What does a Petroleum
Engineer Do?
Producing oil
and gas and other resources from the earth is the primary
challenge of
the petroleum engineer. Petroleum now provides over 70% of
the world’s energy and is
likely to do so for at least another 50, and probably 100,
years. In a sense, no other
branch of engineering is more concerned with our everyday
lives. Economic and
environmentally safe production of petroleum resources
requires creative application of
a wide spectrum of knowledge, ranging from the basic
sciences of mathematics,
physics, geology, and chemistry to almost all engineering
disciplines (mechanical,
chemical, electrical, etc.).
The petroleum
engineer evaluates potential oil and gas reservoirs,
oversees drilling
activities, selects and implements recovery schemes, and
designs surface collection and
treatment facilities. The petroleum engineer increasingly
uses advanced computers in
this work, not only in analysis of exploration data and
simulation of reservoir behavior,
but also in automation of oilfield production and drilling
operations. Petroleum
companies own many of the world’s supercomputers.
Petroleum
engineers have a future full of challenges and
opportunities. They must
develop and apply new technology to recover hydrocarbons
from oil shale, tar sands,
and offshore oil and gas fields. They must also devise new
techniques to recover oil left
in the ground after application of conventional producing
techniques. Example of these
“enhanced” recovery methods are steam injection, underground
combustion, and
injection of chemically treated water to release oil trapped
in the pores of rock. These
new methods are aimed at recovering additional petroleum
from known reservoirs,
beyond the 25% typically recovered with conventional
technology.
Techniques
developed for the recovery of petroleum will increasingly be
applied to the
extraction of other important minerals as in-situ uranium
leaching, geothermal energy
production, and coal gasification. Petroleum engineers are
also able to contribute to
such non-energy activities as pollutant remediation,
underground waste disposal and
hydrology.
Since many
petroleum companies conduct worldwide operations, the
petroleum
engineer may have the opportunity for assignments all over
the world. Petroleum
engineers must solve the variety of technological,
political, and economic problems
encountered in these assignments. These exciting
technological challenges combine to
offer the petroleum engineer a most rewarding career.
الدكتور محمد
هيثم
عميد الكلية