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PERM – Petroleum Engineering & Rock Mechanics Group
Providing affordable energy in an environmentally sustainable way is a key issue for the world. Despite recent developments there is still a significant global reliance on oil and gas.
Research into efficient and effective recovery methods is, therefore, a very high priority. In the Petroleum Engineering and Rock Mechanics Research Group (PERM) we perform research in all areas of petroleum engineering. We focus predominantly on the subsurface upstream end of the industry, including flow in porous media, reservoir simulation, reservoir characterisation, hydrocarbon thermodynamics and rock mechanics.
This research has applications to many industry problems such as well testing, heavy oil recovery, enhanced/improved recovery, CO2 sequestration, drilling and so on. Funding for these activities is from international oil and service companies, UK government and Research Councils, and the EU.
Petroleum Engineering Course Outline
This course will begin on schedule in the Autumn and we plan to reopen our campuses. We are looking forward to seeing you in person, if travel and visa arrangements allow. If you can’t travel to campus in time for the start of term, we want to reassure you that we have made plans which make it possible to offer you a high-quality remote educational experience during the Autumn term.
Your teaching will be a combination of on-campus (in-person) and remote learning (online). We call this ‘multi-mode’ delivery. Depending on official government guidance throughout the entirety of next academic year, the ‘multi-mode’ balance may be subject to change. We hope to be able to offer you increased on-campus teaching and learning activities throughout the year.
Amongst MSc Petroleum Engineering academics are distinguished researchers and lecturers, highly regarded in academia and the petroleum industry.
Course Director
Professor Martin J. Blunt
Chairs in MSc Petroleum Engineers
Professor Martin J. Blunt
Professor Matthew Jackson
Professor Peter R. King
Professor Ann Muggeridge
Professor Velisa Vesovic
Professor Robert W. Zimmerman
Course structure
The course is managed by Professor Martin Blunt. It is supported by over 20 specialist internal and external staff with over 160 years of cumulative industrial experience. The course also benefits from contributions from industry professionals. The course runs for 12 months and is aimed at providing the necessary background for employment in the oil and gas industry or a springboard for a research degree, as well as providing an in-depth study and consolidation for those already working in industry.
There are three principal elements to the course:
- Formal lectures, problem classes, laboratory and computer exercises. These take place on a full-time, structured basis from October to March in the normal academic terms. During the taught course, our students do fieldwork based learning. Formal examinations are usually conducted in January and the first two weeks of the Summer term.
- Group project work. This is a group field development exercise carried out by groups of about five to six students, the first phase being carried out jointly with the MSc Petroleum Geoscience students. The objective is to interrelate the separate subjects taught in formal lectures. Data for the project are analysed with prevailing commercial software as part of Modules II to IV and integrated into a development proposal as part of Module V. This is assessed initially by a presentation to the examiners at the end of the Spring term. After review and discussion, selected groups make further presentations to an invited audience from industry.
- Individual research projects. After formal examinations, candidates will work on individual research projects. These are submitted at the beginning of September and are examined both as a report and by an oral presentation in mid-September. Projects may be selected by the candidate, planned in cooperation with industrial sponsors or allocated by the Department.
RESEARCH PROJECTS
The course finishes with an extensive four-month individual research project in the student’s chosen branch of Petroleum Engineering. A broad range of research topics are covered and all projects are supervised by an academic from Imperial College London. Many research projects are done in collaboration with major petroleum companies allowing students to make contacts and gain practical experience within the industry.
The projects expand upon the core taught modules, requiring independent thinking and critical analysis, resulting in an addition to knowledge of substantial depth and relevance to the modern petroleum industry. On completion of the projects will be a series of presentations to faculty of Imperial College London and our associates in industry. A number of the final theses are published as Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) papers.
Overview
This programme will train you to understand and effectively utilise the workflow concepts now prevailing in the oil industry and prepare you to work in multidisciplinary teams.
This MSc is a one-year, full-time course that trains petroleum engineering professionals to understand and effectively utilise the workflow concepts now prevailing in the oil industry, and prepares them fully for work in multidisciplinary teams.
The programme provides a 12-month conversion from other engineering and science-based foundations into the specialities of petroleum engineering and is designed for both those with industrial experience and recent graduates.
The course begins in early October. Formal lectures, problem classes, laboratories and computer exercises take place on a full-time structured basis from October to March, during the academic terms, and cover a total of 390 hours.
The course curriculum is organised around five teaching modules. All modules feature petroleum engineering laboratories, a field trip, seminars with industry and communication skills classes.
Professional accreditation
This course is professionally accredited by The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining.
Achieving a professionally accredited degree demonstrates to employers that you have achieved an industry-recognised standard of competency. It also brings international recognition of your qualification, which is particularly useful for students preparing for a career abroad.
Our accreditation agreement with The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining is renewed every 5 years, and the current agreement runs between 2018 and 2022.
Structure
Modules shown are for the current academic year and are subject to change depending on your year of entry.
Structure
Coursework modulesExam modulesIndependent project
You take all of the core coursework modules below.
- Reservoir Characterisation/Reservoir Engineering and Performance/Field Development: Group Field Project
- Reservoir Characterisation: Production Logging
- Reservoir Characterisation: Well Test Analysis
- Reservoir Engineering and Performance: Numerical Reservoir Simulators
- Reservoir Engineering and Performance: Reservoir Performance Predictors
- Reservoir Engineering and Performance: Upscaling
Teaching and assessment
Teaching
- Fieldwork
- Group projects
- Independent project (often via industry placements)
- Lectures
- On-line lecture materials
- Practical classes
- Workshops
Assessment
- Fieldwork exercises
- Oral and poster presentations
- Reports
- Written Examination
Entry requirements
We welcome students from all over the world and consider all applicants on an individual basis.
Minimum academic requirement
Our minimum requirement is a first-class degree in science or engineering.
Applicants with other qualifications, and a minimum of three years industrial experience, may be considered.
International qualifications
We also accept a wide variety of international qualifications.
The academic requirement above is for applicants who hold or who are working towards a UK qualification.
For guidance see our Country Index though please note that the standards listed are the minimum for entry to the College, and not specifically this Department.
If you have any questions about admissions and the standard required for the qualification you hold or are currently studying then please contact the relevant admissions team.
English language requirement (all applicants)
All candidates must demonstrate a minimum level of English language proficiency for admission to the College.
For admission to this course, you must achieve the standard College requirement in the appropriate English language qualification. For details of the minimum grades required to achieve this requirement, please see the English language requirements for postgraduate applicants.
How to apply
How to apply
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Before you apply
We strive to increase and broaden inclusivity and support everyone, regardless of background, in breaking down any barriers to your application the Department.
If you are interested in this MSc, we strongly encourage you to contact the course administrator prior to starting your application.
Making an application
Apply online
All applicants must apply online.
Visit our Admissions website for details on the application process.
You can submit one application form per year of entry. You can usually choose up to two courses.
Application fee
For 2021–22 entry, we are introducing a pilot application fee for our Master’s courses. This helps cover some of the administrative and staffing costs associated with processing the large volume of applications we receive.
This fee will be £80 per application and not per course.
We will waive the fee for any applicant – Home or Overseas – who demonstrates that they are experiencing financial hardship.
There is no application fee for Postgraduate Certificates, Postgraduate Diplomas or PhDs. The fee for MBA applications to the Imperial College Business School is £135.
Find out more about the application fee and waiver
ATAS certificate (overseas candidates)
An ATAS certificate is required for all visa-nationals, with the exception of EEA/Swiss nationals and nationals of the following countries: Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, South Korea and the USA.
To apply for an ATAS certificate online, you will need your programme’s Common Aggregation Hierarchy (CAH) code and ‘descriptor’, as well as your university supervisor name. For this course, these are:
CAH code Descriptor Supervisor name
CAH10-01-09 chemical, process and energy engineering Professor Mark Sephton
Your student visa application, or extension of stay, will automatically be refused if you need an ATAS certificate and cannot provide one.
For further guidance on obtaining an ATAS certificate please see the information on our International Student Support website.
Further questions?
Find answers to your questions about admissions. Answers cover COVID-19, English language requirements, Visas and more.
Visit the FAQs
Tuition fees and funding
The level of tuition fees you pay is based on your fee status, which we assess based on UK government legislation.
Find out more about fees and funding opportunities.
Tuition fees
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Home rate of tuition
2021 entry
£18,500 per year
Fees are charged by year of entry to the College and not year of study.
Except where otherwise indicated, the fees for students on courses lasting more than one year will increase annually by an amount linked to inflation, including for part-time students on modular programmes. The measure of inflation used will be the Retail Price Index (RPI) value in the April of the calendar year in which the academic session starts e.g. the RPI value in April 2021 will apply to fees for the academic year 2021–2022.
Fee status
Whether you pay the Home fee depends on your fee status.
Your fee status is assessed based on UK Government legislation and includes things like where you live and your nationality or residency status.
Find out more about how we assess your fee status.
EU/EEA/Swiss students
The Government has confirmed that EU/EEA/Swiss students who begin a course before the 31 July 2021 will be eligible to pay the same fee as Home students and have access to student finance for the duration of their course, as long as they meet certain requirements which are unchanged from previous years. This includes students who begin the course remotely.
EU/EEA/Swiss students starting a course on or after 1 August 2021 will no longer be eligible for the Home fee rate and so will be charged the Overseas fee. Please note we do not expect this to apply to Irish students or students benefitting from Citizens’ rights under the EU Withdrawal Agreement, EEA EFTA Separation Agreement or Swiss Citizens’ Rights Agreement respectively. However, we are currently awaiting the formal publication of the amended Fees and Awards regulations.
The UK Council for International Student Affairs (UKCISA) website has useful information on the conditions you currently need to meet to be entitled to pay tuition fees at the Home rate for study on a higher education course in England and reflect the regulations as they currently stand (not the amended regulations which are subject to publication).
UKCISA has also provided some information in response to Questions for students starting their course from the 1 August 2021.
For regular updates for EU students, please see our Imperial and the EU webpages.
Overseas rate of tuition
2021 entry
£38,750 per year
Fees are charged by year of entry to the College and not year of study.
Except where otherwise indicated, the fees for students on courses lasting more than one year will increase annually by an amount linked to inflation, including for part-time students on modular programmes. The measure of inflation used will be the Retail Price Index (RPI) value in the April of the calendar year in which the academic session starts e.g. the RPI value in April 2021 will apply to fees for the academic year 2021–2022.
Fee status
Whether you pay the Overseas fee depends on your fee status.
Your fee status is assessed based on UK Government legislation and includes things like where you live and your nationality or residency status.
Find out more about how we assess your fee status.
EU/EEA/Swiss students
The Government has confirmed that EU/EEA/Swiss students who begin a course before the 31 July 2021 will be eligible to pay the same fee as Home students and have access to student finance for the duration of their course, as long as they meet certain requirements which are unchanged from previous years. This includes students who begin the course remotely.
EU/EEA/Swiss students starting a course on or after 1 August 2021 will no longer be eligible for the Home fee rate and so will be charged the Overseas fee. Please note we do not expect this to apply to Irish students or students benefitting from Citizens’ rights under the EU Withdrawal Agreement, EEA EFTA Separation Agreement or Swiss Citizens’ Rights Agreement respectively. However, we are currently awaiting the formal publication of the amended Fees and Awards regulations.
The UK Council for International Student Affairs (UKCISA) website has useful information on the conditions you currently need to meet to be entitled to pay tuition fees at the Home rate for study on a higher education course in England and reflect the regulations as they currently stand (not the amended regulations which are subject to publication).
UKCISA has also provided some information in response to Questions for students starting their course from the 1 August 2021.
For regular updates for EU students, please see our Imperial and the EU webpages.
Postgraduate Master’s loan
If you’re a UK national, or EU national with settled or pre-settled status under the EU Settlement Scheme, you may be able to apply for a Postgraduate Master’s Loan from the UK government, if you meet certain criteria.
For 2020-21 entry, the maximum amount was of £11,222. The loan is not means-tested and you can choose whether to put it towards your tuition fees or living costs.
Scholarships
We offer a range of scholarships for postgraduate students to support you through your studies. Find out more about our scholarships to see what you might be eligible for.
A number of external organisations also offer awards for Imperial students. Find out more about non-Imperial scholarships.
If you are an Iranian national and are accepted to study at Imperial starting this October, you may be eligible to apply for the Irani family scholarship.
Accommodation and living costs
Living costs, including accommodation, are not included in your tuition fees.
You can compare costs across our different accommodation options on our Accommodation website.
A rough guide to what you might expect to spend to live in reasonable comfort in London is available on our Fees and Funding website.
Petroleum Engineering MSc
Key Information
We strive to increase and broaden inclusivity and support everyone, regardless of background, in breaking down any barriers to your application the Department.
If you are interested in this MSc, we strongly encourage you to contact the course administrator prior to starting your application.
MSc Petroleum Engineering is a one-year, full-time programme, designed to train professionals in the work-flow concepts now prevailing in the oil and gas industries, and to produce engineers that are fully prepared to work effectively in multi-disciplinary teams.
Key information
- Accredited by the UK Engineering Council.
- Graduates with appropriate first degrees and relevant professional experience qualify for the CEng (Chartered Engineer) designation. The UK CEng in turn has reciprocal standing in Europe and as such engineers are entitled to use the EUR ING designation.
- The course begins in early October, and leads to award of a Master of Science (MSc) degree and to the Diploma of Imperial College (DIC).
- The course is run by the Centre for Petroleum Studies.
Petroleum Engineering MSc
- MSc Petroleum Engineering academics are distinguished researchers and lecturers, highly regarded in academia and the petroleum industry.
- Students undertake group project work and individual research projects
- The course benefits from strong industry links
Who should attend?
The course is designed for new graduates as well as those with previous experience of the petroleum industry. The course is a good fit for graduates with strong science or mathematics from a wide range of academic backgrounds, from Chemical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering to Physics and Economics.
A MSc in Petroleum Engineering from Imperial College will appeal to bright students, who want a rigorous education that incorporates technical industry knowledge and practical applications.
We require a first class honours degree or its equivalent from an overseas academic institution. In exceptional circumstances we will accept a good upper second class (2.1) degree with three or more years of applicable industry experience.
Why choose Imperial?
The Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial provides our MSc students with numerous recruitment days and careers presentations held on site over the duration of the course. Graduates will be highly numerate and strong communicators. Students may go on to work in locations throughout the world and in all branches of the petroleum industry.
Many of our students go on to work in finance, teaching, research, start-ups and service consultancies.