Power Time = Money Knowledge = Work / Money. Solving for Money, we get: Money = Work / Knowledge. Thus, as Knowledge approaches zero, Money approaches infinity, regardless of the amount of work done. Conclusion: The less you know, the more you make. 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 16
Managing Knowledge on a High-Turnover Environment Age Demographics, in few years cause rapid loss of highly experienced personnel replaced by people new to the workforce Transition harder to manage than past higher level of technical expertise more complicated business 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 17
Issues What are the major impacts of this change in personnel? What actions can/should the industry take now to prepare for this change? How can the industry develop the actions required to manage this transition? What should University Role be? 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 18
Models and Trends in Continuing Education Decreased in-house training activities Ever-increasing workload How to stay current or improve our skills? Core Competencies Is Professional Registration important? How to project education needs? Engineer Development from outside N. American and Europe 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 19
Education & the Big Crew Change Lloyd R. Heinze Texas Tech University 1/16/2004 SPE ATC&E, Denver, CO 20