Civil Service Bureau revives dormant engineering specializations
The batch included the nomination of 344 with a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering and industrial engineering.
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The Civil Service Bureau nominated 752 citizens for government positions, including all those registered in previous periods with a bachelor’s degree in petroleum engineering, along with other engineering specializations.
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The new batch is added to what the bureau announced on the 11th of this month, nominating 2,093 male and female citizens registered in the central employment system.
In its efforts to implement the new employment plan, the Civil Service Bureau aimed to revitalize dormant engineering specializations previously excluded from the employment process.
The bureau announced the nomination of 752 male and female citizens for government positions, including all those registered in previous periods with a bachelor’s degree in petroleum engineering, along with other engineering specializations.
The new batch is added to what the bureau announced on the 11th of this month, nominating 2,093 male and female citizens registered in the central employment system. This brings the total number of candidates registered before the last registration period to 6,900 male and female citizens, in addition to the 752 new candidates.
The bureau stated in a press statement, “In continuation of its efforts to nominate registrants from specializations that were stagnant and not needed in previous employment periods before the last registration period of 87, Friday’s batch nominated all registrants with a bachelor’s degree in petroleum engineering, numbering 220.
The batch also included the nomination of 344 with a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering and industrial engineering. This batch of stagnant engineering specializations is considered the first, and will be followed by subsequent batches based on the government agencies’ needs for these specializations, to fill the newly created engineering positions, which are (contracts engineer, environmental engineer, project engineer, safety engineer).
The bureau called on candidates to visit the employer to whom they were nominated directly, without the need to visit the bureau itself, stressing its commitment to issuing new batches of candidates during the coming period.