GETI 2023:化石燃料价格飙升使石油和天然气行业成为能源工人的首选


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第七届年度全球能源人才指数(GETI)是一份既定且全面的能源劳动力趋势报告,该指数显示,最近的天然气价格危机使石油和天然气成为最受寻求转换角色的能源工人欢迎的行业,并导致薪资飙升高于大流行前的水平。

全球 STEM 行业劳动力解决方案提供商 Airswift 的报告发现,随着石油和天然气巨头公布创纪录的利润,44% 的石油和天然气工人去年加薪,三分之二的人预计明年加薪进一步。乐观的是,41% 的人预计明年薪资涨幅将超过 5%。

由于石油和天然气人才的激烈竞争,整个行业的工资正在上涨,近三分之一的石油和天然气工人在过去一年里被猎头超过六次。高额薪酬也推动了高工作满意度,薪酬被认为是满意度的最大驱动因素,69% 的石油和天然气工人表示自己对目前的职位感到满意。

然而,工资和就业机会的增加也使石油和天然气工人能够根据价值观和工资寻找工作,ESG 担忧现已成为他们选择雇主的三大原因。可再生能源是石油和天然气工人加入的外部能源行业的首选,也许是因为它在环境中发挥着关键作用。调查中,只有 11% 的石油和天然气劳动力由女性组成,而且女性员工也更有可能表示自己的观点在工作中被忽视,因此提高多样性也可能是留住和吸引具有 ESG 意识的劳动力的关键。

Airswift首席执行官珍妮特·马克思(Janette Marx)表示:“在最近对俄罗斯实施制裁后,化石燃料利润的飙升使石油和天然气成为最具吸引力的能源行业,并将其转变为员工市场。在美国等国家,规定薪酬透明度的新法律迫使公司在薪资和福利方面公开竞争。日益高薪、需求的石油和天然气劳动力现在有权根据其环境和社会绩效以及薪酬来选择雇主。对于雇主来说,这是一个在工资以外的其他差异化因素(从脱碳到多元化)上争夺人才的机会。”

石油设备供应商瓦雷尔能源解决方案公司全球人力资源执行副总裁伊尔达·安达鲁斯 (Ilda Andaluz) 补充道:“新冠疫情时代的‘彻底辞职’,加上最近化石燃料生产和价格的复苏,造成了石油领域的重大技能差距和天然气,现在填补每个位置需要三倍的时间。然而,不断发展的数字化已经与技术等行业产生了越来越多的技能协同作用,可以帮助我们增加劳动力并降低劳动力成本;我们最近从亚马逊等公司招聘了人才。”

石油和天然气领域的进一步重要发现包括:

  • 从法国到英国的石油和天然气项目的复苏使欧洲成为石油和天然气工人寻求海外转移的主要目的地(27%)。
  • 希望搬迁的工人比例已从2020年的91%下降到如今的81%。
  • 在那些已经开始转向清洁能源的公司中,38% 的公司欢迎这对其角色的改变。

Airswift 采访了行业专家,并对来自 149 个国家/地区的 10,000 名能源专业人士和招聘经理进行了调查,涉及五个行业子行业:石油和天然气、可再生能源、电力、核能和石化产品。

在线阅读文章:https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-product/14022023/geti-2023-surging-fossil-fuel-prices-make-oil-and-gas-sector-top-choice-为能源工人/

原文链接/oilfieldtechnology

GETI 2023: Surging fossil fuel prices make oil and gas sector top choice for energy workers

Published by , Editorial Assistant
Oilfield Technology,


The seventh annual Global Energy Talent Index (GETI), an established and comprehensive energy workforce trends report, has revealed that the recent gas price crisis has transformed oil and gas into the most popular sector for energy workers looking to change roles and has sent salaries soaring above pre-pandemic levels.

The report by Airswift, a global workforce solutions provider to the STEM industries, finds that, with oil and gas majors posting record profits, 44% of oil and gas workers saw their pay increase last year and two-thirds expect further salary rises next year. Optimistically, 41% expect bumper pay rises of over 5% next year.

Sector-wide salaries are being inflated by fierce competition for oil and gas talent, with almost one-in-three oil and gas workers having been headhunted over six times in the past year. Big pay packets are also driving high job satisfaction, with remuneration cited as the biggest driver of said satisfaction and 69% of oil and gas workers declaring themselves satisfied in their current positions.

Yet rising salaries and job opportunities are also empowering oil and gas workers to seek jobs based on values as well as salaries, with ESG concerns now among their top three reasons for choosing employers. Renewables is the first choice of outside energy sector for oil and gas workers to join, perhaps due to its pivotal role in the environment. With just 11% of the oil and gas workforce in the survey composed of women, and female employees also more likely to say their views are ignored at work, improving diversity could also be key to retaining and attracting an ESG-conscious workforce.

Janette Marx, CEO at Airswift, says: “In the wake of the recent sanctions on Russia, soaring fossil fuel profits have made oil and gas the most attractive energy sector and turned this into an employees’ market. In countries such as the US, new laws mandating pay transparency have forced companies to openly compete on salaries and benefits. An increasingly high-paid, in-demand oil and gas workforce is now empowered to choose employers based on their environmental and social performance as well as pay. This is an opportunity for employers to compete for talent on other differentiators beyond salaries, from decarbonisation to diversity.”

Ilda Andaluz, Executive Vice President of Global Human Resources at oil equipment supplier Varel Energy Solutions, adds: “The COVID-era ‘Great Resignation’ combined with the recent resurgence of fossil fuel production and prices has opened major skills gaps across oil and gas and it now takes up to three times longer to fill every position. Yet growing digitalisation has created increasing skills synergies with industries such as technology that could help us grow the workforce and reduce labour costs; we have recently recruited from the likes of Amazon.”

Further key findings within oil and gas include:

  • The revival of oil and gas projects from France to the UK makes Europe the leading destination for oil and gas workers seeking overseas transfers (27%).
  • The proportion of workers wanting to relocate has fallen from 91% in 2020 to 81% today.
  • Of those companies that have begun transitioning to clean energy, 38% welcome the change this has made to their roles.

Airswift interviewed sector experts and surveyed 10 000 energy professionals and hiring managers of 149 nationalities across five industry sub-sectors: oil and gas, renewables, power, nuclear and petrochemicals.

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/14022023/geti-2023-surging-fossil-fuel-prices-make-oil-and-gas-sector-top-choice-for-energy-workers/