05.07.2009

In well cementing, the fluid, usually drilling mud or salt water, that is pumped into the well after the cement is pumped into it to force the cement out of the casing and into the annulus.

Type of drilling which does not use circulation drilling fluids

Layers of rocks that have been moved by the action of faults show displacement on either side of the fault surface.

a cementing method based on replacing the drilling mud with cement in a manner that ensures the cement remains clean and retains its properties.

The control for an integrated electric system to schedule transactions with other interconnected electric utilities and order generation from specific power plants to achieve the most reliable and economical supply of electricity as the demand curve for electricity rises or falls.

Most, if not all, oil and gas producers have to account for the estimated future cost of dismantling and removing oil and gas production and related facilities and equipment and restoring land to its previous condition. Estimated future dismantlement, removal, and restoration costs have characteristics that distinguish them from other costs associated with the acquisition and use of productive assets. The first difference is that the cash outlays associated with these costs typically occur after the asset has ceased production. Second, the timing of the future cash outlays is uncertain, since it depends on when the oil and gas reserves are exhausted. Finally, changes in field investment, fluctuations in prices, innovations in technology, and enactment of new legislation can make estimation of these costs even more speculative. The costs are accumulated over the estimated lives of the facilities by the use of the unit per production method.

Discovery of petroleum after drilling