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- O -
OCS
(outer continental shelf) - A gently sloping underwater plain
that extends seaward from the coast.
Octane
- An hydrocarbon of the paraffin series. It is liquid at ordinary
atmospheric conditions, although small amounts may be present in
the gas associated with petroleum.
Octane
number - A performance rating used to classify motor fuels by
grading the relative antiknock properties of various gasolines.
A high-octane fuel has better antiknock properties than one with
a low number.
Offering
memorandum - A legal document provided to potential investors
in a venture describing the terms under which the investment is
being offered.
Offset
well - A well drilled near the discovery well. Also a well drilled
to prevent oil and gas from draining from one tract of land to another
where a well is being drilled or is already producing.
Offshore
platform - A fixed structure from which wells are drilled offshore
for the production of oil and natural gas.
Oil
column - The vertical height (thickness) of an oil accumulation
above the oil-water contact.
Oil
gravity - The density of liquid hydrocarbons, generally measured
in degrees.
Oil
in place - The crude oil estimated to exist in a field or a
reservoir. Oil in the formation not yet produced.
Oil
pool - An underground reservoir containing oil. An oil field
may contain one or more pools, each of which has its own pressure
system.
Oil
rig - A drilling rig that drills for oil and gas.
Oil
run - 1. The production of oil during a specified period
of time. 2. A tank of oil gauged, tested, and put on a pipeline.
Oil
shale - A fine-grained, sedimentary rock that contains kerogen,
a partially formed oil. Kerogen can be extracted by heating the
shale, but at a very high cost.
Oilfield
services - Described as service companies that do work in and
for the oilfield. These services may include: cementing, perforating,
trucking, logging, etc.
On
the pump - A phrase used in reference to a well that no longer
flows from natural reservoir energy by is produced by means of a
pump.
OPEC
(Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries) - An international
oil cartel originally formed in 1960 and including in 1983: Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Quatar, Libya, Indonesia,
United Arab Emirates, Algeria, Nigeria, Ecuador, and Gabon.
Operator
- The individual or company responsible for the drilling, completion
and production operations of a well, and the physical maintenance
of the leased property.
Organization
costs - Direct costs incurred in the creation of a new business
organization such as an oil and gas limited partnership.
Outcrop
- A portion of bedrock or other stratum protruding through the soil
level, indicating a fault or some other oil-bearing formation.
Overriding
Royalty (ORRI) - A revenue interest in oil and gas, created
out of a working interest. Like the lessor's royalty, it entitles
the owner to a share of the proceeds from gross production, free
of any operating or production costs.
Overthrust
belt - A geological system of faults and basins in which geologic
forces have thrust layers of older rock above strata of newer rock
that might contain oil or natural gas. The Eastern Overthrust Belt
runs from eastern Canada through Appalachia into Alabama. The Western
Overthrust Belt runs from Alaska through western Canada and the
Rocky Mountains into Central America.
- P -
Packer
- A flexible rubber sleeve that is part of a special joint of pipe.
Pay
zones - The term to describe the reservoir that is producing
oil and gas within a given wellbore. Pay zones (or oil reservoirs)
can vary in thickness from one foot to several hundred feet.
Payoff
- The time when a well's production begins to bring in revenues.
Payout
- The amount of time it takes to recover the capital investment
made on a well or drilling program.
Perforating
gun - An instrument lowered at the end of a wireline into a
cased well. It contains explosive charges that can be electronically
detonated from the surface.
Perforation
- A method of making holes through the casing opposite the producing
formation to allow the oil or gas to flow into the well. See the
Gun perforation.
Permeability
- A measure of the ease with which a fluid such as water or oil
moves through a rock when the pores are connected. Geologists express
permeability in a unit named the darcy, but oilmen use the millidarcy
because most of the rocks they come in contact with are not very
permeable.
Petrochemicals
- Chemicals derived from crude oil or natural gas, including ammonia,
carbon black, and other organic chemicals.
Petroleum
- Strictly speaking, crude oil. Also used to refer to all hydrocarbons,
including oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids, and related products.
Petroleum
engineer - A term including three areas of specialization: 1)
Drilling engineers specialize in the drilling, workover, and completion
operations, 2) Production engineers specialize in studying a well's
characteristics and using various chemical and mechanical procedures
to maximize the recovery from the well, 3) Reservoir engineers design
and execute the planned development of a reservoir. Many U.S. universities
offer BS, MS, and Ph.D. degrees in petroleum engineering.
Petroleum
geologist - A geologist who specializes in the exploration for,
and production of, petroleum.
Pinch
out - The disappearance of a porous, permeable formation between
two layers of impervious rock over a horizontal distance.
Pipeline
- A tube or system of tubes used for the transportation of oil or
gas. Types of oil pipelines include: lead lines, form pumping well
to a storage tank; flow lines, from flowing well to a storage tank;
lease lines, extending from the wells to lease tanks; gathering
lines, extending from lease tanks to a central accumulation point;
feeder lines, extending from leases to trunk lines; and trunk lines,
extending from a producing area to refineries or terminals.
Pipeline
gas - Gas under enough pressure to enter the high-pressure gas
lines of a purchaser; gas in which enough liquid hydrocarbons have
been removed so that such liquids will not condense in the transmission
lines.
Plug
back - To block off the lower section of the borehole by setting
a plug, in order to perform operations in the upper part of the
hole.
Plugged
& Abandoned (P&A) - This expression refers to setting
cement plugs in an unsuccessful well (a dry hole) or a depleted
well.
Plugging
a well - Filling the borehole of an abandoned well with mud
and cement to prevent the flow of water or oil from one strata to
another or to the surface.
Pool
- 1) (noun) An underground reservoir containing or appearing
to contain a common accumulation of oil and natural gas. A zone
of a structure which is completely separated from any other zone
in the same structure is a pool. 2) (verb) To combine two or more
tracts of land into one unit for drilling purposes. This may be
accomplished voluntarily, or through compulsion.
Pooling
- A term frequently used interchangeably with "Unitization"
but more properly used to denominate the bringing together of small
tracts sufficient for the granting of a well permit under applicable
spacing rules.
Porosity
- A measure of the number and size of the spaces between each particle
in a rock. Porosity affects the amount of liquid and gases, such
as natural gas and crude oil, that a given reservoir can contain.
Possible
reserves - Areas in which production of crude oil is presumed
possible owing to geological inference of a strongly speculative
nature.
Present
net value - The present value of the dollars (income, or stream
of income) to be received at some specified time in the future,
discounted back to the present at a specified interest rate.
Primary
recovery - Production in which oil moves from the reservoir,
into the wellbore, under naturally occurring reservoir pressure.
Primary
term - The basic period of time during which a lease is in effect.
Private
Placement Offering - A securities (investment) offering not
intended for the general public. By meeting certain criteria, such
an offering may qualify for exemptions from registration with the
Securities and Exchange Commission of the Federal government.
Probable
reserves - Areas which are unproven but presumed capable of
production because of geological inference, for instance, proximity
to proven reserves in the same reservoir.
Producing
horizon - Where the well is actually produced, since it may
be drilled to a greater depth.
Producing
platform - An offshore structure with a platform raised above
the water to support a number of producing wells.
Production
- A term commonly used to describe taking natural resources out
of the ground.
Production
test - A test made to determine the daily rate of oil, gas,
and water production from a potential pay zone.
Proppants
- Materials used in hydraulic fracturing for holding open the cracks
made in the formation by the fracturing process. Proppants may consist
of sand grains, beads, or other small pellets suspended in fracturing
fluid.
Prospect
- A lease or group of leases on which an operator intends to
drill.
Proved
behind-pipe reserves - Estimates of the amount of crude oil
or natural gas recoverable by recompleting existing wells.
Proved
developed reserves - Estimates of what is recoverable from existing
wells with existing facilities from open, producing payzones.
Proved
reserves - Estimates of the amount of oil or natural gas believed
to be recoverable from known reservoirs under existing economic
and operating conditions.
Proved
undeveloped reserves - Estimates of what is recoverable through
new wells on undrilled acreage, deepening existing wells, or secondary
recovery methods.
Public
lands - Any land or land interest owned by the federal government
within the 50 states, not including offshore federal lands or lands
held in trust for Native American groups.
Public
Offering - A securities (investment) offering intended for sale
to the general public. It must be register with 1) the Securities
and Exchange Commission of the Federal government and 2) the securities-regulating
agencies of the various states in which it will be offered.
Pump
- A device that is installed inside or on a production string (tubing)
that lifts liquids to the surface.
Pump
off - To pump a well so rapidly that the oil level falls below
the pump's standing valve, rendering the well temporarily dry.
Pumping
well - A well that does not flow naturally and requires a pump
to bring product to the surface.
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