|
Acid
stimulation |
Injection
of acid into a reservoir, to increase the production of hydrocarbons. |
|
API
gravity |
An
arbitrary scale of degrees, named after the American Petroleum Institute, by
which a crude oil’s specific gravity (density relative to water) is measured.
The larger the
API degree, the lighter the oil. |
|
Associated
gas |
Natural
gas associated with oil accumulations by virtue of its being dissolved in the
oil under reservoir temperatures and pressures or by virtue of its overlying
the oil. |
|
Black
oil |
Liquid
hydrocarbons derived from crude oil. As such, the term excludes condensate,
which is derived from natural gas. |
|
Carbonate
stringer |
Carbonate
rock formation encased in salt. Such formations are found in south |
|
Casing |
Joined
steel pipes used to line a borehole. The casing is secured to the borehole
wall with cement. |
|
Cemented
completion |
Method
of completing well in which tubulars — either casing or production tubing —
is fixed in place with cement. |
|
Condensate |
Light,
liquid hydrocarbons that condense out of natural gas upon a change in
pressure. |
|
Downhole
separation |
The
segregation of oil from water in a well rather than at the surface. |
|
Drag
reducers |
Chemical
agents added to a liquid to reduce the resistance to its flow through
pipelines. |
|
Drop-out |
The
formation of condensate in a gas reservoir as a result of pressure changes
due to production. |
|
ESP |
Electric
submersible pump = Electrically driven pump that is installed
in oil wells. |
|
Expandable
tubulars |
Oilfield
tubing that can be expanded to a larger diameter by drawing a cone through
it. |
|
Fairway |
Geographic
area in which a particular play is known to yield hydrocarbons. |
|
Finding
cost |
Total
annual exploration expense divided by exploration reserves booked during the
year. |
|
Fraccing |
Fracture
stimulation = Attempt to increase
production from a well by subjecting the reservoir to enough hydraulic
pressure for it to crack. A granular "proppant" is injected into
the cracks to hold them open when the pressure is released. |
|
Frontier
exploration |
Exploration
for hydrocarbons that is focused on previously unexplored formations. |
|
Gas
anchor |
Device
to allow gas dissolved in well liquids to escape before the liquids are
pumped to the surface. |
|
Gas
injection |
Injection
of natural gas into an oil reservoir to maintain its pressure, thereby
assisting the oil production from the reservoir. |
|
Gas
lift |
Method
of increasing the natural flow of oil from a well by injecting gas into the
well fluids, thereby lightening the fluid column. |
|
Geosteering |
Adjusting
the direction of drilling by means of the rock properties detected at or near
the drillbit. |
|
Gravel
pack |
A
type of well completion based on surrounding the production tubing with
gravel. |
|
Horizontal
well |
Well
that traverses a formation at an angle 90 degrees from the vertical. |
|
Intelligent
pig |
Device
that detects flaws in a pipeline as it travels down the pipeline. |
|
Logging |
Recording
the physical properties of the rock around a borehole, as a function of
depth. Some of the key properties measured are the rock’s electrical
resistivity, its natural radiation and speed of sound through it. Such
measurements provide clues as to whether oil or gas is present in the rock
and whether it is likely to flow into a well. |
|
LTIF |
Lost-time
incident frequency : Measure of safety. The number of recorded incidents in
which an employee is rendered incapable of working (per million working
hours). |
|
LTOIF |
Lost-time
occupational illness frequency =
Measure of occupational health. The number of cases of occupational
illnesses that have resulted in an employee's incapacity to work (per million
working hours). |
|
Multi-lateral
well |
Well
with multiple branches. |
|
Multi-phase
pump |
Pumps
that can move a mixture of crude oil, natural gas, water and perhaps even
some solid particulate matter down a pipe. |
|
Near-field
exploration |
Exploration
for hydrocarbons that is focused on in the vicinity of existing oil and gas
fields. |
|
Non-associated
gas |
Gas
accumulations that exist independently of any oil accumulations. |
|
Party-month |
Measure
of seismic exploration activity: one seismic-survey team conducting
operations for one month equals one party-month. |
|
Peephole
well |
A
small-diameter pilot hole drilled from the surface to appraise a reservoir. |
|
Play |
Particular
combinations of subsurface phenomena (reservoir rock, sealing layer,
hydrocarbon source and geological structure) that can result in the
accumulation of hydrocarbons. |
|
Porosity |
Percentage
of the bulk volume of a rock taken up by pores, the voids between mineral
grains. Hydrocarbons in reservoir rock are contained in such pore spaces. |
|
Production
(or produced) water |
Highly
saline water that is commonly found with crude oil in underground reservoirs. |
|
Proppant |
Granular
material injected into cracks opened up in a reservoir during a
fracture-stimulation treatment. The proppant is intended to hold the cracks
open, so that oil or gas can flow through them to a well. |
|
PSDM |
Pre-stack
depth migration = Shifting of seismic
traces from their recorded positions to their true positions before the
traces are averaged to reduce spurious noise |
|
PSI |
Pre-stack
imaging = Brining seismic reflections
into focus before the component seismic traces are averaged to reduce
spurious noise. |
|
Recovery
factor |
That
fraction of the original oil-in-place or gas-in-place that is expected to be
ultimately withdrawn from a reservoir. It is generally expressed as a percentage. |
|
Reserves |
The
estimated quantities of oil and gas that geological and engineering data
indicate, with reasonable certainty, to be recoverable in future years from
known reservoirs under existing economic and operating conditions. |
|
Reservoir |
Hydrocarbon-bearing
rock formation. There may be more than one reservoir in a field. |
|
Seismic
inversion |
Derivation
or estimation of rock properties on the basis of seismic data. |
|
Separator |
Apparatus
that divides the fluid mixture coming out of a well into its oil, gas and
water components. |
|
SFR |
Scope
for recovery = Classification of
hydrocarbon resources when their development options are not yet firm enough
to classify them as reserves. |
|
Sidetracks |
A
well drilled out from an existing well. |
|
Slip-sweep
seismic technique |
Technique
for land-based data acquisition in which the signals emitted and received
from different seismic sources (truck-mounted vibrating plates) are allowed
to overlap. Because of the overlapping signals, more data can be collected in
a given amount of time. |
|
Sour
crude |
Crude
oil containing more than 2.5% sulphur. |
|
Steam
injection |
Method
of enhanced oil recovery involving the injection of steam into a oil
reservoir. The heat released by the steam markedly reduces the viscosity of
the oil and may cause some of its lighter components to vaporise. |
|
STOOIP |
Stock-tank
oil initially in place = Amount of oil
originally contained in a rock formation, expressed as barrels at stock-tank
conditions (i.e., under atmospheric pressure and room temperature). Only a
fraction of the STOOIP is ever produced; the oil that remains is beyond the
reach of petroleum engineering in today’s economic climate. |
|
String-month |
Measure
of rig activity: one rig operating for one year equals 12 string-months. |
|
Supply-chain
management |
Managing
all aspects of supplying goods and services, from the customer's initial
order to its final fulfilment. |
|
Three-dimensional
seismic survey |
A
survey involving so many seismic sources and receivers that the underground
formations can be imaged in three dimensions rather than as two-dimensional
cross-sections. |
|
Tight
reservoir |
A
reservoir with low permeability, i.e., one through which fluids have
difficulty flowing. |
|
TROIF |
Total
reportable occupational illness frequency ,
= Measure of occupational health. The total number of cases of all
occupational illnesses (per million working hours). |
|
Underbalanced
drilling |
Drilling
in which the wellbore pressure is deliberately kept below the pressure of the
formation being drilled. With this technique, oil can be produced from a well
as it is being drilled. |
|
Volume
interpretation |
Interpretation
of seismic data, taking three-dimensions at a time. |
|
Injection
of water into a producing formation in order to displace oil toward producing
wells. |
|
|
|
|
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