OFFSET WELL Well location adjoining another well site.
OIL IN PLACE (OIP)See In Place
OIL COLUMN/GAS COLUMNThe vertical distance between points of highest and lowest known oil or gas in a reservoir.
OIL/WATER CONTACTThe lower end of the oil column in a reservoir with underlying water. This may be graduated or occur in formations where it is hard to detect.
ON STREAMWhen production is flowing, or plant is in operation.
OPEN FLOWProducing a well without chokes or beans. Unrestricted production normally for testing or maintenance purposes.
OPEN HOLEAn uncased section of well borehole.
OPERATOR Person, whether proprietor or lessee, who actually operates the well. Generally, the oil company by whom the drilling contractor is engaged.
P10 The value for which there is at least a 10% probability that
the quantities actually recovered will equal or exceed that
value.
P50 The value for which there is at least a 50% probability that
the quantities actually recovered will equal or exceed that
value.
P90 The value for which there is at least a 90% probability that
the quantities actually recovered will equal or exceed that value.
PACKERA seal used to isolate a section of a well, eg for testing or production from one of several formations. Packers are also used in operations such a cementing and acidising.
PAY, PAY SAND, OR PAY SECTION Producing formation, or that formation which represents the objective of drilling.
PAY ZONE/HORIZONA formation containing producible hydrocarbons.
PERFORATE To pierce holes through well casing within an oil or gas-bearing formation by means of a perforating gun lowered down the hole and fired electrically from the surface. The perforations permit production from a formation which has been cased off.
PERFORATION/PERFORATING GUNHoles punched in the casing of a well at the pay zone to be produced, to allow oil or gas to enter the well. A Perforating Gun is a cylindrical tool loaded with explosive charges which are triggered opposite the pay zone, perforating the casing in many places.
PERMEABILITYThe degree to which a body of rock will permit a fluid to flow through it. It is a function of the shape of the capillary pore spaces and the degree to which pores are connected.
PETROLOGYThe study of rocks, their origin, chemical and physical properties and distribution.
PINCH OUTThe thinning out and disappearance over a distance of a formation, eg an oil bearing sandstone between layers of impermeable rock.
PIPE Oilfield tubular goods such as casing, drill pipe, tubing, or pipeline.
PIPE RACKWhere stands of drill pipe are stacked vertically in a derrick ready for use. Racks or frames are also sometimes used to store tubulars horizontally in yards and or offshore decks, and when transporting them offshore.
PIPE RAMSHydraulic rams in a blowout preventer which are shaped to fit around the drill-stem and seal the annulus. Blind Rams are designed in extreme emergency to shear through the drill pipe and seal the well completely.
PLUG/PLUG AND ABANDONTo seal a well, or part of a well with cement, e.g. before producing from a higher formation, sidetracking, or leaving the well permanently sealed and abandoned.
POOLAn Oil Pool is a reservoir or group of reservoirs sharing a common pressure system.
POROSITYThe volume of free space between the grains of a rock capable of holding fluid, (gas or liquid). It is expressed as a percentage of total gross rock volume.
PRESSURE BOMBA down hole pressure recording capsule used in well monitoring.
PROBABLE RESERVES Those unproved reserves which analysis of geological and engineering data suggests are more likely than not to be recoverable. In this context, when probabilistic methods are
used, there should be at least a 50% probability that the quantities actually recovered will equal or exceed the sum of estimated Proved plus Probable Reserves. When probabilistic methods are used this corresponds to P50 value.
PRODUCIBLE LEASE A lease where one well or several wells have discovered hydrocarbons in paying quantities, but for which there is no production during the reporting period.
PRODUCIBLE ZONE COMPLETION The interval in a wellbore that has been mechanically prepared to produce oil, gas, or sulphur. There can be more than one zone completed for production in a wellbore.
PRODUCING LEASE A lease that is producing oil, gas, or sulphur in quantities sufficient to generate royalties.
PRODUCTION The operation of bringing the well fluids to the surface and separating them, and storing, gauging, and otherwise preparing product for the pipeline. Also refers to the amount of oil or gas produced over a given period
PRODUCTION CASING STRINGThe innermost steel lining of a well cemented in place and perforated for production in the pay zone. Note that production tubing is inserted inside this casing.
PRODUCTION TESTINGA production test concerns the capability to produce (productivity) of a well and its effects on the reservoir produced. A production test may continue for several months where extensive data is necessary prior to final commitment to development expenditures etc.
PRODUCTION TUBING STRINGThe string of pipe installed inside the casing of a production well, to a point just above the reservoir through which the fluids are produced. It may be 2" to 5" diameter or more, depending on the production flow and pressures anticipated.
PRODUCTION WELL/PRODUCERA development well specifically for the extraction of reservoir fluids.
PRODUCTION WELLHEAD AND TREEThe assembly of casing head, tubing head, connections and well-control valves fitted to a producing well. The "Christmas Tree" is the name given the complete assembly of valves, connecting flanges etc.
PRODUCTIVITY/PRODUCTIVITY INDEXThe continuous productive capacity of a well. The Index is measured as volume produced (e.g. barrels per day) divided by the drop in pressure (p.s.i.) to achieve that flow rate starting with a "shut in" pressure.
PROSPECTIVE RESOURCES Those quantities of petroleum which are estimated on a given date, to be potentially recoverable from undiscovered accumulations.
PROVED RESERVES Those quantities of oil and gas which, by analysis of geological and engineering data, can be estimated with reasonable certainty to be commercially recoverable, from a given date forward, from known reservoirs and under current economic conditions, operating methods and government regulations. When probabilistic methods are used this corresponds to the P90 value.
PULLING OUTRetrieving and stacking the drill-string on reaching target depth.
PUP JOINTA joint of pipe of non-standard length, to make up a string of tubulars to an exact required total length.
RATHOLEA hole in the drilling floor in which the kelly joint is kept when not in use.
RECOVERABLE OIL An estimated measure of the total amount of oil which could be brought to the surface from a given reservoir.
RECOVERY FACTORThe ratio between the volumes of oil and /or gas produced and produceable from a reservoir and the oil and/or gas originally in place.
RE ENTRYInserting the drilling, testing or logging string etc. into the wellhead.
RESERVES/RECOVERABLE RESERVESOil or gas that it is anticipated can be produced. Technical Reserves are theoretically producible at a gross operating margin by e.g. normal primary or secondary recovery methods, while Commercial Reserves are restricted to volumes recoverable at an acceptable profitability. The detailed definitions are important in oil and gas financial and other information.
RESERVOIRA porous, fractured or cavitied rock formation with a geological seal forming a trap for producible hydrocarbons. A common exploration maxim is that a prospective target must possess a related Source rock, Structure and Seal.
RESERVOIR PRESSUREThe pressure at reservoir depth in a shut-in well.
REWORKING A WELLMaintenance work on a well to stimulate production. This may involve cleaning out silt deposits etc., or stimulation techniques such as fracturing or acidising.
RIGA collective term to describe the permanent equipment needed to drill a well. It has come to include the onshore and offshore vehicles, mobile platforms, or vessels on which the equipment is installed.
RIGGING UP Act of getting a rig assembled and ready to start drilling.
ROLLER BITA rotary drilling bit which penetrates by pulverising the rock with its toothed wheels.
ROTARY DRILLING Method of drilling in which the drill pipe is rotated in order to rotate a bit.
ROTARY TABLEThe heavy turntable at the centre of a drilling-rig floor, which is rotated by the main rig power supply, and in turn rotated by the kelly.
ROUND TRIPRecovering the drill string from the bottom of the well to the surface and returning it to continue drilling. This may be e.g. to replace the bit. "Tripping" is arduous and interrupts "making hole".