transportation fuels derived from biomass include fuel ethanol and biodiesel, whereby these fuels are usually blended with petroleum fuels. Ethanol is an alcohol made by fermenting starch or sugar, notably from (corn) grains and sugar cane. Biodiesel is made primarily from vegetable oils (e.g. palm oil, soybean oil) or from other oily sources (such as waste cooking grease).
the installation of permanent equipment for the production of oil or gas.
a consumption weighted average of retail prices (including taxes) of the main groups of petroleum products.
a mixture of hydrocarbons that exists in a liquid phase in natural underground reservoirs and remains liquid at atmospheric pressure after passing through surface separating facilities. For statistical purposes, volumes reported as crude oil include:
- liquids technically defined as crude oil;
- small amounts of hydrocarbons that exist in the gaseous phase in natural underground reservoirs, but which are liquid at atmospheric pressure after being recovered from oil well (casing head) gas in lease separators;
- small amounts of non-hydrocarbons produced with the oil;
- very heavy and extra-heavy crude oils with viscosity less than 10,000 mPa.s (centipoises) at original reservoir conditions.
middle distillate type hydrocarbons; includes products similar to number one and number two heating oils and diesel fuels. These products are used for space heating, diesel engine fuel and electrical power generation.
a well found to be incapable of producing either oil or gas in sufficient quantities to justify completion as an oil or gas well.
excludes international air and marine bunkers.
a mixture of relatively volatile hydrocarbons, with or without small quantities of additives, that have been blended to form a fuel suitable for use in internal combustion engines; includes gasoline used in aviation.
agreement of January 1972 between some OPEC Member Countries and the major international oil companies, which had the effect of establishing an index for quarterly adjustments of posted crude oil prices on the basis of the arithmetic average of the deviations of the exchange rates of nine major currencies against the US dollar. This was modified to an import-weighted index in 1978, accounting for exchange rates and inflation rate. The present ‘modified Geneva I + US dollar’ currency basket includes the US dollar, the Chinese yuan, the Euro, the Indian rupee, the Turkish lira, the Japanese yen, the South Korean won, the UK pound, the Vietnamese dong and the Swiss franc.
medium hydrocarbon distillates in the 150° to 280° C distillation range and used as a heating fuel as well as for certain types of internal combustion engines; includes jet fuel, which is a fuel of naphtha or of kerosene type, suitable for commercial or military purposes in aircraft turbine engines.
those reservoir gases liquefied at the surface in lease separators, field facilities or gas processing plants. NGLs consist of field condensates and natural gas plant products such as ethane, pentane, propane, butane and natural gasoline.
a mixture of hydrocarbon compounds and small quantities of various non-hydrocarbons existing in the gaseous phase or in solution with oil in natural underground reservoirs at reservoir conditions. The natural gas volumes refer to Standard Conditions of 60° F, 14.73 psia (15.6° C, 760 mm/Hg).
Gross production: the total flow of natural gas from oil and gas reservoirs of associated-dissolved and non-associated gas.
Marketed production: corresponds to gross production, minus the volumes of gas flared or re-injected into fields, minus the shrinkage.
Re-injection: the total volume of natural gas produced from oil and gas completions, processed through gas-processing plants and field facilities, and used for gas lift, gas injection and cycling operations.
Shrinkage: volume shrinkage due to purification and/or extraction of natural gas liquids, gas used as input to GTL plants, lease separators plant, own consumption, as well as any other losses caused by spillage, evaporation, etc.
includes synthetic crude oil from tar sands, oil shale, etc., liquids derived from coal liquefaction (CTL) and gas liquefaction (GTL), hydrogen and emulsified oils (e.g. Orimulsion), non-hydrocarbon compounds added to or blended with a product to modify fuel properties (octane, cetane, cold properties, etc.) of substances like alcohols (methanol, ethanol), ethers (such as MTBE (methyl tertiary butyl ether), ETBE (ethyl tertiary butyl ether), TAME (tertiary amyl methyl ether) or esters (e.g. rapeseed or dimethylester, etc.) and chemical compounds such as TML (tetramethyl lead) or TEL (tetraethyl lead) and detergents.
inland delivery, including refinery fuels and losses, as well as products from gas plants; including international air and marine bunkers as well as direct crude burning.
a well completed for the production of oil or gas from one or more zones or reservoirs.
consists of crude oil natural gas liquids and non-conventional oil production.
the OPEC Reference Basket (ORB) price was introduced on January 1, 1987. Up to June 15, 2005, it was the arithmetic average of seven selected crudes. These were: Saharan Blend (Algeria); Minas (Indonesia); Bonny Light (Nigeria); Arab Light (Saudi Arabia); Dubai (United Arab Emirates); Tia Juana Light (Venezuela); and Isthmus (Mexico). As of June 16, 2005, the ORB is calculated as a production-weighted average of the OPEC Basket of crudes. These are: Saharan Blend (Algeria); Girassol (Angola, between January 2007 and December 2023); Djeno (Congo, as of June 2018); Zafiro (Equatorial Guinea, as of May 25, 2017); Rabi Light (Gabon, as of July 1, 2016); Iran Heavy (IR Iran); Basrah Medium (Iraq; prior to 2022, ORB based on Basrah Light); Kuwait Export (Kuwait); Es Sider (Libya); Bonny Light (Nigeria); Arab Light (Saudi Arabia); Murban (United Arab Emirates); and Merey (Venezuela).
the total amount of petroleum products produced from refinery input in a given period, excluding refinery fuels.
products obtained from the processing of crude oil, unfinished oils, NGLs and other hydrocarbon compounds. These include aviation gasoline, motor gasoline, naphtha, kerosene, jet fuel, distillate fuel oil, residual fuel oil, liquefied petroleum gas, lubricants, paraffin wax, petroleum coke, asphalt and other products.
the estimated quantities of all liquids statistically defined as crude oil. They consist of those quantities of crude oil which by analysis of geoscience and engineering data can be estimated with reasonable certainty to be commercially recoverable, from a given date forward, from known reservoirs and under defined economic conditions, operating methods and government regulations (source: SPE - Petroleum Resources Management System).
are the estimated quantities of all hydrocarbons statistically defined as natural gas. They consist of those quantities of natural gas (associated and non-associated) which by analysis of geoscience and engineering data can be estimated with reasonable certainty to be commercially recoverable, from a given date forward, from known reservoirs and under defined economic conditions, operation methods and government regulations (source: SPE - Petroleum Resources Management System).
the input (feed) capacity of the refinery processing facilities.
the maximum amount of input to atmospheric distillation units that can be processed in an average 24-hour period.
Oil input to atmospheric distillation unit.
fuels obtained as liquid still bottoms from the distillation of crude used alone or in blends with heavy liquids from other refinery process operations. These are used for the generation of electric power, space heating, vessel bunkering and various industrial purposes.
a derrick complete with engine-house and other equipment necessary for drilling oil and gas wells.
a hole drilled for the purpose of finding or producing crude oil or natural gas, or providing services related to the production of crude oil and natural gas.