St. Louis Paper - The Practical Value of Oil and Gas Bureaus (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
W. G. Matteson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
24
File Size:
1096 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1918

Abstract

The Oklahoma legislature recently passed a bill providing for "the creation of an oil and gas department under the jurisdiction of the Corporation Commission, authorizing the Corporation Commission to appoint a chief oil and gas conservation agent, and conferring exclusive jurisdiction on the Corporation Commission in reference to the conservation of oil and gas, and the inspection of gasoline and oil, the product of crude petroleum, and repealing all acts or parts of acts in conflict therewith and declaring an emergency." Some of the functions of the new bureau include the receiving and filing of all well logs, and the direction and supervision of plugging all abandoned oil and gas wells, under rules prescribed by the Corporation Commission. The two leading petroleum-producing States of the country, Oklahoma and California, have now established oil and gas bureaus with a staff of inspectors to see that the important rules relating to the conservation of oil and gas are thoroughly enforced. The economic significance and the value of well logs in the conservation work has been recognized, and the necessary legal action taken to insure and procure them. William B. Heroy, of the Government Land Classification Board, in a personal communication to the writer, says that the drilling of wells is also regulated by public authority in the Roswell artesian basin in southeastern New Mexico, where a permit must be obtained for the drilling of any well and a certified log of the well recorded with a county official. The method is said to give fairly satisfactory results. In a recent article1 a National instead of a State Bureau was suggested for collecting and filing well logs. In discussing the paper, L. L. Hutchison characterized such a plan as impractical because the average driller or contractor will often juggle or guess at the log and will not keep the record sufficiently close or accurate, making it necessary to maintain a special man at each well for the sole purpose of obtaining
Citation

APA: W. G. Matteson  (1918)  St. Louis Paper - The Practical Value of Oil and Gas Bureaus (with Discussion)

MLA: W. G. Matteson St. Louis Paper - The Practical Value of Oil and Gas Bureaus (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1918.

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