Brain drain in ONGC, 900 experts quit
Brain drain in ONGC, 900 experts quit
ONGC,India's largest oil producer, has lost nearly 900 of its skilled experts in the last one year to its competitors.

New Delhi: Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC), India's largest oil producer, has lost nearly 900 of its

skilled experts in the last one-year to its competitors, who offered 4-5 times more salary than the state-owned firm.

"In last one year, ONGC has seen 900 key personnel leave the company to join MNCs or private companies,this outflow is expected to increase by alarming proportions in the near future," warned L K Mirchandani,ONGC's Association of Scientific and Technical Officers President.

New multinational and private exploration firms offer wage packages at least 4 to 5 times that of ONGC, while the latter flounders when it comes to offering either a career prospect or attractive wages, he told.

Mirchandani said ONGC officers would join the indefinite strike called by Oil Sector Officers' Association (OSOA) from May 31 to demand higher wages.

Such a strike could mean loss of 36.54 million dollars per day in revenue from stoppage of 71,000 tones per day of crude oil output.

Besides 54 million standard cubic meter per day gas production would also be shut, he added.

"While the (ONGC) management is doing lip service in public, to offer better packages to its employees to arrest the flight of critical talent, it is actually withdrawing even the existing benefits in the name of rationalizing compensation package," an ASTO press release said.

With the advent of New Exploration Licensing Policy regime and the consequent entry of MNCs and private sector in exploration, the rat race for attracting and poaching highly skilled and competent manpower of state-run oil undertakings has resulted in the "flight of home grown talent," ASTO said.

"This problem is further compounded by lack of clearly defined career growth prospects, unattractive pay package, and orthodox and unimaginative HR practices prevailing in PSUs resulting in employee de-motivation and mental disengagement from the parent company," ASTO, which has 24,000 officers under its banner, added.

The attrition has resulted in an increase in the exodus of middle-rung executives with 15-20 years of experience in cutting edge geo-sciences, directional drilling, production that constitute the bedrock of organisational competency.

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