roca
Mechanical
- Aug 21, 2002
- 276
I am at present living in Perth, Western Australia having lived and worked most of my life in Europe.
My trade is a Static Equipment Engineer – pressure vessels, shell and tube heat exchangers, ACHE’s, columns, flares, etc,etc.
In Europe I could be working at one of the major world engineering contracting companies on say a refinery project. The next project might be a chemical plant or an LNG project or a pharmaceutical plant, an FPSO, a rig, etc
Here in Oz they have the strange habit of pigeon holing people.
If you have worked on refinery projects you can only work on that type of project, if you are from a mining / minerals background or have offshore experience again you are placed in a box and are not allowed to work on other types of projects.
I find this bizarre to say the least and it makes it difficult to move around the workplace. Maybe its just people protecting their little empires.
In my discipline for example a pressure vessel is a pressure vessel. The only difference will be the vessel contents, design pressure and temperature, materials of construction and design code. It does not basically matter whether it is going onshore / offshore, on an LNG plant, a mining project, a chemical plant, etc. There are of course some slight differences for each project based on the project and client requirements.
Has anyone else come across this sort of attitude before?
My trade is a Static Equipment Engineer – pressure vessels, shell and tube heat exchangers, ACHE’s, columns, flares, etc,etc.
In Europe I could be working at one of the major world engineering contracting companies on say a refinery project. The next project might be a chemical plant or an LNG project or a pharmaceutical plant, an FPSO, a rig, etc
Here in Oz they have the strange habit of pigeon holing people.
If you have worked on refinery projects you can only work on that type of project, if you are from a mining / minerals background or have offshore experience again you are placed in a box and are not allowed to work on other types of projects.
I find this bizarre to say the least and it makes it difficult to move around the workplace. Maybe its just people protecting their little empires.
In my discipline for example a pressure vessel is a pressure vessel. The only difference will be the vessel contents, design pressure and temperature, materials of construction and design code. It does not basically matter whether it is going onshore / offshore, on an LNG plant, a mining project, a chemical plant, etc. There are of course some slight differences for each project based on the project and client requirements.
Has anyone else come across this sort of attitude before?