addressing the drilling industry competence challenge

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Mark Denkowski International Association of Drilling Contractors EVP Operational Integrity Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

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Page 1: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Mark Denkowski International Association of Drilling Contractors

EVP Operational Integrity

Addressing the Drilling Industry

Competence Challenge

Page 2: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

IADC History

2

75 Years: 1940-2015

ODC Logo, 194 0-1959

American Associat ion of

Oilwell Drilling Contractors

AAODC Logo, 1959-1972

American Associat ion of

Oilwell Drilling Contractors

IADC Logo, 1972-2014

International Associat ion

of Drilling Contractors

IADC Logo, 2014 -Present

International Associat ion

of Drilling Contractors

IADC 75th Anniversary Logo, 2015

International Associat ion of Drilling Contractors

Page 3: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Times were good!

•Ultra-deepwater exploration

•Global new build ramp up

•Land drilling renaissance & fracking

•Big crew change: 10,000s of new workers

•New technology and complexity

•Post-Macondo drive towards process safety

Page 4: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

2015 Commodity Crash

Page 5: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Current State of the Industry

•Companies have stacked rigs and reduced head count

•Retained employees have been increasingly being

asked to assume lower positions

•Reduced training budgets**

Page 6: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

The Great Crew Change

Page 7: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

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Rec. Rate Man-hours

US Onshore Recordable Incident Rate vs Man-Hours

Page 8: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Challenges

•Prepare for new people entering the industry

•Close the knowledge gap

•Maintain clear roles and responsibilities

•Develop a strategy for experienced people returning to the

industry

How Should the Industry Cope

Page 9: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

COMPETENCE

BACK TO BASICS

Page 10: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Competence is…

An individual’s

knowledge, skills,

abilities, and behavioral

attributes that

enable him or her to

perform his or

her work consistently,

precisely, and reliably.

Page 11: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Competence is …

8

“Doing the right thing in the

right way,

at the right time.”

EVERYTIME!

Page 12: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Consciously

Incompetent

Consciously

Competent Unconsciously

Incompetent

Unconsciously

Competent

Training

Mentoring

and

Experience

Cycle of

Competence

Technology or

Environment

Training

Competence is…

Page 13: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Pathway to Competence

10

Page 14: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Knowledge, Skills and Abilities (KSA)

Raising the Bar on Competency

Enhanced competency guidelines for virtually all rig-based

positions

• Globally accepted recommended common competence

standard

• Industry developed and accepted guidelines

• Addresses looming talent crisis

• Crucial step in developing workforce capabilities

Page 15: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Onshore Driller KSA

Page 16: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Gateway Accreditation Program

• Part of IADC’s Workforce Attraction and Development Initiative ‘WADI’

• Project that was developed by the IADC Workforce Development

Committee

• Learning objectives based on KSAs

• Preparing individuals for a successful career in the oil and gas industry

• The first course within the Gateway Accreditation is the ‘Introduction to

Oil and Gas Program’

_________________________________________________

Page 17: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Gateway: Introduction to Oil and Gas Program

Purpose:

To define the body of knowledge and set of job skills needed to train and

prepare personnel for entry-level positions in the oil and gas industry.

The course is designed to better prepare new employees for working on a

rig, thereby helping companies to improve safety culture in the field while

reducing turnover rate.

_________________________________________________

Page 18: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Gateway: Introduction to Oil and Gas Program

The program offers a baseline curriculum comprising

• IADC’s HSE RigPass ‘Safe Land’, ‘SafeGulf’

• IADC’s WellSharp Awareness level well control

• A general introduction to the industry

• Behavioral training (Human Factors)

• Training modules on rig life, rig math, rigging basics, electrical and

fluid safety, and industrial practices

Major focus on hands-on training throughout the program.

_________________________________________________

Page 19: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

David McCelland – Harvard Psychologist

• traditional achievement and intelligence scores may not be

able to predict job success”

• “what is required is to profile the exact competencies required

to perform a given job effectively and measure them using a

variety of tests.”

19

Page 20: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Training isn’t enough

_________________________________________________

Page 21: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

How do you measure Competence?

Page 22: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

The IADC Competence

Model

Assess

Manage

Define

Page 23: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Components of a Competence

AssuranceProgram

Verify Record

Outcome

Job

Role

Role

Competency

Profile Assess

Feedback

Outcome to

Candidate

Development

Plan

Candidate

Competency

Standards

Management System

Company

Standards

External

Standards

Page 24: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

David McCelland – Harvard Psychologist

• traditional achievement and intelligence scores may not be able to

predict job success”

• what is required is to profile the exact competencies required to

perform a given job effectively and measure them using a variety of

tests.

24

• the definition of a job competency required that the person’s

intent be understood, not merely that the person’s behavior be

observed.

Page 25: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Human Factors

25

Page 26: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Human Factor Elements

.

_________________________________________________

• Situation Awareness

• Peer pressure

• Decision Making

• Communication

• Teamwork

• Leadership

• Stress and fatigue

• Health

• Distractions

Page 27: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Human Factor Interactions

Human Factors

Interaction of individuals with each other, with facilities and equipment, and with management systems.

Non-technical Skills

Cognitive, social and personal resource skills that compliment technical skills, and contribute to safe and efficient task performance.

People

Management Systems

Facilities & Equipment

Page 28: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

WellSharp Well Control Training

Page 29: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

•Industry demanded more effective training:

•Courses focused on what employees need to know

•Develop training for all employees with well control

responsibilities

•Improve the integrity of the knowledge assessment

• Implement independent proctoring

• Increase focus on auditing

• Eliminate certificate mills

WellSharp Well Control Training

Page 30: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

WellSharp Well Control Training

• Electronic knowledge testing system • Online testing • Offline e-testing • Centralized and controlled question database • Questions randomized and answers shuffled • Pass/fail safety-critical questions • Surveys • Metrics

Page 31: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

WellSharp Well Control Training

• Independently proctored assessments • Lloyds Register

• Strengthened Instructor qualification requirements • Knowledge test

Page 32: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

WellSharp Well Control Training

Page 33: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

WellSharp Metrics–Test Question

Monitoring

42

Page 34: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

What’s Next

Test Translations

•Portuguese, Spanish, Arabic, Mandarin in 2016 with additional language translations to follow

Course Development

•Engineering course

•Human Factors module

•Supplements for MPD and Supervisory responsibilities of Onshore Drillers

Page 35: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Competence leads to …

…SUCCESS!

Page 36: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Competence leads to …

…SAFE and EFFICIENT OPERATIONS!

Page 37: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

IADC Resources Support

Building a Competence Program

Page 38: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

IADC Resources

• KSA Database

http://www/iadc.org/KSAdatabase

• Competence Guidance—Building a Successful

Competence Program

http://www/iadc.org/workforce-development-

committee/ase

• IADC Competence Assurance Accreditation Program

http://www.iadc.org/competence-assurance-

accreditation-program/

• WellSharp Well Control Training Accreditation

http://www.iadc.org/wellsharp/

Page 39: Addressing the Drilling Industry Competence Challenge

Questions