Oilsands Review
Search Magazine Features
and News Updates
 
Welcome to the new Oilsands Review website. Sign up for a free two week trial to enjoy access to our new upgraded site!

Energy Toolkit

Table of Contents

GLOSSARY OF OILPATCH TERMS

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W X Y Z

 
Passive Solar
Architectural designs in buildings taking advantage of site and building materials to enhance the amount of solar radiation turned into useful interior heat during cold periods and to minimize absorption of solar heat during warm periods. Contrasts with active solar.
 
 
Peak Demand
The maximum load consumed by a customer or a group of customers or a system in a period of time such as month or year. The value may be the maximum instantaneous load or more usually the average load over a designated short interval of time such as one hour. Normally stated in kilowatts or megawatts.
 
 
Peaking Capacity
Electrical generating equipment which is operated to supply energy during periods of high demand on the power system. Peak capacity usually entails low capital cost and high operating cost.
 
 
Permeability
A property of a porous medium: a measure of the capacity of the medium to transmit fluids. The common unit of mesurement of the millidarcy.
 
 
Petroleum
A generic name for hydrocarbons, including crude oil, natural gas liquids, natural gas and their products.
 
 
Photovoltaics
An active solar technology involving the conversion of sunlight directly into electricity by means of a semiconductor.
 
 
Plasma Arc Technology
Use of electrical arcs in a plasma furnace to efficiently produce very high temperatures for applications such a metal melting and coating and industrial drying.
 
 
Plugged and Abandoned
There may be oil or gas in the well but for the time being it is not worth taking out. The company may, however, decide to return and retrieve the oil or gas at a later date.
 
 
Plutonium
A radioactive element used as a raw material in the manufacture of nuclear weapons; a waste product of processes yielding atomic energy.
 
 
Pool
A natural underground reservoir containing, or appearing to contain, an accumulation of petroleum or natural gas.
 
 
Possible Reserves
Reserves that, at present, cannot be regarded as ‘probable’ but are estimated to have a significant but less than 50% chance of being technically and economically productive.
 
 
Pour Point
The lowest temperature at which a given crude oil or petroleum product will flow as a liquid. Material with a pour point expressed as 16o celcius Max will flow at temperature s down to 16o celcius. Petroleum with a high pour point maximum of 41o celcius and above is generally considered high pour oil, although this term has also been applied to all oil with a maximum above 18o celcius or 24o celcius. At the guaranteed pour point (or perhaps slightly below it) the oil will begin to solidify. Inasmuch as product with a relatively low pour point would require less preheating prior to combustion and can be stored or shipped at lower temperatures (high pour oil, in contrast, must be transported and stored in tanks equipped with heating coils to maintain its liquidity), such low pour oil generally commands a price premium on the market.
 
 
Price Control
The setting of limits on prices by government order. These include maximum limits as well as "floor prices" (designed to limit how far prices may drop).
 
 
Primary Recovery
The standard oil well production technique, sometimes called flush production, using only the natural water or gas pressure in the reservoir to force the petroleum to the surface. Primary recovery typically yields approximately 20% of the oil in a conventional light crude reservoir, but only about 5% of the oil in a heavy crude reservoir. Primary recovery is usually first augmented by wellhead pumps.
 
 
Production Casing
The casing which is set in the productive zone through which perforations and production comes from.
 
 
Productive Capacity
The estimated average daily ability of a property to produce oil and/or natural gas, unrestricted by demand, but restricted by reservoir performance, well density and well capacity, oil sands mining capacity, field processing capacity and pipeline capacity.
 
 
Projected Depth
The approximate depth the company will reach. This depth is set before drilling commences. Note that the final total depth is usually greater or lesser than the projected depth.
 
 
Propylene
Second member of the olefin series of hydrocarbons (C3H6). Propylene is a flammable gaseous byproduct of the thermal or catalytic dehydrogenation of propane. Most propylene used for chemical purposes is generated as co-product in the production of ethylene via steam cracking of natural gas liquids, naphtha or gas-oil.
 
 
Pulping Liquor
A substance consisting primarily of lignin (a non-carbohydrate constituent of wood) produced as a byproduct of the manufacture of chemical pulp. It can be burned in a boiler to produce steam or electricity. Also known as waste liquor or black liquor.
 
Top
JuneWarren-Nickle's Energy Group
JuneWarren-Nickle's Network: