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#29 | |
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Booooosted.
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AND, if you use hay, you won't be refining it at all. I'm just saying, that cost effectiveness is important here. |
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#30 |
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Hey y'all :)
Drives: Rosalee Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Southeast TN
Posts: 437
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You're not alone in your thinking, PQ, my hubby agrees with you. He thinks BP will cut and run too.
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#31 | |
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12.23s@113mph
Drives: 2SS/RS, A6, just a few bolt ons Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 1,197
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MOST oil reservoirs have some water saturation in them which is WAY more salinated than normal sea water. also oil separates from water very easily so getting the water separated is no big deal, they do it all the time all over the world. the skimmers they are using to collect the oil are also collecting sea water, when they pump it up the oil and water separates in the tanks and they dump the sea water back in the gulf to save room to collect more oil. now using the hay would not be smart on their part because it would be more difficult to use the oil. BP isn't going to collect the oil with hay just to burn it, they are going to want to sell it at as little cost to them as possible. some might wonder where i get all this info... well i'm a petroleum engineer, and a smart one at that b/c i got a job offer with BP last year before i graduated and i declined it immediately.
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RIP Cammie 7/15/2009 - 4/1/2011 |
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#32 | |
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Good move! So question: What all does a petroleum engineer do? How many years of college does that take? Just curious
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#33 | |
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12.23s@113mph
Drives: 2SS/RS, A6, just a few bolt ons Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 1,197
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![]() basically there are 3 sides to the oil industry: service companies, exploration/production companies, and downstream companies. service companies like Halliburton or Schlumberger provide a service for the E&P companies to work on wells or for consulting. the petroleum engineer either designs cement jobs, frac jobs, and other stuff and goes to the wellsite to perform that job. the E&P companies like my Company, Apache, or Devon, Oxy, etc... we are the ones that obtain leases on land or sea and figure out where the best place to drill a well and develop a field. a petroleum engineer can either be a drilling engineer who is in charge of drilling the well, a reservoir engineer (like me) who teams with a geologist and figures out where we want to drill and develop a field and then book oil/gas reserves for it, and then there are production engineers that pretty much maintain the wells while they are producing. E&P companies only produce oil then pipe it to the refineries where they sell it. then there is the downstream side like oil refineries. a petroleum engineer here is more of a chemical engineer and they pretty much just take the crude and turn it into usable products like gasoline and plastic, etc... then send it off to gas stations and other companies that use it. and finally you got the major companies like Exxon, BP, Shell, Chevron who are an E&P company but own the refineries and gas stations as well. in one sentence you could say we help find the oil, figure out how much is there, produce it, and turn it into usable products.
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RIP Cammie 7/15/2009 - 4/1/2011 |
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#34 | |
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Booooosted.
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Hmmmm............ I wonder if that's the reason they have declined to allow it to be done by the offers that have come in? THAT would really piss me off.
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#35 | |
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12.23s@113mph
Drives: 2SS/RS, A6, just a few bolt ons Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 1,197
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it gets really sticky with laws and oil spills. technically if it touches the ground surface, it is the surface owner's oil and since the coast is owned by the gov't then that oil will be unusable, especially if the sand soaks it up. but it is still BP's responsibility to clean up the beaches.
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RIP Cammie 7/15/2009 - 4/1/2011 |
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#36 | |
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Booooosted.
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#37 | |
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Boosted Moderator
Drives: Bone Stock LS3 Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Marion Tx
Posts: 15,802
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I also understand the implications of working out here financially.... and I'm way over the basic 6 figure income. You forgot the little guy though... figuratively speaking of course... "basically there are 3 sides to the oil industry: service companies, exploration/production companies, and downstream companies. There are the E&P companies, Shell, B.P. Exxon Chevron etc... There are the service companies, that work directly for the oil companies, in someone elses back yard... Halliburton, Schlumberger, etc... There are also the drilling companies.... my line of work... Diamond Offshore, Transocean, Noble, Pride etc... We are the ones that do the physical part of getting the product out of the ground... You can't go straight from finding it to producing it without us... Many years ago, drilling contractors were hired and a company man was put on the rig to make sure that the oil company was getting value for the dollar work... There has been an unfortunate trend that came about over many years of the co-men becoming micro-managers in the day to day operations at the base levels... This is unfortunate and in my opinion has a very great deal to do with the recent explosion on the Horizon.. To expand on this a little, if you Camaro is wrecked, it is taken to a body shop (drilling contractor)... There is an estimate done (service, geologists etc). The Insurance co. (E&P) is contacted for the money to fix it. The shop has a manger to make sure the work is done correctly, but as the owner, you are the final say in the finished product (co-man). Are you going to tell the body man how to fix the car, how far to pull the frame, how much body putty to use, or how to mix the paint, or are you simply going to make sure the final product is correct and done in a timely fashion... I had a 23 y/o co-man for the company we are working for tell me how to test my BOP's... Huh, sorry dude, but I follow my companies procedures and the original manufacturers guidelines... I do not follow the whimsical mandates of a co-man, regardless of his/her age...I kid you not, every single co-rep that comes out here has his own ideas for how things are to be done, and while most of them are sound and based in good information, many of them are so off the wall as to make me wonder if they got hired from a tiki hut on the beach the week before... Again, congratulations on your education, and welcome to a lifetime of misery and great money...
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If the car feels like it is on rails, you are probably driving too slow. -Ross Bentley
Horsepower is how fast you hit the wall. Torque is how far you take the wall with you. “If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough.” Mario Andretti If you can turn, you ain't going fast enough... |
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#38 |
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Hey y'all :)
Drives: Rosalee Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Southeast TN
Posts: 437
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Great analogy SSE. I have been wondering since the beginning if Transocean somehow shares the liability for this. Any knowledge of that?
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Last edited by 5thGenCamaroChick; 06-25-2010 at 10:36 AM. |
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#39 |
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12.23s@113mph
Drives: 2SS/RS, A6, just a few bolt ons Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 1,197
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your analogy is good.i was trying to keep my description as simple as possible. in a way you can categorize drilling companies along with service companies, because the E&P companies hire the drilling contractors to drill a well for them, which is a service they provide. but to be more descriptive on my original post, there are: E&P companies (own the well) Drilling companies (drill the well) Service companies (provide cement, frac jobs, wireline, logging, tools, etc. to complete and work on the well) Midstream companies (own the pipelines & tankers that transport the oil from where ever it comes from) Downstream companies (refineries, gas stations, etc. that process the oil into usable products then sell them to the consumer)
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RIP Cammie 7/15/2009 - 4/1/2011 |
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#40 |
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Very interesting all around, I think I may have actually learned something today
Thanks for sharing guys!
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#41 |
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Booooosted.
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So............. where does Harry Stamper fit in to all this?
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#42 | ||
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Boosted Moderator
Drives: Bone Stock LS3 Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Marion Tx
Posts: 15,802
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But obviously you studied well and are very well informed... you are gonna do well out here... Maybe some day I can work for on a drilling rig if you are on the drilling side... "No nukes, no nukes... ... I just wanted to feel the power between my legs... " The rig that was used for that movie is actually a state of the art 5th+ Gen rig we own capable of drilling in 10,000 feet of water to around 40,000 feet deep... It was a cold stack rig no longer used when the movie was made. We bought it and had it refurbished for around half a billion dollars... or roughly half what a new build would cost...
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If the car feels like it is on rails, you are probably driving too slow. -Ross Bentley
Horsepower is how fast you hit the wall. Torque is how far you take the wall with you. “If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough.” Mario Andretti If you can turn, you ain't going fast enough... |
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