You are going to have very few choices so setting up exclusionary criteria may not be wise. If you need to, just take the test. https://engineering.tamu.edu/petroleum/academics/distance-learning
Kismet's advice is sound. Thing one: there are many practice tests available. Try one or two. No shame for a lower score -- and then you try something else. Thing two: one of the 'something else' are the exam prep services, which can have dramatic results. A family member last year went from 322 (verbal + quantitative) -- above average but not great, to 338 (two points short of perfect) after a Princeton weekend course.
My friend retired from the petroleum industry. He had a degree in chemical engineering. (A degree good for many industries)