RI 3392 Resume Of Problems Relating To Edgewater Encroachment In Oil Sands

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 19
- File Size:
- 8876 KB
- Publication Date:
- Mar 1, 1938
Abstract
Petroleum technologists and progressive operators constantly are striving to increase the percentage of oil that may to recovered from reservoir rocks through wells. The exhaustive studies that have been made of the function of natural as in the production of oil, for example, have aided operators greatly in increasing the quantity of oil recovered from reservoirs. Natural gas dissolved in and otherwise associated under pressure with oil in reservoir rocks, however, is not the only source of energy available for moving oil through sands to wells. In becoming "reservoir—energy conscious" engineers have learned that in many petroleum reservoirs the edgewater flanking the oil accumulation constitutes a potential source of energy capable, through proper control, of increasing oil—recovery efficiencies materially. No longer is the encroachment of water into the oil— and gas—filled tart of the reservoir considered as an evil to be combatted by devious methods but rather a natural consequence, incident to the withdrawal of nil and as from the wells, that may be used advantageously in lengthening the flowing life of wells and increasing the economic recovery of oil and gas.
Citation
APA:
(1938) RI 3392 Resume Of Problems Relating To Edgewater Encroachment In Oil SandsMLA: RI 3392 Resume Of Problems Relating To Edgewater Encroachment In Oil Sands. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1938.