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Shell Summer School Trains 120 Undergraduates
The Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) last Monday added another cap to the litany of accomplishments as its Summer School kick-started the training of 120 top petroleum engineering and geosciences undergraduates of four universities in the Niger Delta as a practical demonstration of its desire to create a pool of competent human resource base to drive the oil and gas industry in the years ahead.
Of this number, 60 petroleum engineering students began their classes on Monday, and would stay on campus till August 15, while the other 60 geosciences students would join their class on September 14 through 19, in very intensive, practical sessions accounting for a cumulative 4,500 contact hours, covering a whole semester’s work.
Speaking during the inauguration of the school at the Information and Communication Technology Centre (ICTC), University of Port Harcourt, Choba, SPDC Managing Director, Mr. Mutiu Sunmonu said the 120 top performers participating in the two six-day summer schools are drawn from the host university, Rivers State University of Science and Technology (RSUST), Federal University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO), and the University of Benin (UNIBEN).
Represented at the event by the General Manager, Geosciences, Mr. Nedo Osayande, the managing director stressed that the programme was aimed at transferring industry experience to the students while at the same time bridging the academic-industry gap in curricula as a means of providing veritable platform for development of future exploration and production recruits in the industry.
He stated that the Shell staff, who constitute the faculty would provide on hands-on lectures, lead group discussions, syndicate practical and interactive sessions/exercises, and deliver practical modules in such subjects as mathematics, physics, mechanical, electrical and petroleum engineering as well as geology, geophysics, among others, adding that the initiative was strategically targeted at encouraging excellence in the four universities.
According to him, apart from the public relations benefits, the summer schools also provide significant window for talent-spotting as the industry grapples with the enormous challenges of replenishing its stock of competent reservoir engineers and other professionals in the oil and gas exploration and production environment, and promised to monitor the performance of the students for possible future employment.
Sunmonu noted that SPDC was committed to contributing to the enhancement of educational standards in exploration and production disciplines in Nigerian universities through direct transfer and impartation of practical and current industry knowledge and experience to the top performing students in the catchment universities, and assured the students of a better future in the industry, if they perform well on graduation.
An elated Vice Chancellor, University of Port Harcourt, Prof Don Baridam, while declaring the school open, lauded SPDC for collaborating with the university in this strategic initiative, particularly the introduction of geosciences summer school, saying that it would promote better interactions and more benefits to both the four universities and the participating students.
Prof Baridam listed other Shell involvements in the university to include establishment of Shell/Aret Adams chair in petroleum engineering, the donation of significant volumes of modern textbooks to both university library and the Department of Petroleum and Gas Engineering, the establishment of a state-of-the-art geophysics computing centre and the promise to supply more equipment to the centre as the research progresses, and requested Shell’s donation of a decommissioned Linux cluster to assist the university faculties to meet their computing needs.
The UNIPORT VC reminded the participating students that the course work was intensive, competitive and highly demanding, and said the authorities of their universities expect them to seize the rare opportunity to further expose themselves to the best industry knowledge, experience and cutting-edge technologies to prepare them for participation at higher levels of the oil and gas industry operations, especially in Shell.
The event, which collapsed into full academic session for the students, was witnessed by a cream of Shell staff and top members of the academia, including UNIPORT DVC, Academics, Prof Biozor Anyologwu, Director, UNIPORT ICT Centre, Prof Joseph Ebeniro, Director, Shell/Aret Adams Professorial Chair in Petroleum Engineering, Prof Wale Dosunmu, Director, UNIPORT Institute of Petroleum Studies, Prof Joseph Ajienka, Prof Onyewuchi Akaranta, deans, heads of departments, among others.