A Business and Sustainable Development Challenge: The Training of New Recruited Geoscientists Worldwide
Estival, Jacques1, Jean-Francois Coste2, Hubert Lecanu3, Philippe L. Julien3 (1) Total, Paris, France (2) Totalfinaelf, F-64018 Pau Cedex, France (3) Total S.A, Pau, France
The oil industry
has to face a significant aging of its E&P task force and its correlative
retirement in a few years. To prepare for this “crew” change, Total
implements a consistent training program for new recruits both at the
Headquarters and in the affiliates worldwide. Obtaining the required skills as
quickly as possible is a major challenge. Each new recruited geoscientist
follows a personalised curriculum (the so-called
Training Passport, designed to fill the gap between initial and expected
skills) corresponding to about 6 months training distributed over a 3 year
period: for each new recruit, the technical skills and the personal development
objectives are listed. The Training Passport is now being extended to
affiliates starting with
hydrocarbon
producing
countries. The national geoscientists are trained according to the Total
international standards. We faced three main challenges: maintaining technical
group cohesion despite remoteness, solving the problem of different technical
levels among the new recruits (compared to the European context), and lack of
local training resources. Different solutions have been proposed: adaptation of
courses to the affiliates’ contexts, on the job training in
