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Global
Energy
- The Next Decade
and Beyond*
By
Arthur R. Green1
Search and Discovery Article #70013 (2005)
Posted February 3, 2005
*2004-05 AAPG Distinguished Lecture
Funded by the AAPG Foundation through the J. Ben Carsey Endowment
1Chief Geoscientist, ExxonMobil Exploration Company, Houston, TX, Retired; current address: Gig Harbor, WA ([email protected]).
|
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|
Conclusions
Moving into the Next Phase of World
Modern civilization, a growing population and globalization will become
increasingly more dependent on access to large volumes of
The
geography and geopolitical setting of both production and consumption of
The
peaking of conventional Increased gas production will become more important and the required transport and facilities infrastructure will require huge up front investment. The
modern
These changes in the global
Recognizing and facing
I am optimistic about our
Factors Driving Global
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Figure 12.
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Figure 13. Theodore Link, legendary petroleum geologist, also AAPG President 1955-56, demonstrating the application in the field of basic tools. |
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Figure 14. Creole Field, Coast of Louisiana (from Wasson, 1948). |
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Figure 16. Plot of |
Global Geopolitical & Economic Environment
Surge in Demand
US becomes Net Importer
Winds of Nationalization
Geopolitical Restructuring
State of Israel Formed and Colonies Fall
Marshall Plan
Cold War 1947 - Korean War 1950 - 1953
Stock Market (DOW) Reaches 500 Milestone in 1956
Population Inflection
Business Operations
Aggressive Global Search and Discovery
On-site Geologic and Engineering Investigations
Reestablishing Global Reach Limited to "The Western World"
Increasing Flow of
Oil
& Gas and Refined Products
ARAMCO Restructured
Companies Reorganized
Science - Technology - Knowledge
(Data - Information - Knowledge - Wisdom)
Revolutionary Advancements from War Years - High Octane Fuel, Butyl. Rubber, Lubricants
Direct and Indirect Impact of Technology
Technical Leadership in Academia, Government and Industry
Corporate Research Centers - Upstream and Downstream Enlarged
1st Offshore Drilling
Scouting - Global Information
Human Technology
"Experienced" Staff
Inventive "can do" Attitude
Global Maturity
Travel and Communication Advances
Training - Schools and Mentoring
(Figures 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 22)
Global Geopolitical and Economic Environment
Nationalizations - Embargos (1973)
OPEC becomes a Major Force
Intense Cold War - Vietnam War Ends 1975
Gasoline Shortages
Inflation Increased Sharply
Iran Hostage Crisis (1974)
Nixon Resigns (1974)
Stock Market Plunges (1974/75) Stagflation - GDP Dropped
Business Operations
Major Discoveries and Production come on line
New Global Offices Established by Industry
Oil
& Gas Operations in USSR Surge
S.E. Asian Businesses Rise
Nationalization of
oil
properties
Science - Technology - Knowledge
Dynamic Earth Model - Applied (Regional) Projects
Research Centers merged (Carter- Humble)
Seismic Reflection, Stratigraphy and Attributes, 3-D
Seismic Data Processing
Sequence Stratigraphy
Micro - Paleo Develops Rapidly
Gravity and Magnetics
Satellite Imagery
Drilling begins move to Deep Water
Refining Advancements
Computers - Micro Chips
Human Technology
Staff Increases in Size and Experience
Extensive School System Develops at Research Lab.
Travel and Communication Surge
Integrated Regional Projects
Six Major Factors
in
Energy
Planning
Only
One
Energy
Event was Arguably a Real Crises
A Turning Point:
THE 1973
OIL
EMBARGO.
Some of
What happened in the U.S. (from
Robert L. Hirsch, Senior
Energy
Program Advisor, SAIC -- February, 2004)
([email protected]).
·
Oil
prices increased ~ 4.5 x (Saudi crude)
· Gasoline rationed (even / odd days)
· Gasoline lines and spot shortages
· GDP dropped two years in a row (recession)
· Interest rates spiked dramatically upward
· Inflation increased sharply
There was a huge wealth transfer to OPEC
U.S. Actions Resulting
From the 1973
Oil
Embargo (from
Robert L. Hirsch, Senior
Energy
Program Advisor, SAIC -- February, 2004)
([email protected])
· Price controls enacted
· CAFÉ implemented
· Higher efficiency mandated in a variety of sectors
· National speed limit (55 mpg) enacted
·
Domestic
oil
& gas exploration
& production spiked upward
·
Federal
energy
R & D
dramatically increased
· A major effort in synthetic fuels initiated
· Windfall profit taxes levied
· U.S. government reorganized to form ERDA, FEA & FERC
· IEA formed
· Strategic Petroleum Reserve established
·
Formulation of a coherent
national
energy
policy initiated
· Foreign policy adjusted to new realities
Recent: 1995-2001 (Figure 23)
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Figure 23. Factors driving global
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Figure 24.
From irrational exuberance to infectious greed, with a plot of Dow Jones
Industrial Average and S&P 500-stock Index, along with quotations from
two Alan Greenspan speeches (The Wall Street Journal, July, 2002;
|
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Figure 25. Merger acquisitions: deals closed / pending 1/1/98 to 2001, with estimated values. |
|
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Figure 26. Top
|
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Figure 27. US
Petroleum Engineering Workforce ( |
Global Geopolitical & Economic Environment
Major Mergers - Restructuring
Stock Market Surges (1995) and Falls (2001)
Globalization/Post cold war economy develops
Europe United - EU Currency
NGOs - Environment and Globalization
Balkans - Bombing (1999)
Oklahoma City Bombing 1995
World Trade Center and Pentagon Struck (2001)
Sanctions on Iran, Iraq, Libya
Business Operations
Major Corporations Develop from Mergers
Offshore West Africa Blooms
Caspian Sea North and South
Niger Delta and Equatorial Guinea
Indonesia and Sakhalin
Russian Industry Advances
Middle East Production Evolves /
Tensions rise
Science - Technology - Knowledge
Micro Chips and PCs Advance - Efficiency Surge
3-D Seismic and Attribute Analysis
Visualization
Communications - Cell Phones and Broad Band
Satellites - GPS, ICONOS, Interferometry, Geostat
Smart Materials
Robotics
Nano Technology Micro Machines
Human Genome Mapped
Medical Advances - Genes and Stem Cells
Cloning
Fuel Cells - Photo Voltaics and Combination Cars Advance
Climate Science Advances
Human Technology
Integrated Geoscience Emerges
Team Projects
Staff Matures
Hiring and Training Continue
The "New Economy" (Figure 24)
"How do we know when irrational exuberance has unduly escalated asset values, which then become subject to unexpected and prolonged contractions as they have in Japan over the past decade?"—Alan Greenspan, December 5, 1995 speech.
"Why did corporate governance check and balances that served us reasonably well in the past break down? . . An infectious greed seemed to grip much of our business community. . ."—Alan Greenspan, July16, 2002 speech.
Corporate Consolidation (Figures 25, 26, and 27)
Science and Technology
(Figures 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, and 44)
Figures 28-44
Return to top.
Sedimentary Basin Systems: Models in Our Minds
Figures 45-47
|
Figure 45. Systems within systems:
diagrammatic cross-section. |
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Figure 47. Detection of surface-expressed fault and seepage. |
The mental model of sedimentary basins envisioned here is that basins are complex, non-linear, self-organizing, dynamic natural systems. They are thrown in and out of thermodynamic and pressure equilibrium and experience both positive and negative feedback as they attempt to maintain equilibrium throughout their unique evolution.
The fluids (
oil
-gas-water) are the most unstable and mobile parameters
of sedimentary basin systems and are the major agents in self
organization on the maintenance of equilibrium.
Petroleum exploration is the science and art of envisioning multiphase fluid and rock interactions envisioned through time in a high pressure and temperature environment of the subsurface atmosphere.
A Forgiving
Influence: Salt in the Petroleum System (open-closed-chaos systems)
(Figures 45 and 46)
Salt and Shale
Diapirs: Catalytic - Self
Organizing Systems
Non-linear, Self-organizing Dynamic Systems Creates a "Subsurface Atmosphere."
-
Redistributes heat (conductive halite) and pressure
-
Mobile sediments move with fluids.
-
Alters basin chemistry NaCl) - Density flows
Molds the Shape of the Ocean Bottom
-
Withdrawal and fault subsidence
-
Forms itinerate basins - collects sands
Creates Traps
-
Forms structures - anticline and down-to-basin faults
-
Creates unconformities
-
Turtles
Creates Migration Pathways
-
Moves perpendicular to sedimentary layers
-
Breaks seals
-
Shale sheath conduits
-
Focus fluid flow
A Clue to Basin Dynamics and Compaction History
Direct and Indirect
Oil
and Gas Detection (Figure
47)
From Science to Business Ventures - Managing the Unknowable
(Figures 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, and 53)
Knowledge - Forever a Student (Figure 54)
The power of knowledge - the sustainable resource - geology of Asia
Learning in Istanbul
-
In the non-linear, free
energy
market environment of 2004 and beyond, science and
technology must be the foundation of decision-making. -
Learning is at the heart of our ability to adapt to changing
energy
environments. -
We must all be teachers, students, and mentors at the same time in a world without walls.
Figure
56. Win/win human relations.
Success (Figure 57)
Figure
57. Marimba-1 (Angola) - Ocean Valent 1998 (ExxonMobil).
The Future to 2025 (Figure 58)
|
Figure 58. Factors driving global
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Figure 59. World population and |
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Figure 60. World |
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Figure 61. Global |
Global Political and Economic Environment
Increasing degree of volatility and discontinuities - Afghanistan and Iraq
Increasing demand for crude, natural gas, and petroleum products
The world of declining petroleum resources
Intense competition for quality properties
Pressure on earnings growth - keeping costs - volumes up
Geopolitical awareness -NGOs environmental, and "Evil Doers"
Corporate reputation -performance
Public relations and safety
Embrace change -MAKE THE FUTURE
Business Operations
Performance and profitability
World basins continue to mature
Shifting center of growth for producing properties
Natural gas becomes
a major player in the
energy
mix (LNG / GTL)
Increasingly complex high risk geologic opportunities
Increased development of static petroleum resources
Business and scientific relationships
Partner of choice
High operational performance
Sound safety and environmental performance
Scientific and technical leadership
Ethics and global maturity
Doing the right thing right
Science - Technology - Knowledge
Genetic basin analysis
Complexity science - fundamental knowledge - fractals /patterns
Advanced subsurface fluid models - (Atmosphere) at all scales
Robust research - upstream and downstream
Interferometry
Earth tomography
Non-seismic geophysics
Nano-Technology - Micro Machines
Military research - satellite gravity - smart materials
Climate science
Advanced data and information systems
Human Technology
A learning organization
Adaptive self-organizing system - leadership
People network - Multi-cultural and evolving demographics
Congruency, integration, and communication
Innovation and creativity by all
World realities - Globalization, Advancing Technology, National Security
The confluence of change at the turn of the century has created a dynamic environment of opportunities, discontinuities, and challenges
-
Changing geopolitical climate - new markets and technologies drive economics.
-
Globalization creating an inter-connected world - geographies and virtual. Incomplete globalization debated (?). Shifts in employment and production capabilities. Trading blocks developing.
-
Mergers, buy-outs and consolidation occurring - backing
oil
and gas, defense,
pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and high tech companies, antitrust
suits common and regulations becoming global. -
Volatile military operations worldwide - terrorist organizations evolving, religious unrest and separatist movements active. NGOs militant environmentalists and animal rights groups, etc. Nation building in Afghanistan and Iraq.
-
New technologies tools and scientific advancements (concepts) increasing rapidly - non-linear acceleration.
-
World population rising rapidly: 1804 - 1.06 billion, 1900 - 1.5 billion, 1960 - 3 billion, 2000 - 6 billion, 2050 - ~9.1 (?) billion.
-
Prosperity and active stock markets in some countries - confusion, lawlessness and poverty in others. The "New Economy" replaced by viable "corporate earnings." China and India GDP rising and thirst for
energy
and base
metals increasing. -
Vast new, global, digital interactive data sets available to all. Instant communications and transactions.
The Sage of the Federal Reserve
Comments at the conference on
energy
Security - Washington, D.C., April
27, 2004 - Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2004 (with quotations from
Alan Greenspan, Federal Reserve Chairman):
The
price of
oil
and gas contracts for delivery six years in the future
indicates:
-
"The recent surge in
oil
and gas prices appear to be a long-lasting phenomenon, and could
alter the magnitude and manner in which the United States consumes
energy
." -
That the long term path of the US economy will be "significantly affected."
-
"A shift in expectations."
-
"The US must expand facilities for handling imported liquefied natural gas (LNG)."
-
"Higher gas prices in the US will prompt some gas-intensive industries such as petrochemicals and fertilizer manufacturers, to move facilities from the US to parts of the world where gas is less expensive.
The World’s
Oil
and Gas Endowment
- Peak
Oil
Next
Big Thing: Peak
Oil
(from Williams, 2004—by
Oil
& Gas Journal Executive
Editor)
". . .
The last time this editor felt that kind of excite about a story with
legs was the new wave of environmentalism sweeping the
oil
and gas
industry that OGJ began tracking in the early 1980s and that exploded
anew with the 1989 Exxon Valdez tanker spill.
"Next Big Thing
"The
peak-
oil
debate is getting more polarized and more rancorous - and
especially noteworthy, more politicized.
"So,
here’s an immodest prediction: The peak-
oil
debate will be the Next Big
Thing. The story with legs. The overarching them that will resonate
throughout the
oil
and gas industry for decades to come. It will be
propelled forward in the public consciousness not only by serious debate
within the industry itself but also on the political hustings and
antioil forces who can’t seem to pry Americans out of their sport
utility vehicles even as war rages in the Middle East and Chicken Little
lies sacrificed on the Kyoto altar.
"Iraq
and Saudi Arabia will figure largely in that debate. So will Russia and
the Caspian. And Orinoco
oil
and Athabasca tar sands. And reserves
accounting transparency.
"And
alternate
energy
viability.
"That
last one once looked like it had legs too, circa 1979-1985. So you’ll
see more coverage of alternate
energy
in OGJ in the years ahead. . . ."
Energy
Consumption (Figures
59, 60, and
61)
Oil
(Figures 62, 63,
64, 65,
66, 67,
68, 69,
70, 71, and
72)
Figures 62-72
|
Figure 62. EIA -
World conventional |
|
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Figure 63. World
demand vs. production (US Department of |
|
|
Figure 65.
Historical development of the IEA crude |
|
|
Figure 67.
Published estimates of world |
|
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Figure 68.
Conventional |
|
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Figure 69. Proven
conventional |
|
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Figure 70. Production and remaining reserves in largest UK fields (Read, 2002). |
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Figure 71. Production and remaining reserves in largest Norwegian fields (Read, 2002). |
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Figure 72. World
|
In Figure 62, Peak Ranges are 46 years (2021 to 2067) or 91 years (2021 to 2112); 900 billion barrels moves peak 10 years from 2047 to 2047. The table and chart do not include price feedback, political and geographic accessibility, geopolitical conditions or infrastructure.
Supplying
oil
and gas demand will require planning, technical skills and
major up-front investment and risk (Figure 63).
The Era of Gas (Figures 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, and 78)
Figures 73-78
|
Figure 74. World natural gas consumption by region, reference
case, 1990-2025. (Sources: History: EIA, 2003A.. Projections:
EIA, 2003B). (US Department of |
|
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Figure 75. World natural gas consumption, 1970-2025. (Sources:
History: EIA, 2003A.. Projections: EIA, 2003B). (US Department
of |
|
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Figure 76. Advanced gas conversion for the 21st century (AGC-21). |
|
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Figure 77. Recoverable |
|
Unconventional Resources
"Beyond Petroleum"
Figures 79-90
Coal (Figures 79, 80, 81, and 82)
Hydroelectricity (Figures 83 and 84)
Nuclear
Energy
(Figure 85)
Wind
Energy
(Figure 86)
Solar
Energy
(Figure 87)
The
diameter of the sun is 864,000 miles. Hydrogen and helium compose 95% of
it.
Energy
is generated by thermonuclear fusion that converts hydrogen
to helium. Solar flairs hurl radiation and particles into space. The
plasma temperature is about 1million degrees. Bright region "sun spots"
have higher density of coronal gas than dark regions.
Geothermal
Energy
(Figure 88)
Renewable Water Supply (Figure 89)
Efficiency and Conversation (Figure 90)
An
Energy
Scenario
(Figure 91)
Figure
91.
Energy
consumption and mix, 1860-2060, along with population growth.
A complex story of interacting variables and uncertain reserve figures
Assumptions
USGS 20000 World Resources
World GDD 2%
No major wars or economic collapses
Global free flow of
energy
products to consumers
Major construction of international transport and refining infrastructure
Globalization develops
Population increases
More nations prosper
New
energy
sources viable at end
of period
Moderate conservation and efficiency increases
National
oil
companies and
private companies cooperate.
Energy
and Our Environment
(Figure 92)
Energy
, Nations, and
Mankind’s Future
(Figures 93,
94, 95, and
96)
Figures 93-96
|
Figure 93. |
|
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Figure 95. USGS 2000 |
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Figure 96. USGS 2000 |
Realities and Opinions of a Geoscientist
Oil
and
gas supplies 65% of the world’s
energy
:
80 million bbls per day and 220 billion cfg per day
By 2010, 90 million bbls per day and 280 bcf per day
Critical chemicals, lubes and refined products
Unconventional resources will increasingly be exploited - tar, heavy
oil
, tight gas, etc.
Subsurface geologic knowledge
Innovative production and refining methods
Renewable
energy
, excluding hydroelectric plants and nuclear represent
about 2% of
energy
production worldwide.
Prospective geographic areas with large new
oil
and gas potential are
becoming difficult to find, and viable contractual agreements are a
challenge.
By 2020
much of the
oil
and gas feeding the global economy will come from fields
not yet online - the center of gravity for
oil
and gas production is
shifting.
The world power structure is self-organizing, breaking into a spectrum off political, social and religious entities, and NGOs.
· The EU in Brussels is becoming a controlling influence in international business and regulations.
· The large the world economy, the more powerful its smallest members John Naisbitt, Megatrends).
Geoscience, concepts, tools, and technology are developing at an accelerated pace.
Advancements in drilling and logging capabilities and breakthroughs in
fuel and chemical research will be needed to meet the world’s growing
energy
needs.
We are just on the edge of understanding the fundamental complex earth processes that operate within the Earth’s subsurface realm.
Massive streams of information and new technology have never been more abundant - and yet to transform them into global, economic and social gain, requires the intellect, passion, and genius of the individual human mind working in concert with sophisticated cross-discipline international teams.
Human knowledge and experience - by 2015, 50% of the geoscientists and petroleum engineers conduction our exploration and production operations have not yet graduated from university.
The
peaking of conventional
oil
and gas production is sure to happen, and
while the timing is uncertain, there are signs of change on the horizon.
Energy
related projects are long term - ten to fifteen years leas time
needed. Short term oversupply in the period leading up to peak
production may result in complacency and inaction.
Meeting
our
energy
needs in a world without walls is an essential prerequisite
for a global transition to a more affluent work population, the growth
of freedom and a sustainable environment for our beautiful blue planet.
Who is
responsible for developing a workable
energy
program for the future? If
not us - who is?
**Other references are given with the text and figure captions.
Ahlbrandt,
T.S., and World
Energy
Assessment Team, 2001, World Petroleum Assessment
2000: Compiled Power Point Slides: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File
Report 99-50-Z, 112 p. (http://greenwood.cr.usgs.gov/
energy
/WorldEnergy/OF99-50Z/)
Bijwaard, H., W. Spakman, and E.R. Engdahl, 1998, Closing the gap between regional and global travel time tomography: Journal Geophysical Research, B, Solid Earth and Planets, v. 103, no. 12, p. 30,055-30,078.
Bilkadi, Zayn, 1995, Aramco World, January/February, 1995.
De’Ath, N., 1997,
Oil
companies exploration strategies in
the 21st century: Bulletin of the Geological Society of
Malaysia, no. 41, p. 5-11.
Energy
Information Administration (EIA), 2003A,
International
Energy
Annual 2001, DOE/EIA-0219 (2001), Washington, D.C.,
February, 2003.
Energy
Information Administration (EIA), 2003B, System
for the analysis of global
energy
markets.
International Petroleum Industry Environmental
Conservation Association (IPIECA), Climate Change Working Group, 2004,
Energy
, development, and climate change: considerations in Asia and
Latin America:
Oil
& Gas Journal, v. 102.5 (February 2), p. 18-26.
International
Energy
Agency, 2002, World Agency Outlook,
2002.
Johnston, Nels, Carmen Revenga, and Jaime Echeverria., 2001, Managing water for people and nature: Science, v. 292, 11 May, p. 1071-1072.
Kellogg, Louise H., H. B. Hager, and R.D. van der Hilst, 1999, Compositional stratification in the deep mantle: Science, v. 283, no. 5409, p. 1881-1884.
Morse, S.A., 2001, Porous sediments at the top of earth’s core?: Science, v. 291, March 16, 2001.
Oil
for Victory, McGraw-Hill
Book Co., Inc., 1946.
Poruban, Steven, 2001,
Oil
and gas industry continues to
grapple:
Oil
& Gas Journal, v. 99.29 (September 24), p. 22-28.
Read, Roger, 2002, North Sea evolution to track Gulf of
Mexico Model:
Oil
& Gas Journal, v. 100.34 (August 26), p. 40-44.
Vail, P.R., 1987, Seismic stratigraphy interpretation using sequence stratigraphy: part I: Seismic stratigraphy interpretation procedure, in Atlas of seismic stratigraphy, v. 1, AAPG Studies in Geology 27, p. 1-10.
U.S. Department of
Energy
, 2003, International
energy
outlook, May, 2003.
Wasson, Theron, 1948, Creole Field, Gulf of Mexico, Coast
of Louisiana, in Structure of typical American
oil
fields, v.
III, AAPG, p. 281-298.
Williams, Bob, 2003, Debate over peak-
oil
issue boiling
over, with major implications for industry, society:
Oil
& Gas Journal,
v. 101.27 (July 14), p. 18-29.
Williams, Bob, 2004, Next big thing: peak
oil
:
Oil
& Gas
Journal, v. 102.15 (July 19), p. 15.
