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Abandon |
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Annex B |
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Annulus |
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Appraisal Well |
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Natural gas associated with oil
accumulations, which may be dissolved in the oil at reservoir conditions or
may form a cap of free gas above the oil. |
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bbl |
One barrel of oil; 1 barrel = 35
Imperial gallons (approx.), or 159 litres (approx.); 7.5 barrels = 1 tonne
(approx.); 6.29 barrels = 1 cubic metre. |
|
bcf |
Billion cubic feet; 1 bcf = 0.83 million tonnes of
oil equivalent. |
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bcm |
Billion cubic metres (1 cubic metre
= 35.31 cubic feet). |
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A |
|
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blow-down |
Condensate and gas is produced simultaneously from
the outset of production. |
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Blow-out
preventers (BOPs) |
Are high pressure wellhead valves, designed to shut
off the uncontrolled flow of hydrocarbons. |
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Blow-out |
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The hole as drilled by the drill
bit. |
|
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Capex |
Capital
expenditure. |
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The steel tubing that lines a well
after it has been drilled. It is formed from sections of steel tube screwed
together. |
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Central
estimate |
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CNS |
Central North
Sea. |
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Commercial
field |
An oil and/or gas field judged to
be capable of producing enough net income to make it worth developing. |
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Completion |
The installation of permanent wellhead equipment
for the production of oil and gas. |
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Hydrocarbons which are in the
gaseous state under reservoir conditions and which become liquid when
temperature or pressure is reduced. A mixture of pentanes and higher hydrocarbons. |
|
|
Connate water |
Salt water occurring with oil and
gas in the reservoir. |
|
Coring |
Taking rock samples from a well by
means of a special tool -- a "core barrel". |
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Crane barge |
|
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Creaming
Theory |
A statistical technique which
recognises that in any exploration province after an initial period in which
the largest fields are found, success rates and average field sizes decline
as more exploration wells are drilled and knowledge of the area matures. |
|
CRINE |
Cost Reduction Initiative for the
New Era. |
|
Cubic foot |
A standard unit used to measure
quantity of gas (at atmospheric pressure); 1 cubic foot = 0.0283 cubic
metres. |
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Cuttings |
|
|
The tower-like structure that
houses most of the drilling controls. |
|
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Development
phase |
The phase in which a proven oil or
gas field is brought into production by drilling production (development)
wells. |
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Dry Gas |
Natural gas composed mainly of
methane with only minor amounts of ethane, propane and butane and little or
no heavier hydrocarbons in the gasoline range. |
|
Dry hole |
A well which has proved to be
non-productive. |
|
E&A |
Abbreviation for exploration and
appraisal. |
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E&P |
Abbreviation for exploration and
production. |
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Enhanced oil
recovery |
A process whereby oil is recovered
other than by the natural pressure in a reservoir. |
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Exploration
phase |
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|
A well drilled in an unproven area. Also known
as a "wildcat well". |
|
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Farm in |
When a company acquires an interest
in a block by taking over all or part of the financial commitment for
drilling an exploration well. |
|
A geographical area under which an
oil or gas reservoir lies. |
|
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Fishing |
Retrieving objects from the borehole, such as a
broken drillstring, or tools. |
|
The pressure at the bottom of a
well when it is shut in at the wellhead. |
|
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Formation
water |
|
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Fracturing |
|
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G |
Gas. |
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G/C |
|
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Gas field |
A field containing natural gas but
no oil. |
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Gas injection |
The process whereby separated
associated gas is pumped back into a reservoir for conservation purposes or
to maintain the reservoir pressure. |
|
Gas/oil ratio |
The volume of gas at atmospheric pressure produced
per unit of oil produced. |
|
A compound containing only the
elements hydrogen and carbon. May exist as a solid, a liquid or a gas. The
term is mainly used in a catch-all sense for oil, gas and condensate. |
|
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Injection well |
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IS |
Irish Sea. |
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Jacket |
|
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Kick |
A well is said to "kick"
if the formation pressure exceeds the pressure exerted by the mud column. |
|
Lay barge |
A barge that is specially equipped
to lay submarine pipelines. |
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Oilfield or naturally occurring
gas, chiefly methane, liquefied for transportation. |
|
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Liquefied
petroleum gas (LPG) |
|
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mboe |
Million
Barrels Oil Equivalent. |
|
Metric tonne |
|
|
mmcfd |
Millions of cubic feet per day (of
gas). |
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Moonpool |
|
|
Mt |
Million
tonnes. |
|
A mixture of base substance and
additives used to lubricate the drill bit and to counteract the natural
pressure of the formation. |
|
|
Gas, occurring naturally, and often found in
association with crude petroleum. |
|
|
NGLs |
Natural gas liquids. Liquid hydrocarbons found in
association with natural gas. |
|
NNS |
Northern North
Sea. |
|
O |
|
|
O&G |
|
|
A mixture of liquid hydrocarbons of different
molecular weights. |
|
|
Oil field |
A geographic area under which an
oil reservoir lies. |
|
Oil in place |
An estimated measure of the total
amount of oil contained in a reservoir, and, as such, a higher figure than
the estimated recoverable reserves of oil. |
|
Opex |
Operating
expenditure. |
|
Payzone |
Rock in which oil and gas are found in exploitable
quantities. |
|
Permeability |
The property of a formation which
quantifies the flow of a fluid through the pore spaces and into the wellbore. |
|
A generic name for hydrocarbons,
including crude oil, natural gas liquids, natural gas and their products. |
|
|
An offshore structure that is
permanently fixed to the seabed. |
|
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Porosity |
The percentage of void in a porous
rock compared to the solid formation. |
|
Possible
reserves |
Those reserves which at present
cannot be regarded as 'probable' but are estimated to have a significant but
less than 50% chance of being technically and economically producible. |
|
Primary
recovery |
Recovery of oil or gas from a
reservoir purely by using the natural pressure in the reservoir to force the
oil or gas out. |
|
Probable
reserves |
Those reserves which are not yet
proven but which are estimated to have a better than 50% chance of being
technically and economically producible. |
|
Proven field |
An oil and/or gas field whose
physical extent and estimated reserves have been determined. |
|
Proven
reserves |
Those reserves which on the
available evidence are virtually certain to be technically and economically
producible (i.e. having a better than 90% chance of being produced). |
|
That proportion of the oil and/gas
in a reservoir that can be removed using currently available techniques. |
|
|
Recovery
factor |
The ratio of recoverable oil and/or
gas reserves to the estimated oil and/or gas in place in the reservoir. |
|
The underground formation where oil
and gas has accumulated It consists of a porous rock to hold the oil or gas,
and a cap rock that prevents its escape. |
|
|
Riser
(drilling) |
|
|
Riser
(production) |
The section of pipework that joins a seabed
wellhead to the Christmas tree. |
|
Roughneck |
|
|
Roustabout |
Drill crew members who handle the
loading and unloading of equipment and assist in general operations around
the rig. |
|
Royalty
payment |
The cash or kind paid to the owner
of mineral rights. |
|
Secondary
recovery |
Recovery of
oil or gas from a reservoir by artificially maintaining or enhancing the
reservoir pressure by injecting gas, water or other substances into the
reservoir rock. |
|
Shutdown |
|
|
SNS |
Southern North
Sea. |
|
Spud-in |
The operation of drilling the first
part of a new well. |
|
Suspended well |
A well that has been capped off
temporarily. |
|
tcf |
Trillion Cubic Feet (of gas). |
|
Toolpusher |
Second-in-command of a drilling
crew under the drilling superintendent. Responsible for the day-to-day
running of the rig and for ensuring that all the necessary equipment is
available. |
|
Topsides |
|
|
UKCS |
United Kingdom
Continental Shelf. |
|
UKOOA |
|
|
Well log |
A record of geological formation
penetrated during drilling, including technical details of the operation. |
|
A well drilled in an unproven area. Also known
as a "exploration well". |