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I know a couple of people who work offshore on rigs and boats, doing hydrographic survey.

If you don't have any skills to offer, ie no degree in engineering, ocean science etc, then the only thing that you can do is manual labour, roustabout, roughneck etc

In order to get a manual labour job, remember that no company is likely to invest in you getting the necessary qualifications to get offshore, so you will have to pay yourself these can be quite costly;

Medical £50-80
Bosiet £500-600
Greenhand £700-£1500

So £1200 to £2k plus

Once you have done these, you are qualified to go offshore, this doesn't mean you are guaranteed work, in fact far from it, 90% of agencies 90%
of the time will want you to have been offshore at least once, they dont want a n00b basically.

This may seem pretty gloomy but work offshore, apart from being very very boring as well being away for birthdays, Christmas, and only meeting the same 20 people for 6weeks, isn't all that bad, the food and living quarters can be quite good and of course is provided free!

PS. yes pirates are a real threat, off the coast of Angola, Nigeria etc you will likely have navy and / or armed guards. When you on land esp Niger delta you run the risk of being kidnapped for extortion, along with general crime in Luanda and Lagos etc
 
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hey marge, abro works on the rigs, hes a "mud logger" which pays 18 grand or so, works 2 weeks on 2 weeks off, hes got a degree in geology and looks through microscopes at mud.. he's the guy to ask about the jobs tbh
 
hey marge, abro works on the rigs, hes a "mud logger" which pays 18 grand or so, works 2 weeks on 2 weeks off, hes got a degree in geology and looks through microscopes at mud.. he's the guy to ask about the jobs tbh

Is that a quote off The Simpsons I assume?
 
I've heard of a few guys around here getting jobs working on oil rigs, 3 weeks at a time with good pay, but I cant seem to find any informative information on the subject.

Has anyone worked offshore doing something similar, what are your experiences and comments? Thinking about doing it myself.
What skills do you have?

Without a skill your chances of getting a job offshore are virtually nill. But all sorts of things are required offshore, anything from stewards to scaffolders to process operators.

Working offshore is VERY safe. Safety first is drilled in to you. Idiots that endanger others are not tolerated. The most dangerous thing you will encoutetr offshore is the food, depending on the rig, you can expect to put on quite a few kilos.
I'll echo this, if you show a disregard for basic safety you will get kicked off, BUT though the people working there will watch out for you and everyone elses safety some of the facilities themselves can be a bit ropey.
 
Ah ok :D

Has the bloke that works on the rigs only just started as that pay seems very low of a grad geologist in the oil industry?
 
Ah cool, I was getting worried then (doing a geology degree at the moment)!

He should be on £40k in no time. ;)
 
If you want to get a realy high paying position, and a better chance of getting the job, learn how to climb. Some of the highest paid and most sought after people are those who have the knowledge/skills to do climbing work on areas of the rig that are not easily accessible. Bit more dangerous then some of the other jobs on an oil rig, but im gusesing it shouldnt be too bad as you will be wearing a proper climbing harness and have it attached to whatever is available so you dont fall to your death.
 
Worked offshore for a few years in UK and aborad....currently working Month On/Month Off doing a project engineers role in Baku for BP...what would u like to know about the industry?
 
If you want to get a realy high paying position, and a better chance of getting the job, learn how to climb. Some of the highest paid and most sought after people are those who have the knowledge/skills to do climbing work on areas of the rig that are not easily accessible. Bit more dangerous then some of the other jobs on an oil rig, but im gusesing it shouldnt be too bad as you will be wearing a proper climbing harness and have it attached to whatever is available so you dont fall to your death.

Lots of climbers are keen to do roped access work on and offshore but the general advice is the rope skills aren't much use without a skill/trade.
 
I'm currently doing a course on the law of Maritime security and piracy at the nat. university of Singapore, interesting that this topic came up! My lecturer is an advisor to indonesia, malaysia, thailand etc on the issue of piracy as this is the region with some of the highest levels of piracy in the world. I'm sure you'd be fine, not many people with speedboats and assault rifles have the means to rob and oil rig!

As a side note, "international waters" isn't legally a real thing, they are actually called the High Seas - which sounds much cooler.
 
Worked offshore for a few years in UK and aborad....currently working Month On/Month Off doing a project engineers role in Baku for BP...what would u like to know about the industry?

Toxic, are you working on the Azeri project? Just wondering as I'm in the London office in materials control...
 
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