The Manpower Problem in the Petroleum Industry

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
V. Taylor
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
3
File Size:
1469 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1967

Abstract

"THE petroleum industry in Canada has been experiencing considerable difficulty in filling its manpower requirements during the last few years, and because of the rapidly expanding nature of the industry it is concerned about the supply that will be available to fill the needs of the future. As the oil industry is one of the more technically oriented industries, the most acute problem exists primarily in the field of profession-al/technical personnel. This is particularly true in the production and exploration side of the business, because it employs the highest percentage of this type of personnel. Let me illustrate this by giving you some figures reported by the Alberta Bureau of Statistics as of December, 1965 -out of a total of 9,641 male employees engaged in oil producing and geological and geophysical operations in Alberta, 3,021, or 31 per cent, were classified as engineers, geologists, geophysicists, managers and other professional personnel. No figures are available for 1946 to make a direct comparison of the expansion of the industry over the past twenty 466 years, but it is doubtful whether more than 100 professional/technical people were engaged in producing in Alberta at that time"
Citation

APA: V. Taylor  (1967)  The Manpower Problem in the Petroleum Industry

MLA: V. Taylor The Manpower Problem in the Petroleum Industry. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1967.

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