Are you thinking about taking up a
Geology major in petroleum
courses in islamabad? It is not a bad course, and
prospects are pretty good overall. Employment opportunities look pretty solid
for the next few decades, strongly supported by world economic fundamentals.
After all, geologists are the people who find new deposits of oil, gas, metals
and minerals - all of them raw materials in great demand from both developed
countries (e.g. the USA and Europe) and developing countries (especially China
and India). The major employers of geologists are the government sector, the
mining industry and the oil/gas industry.
So, what is a geologist' salary after
doin it from petroleum courses in islamabad on an oilrig? According to a 2008 survey by American
Geologic Institute, it ranges from $80,000 to $100,000 for a fresh Geology
graduate with a relevant Masters degree. Another survey by the University of
Houston in 2007 indicated that experienced petroleum geologists (10 years and
up) earn an average salary of $132,132 a year. Those are increases of 50% for
new geologists on offshore oil platforms and 23% for experienced geologists
prospecting for oil since 2003/2004. This is a salary range that can turn the
CEOs of many small companies green with envy.
But it is now the summer of 2010 and
we have just exited one major recession and hit a major bump in the road
because of the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Surely there must be some impact for
a geologists working offshore? Well, if you are graduating (or a veteran
looking for a new employer) today, there will probably be some artificial
downward pressure on your pay. But seriously, the demand for oil workers and
people who can find oil is not dependent on the short-term status of the
economy. The demand for skilled geologists and other rig workers has
historically depended on the price of oil. Just look at the Roaring '80s, where
the economy was booming but the price of oil was low. Oil companies and
drilling contractors were laying off workers left and right. Look at our recent
recession for an example of the opposite - the price of oil remained strong
($60 to $70 per barrel) despite the weak economy. Although they laid off
workers on less productive land-based oil fields, they hired workers for newer
and more lucrative offshore oil fields. If you want to do highly paid job we
recommended you to do petroleum courses in
islamabad.
Fundamentally, there are three major
reasons why a geologist will still continue to earn the big bucks for the next
10, 20 or even 30 years. The first is that it is difficult to train a good
geologist. 20,000 students enrol in Geology each year, but only 2,800 graduate
with the needed specialties to look for oil. Geology is a four-year course, and
it is not easy to pass. Besides, a field geologist is not someone who lives
above the clouds in an ivory tower. He is, frequently, someone who must travel
long distances, face both man-made and natural danger, and work in difficult
situations. In some ways, he is closer to Indiana Jones (except with a Geology
degree instead of an Archaeology degree) than he is to Einstein.
A second major reason for the
continued strong demand for Geology graduates is that many old, experienced oil
geologists are now in their 40s, 50s or 60s. The previously cited University of
Houston survey also discovered that 72% of oil workers are above 40. Most of
them were last hired in the last oil boom in the 1970s, and are the survivors
of the oil glut of the 1980s. Those who left the oil industry went to more
stable government jobs (or to work for the mining companies) in the mass
lay-offs. Any good oil company CEO knows that a good petroleum geologist who
can find him a new oil field is worth as much as the Marketing director or
Finance Director.
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