Title: Jayne Englebert and David Voight
1Geology Careers In The New Millennia
AIPG
- Presented by
- Jayne Englebert and David Voight
- March 7, 2002
2What Is This Program About ?
- Informing college students of opportunities in
geology - Answering career-related questions
- Providing advise on career paths
- Explaining the importance of professional
registration
3Who Are We?
- Dave T N Associates, Inc.
- Jayne MSA Professional Services, Inc.
- State registered professional geologists
- Certified professional geologists - AIPG
4Questions Graduates Want Answered
- What courses do I need to succeed?
- What are my career options?
- What will I do in practice?
- Who are my potential employers?
- Where will I live?
- Is there job security?
- How much will I make?
5Courses To Succeed
- Basic Geology Courses To Cover National
Registration Standards - Physical and Historical
- Mineralogy and Petrology
- Structural
- Stratigraphy
- Field Course, plus 12 advanced level for a total
of 36 semester or 45 quarter hours
6Courses - Continued
- Specialty Courses That Help
- Hydrogeology
- Geophysics
- Soils
- Petroleum Geology
- Engineering Geology
- Economic Geology
7Courses - Continued
- Beneficial Non-Geology Courses
- Technical Writing
- Business / Economics / Accounting
- Chemistry / Physics
- Geotechnical Engineering
- Law / Regulatory / Legislative Reviews
- Computer Applications
- DBM / Mapping Systems (GIS), Networking,
Spreadsheets, Graphics for Presentations
8Career Path Options In Geology
- by who you can work for . . .
- Academic
- Government / Non-Profit
- Industry / Consulting
9Career Path Options Academic
10Career Path Options Government/Non-Profit
11Career Path Options Industry and Consulting
Remember - Consulting follows industry!
12What Will I Do ?Youll Do It All !
- Field
- sample, measure, observe, and document
- Lab
- analyze soil, rock, and water samples for
physical and chemical make-up - Office / Public
- interpret data
- prepare maps, sections, reports
- model, present
13Who Are Potential Employers ?
- Government - Regulatory
- Federal
- EPA
- DOE
- State agencies
- DNR DOC
- DOA DOT
- Academics
- schools and
universities - Research
- universities, large corporations, government, and
institutes
14Potential Employers - Continued
- Government - Non-Regulatory
- US and State GSs
- NOAA / NASA
- ACOE / BLM
- FBI / CIA
- Military
- Municipal
- DOT / DOE (as owners)
- Industry / Consulting
- Oil
- Mining
- Solid Waste
- Manufacturers
- Finance / Brokerage
- Insurance
15What Areas of Interest Do Geologists Prefer ?
- Total Geologists in US in 2000 97,000
- 65 (64,000) Environmental
- 20 Oil/Gas Extraction or Mining
- 3 (3,100) Federal Government
- 3 (2,600) State Agencies
- 8 (8,000) Hydrologists
- 1 Miscellaneous
16UW-Madison MS/PhD Graduates1989-2000
- Masters Graduates
- Industry 27
- Academia 6
- Administration 14
- Non-Geology 10
- PhD Programs 45
-
- PhD Graduates
- Industry 28
- Academia 43
- Administration 20
- Non-Geology 9
By contrast, in 1999, 68 of Colorado School of
Mines graduates accepted industry positions!
17Where Will I Live ?- By Industry
- Oil / Gas - Major Companies
- Houston, New Orleans, Dallas, International
- Oil / Gas - Minor Companies
- Texas, Louisiana, rarely other states
- Mining
- west US, International
- Environmental
- anywhere
18Where Will I Live ? - Cont.- By Industry -
- Academic / Non-Industry Research
- Primary/secondary anywhere
- Research university locations and major cities
with research facilities - Regulatory / Government
- state capitals and cities with district offices
19Employment Outlook - By Industry -
- Varies with economic and environmental needs.
Dependent on ability to tolerate risk, reward,
and security - Oil / Gas
- good due to domestic shortages and need for
environmental stewardship and staff gap - Mining
- moderate due to continued metals demand and need
for environmental stewardship
20Employment Outlook - Cont. - By Industry -
- Environmental
- good for consulting due to regulations and focus
on environmental stewardship - Academic
- good / excellent at primary and secondary levels
as science teachers - poor at universities due to declining enrollments
21Employment Outlook - Cont. - By Industry -
- Non-Industry Research
- poor at universities due to declining enrollments
- steady at federal / state agencies due to
attrition - Regulatory / Government
- steady at federal / state agencies due to
attrition
22How Much Will I Make ? - By Industry -
- Starting Salary Long-Term Job
- Employer Low High Security
- Mining 44,200 51,700 Low
- Oil/Gas 42,000 65,000 Low
- Govnt 29,100 31,300 High
- Academic 30,000 38,000 High
- Environtl 32,800 40,100 Moderate
23How Much Will I Make ? - By Degree -
- Starting Salary
- Degree Low High
- Bachelors 29,100 48,600
- Masters 38,000 52,500
- PhD 42,000 65,000
-
Note that the lowest salaries are typically
government or academic jobs and the highest
salaries are oil/gas company jobs.
24How Much Will I Make ?- 1999 Colorado School of
Mines Averages -
- Geoscience Degrees
- Geology 35,338
- Geophysics 46,000
- Mining 42,070
- Petroleum 49,786
- Comparable Degrees
- Civil Engr 38,039
- Elect Engr 48,554
- Mechnl Engr 44,882
- Math/Compt Sci 49,058
- Eco/Business 43,313
- Chemistry 44,138
Consider these high-end salaries for MS degrees
25Focus on Environmental Consulting Career Path
- What career paths are available ?
- What are the typical career ladders in
environmental consulting ? - What do you need to succeed ?
- What is the market outlook ?
26Career Paths In Environmental Geology
27Career Ladder InEnvironmental Consulting
28Technical Knowledge Needed To Succeed
- Hydrogeology
- Solid mapping and cross sectioning skills
- Miscible and non-miscible flow
- Multi-disciplinary fields
- Field sampling methods
- Geophysical methods
- Chemistry
- Statistics and Computer skills
29Non-Technical Skills Needed To Succeed
- Writing and speaking
- Negotiating
- Organizing
- Legislative / regulatory process
- Business / project management
30The Best Job Candidates Are . . .
- 1. Willing to pay their dues in the field
- 2. Excellent communicators
- 3. Open to listen and learn new ideas
- 4. Able to adapt to meet economic needs
- 5. Have more than 1 area of expertise
- 6. Have business acumen
31Past Market For Environmental Consulting
- Growth market in the 1980s
- 40 growth / year
- Very stiff competition in the 1990s
- 10- 20 reduction since 1991
- Mature market in late 1990s
32Future Market For Environmental Consulting
- Current market is mature
- Normal turnover, entry level opportunities
- Better outlook due to
- power demands
- new international programs
- new regulations (wetlands, air, land use)
- clean water shortages
- increased environmental stewardship, and
- decrease in available candidates
Those with business acumen in highest demand!
33Growth Opportunities In Environmental Consulting
- Non-regulatory based markets
- Brownfield redevelopment
- Working with developers on contaminated lands
- Financially based improvements to existing
environmental controls - Long-term land use management and resource
protection plans
34What Drives The Market In The Long Run
- Achieving your clients objectives
- Saving money for your client
- minimizing remediation efforts
- turn-key remediation (fast)
- Helping your client make money
- fast permitting for speed to market
- design with new technology
35Professional RegistrationWhat Is It ?
- State statutory authority over the practice of a
profession
36Professional RegistrationWhat Does It Do ?
- Provides states assurances of minimum competency
- Charges geologists with protecting public health,
welfare, and environment - Provides penalties for practicing illegally,
unethically, or outside field of expertise
37Professional RegistrationBasic Requirements Are ?
- Bachelors degree
- 30 semester or 45 quarter hours in geology at
approved college - 5 yrs experience 7 yrs with peer review
- Letters of recommendation
- Exam (ASBOG)
38American Institute of Professional GeologistsWho
Are We ?
- Started at Colorado School of Mines in 1963
- Advocate for the Geology Profession
- National Membership over 8,000
- Quarterly magazine
- Range of Membership Categories
39Case Study
40(No Transcript)
41Site Investigation Activities
- Radiological Surveys
- Geophysical Surveys
- Background Soil and Groundwater Studies
- Surface Water and Seep Characterization
- Landfill Gas and Leachate Characterization
- Soil and Aquifer Characterization Studies
- Residential Well Sampling
- Ecological Surveys
42Geological and Hydrogeological Model Summary
(Eagan)
From Eagan, 2000, Figure 5-1
43Geological and Hydrogeological Model Summary (EPA)
44Geological and Hydrogeological Model Summary
45Geological and Hydrogeological Model Summary
- General Geology
- Upper Till clayey silt glacial till and
intertill deposits with thin interbedded sand and
gravel - Lower Sand and Gravel dominantly sand and gravel
interbedded with clayey silt glacial till which
increases to south and with depth - Bedrock highly porous limestone or dolomite
- Complex identification/correlation of
glacial/interglacial units requires integration
of all data
46Geological and Hydrogeological Model Summary
(Eagan)
From Eagan, 2000, Figure 3-1
47Other Investigation Activities
- Evaluate existing pump test data
- Estimate water budget (EPA vs. Danis)
- Research chromium occurrence and transport
- Perform supplemental aquifer characterization
studies - Review existing isotopic data
- Provide assistance with evaluating flow paths and
estimating transport rates
48Geological and Hydrogeological Model Summary (EPA)
49Geological and Hydrogeological Model Summary (EPA)
50Geological and Hydrogeological Model Summary
(cont.)