Treasurer 2002-03

Officer Candidates

Larry C. Knauer

Larry C. Knauer, a candidate for AAPG treasurer, is a senior geologist with Texaco in Bakersfield, Calif.

A native of Long Beach, Calif., Knauer earned his bachelor's degree in geology from Whittier College and a master's from the University of California at Los Angeles.

Knauer began his career as a petroleum geologist with Gulf Oil, which in 1985 became a part of Chevron. In 1987, Knauer became a lecturer/curator at the California Well Sample Repository at California State University at Bakersfield, as well as a consultant for oil environmental issues in Kern County. In 1989 he took a senior geologist position with Bechtel Petroleum Operations before moving on to join Texaco in 1997.

Knauer has been a member of AAPG since 1982 and he is a registered geologist in California.

Active in the AAPG Pacific Section, Knauer has held a number of leadership positions there, including president in 1996-97. In 1999 he received the Section's Honorary Lifetime Member award. Knauer also has served as president of the San Joaquin Geological Society. Knauer was an AAPG House of Delegates alternate in 2001.

Additional professional affiliations include the Society of Petroleum Well Log Analysts.


Why I Accepted the Invitation To Be a Candidate For AAPG Office

By LARRY C. KNAUER

AAPG is a unique organization that thrives through a combination of good business sense, a true vision of its purpose as a vehicle for education and assistance to its members and the public, and its member's volunteerism.

I believe in volunteerism. I think giving something back to the profession you have selected is important. It is no less important than giving something of yourself to improve the community in which you live.

I have participated in the Pacific Section AAPG a great deal over the years. I see the direct benefit of what even a small number of volunteers are able to accomplish for our members. I see the camaraderie and flow of information grow as the network of geologists expands to include more of us. One of the main things we need to do is encourage fellow geologists to get actively involved. It is a slow process, usually involving one person at a time. We need to make a greater effort to bring more of what AAPG has to offer to the local societies and sections.

Joining with other professional societies for annual meetings has proven to be beneficial. The last two annual section meetings in the Pacific Section were done with the SPE in 2000 and the GSA in 2001. We are teaming up with the SPE again in 2002 in Anchorage. While the culture of these groups is somewhat different, that difference has provided the main benefit of working together on these joint meetings. That benefit is the many new ideas to which each of the organizations has been exposed. Not just technical ideas, but differences in the philosophy of how to run a meeting for the maximum benefit of the membership.

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Larry C. Knauer

Larry C. Knauer, a candidate for AAPG treasurer, is a senior geologist with Texaco in Bakersfield, Calif.

A native of Long Beach, Calif., Knauer earned his bachelor's degree in geology from Whittier College and a master's from the University of California at Los Angeles.

Knauer began his career as a petroleum geologist with Gulf Oil, which in 1985 became a part of Chevron. In 1987, Knauer became a lecturer/curator at the California Well Sample Repository at California State University at Bakersfield, as well as a consultant for oil environmental issues in Kern County. In 1989 he took a senior geologist position with Bechtel Petroleum Operations before moving on to join Texaco in 1997.

Knauer has been a member of AAPG since 1982 and he is a registered geologist in California.

Active in the AAPG Pacific Section, Knauer has held a number of leadership positions there, including president in 1996-97. In 1999 he received the Section's Honorary Lifetime Member award. Knauer also has served as president of the San Joaquin Geological Society. Knauer was an AAPG House of Delegates alternate in 2001.

Additional professional affiliations include the Society of Petroleum Well Log Analysts.


Why I Accepted the Invitation To Be a Candidate For AAPG Office

By LARRY C. KNAUER

AAPG is a unique organization that thrives through a combination of good business sense, a true vision of its purpose as a vehicle for education and assistance to its members and the public, and its member's volunteerism.

I believe in volunteerism. I think giving something back to the profession you have selected is important. It is no less important than giving something of yourself to improve the community in which you live.

I have participated in the Pacific Section AAPG a great deal over the years. I see the direct benefit of what even a small number of volunteers are able to accomplish for our members. I see the camaraderie and flow of information grow as the network of geologists expands to include more of us. One of the main things we need to do is encourage fellow geologists to get actively involved. It is a slow process, usually involving one person at a time. We need to make a greater effort to bring more of what AAPG has to offer to the local societies and sections.

Joining with other professional societies for annual meetings has proven to be beneficial. The last two annual section meetings in the Pacific Section were done with the SPE in 2000 and the GSA in 2001. We are teaming up with the SPE again in 2002 in Anchorage. While the culture of these groups is somewhat different, that difference has provided the main benefit of working together on these joint meetings. That benefit is the many new ideas to which each of the organizations has been exposed. Not just technical ideas, but differences in the philosophy of how to run a meeting for the maximum benefit of the membership.

I accepted the invitation to stand for the office of treasurer of AAPG because I saw it as an opportunity to get to know geologists from other sections in AAPG. I want to find out how they conduct themselves in their geologic communities. I want to know what programs they support and how they get people involved in doing the work.

Most of all, I want to find a way to connect the local societies, the regional sections and the national AAPG office into a more organized system of data exchange and mutual support. Rick Fritz has the right idea in going digital as much as possible, and expanding the AAPG Web site. But digital isn't everything. People are still needed to facilitate the connection between Tulsa and the outlying areas. I have a few ideas to discuss with the members and the staff of AAPG over the next year or two. I hope during that time to bring some new ideas back to the Pacific Section for the benefit of its members.


Dwight "Clint" Moore

Dwight "Clint" Moore, a candidate for AAPG treasurer, is a project geologist in business analysis for Anadarko Petroleum in Houston.

A native of Bloomfield Hills, Mich., Moore earned two bachelor's degrees, in geology and business administration from Southern Methodist University.

Moore began his career as a petroleum geologist with Diamond Shamrock in 1978 in its Gulf of Mexico US Exploration and Development group in Houston. He became senior staff geologist, and in 1986 became senior business analyst in Dallas.

In 1987 he joined Anadarko, becoming geological supervisor in 1995. In 1997 he became the offshore new ventures supervisor over the eastern Canada offshore group, and then exploration supervisor in 1998. In 1999, he returned to the offshore Gulf of Mexico group as project geologist.

Moore joined AAPG in 1978, and is a Certified Petroleum Geologist. He is a charter member of the Division of Environmental Geologists and a member of the Energy Minerals Division.

AAPG activities include presently serving on the AAPG Advisory Council (1999-2002), as a delegate in the AAPG House of Delegates (1989-2004), vice-chair of DPA's Governmental Affairs Committee and as a member of the Committee on Committees (1994-2002). He was chairman of the AAPG-DPA Governmental Affairs Committee from 1996-2000, chairman of the HOD's Constitution & Bylaws Committee from 1999-2000, and was a member of that committee from 1997-2001. He's a past member of the Education Committee (1995-99), was AAPG's Representative on AGI's Governmental Affairs Program Committee (1997-2000), and served on several additional Advisory Council and House of Delegates ad hoc committees.

He received the HOD's "Distinguished Member of the House" Award in 2001, the DPA's Distinguished Service Award in 2001 and AAPG Certificates of Merit in 1997 and 1999. He is a past president of the Houston Geological Society, and was a technical session chairman at AAPG annual meetings in 1995, 1997 and 1999. He also has been on the GCAGS Board of Directors (1994-95).

He's authored several AAPG-SEPM papers on sub-salt exploration and salt tectonics.

He is a member of the Houston Geological Society, the New Orleans Geological Society, the Society of Exploration Geophysicists and the Geophysical Society of Houston.


Why I Accepted the Invitation To Be a Candidate For AAPG Office

By DWIGHT "CLINT" MOORE

I decided to become a candidate for AAPG office because I firmly believe that AAPG needs to do much more in improving and advancing the relationship with its members. Specifically, AAPG and its leaders should embrace this higher mission of evolving programs and services so the Association becomes our "Career Partner for Life." This would launch us into a new era of greater responsiveness to the needs of our present members, and likely attract potential new ones. Some organizations once offered this relationship to their employees, but today that interdependent policy is seldom found.

Members deserve no less from our professional Association, and our future leaders should focus more on the issues and solutions that will add greatest value to AAPG's member services. In my view, AAPG should evolve toward this vision and embrace it, or risk long-term atrophy or even decline. We should try to offer career counseling services, employment assistance, a skills registry, Web site resumé posting and any other service that will allow AAPG to literally become every member's "Career Partner for Life." If you ever lose your job, AAPG should "be there for you" with programs and services that can make a meaningful difference in finding that next career opportunity. Our Constitution is well stated where it says our purpose is to "advance(s) the professional well being of its members." If effectively implemented, most geologists would want to be an AAPG member just for these programs and services alone. This approach might also help retain some of the 2,000 non-renewing members that we drop each year.

Many members have spoken to me of their concerns with the way AAPG sometimes interacts with its membership. We can improve upon our: 1) continuing education program pricing and formats, 2) convention pricing and services, 3) memoir and publications pricing and formats, and 4) the insurance program's pricing and coverages. Just as important, we need to review the publishing criteria for our AAPG BULLETIN, with the objective of making it more useful to the professional needs of the average member.

After many years in various leadership roles within AAPG, I have come to understand the importance of the treasurer position, and its critical role on the Executive Committee. The treasurer has key fiscal responsibility, and can have a definitive role in the direction of the Association. I seek the treasurer position because it is responsible for "all disbursements of funds" of AAPG's $10+ million budget, where important new programs and services need to be funded. My career experience and second collegiate degree in business-finance with an economics minor, additionally qualify me to analyze the AAPG financial reports and propose more cost-effective ways to achieve our mission.

My commitment is to build a more effective AAPG. We need a strong, well-served AAPG membership with leadership that optimizes AAPG's value and potential to each member. I offer you my energy, dedication and firm commitment to do just that. I seek only to best serve my fellow members, and the goals and aspirations we all share for this great Association.


Paul Weimer

Paul Weimer, a candidate for AAPG treasurer, is the University of Colorado Bruce D. Benson Endowed Chair in Petroleum Geology, director of the Energy and Minerals Applied Research Center, associate chair for graduate studies, and a consulting geologist.

A native of Colorado, Weimer earned his bachelor's degree in geology at Pomona College, his master's at the University of Colorado and a doctorate at the University of Texas at Austin.

Weimer began his career as an exploration geologist at Sohio Petroleum in San Francisco from 1980-84, and British Petroleum (merged with Sohio) from 1984-88. He joined Mobil in 1988 as exploration and research geologist before assuming his present position at CU in 1990.

He joined AAPG in 1978 and is a Certified Petroleum Geologist.

AAPG activities include serving on the Distinguished Lecture Committee from 1991-94, 1996 and 1998 to present and is presently chairman. He was a Distinguished Lecturer in 1998-99. He also has served on the Membership, Research, Geophysical Integration, Technical Program and Convention Coordination (two terms) committees. He also served as AAPG Student Chapter sponsor in 1998. He served as an associate editor for the BULLETIN from 1997-2000.

The author of over 100 technical papers, Weimer has conducted and convened AAPG symposia, annual meeting sessions and short courses. He was awarded the J.C. "Cam" Sproule Best Paper Award in 1992 and has co-edited eight books, including AAPG Studies 42, Applications of 3-D Seismic Data to Exploration and Production; and AAPG Memoir 58, Siliciclastic Sequence Stratigraphy -- Recent Developments and Applications.

He is currently finishing writing a book for AAPG on petroleum geology of deep-water deposits.

Other professional affiliations include the Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists, Houston Geological Society, New Orleans Geological Society, Geological Society of America, the Society of Exploration Geophysicists, SEPM and the European Association of Exploration Geophysicists.


Why I Accepted the Invitation To Be a Candidate For AAPG Office

By PAUL WEIMER

Candidates always say how fortunate and honored they are to be asked to run for AAPG office. I understand that emotion; they are quite right!

  • Like all professional societies, AAPG faces many challenges in these rapidly changing times. I see the main challenges as:
  • Making sure that AAPG remains valuable to members, offering the services members need at the lowest possible price.
  • Making sure that AAPG's programs mirror the interdisciplinary approaches that are the future of the petroleum industry.
  • Addressing AAPG's membership decline, which decreases AAPG's revenue and endangers our future as a vital professional society.

None of these challenges have simple solutions. Collectively, the Executive Committee must continue to address these challenges in creative and innovative ways.

I have been honored to serve AAPG in several technical aspects that are relevant to these challenges. First, I worked on the technical program committees for several conventions and conferences during the past 16 years. Second, I have edited two AAPG books and served as an associate editor for the BULLETIN. Third, I have served on several strategy-related committees, including an ad hoc committee in early 1999 to investigate the areas of overlap between different professional societies. Finally, I am chairing the Distinguished Lecture Committee from 2000 to 2003 -- one of AAPG's flagship programs for disseminating state-of-the-art science.

As part of this effort, I helped initiate two new interdisciplinary distinguished lecture programs with SEG (1999) and with SPE and SEG (2002).

Throughout these AAPG activities, my goal as an applied academic and consulting geoscientist is to keep pace with technical advances. As a professor, I also need to prepare students for their careers in industry.

If elected as treasurer, I will use all these experiences to address the challenges we face. Specifically, I'll work with members and officers to investigate:

  • Using technology to disseminate technical information rapidly. For example, we are placing many of the figures from AAPG Distinguished Lectures on the Web. This will allow all members to access the lectures' scientific insights -- even members who cannot attend the lecture.
  • Educating AAPG members about interdisciplinary approaches to our profession. To do this, we should continue working with other societies to expand our joint programs, such as Distinguished Lecture tours. Other areas such as continuing education, publications, scientific conferences and conventions are also ripe for cooperative efforts.
  • Rebuilding our membership through recruitment of young geoscientists. This requires coordinated efforts through many committees. We should focus our membership efforts not only on AAPG student chapters, but also on young geoscientists who are already working in companies.
  • Increasing the International membership is also essential to AAPG's future success. AAPG has increasingly become an international society during the past decade; engaging more potential international members by providing the services (technical and business) that they need will encourage their participation.
  • In conclusion, I am honored to be asked to run for AAPG treasurer, and will work hard to represent members' interests. Thank you for the privilege.

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