There’s an ancient Chinese proverb that goes something like, “Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will eat for a lifetime.”
The message is clear: Education has a longer-lasting benefit than charitable donations alone. For AMEC – the international engineering and project management company – this sustainable approach is both a good way of helping the communities in which it works and a good way of growing the business in new regions, especially those where there are not enough skilled engineers already available to support new, expanding industries. It also helps improve labor standards in these regions.
A shining example of how this works in practice can be found at the company’s growing business in Kazakhstan, which provides high-value services to the country’s oil and gas industry. Since March 2008, the company’s ASK (AMEC Students in Kazakhstan) program has been guiding and supporting a group of students – 60 at its peak – studying for degrees in a diverse range of subjects during the four university years at Uralsk, Astana, Almaty, and Moscow universities. Not only have they received some financial support and mentoring during their courses but they have also undertaken work experience with AMEC during vacations and been involved in worthwhile activities in the local community. Training organized by the AMEC team teaches leadership, teamwork, and decision making. Project managers, experienced engineers, and departmental heads act as mentors and offer advice on technical aspects of the job.
AMEC plc is a focused supplier of high-value consultancy, engineering, and project management services to the world’s natural resources, nuclear, clean energy, water, and environmental sectors. With annual revenues (in 2009) of over £2.5 billion, AMEC designs, delivers, and maintains strategic and complex assets for its customers. The company employs over 21,000 people in around 40 countries worldwide.
AMEC joined the UN Global Compact in April 2009. The Compact’s Ten Principles resonate with our own Guiding Principles, which help ensure we run a safe, sustainable, and ethical business no matter where in the world that may be. Sustainable development is ingrained in our day-to-day activities, through the type of work we do and the way we deliver it. It makes good business sense and is something our stakeholders expect.
In the environmental sector, our many experts help clients to operate in an environmentally responsible way. For example, this could be by ensuring that overhead power lines do not disturb the habitats of protected species. Or it could be by surveying a factory’s energy consumption and subsequently advising how to reduce the firm’s carbon footprint.
In our own business, we subscribe to the view held by a majority of climate scientists – that man-made greenhouse gas emissions do have an impact on climate. As a result, we have joined the 10:10 campaign, in which we aim to achieve a 10-percent cut in our carbon output by the end in 2010. This is the first step in our ambitious 40-year carbon reduction program.
We have respect for people, both in and outside our company. We aim to provide a safe workplace and good career opportunities. We train our employees through schemes such as the AMEC Academy, which shares best practice and helps nurture talented staff. In the wider world, we support many charitable foundations and encourage our employees to do the same through matched funding.
Away from the office, ASK students and AMEC employees have worked side by side in organizing activities at children’s homes, orphanages, and schools around Uralsk. At the Oblast Specialised School Boarding House for children with hearing and speech impairments, the ASK / AMEC team has found the time to play football and other sports with the youngsters. They have also been mentors for the children, offering personal development for each child. And on a lighter note, there is the ASK quiz, a general knowledge quiz organized by AMEC for students from all over Uralsk, not just ASK members. It has been a fun way of improving their English language skills and their knowledge of global issues and business practices.
ASK has been, and continues to be, a win-win arrangement for AMEC and the students alike. On the one hand, AMEC has been able to identify and develop good quality potential recruits to sustain and grow the business and thereby help develop the local economy. On the other hand, the students have been able to gain valuable insights into the commercial world that will help with their academic studies and, not least, enhance their business and communication skills. Following successful completion of their degrees, each student is considered for possible full-time employment with the company.
“Building strong relationships with the people, businesses, and educational organizations in the countries where we operate is not new for us,” says Ronnie Anderson, AMEC’s manager for Kazakhstan. “We’ve worked in the oil and gas sector in nearby Azerbaijan since 1998 and decided from the outset not to import vast numbers of expatriate employees to take up all the local jobs. Instead, we struck a balance between our own global engineering skills and employing and training local people. It has had the double benefit of making us welcome and creating a long-term, self-sustaining operation that helps us serve our clients better.
“Our entry into Kazakhstan, which also has a buoyant oil industry, has been similar to that. But what is new for us here is the structured, large-scale approach to the relationship with the universities and the series of training events we’ve organized. We have already had our first ‘graduation’ and intake into the company and we are delighted with the enthusiasm, quality, and professionalism of these young people. We hope they go on to do good work wherever their careers take them.
“What I think is good about ASK is that we can take the idea with us when we set up in a new territory, thereby helping us to develop the talent, industry, and our business for the long term.”
ASK graduate Sergey Fyodorov, who now works in AMEC’s Information Technology team in Uralsk, explains how he has benefited: “AMEC is global, which has helped me to advance my expertise more fully than I could have through university alone or by working for a local company. Their high standards and clear aims meant my work had to reach the very highest level. My desire to maintain this level is the best stimulus for my personal and professional development.”
Such is the success of ASK that it won the coveted International Platinum Award at the Energy Institute (EI) Awards 2009. The EI is well-placed to judge how worthwhile an initiative is because it has a membership of over 14,000 individuals and 300 companies across 100 countries and is the leading chartered professional membership body for those working and studying in energy.
This project description was originally presented in the Global Compact International Yearbook 2010.
Frank Stokes is Media Relations Manager at AMEC.