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I used to see in the job application website and noted that in the oil/gas industries, at most time they are looking for different level of production operators. It stated as A Operator, B operator or C operator. I don’t know what exactly it means being an oil/gas production operator like me. I would be much appreciated if any one can detail out what it means?
Thanks.
I’ve worked in manufacturing (not oil/gas) for 13 years and never heard of A, B and C operator as a skill-level sort of description. The only reference that popped into mind was A shift, B shift, and C shift…meaning it isn’t skill level but what hours of the day/days of the week you work.
If it is describing skill level, it must be specific to the company/industry.
I hate them to. Cost me $60-$70 to fill up out what I get per week and that doesn’t leave me much left, but then I stop to think, without these prices, the oil and gas production would shut down and my husband would be without a job. I’ve seen first hand what these men go through to provide a living for all of us and if the prices are lowered, even a little, production goes down, and my husband stays home more, and we can’t pay our bills, he starts looking for more work…I’ve seen men break limbs, get burned badly by rigs exploding, I live right by the hospital and see men get seriously injured and some killed by doing a dangerous job so we can drive our precious vehicles. I just wish people would stop complaining so much and realize the pain and hard labor these men go through so we Americans can have a life. Without these prices, things would be shut down, a lot of men would be without jobs. Would you rather walk everywhere you go, dealing with bad weather, and cold and heat?
Like they did way back when? Like I said, touchy subject but just thought I’d give you something to think about. Its 2007, prices are high everywhere, even a soda cost more than a $1 in most places, or a gallon of milk for that matter. In a few years, things will cost even more than now…
You provide a lot of persuasion. Unfortuantely so do the conspiracy joes. When big oil reports what appears to be extaordinairily high profits, it is difficult to see their perspective. Having been in a hazardous industy for more than 20 years, I understand you and side with you. My answer is to lower my own demand. Which is difficult, but during warm weather, I actually get better gas mileage, but being independantly employed (self) and the fact that there is more work for me in the summer, I actually drive more miles. I am caught also. This is a tough one and I am not sure there are any good answers.
High tech prices combined with new technology is what an Oklahoma company is betting on with a new 65 million dollar facility in Shawnee.
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I was reading on Iraq’s plans to up production (http://dinarspeculation.com/2009/05/05/iraq-to-produce-6-million-barrels-per-day/ ), but it appears that we’re still using more barrels per day than are being produced by the top oil producers (http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/petroleum/data_publications/company_level_imports/current/import.html ).
How does oil usage, oil production, and gas prices trend when you consider this information?
It works, as everything else in the universe, on supply and demand.
But it is supply and demand of several different things, not just crude.
Crude (in various grades) has a supply and demand. Refined oil, gasoline, natural gas, etc., has a supply and demand. They influence each other, but are not absolutely connected.
Increasing crude production will have the tendency of decreasing gas prices, but it isn’t the only controlling supply and demand curve. Possibly about 50% of the price of gasoline is influenced by crude prices.
People say "greed," but greed is a constant (people are equally greedy no matter what the price of gas is). I’ve heard (especially on the radio) people blame greedy gas companies (or whatever) when gasoline prices go up, but I have never heard them praise their generosity when the prices go down. Greed is constant; supply and demand rules.
How simulation can be used to improve the designs of Centralizer Mechanisms in the Oil and Gas Industry.
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I own a tract of land in North Louisiana, there has never been much production around my property. I have been offered a nice amount of money to sell my mineral rights and my royalty interest. Should I sell my Oil & Gas royalties?
A good offer should compensate for at least 90 months of potential future income. You can contact the department of natural resources and they can help you research production near your property. With so much uncertainty with Oil & Gas exploration, it is hard to pass up guaranteed money. You never know if they will drill a good well. You can also sell a percentage of your interest now, keep the rest and see what happens. A good offer will compensate you enough that even if they drill a good well, you have many years of advanced royalties in the bank. Selling in Louisiana always has great tax advantages (as opposed to accruing royalty), this makes the offer that much more appealing. Do your research. People who invest in speculative mineral rights (no history of production) take huge gambles. Keep in mind, even if they plan to drill a well, it can be years before you receive any payment from the well. A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. GOOD LUCK!
"Production" means actually bringing the oil or gas up out of the ground. If 85 million barrels of oil per day are produced, 85 million barrels are pumped out of wells each day. More oil than that may be available, and pumps may or may not be able to pump more up, but only the oil actually pumped up is counted as production.
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JJ Tech holds USA and selected foreign country patents on its line of Jet Pumps and accessories. This pump was developed to produce large volumes of sub-surface formation fluids with inclusions of moderate to high solid content.
The unique patented design allows easy retrieval of the pump from deviated and horizontal wells. Retrieval of the pump from the hole for replacement of the nozzle or expansion tube is done by manipulation of the surface valves and reverse circulation of fluid with the existing production equipment (plunger pump, surface SP). No wire line, pulling unit or work over rig is required.
Wanner Hydra-Cell T Series pumps feature an exclusive seal-less design that eliminates clean up costs from leaking seals or packing and protects operators from dangerous fluids such as those containing hydrogen sulfide.
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From the well head – oil and gas companies report yield or production in cubic feet. But they sell it in BTU’s. How is it converted from one (cubic feet) to the other (BTU’s) and/or vice versa?
NATURAL GAS IS SOLD BY CUBIC FEET AT YOUR METER. NATURAL GAS IS A TERM WHICH ENCOMPASSES A VARIETY OF GASSES. THE INDIVIDUAL GAS THAT IS SUPPLIED TO YOU SHOULD SUPPLY A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF BTU’S PER CUBIC FOOT. SOME APPLIANCES WILL DISPLAY THEIR EFFICIENCY ACCORDING TO THE BTU/CF FORMULA.