Master in Professional Accounting Admissions Blog

Insider Information for Prospective Texas McCombs MPA Students

Tag: sustainability

Interested in Oil, Gas and Sustainability? Read on!

Oil and natural gas power our homes and give us products as varied as eyeglasses and MRI machines. Although renewable energy is increasing as a percentage of global energy production, it’s still small, meaning oil and gas will be key energy sources for the foreseeable future.

At the same time, oil and gas companies are working to produce oil more sustainably to help curb climate change, and they anticipate climate-related regulations. In this dynamic environment, expertise in oil and gas accounting is becoming indispensable — especially in Texas, the largest oil and gas producing state, where the industry is one of the largest employers.

In class, professor Paul Parsons imparts lessons on sustainability and the energy transition. “Oil and Gas Accounting and Sustainability” shows students they can do interesting, important work toward a healthier planet as a part of the oil and gas accounting field.

Parsons worked for more than two decades with Occidental Petroleum Corp. before founding Energy Training Resources, an organization that offers courses for the oil and gas industry covering operational, commercial, accounting, and sustainability topics.

Q: Why is oil and gas accounting an important field for Master in Professional Accounting students to consider?
A:
Oil and gas are in many everyday products we use, from desks students sit in to buses that bring them to class. Oil and gas will remain an important source of energy, and likewise, oil and gas accounting will remain a useful skill in many areas of the country where oil and gas are produced. Companies will have two major responsibilities — being sustainable and reporting on their sustainability — and accountants will be involved with both. Mandatory reporting requirements will affect essentially all U.S. public companies in all industries, and the initial implementation will require an abundance of accounting and auditing expertise.

Oil and gas may seem like an “old” industry, but it’s actually a vibrant, global industry that’s technologically advanced and constantly evolving. If you’re sustainability-minded, oil and gas is actually a good place to work. You can be part of meaningful change.

Q: How did you revamp the course to cover sustainability?
A: Sustainability is an emerging topic that will affect everyone in every industry, and it’s becoming a very important topic in reporting. Companies are now voluntarily reporting on sustainability. Every big company has a sustainability report. But there are more rigorous reporting regulations internationally, and in the U.S. there’s a push by government agencies to get corporations to report more and in a consistent manner so companies can be compared more easily. The Securities and Exchange Commission issued a draft proposal last year that would make climate reporting mandatory.

Q: What will students learn?
A: There are specialized accounting rules for oil and gas production because it has unique characteristics. Students learn these rules and regulations, but also about the fascinating industry operations that drive accounting needs, including petroleum geology and exploration, mineral rights acquisition, drilling, production, and project economics. Lessons on sustainability include greenhouse gas emissions, diversity and equity, habitat protection, water conservation, recycling, and proper waste disposal. This knowledge can give students an advantage, whether they work for an oil and gas company directly, or with a public accounting firm that has oil and gas audit clients.

Q: How do you make the course interesting and interactive?
A: I ask questions as I go, students use a clicker to answer, and then I display answers for everyone to see. This method stimulates discussion. I also decided to forgo a course textbook and instead use slides with videos, photos, and animations. The industry is changing so fast that textbooks just don’t keep up. We do a good deal of group work, too. In one project, groups of students dissect sustainability reports for three companies — a midstream, upstream, and downstream company — and evaluate how the companies reported on metrics and targets and the reports’ effectiveness.

Q: What do you hope students take away from the class?
A: I want them to be able to interview well. To be conversant about oil and gas, but also knowledgeable about sustainability. Also, on the renewable side there’s a tremendous amount of money going into new projects, and I want them to have that expertise.

Parsons teaches “Oil and Gas Accounting and Sustainability” each fall semester.

Sustainability and Accounting at UT Austin

Originally published in the Accounting Times newsletter.

Professor Jeff Hales heads Texas McCombs recently created Global Sustainability Leadership Institute (GSLI). We asked him about these efforts as well as what sustainability means for accounting.

TELL US ABOUT GSLI AND HOW IT CAME ABOUT.

The GSLI is an institute housed in McCombs and in partnership with the Moody College of Communication is dedicated to addressing the critical sustainability challenges of the 21st century through research, education, and industry collaboration. The roots of the GSLI started from student interest in programs and curricula that would help them understand how business activities intersect with society and the environment. That demand was initially met through an initiative that began back in 2017, which fellow accounting professor, Steve Limberg, helped to oversee. With help of a generous donation, we were able to launch the GSLI in the fall of 2021.

WHAT DO YOU HOPE THE INSTITUTE WILL ACCOMPLISH?

By leveraging the expertise of our faculty and corporate partners, my hope is that the Institute will play an integral role in UT’s mission by helping to develop the next generation of business leaders and changemakers. Businesses need to be resilient and adaptive and we need our students to be ready for the challenges and opportunities that will create for them in their future careers.

HOW ARE YOU INCORPORATING GSLI’S WORK INTO OUR TEXAS
McCOMBS CLASSROOMS?

I have recently developed two accounting electives related to sustainability. The first, Corporate Sustainability, is a graduate level course for MPA and MBA students that focuses on sustainability disclosure standards, rules, and regulation. The second, Global Business Sustainability, is one of the core courses in the GSLI’s new Global Sustainability Minor, which is a 17-hour minor open to undergraduates across campus. I teach both through the lens of accounting.

WHY IS SUSTAINABILITY IMPORTANT TO STUDENTS STUDYING
ACCOUNTING?

Lots of reasons! With increasing demand for companies to adopt sustainable practices and report on their sustainability performance, accountants will need to have the skills and knowledge to measure and report on the sustainability metrics that companies will be expected to disclose. More generally, to truly understand a company’s sustainability issues, you have to know more about what the company actually does to make money. Tech companies, food retailers, and pharmaceuticals all have revenues, but the ways in which they generate those revenues are very different and so are associated with very different sustainability challenges. Sustainability accounting forces students to make closer and deeper connections between the financial performance of a company and the operational activities that drove that performance. But the most important reason for bringing sustainability into our curriculum is students today are genuinely interested in knowing more about how businesses affect our broader society and our planet.

Interested in learning more about Jeffrey Hales and his Corporate Sustainability course at UT Austin? Read Accounting for a Better Future