Achieving Harmony Amid Change and Uncertainty

Listening to “Togetherness (K’a jo se)” as I write prompted me to think about community. AAPG has been a pillar of the scientific community for more than 100 years, with a lengthy history of collaboration and rewarding relationships that extend beyond the Association. Like the rise to international success of Nigerian musician King Sunny Adé, AAPG has grown beyond its American roots to serve a global community of energy geoscientists as well as professionals working in adjacent functions like data science, carbon capture, use and sequestration, and various engineering disciplines.

Achieving a sense of harmony – while change and uncertainty dominate our lives and our profession – challenges us to make the best possible business decisions on behalf of AAPG and our community. After extensive strategic assessment, the 2020-21 Executive Committee unanimously supported the ongoing exploration of developing a new organization with the Society of Petroleum Engineers.

New information continues to be added to our merger website, AAPG-SPE-Merger.org, as members of the AAPG and SPE Steering Committee gather input, articulate a mission and vision, define governance and address fundamental aspects such as corporate structure, for review by the Executive Committee and the SPE Board this month. In August, the Steering Committee formed a team to examine membership models, with AAPG volunteers Kristie Ferguson, House of Delegates chair, and John Casiano working with AAPG staff and SPE counterparts. Another team that included past President and Advisory Council Chair Rick Fritz, Advisory Council member and Co-chair of the HoD Constitution and Bylaws Committee Ryan Lemiski, DPA President-Elect Andrea Reynolds, and AAPG staff worked with SPE counterparts to consider how AAPG committees, divisions, regions, sections, SIGs and TIGs and affiliated societies could fit together with components of SPE in a new organization. As with any combination of organizations, essential work must be done to proceed, even though some details cannot be ironed out up front, including aspects such as branding and the name of the organization.

Please offer your feedback and suggestions on the merger website as this work continues.

Please log in to read the full article

Listening to “Togetherness (K’a jo se)” as I write prompted me to think about community. AAPG has been a pillar of the scientific community for more than 100 years, with a lengthy history of collaboration and rewarding relationships that extend beyond the Association. Like the rise to international success of Nigerian musician King Sunny Adé, AAPG has grown beyond its American roots to serve a global community of energy geoscientists as well as professionals working in adjacent functions like data science, carbon capture, use and sequestration, and various engineering disciplines.

Achieving a sense of harmony – while change and uncertainty dominate our lives and our profession – challenges us to make the best possible business decisions on behalf of AAPG and our community. After extensive strategic assessment, the 2020-21 Executive Committee unanimously supported the ongoing exploration of developing a new organization with the Society of Petroleum Engineers.

New information continues to be added to our merger website, AAPG-SPE-Merger.org, as members of the AAPG and SPE Steering Committee gather input, articulate a mission and vision, define governance and address fundamental aspects such as corporate structure, for review by the Executive Committee and the SPE Board this month. In August, the Steering Committee formed a team to examine membership models, with AAPG volunteers Kristie Ferguson, House of Delegates chair, and John Casiano working with AAPG staff and SPE counterparts. Another team that included past President and Advisory Council Chair Rick Fritz, Advisory Council member and Co-chair of the HoD Constitution and Bylaws Committee Ryan Lemiski, DPA President-Elect Andrea Reynolds, and AAPG staff worked with SPE counterparts to consider how AAPG committees, divisions, regions, sections, SIGs and TIGs and affiliated societies could fit together with components of SPE in a new organization. As with any combination of organizations, essential work must be done to proceed, even though some details cannot be ironed out up front, including aspects such as branding and the name of the organization.

Please offer your feedback and suggestions on the merger website as this work continues.

As we manage the process of exploring a new organization with SPE, we recognize that preparing AAPG for the future is the key responsibility of the 2021-22 Executive Committee: change is inevitable. If AAPG does not form a new organization with SPE, then AAPG must greatly reduce its governance, business operations, and product and service portfolio to become a much smaller organization that lives within its means. Our fear is that reduced services to our members and to society will contribute to further erosion of relevance, requiring further reductions at AAPG – a downward spiral we wish to avoid.

In the short term, you can support AAPG by logging into AAPG.org, updating your profile, paying your dues, registering for a conference or buying a book, and recruiting new members. Contact me if you would like to volunteer!

Where Are We Going?

The AAPG Executive Committee and SPE Board recently met for a strategy session that included discussions about the energy transition and the role of our professional organizations. Panelists from industry and academia emphasized the fact that the energy transition is happening and expectations about how we deliver energy are changing, but that oil and gas will play a key role for decades to come. Our skills will be critically important to delivering energy during this transition.

As many experts have noted, the principal issue is not the fuel, it is the emissions. For example, using more natural gas and less coal represents a significant step toward a lower carbon footprint and reduced carbon intensity. Energy geoscientists will also be part of expanding efforts to sequester carbon and develop other forms of energy, such as geothermal and hydrogen.

Closer alignment of professional organizations and companies that employ members will help geoscientists and engineers adapt more quickly to whatever future employment opportunities may demand. Just as geoscientists are a big piece of the energy solution, AAPG is also a part of the energy solution.

Rolling Out the Red Carpet

AAPG looks forward to welcoming registrants who can safely travel to upcoming conferences, including the inaugural International Meeting for Applied Geoscience and Energy in Denver this month. Last month’s Unconventional Resources Technology Conference in Houston attracted several thousand registrants, of whom 70 percent attended in person and 30 percent online. Many of us are looking forward to the Eastern Section meeting in Pittsburgh (Oct. 2-6), the Midcontinent Section meeting in Tulsa (Oct. 3-5) and GeoGulf in Austin (Oct. 27-29). Other events are in flux while we assess whether travel and gathering are safe.

As part of my research for this column, I contacted Dr. Olufemi Babalola, a geoscientist who has been translating the lyrics of King Sunny Adé since the 1980s. As Dr. Babalola attested, the lyrics remind us that we are all in this together. Indeed, we are in this together – in energy geoscience, in AAPG, and in a global community. Since you have read this far, I will award a $100 AAPG gift certificate to the first person who provides an interesting fact about petroleum geoscience of west Africa as an online comment to this EXPLORER article.

Congratulations to July’s winner, George Allen of Butte, Montana, and August winner Graham Brew of Alameda, California.

Until next time,

Gretchen

You may also be interested in ...