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Jan 18, 2011

Welcome


Alaska is the home of Prudhoe Bay, the largest oil field in North America.  As the only petroleum engineering undergraduate and graduate program in Alaska, a special emphasis is placed on arctic oil and gas development. In petroleum engineering, application of the basic sciences of chemistry, geology and physics are combined with engineering sciences to promote the development and production of conventional and unconventional hydrocarbon resources. The Petroleum Engineering program at UAF is a modern and challenging degree and offers a unique look at the problems confronting the petroleum industry. The petroleum engineering curriculum is accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET). Alaska's oil production currently accounts for about 20% of U.S. total production.  Alaska also contains over 25% of the entire U.S. proven reserves of oil as well as massive reserves of natural gas, coal and natural gas hydrates.  The petroleum engineering curriculum at UAF prepares graduates to apply modern technology to development of these resources while emphasizing, whenever possible, the special problems encountered in Alaska. We offer one of the most modern and challenging degree programs anywhere, and are located in the heart of the nation's Energy Frontier.

The primary areas of petroleum engineering are drilling engineering, well completion, production engineering, reservoir evaluation and reservoir engineering. Undergraduate students take basic courses in all of these disciplines.  Graduate work allows the student to focus on one particular area and develop additional expertise.  Most of the research in petroleum engineering at UAF is conducted in the
Petroleum Development Laboratory and include basic and advanced studies of oil displacement, reservoir rock and fluid properties of Alaskan oil fields, thermal recovery, miscible flooding, improved water flooding, gas hydrates, gas-to-liquids (GTL) conversion and transportation, coalbed methane, drilling and production.

Petroleum Engineering Degrees

The deadlines for graduate admission application to be considered for departmental review are February 15th for fall semester and September 15th for spring semester.
At UAF, Bachelor of Science, Master of Science degrees in Petroleum Engineering and Interdisciplinary Ph.D. degrees are available.

Unique Opportunities


Petroleum engineering students have many advantages at UAF:
  • Medium class sizes, with a student to teacher ratio of 20-1
  • Computer lab equipped with oil industry standard software
  • Field trip to Kenai oil field with American Association of Drilling Engineers (AADE)
  • Field trip to Prudhoe Bay with Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)
  • AADE and SPE national poster and paper competitions http://www.alaska.edu/uaf/cem/pete/news/index.xml
  • Petroleum engineering graduates earn some of the highest starting salaries in the field of engineering
  • Research opportunities for undergraduates
  • Campus visit from major energy companies to recruit for internships and full-time employment http://www.uaf.edu/career/

Spring 2011 Courses in Anchorage



PETE 205
(35494): Fundamentals of Drilling Practices (1 Credit)
Instructor: Bob Coolidge
Meeting Time and Location: 5:30 - 6:30 p.m. Room 134 BP Building
First Day of Class: Thursday, January 20, 2011

PETE 206
(35496): Introduction to Production (1 Credit)
Instructor: Bob Coolidge
Meeting Time and Location: 6:45 - 7:45 p.m. Room 134 BP Building
First Day of Class: Thursday, January 20, 2011

For information and course content please contact:
coolrb@bp.com:

PETE 421
(39914): Resevoir Characterization (3 Credits)
PETE 621
39913: Applied Resevoir Characterization (3 Credits)
Instructor: Catherine Hanks
Meeting Time and Location: Tuesday, Thursday 11:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m., Location Room 103 Hartlieb Hall, UAA Campus
First Day of Class: January 20, 2011
For information and course content please contact chanks@gi.alaska.edu.

PETE 630
(40149): Water Flooding (3 Credits)
Meeting Time and Location: Wednesday 5:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., Location Room 103 HArtlieb Hall, UAA Campus
Instructor: Dr. Samson Ning
First Day of Class: January 26, 2010
For information and course content please contact Samson.Ning@bp.com.
  • Courses will be offered subject to sufficient enrollment (minimum 5 students in each course)
  • Register on-line at http://uaonline.alaska.edu or register in person on the first day of class. (Some course registration numbers may be pending at this time.)
  • For additional information, please contact Melody Hughes, fyipete@uaf.edu, 907.474.7734 or Dr. Catherine Hanks, chanks@gi.alaska.edu, 907-474-2668

News and Events




Petroleum engineering student calibrating lab instrument.


Petroleum Development Lab

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