Once a natural gas or oil well is drilled, and it has been verified that commercially viable quantities of natural gas are present for extraction, the well must be 'completed' to allow for the flow of petroleum or natural gas out of the formation and up to the surface. This process includes strengthening the well hole with casing, evaluating the pressure and temperature of the formation, and then installing the proper equipment to ensure an efficient flow of natural gas out of the well.
There are three main types of conventional natural gas wells. Since oil is commonly associated with natural gas deposits, a certain amount of natural gas may be obtained from wells that were drilled primarily for oil production. These are known as oil wells. In some cases, this "associated" natural gas is used to help in the production of oil, by providing pressure in the formation for the oils extraction. The associated natural gas may also exist in large enough quantities to allow its extraction along with the oil. Natural gas wells are wells drilled specifically for natural gas, and contain little or no oil. James Van Blaricum
Condensate wells are wells that contain natural gas, as well as a liquid condensate. This condensate is a liquid hydrocarbon mixture that is often separated from the natural gas either at the wellhead, or during the processing of the natural gas. Depending on the type of well that is being drilled, completion may differ slightly. It is important to remember that natural gas, being lighter than air, will naturally rise to the surface of a well. Because of this, in many natural gas and condensate wells, lifting equipment and well treatment are not necessary.
James Van Blaricum, CEO of Signal Oil and Gas, has been an entrepreneur in several industries.After becoming a medical doctor in the early seventies, Van Blaricum found that his passions were more towards pioneering and running businesses.He started in the oil and gas business in Texas near San Antonio and eventually ran a successful chain of car care facilities before moving back to the oil and gas industry.
Once a natural gas or oil well is drilled, and it has been verified that commercially viable quantities of natural gas are present for extraction, the well must be 'completed' to allow for the flow of petroleum or natural gas out of the formation and up to the surface. This process includes strengthening the well hole with casing, evaluating the pressure and temperature of the formation, and then installing the proper equipment to ensure an efficient flow of natural gas out of the well.
There are three main types of conventional natural gas wells. Since oil is commonly associated with natural gas deposits, a certain amount of natural gas may be obtained from wells that were drilled primarily for oil production. These are known as oil wells. In some cases, this "associated" natural gas is used to help in the production of oil, by providing pressure in the formation for the oils extraction. The associated natural gas may also exist in large enough quantities to allow its extraction along with the oil. Natural gas wells are wells drilled specifically for natural gas, and contain little or no oil. James Van Blaricum
Condensate wells are wells that contain natural gas, as well as a liquid condensate. This condensate is a liquid hydrocarbon mixture that is often separated from the natural gas either at the wellhead, or during the processing of the natural gas. Depending on the type of well that is being drilled, completion may differ slightly. It is important to remember that natural gas, being lighter than air, will naturally rise to the surface of a well. Because of this, in many natural gas and condensate wells, lifting equipment and well treatment are not necessary.
amended form allows an operator to report the annual injection volume of anthropogenic carbon dioxide.
Adoption of Amended Form P-5LC, Irrevocable Documentary Blanket Letter of Credit. The revision from #500 to #600 was effective on July 1,2007. New Letters of Credit filed with the Commission should be filed on the revised form; however, the Commission is NOT requiring that operators (and their banks) refile existing letters of credit. Currently filed letters of credit executed on prior versions of Form P-5LC may remain on file and be renewed as needed without resubmission on the revised form.
Deleted Form W-1X, Application for Future Re-Entry of Inactive Wellbore and 14(b)(2) Extension Permit. This form is no longer necessary.Signal Oil and Gas
Effective October 1, 2006 all plats filed in hardcopy with Form W-1 Drilling
Permit Applications must be in black line on white background; blue line plats and colored plats will no longer be accepted. For drilling permit applications that are electronically filed, the plat that is attached to the application must be scanned in black and white and saved as a TIFF file. A scanning resolution of 200 x 200 dpi is recommended. All information on the original plat should be legible on the scanned image. When naming your scanned plat files DO NOT USE special characters as this could prevent your file from being successfully uploaded. Signal and Oil The Railroad Commission is currently scanning all Drilling Permit Applications,
plats and other attachments that are filed in paper and these scanned images are processed electronically along with the applications that are filed online by operators. The scanned images and electronic data are also made available for public query over the Internet.
Restricting plats to black and white format is necessary in order to ensure that all information on paper-filed plats can be captured when scanned, and to reduce electronic file storage size. Signal and Oil
Signal and Oil- Please refer to Statewide Rule 5 for detailed information about drilling permit and plat requirements, you are reminded of these basic plat requirements:
F) The lease should be outlined on the plat using either a heavy line or crosshatching.
G) The plat should include the following:
A) surface location of the proposed drilling site;
B) perpendicular lines providing the distance in feet from two nearest nonparallel
survey/section lines to the surface location;
C) perpendicular lines providing the distance in feet from two nearest nonparallel lease lines to the surface location;
D) a line providing the distance in feet from the surface location to the nearest
point on the lease line, pooled unit line, or unitized tract line. If there is an
unleased interest in a tract of the pooled unit that is nearer than the pooled
unit line, the nearest point on that unleased tract boundary should be used;
E) a line providing the distance in feet from the surface location to the nearest
oil, gas, or oil and gas well identified by number either applied for,
permitted, or completed in the same lease, pooled unit, or unitized tract and
in the same field and reservoir;
F) the geographic location information;
G) a labeled scale bar; and
H) northerly direction.
For faster processing of Drilling Permit Applications, plats and attachments, you
are encouraged to electronically file over the Internet using the RRC Online System.
Once a natural gas or oil well is drilled, and it has been verified that commercially viable quantities of natural gas are present for extraction, the well must be 'completed' to allow for the flow of petroleum or natural gas out of the formation and up to the surface. This process includes strengthening the well hole with casing, evaluating the pressure and temperature of the formation, and then installing the proper equipment to ensure an efficient flow of natural gas out of the well.
There are three main types of conventional natural gas wells. Since oil is commonly associated with natural gas deposits, a certain amount of natural gas may be obtained from wells that were drilled primarily for oil production. These are known as oil wells. In some cases, this "associated" natural gas is used to help in the production of oil, by providing pressure in the formation for the oils extraction. The associated natural gas may also exist in large enough quantities to allow its extraction along with the oil. Natural gas wells are wells drilled specifically for natural gas, and contain little or no oil. James Van Blaricum
Condensate wells are wells that contain natural gas, as well as a liquid condensate. This condensate is a liquid hydrocarbon mixture that is often separated from the natural gas either at the wellhead, or during the processing of the natural gas. Depending on the type of well that is being drilled, completion may differ slightly. It is important to remember that natural gas, being lighter than air, will naturally rise to the surface of a well. Because of this, in many natural gas and condensate wells, lifting equipment and well treatment are not necessary.
Signal OIL and Gas, James Van Blaricum, Jim Van Blaricum