Albuquerque Journal

Mining Students Top Harvard Grads in Pay

Job Offers Plentiful At S.D. Campus

- By Joe Richter Bloomberg News

Harvard graduates are earning less than those from the South Dakota School of Mines & Technology after a decadelong commodity bull market created shortages of workers as well as minerals.

Those leaving the college of 2,300 students this year got paid a median salary of $56,700, according to PayScale Inc., which tracks employee compensati­on data from surveys. At Harvard, where tuition fees are almost four times higher, they got $54,100. Those scheduled to leave the campus in Rapid City, S.D., in May are already getting offers, at a time when about one in 10 recent college graduates is out of work.

“It doesn’t seem to be too hard to get a job in mining,” said Jaymie Trask, 22, a chemical-engineerin­g major who was offered a post paying more than $60,000 a year at FreeportMc­MoRan Copper & Gold. “If you work hard in school for four or five years, you’re pretty much set.”

A fourfold gain in commoditie­s in the past decade reflects both surging demand and the industry’s failure to keep up. While new mineral deposits are getting harder to find, companies also are struggling to add enough skilled workers. That’s partly a legacy of U.S. colleges cutting back on mining programs. Fewer than 28,000 people were employed in U.S. metals mining in 2004, down from 58,000 in 1993, the National Mining Associatio­n estimates. By 2011, it had rebounded to 40,000.

As many as 78,000 additional U.S. workers will be needed by 2019 to replace retirees, the Society of Mining, Metallurgy & Exploratio­n reported in January. In Australia, the largest shipper of coal and iron ore, there will be a shortfall of 1,700 mine engineers, 3,000 geoscienti­sts and 36,000 other workers in the five years ending in 2015, the report said.

Demand for mining-school graduates is exceptiona­l in the United States, where the unemployme­nt rate for 20- to24-year-olds with bachelor’s degrees was 11.8 percent in July. The jobless rate across the economy held above 8 percent for a 43rd month in August, government data show.

Universiti­es trimmed courses in earth sciences, mineral geology and mine engineerin­g when the industry contracted in the 1980s and 1990s, said Diana Stewart, marketing director at Hampshire, Britain-based jobs4minin­g.com, a message board that links recruiters and prospectiv­e workers worldwide. Shortages in mine engineerin­g and project management are acute, she said.

“There are simply not enough to go around, so companies are trying to tempt people to their own projects, which is driving tremendous salary inflation,” Stewart said. “When investment finance is tight, skilled labor availabili­ty and labor costs are one of the factors that are having an impact on the viability of a project.”

Fourteen U.S. schools offer mining-engineerin­g degrees, compared with 30 in 1982, according to Dave Kanagy, the executive director of the Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploratio­n in Englewood, Colo. There were 178 mineengine­ering graduates in 2011, from 700 in 1982, he said. The average age in the mining industry is 47.3, compared with 40.7 across the combined U.S. work force.

The South Dakota School of Mines & Technology, which charged out-of-state tuition of $10,530 last year, graduated 259 students with Bachelor of Science degrees in 2012. Seventeen of those were in mining engineerin­g.

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