Term
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Definition
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Aquifer
|
A single underground geological formation, or group of
formations, containing water. Those near the surface often contain freshwater
that is recharged by rainfall and that can be used as a source of drinking
(potable) water. Deep aquifers also exist. The water in deep aquifers is
often salty and has been locked away for millions of years. Carbon dioxide
injection into deep saline aquifers is one of the proposed ways of carbon
capture and storage (CCS).
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Antrim shale
|
A
shale deposit located in the northern Michigan basin that is a Devonian age
rock formation lying at a relatively shallow depth of 1,000 feet. Gas has
been produced from this formation for several decades primarily via vertical,
rather than horizontal, wells. The Energy Information Administration (EIA)
estimates the technically recoverable Antrim shale resource at 20 trillion
cubic feet (Tcf).
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Appalachian basin
|
The geological formations that roughly follow the
Appalachian Mountain range and contain potentially exploitable shale gas
resources. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) associates the Appalachian
Basin with the Marcellus Shale, the Devonian Shale and the Utica Shale.
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Barnett shale
|
A
newly developed major play within the Fort Worth Basin in Northeast Texas.
Wells are in the 6,000-to-8,000 foot depth range and the EIA estimated
technically recoverable resource is 43 Tcf.
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Baseline survey
|
A survey carried out prior to any operations to
determine the natural background levels of certain substances or conditions
(e..g., the presence of carbon dioxide or the intensity of the background
noise).
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Becquerel (symbol Bq)
|
The
unit of the amount or activity of a radionuclide. Describes the rate which
transformations occur. 1 Bq = 1 transformation per second.
|
Becquerel per cubic metre of air (Bq m–3).
|
The amount of a radionuclide in each cubic metre of air. Often
referred to as the activity concentration.
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BGS
|
British
Geological Survey – a UK Government agency.
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Biocide
|
An additive that kills bacteria.
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Biogenic gas
|
Natural
gas commonly found in aquifers that is produced by bacteria in the
subsurface.
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Blowout
|
A sudden and uncontrolled escape of fluids from a well
up to the surface.
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Blowout preventer
|
High
pressure wellhead valves, designed to shut off the uncontrolled flow of
hydrocarbons.
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Borehole
|
The hole or shaft in the earth made by a well drill;
also, the uncased drill hole from the surface to the bottom of the well. Also
see ‘wellbore’.
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Bowland-Hodder shale
|
Shale
occurring in basins across the north of England predominantly in Lancashire
and Yorkshire, coast-to-coast.
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Bunding
|
A secondary enclosure to contain leaks and spills.
|
Caney shale
|
Located
in Arkoma Basin of Northeastern Oklahoma; has only recently been developed
following the success of the Barnett Shale in Texas.
|
Cap rock
|
A layer of relatively impermeable rock overlying an
oil- or gas-bearing rock.
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Carbon footprint
|
A
measurement of the impact of activities on the environment by the amount of
greenhouse gases they produce. It is measured in units of carbon dioxide
equivalent.
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Casing
|
Steel pipe cemented in an oil or gas well to protect
both subsurface formations and the wellbore,
to stop formation fluids leaking into and damaging other rocks
formations, and to keep the borehole from caving in. Smaller diameter
“strings” of casing are cemented inside larger diameter strings as a well is
deepened.
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Cement bond log
|
A
method of testing the integrity of cement used in the construction of the
well, especially whether the cement is adhering effectively to both sides of
the annulus between casings or between the outer casing and the rock sides.
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Coal bed methane (CBM)
|
A form of natural gas extracted from coal beds. Along
with tight and shale gas, CBM is considered an unconventional natural gas
resource. Unlike shale gas CBM gas is often from a shallow source, and
although it generally does not require fracking, it can pose a significant
danger to surface aquifers.
|
Conesauga shale
|
Cambrian
Age shale deposits located in north central Alabama currently being evaluated
for development.
|
Consumptive water
|
The water that is completely used up in a process. For
example, drinking.
|
Conventional natural gas reservoir
|
A
geological formation in which the natural gas is in interconnected pore
spaces, much like a kitchen sponge, that allows easier flow to a well.
|
DECC
|
Department of Energy and Climate Change – responsible
for PEDL licenses for onshore and offshore oil and gas exploration and
production.
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Devonian shale
|
The
general term used to describe the thick sequence of shales in the Appalachian
Basin that has been produced for more than a century. Development was
greatest in the 1930s-through-1980s, using vertical wells and explosive
fracturing. However, any shale deposited during the Devonian geologic period
(360 million to 406 million years ago) is considered to be Devonian shale.
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Directional drilling
|
The intentional deviation of a wellbore from the
approximately vertical path it would take naturally.
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Disposal well
|
A
well, sometimes a depleted oil or gas well, into which waste fluids can be
injected for safe disposal.
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Drilling rig
|
A structure employing a drill that creates holes or
shafts in the ground for purposes of accessing and producing natural gas or
oil from subsurface deposits. Those used in the shale gas industry are about
30 m (100 ft.) tall, or the height of an oak tree
|
Eagle Ford shale
|
A
newly discovered (2009) shale play located in several counties in south
Texas. The average gross thickness of the shale is 350 feet and it produces
from depths varying from 4,000 to 14,000 feet. Eagle Ford is the most active
shale play in the world, with about 250 rigs operating at any single time and
the technically recoverable resource is estimated by EIA to be 21 Tcf.
|
Eastern Gas Shales Project
|
A program initiated by the U.S. Department of Energy in
the late-1970s to evaluate the gas potential of – and to enhance gas
production from – the extensive Devonian and Mississippian black shales
located in the Appalachian, Illinois and Michigan basins of the eastern
United States. The program not only identified and classified shales
throughout the three basins, but also focused on developing and implementing
new drilling, stimulation and recovery technologies to increase production
potential. Between 1978 and 1992, DOE spent about $137 million on the
program, which helped develop and demonstrate directional and horizontal
drilling technology.
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Economic Level of Leakage (ELL)
|
The
Economic Level of Leakage is the level at which the cost to companies and
customers of further reducing leakage of water exceeds the cost of producing
water from an alternative source.
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EIA
|
Energy Information Agency – the US agency responsible
for federal energy responsibilities.
|
Embedded water
|
The total water required to make and deliver any
item.
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Enhanced geothermal systems
|
A geothermal system that uses heat from deep in the
ground to generate energy. An enhanced geothermal system is one where the natural
connectivity does not permit sufficient flow and additional stimulation
(fracking) is required.
|
EPA
|
Environmental
Protection Agency – the US agency responsible for federal environmental
protection responsibilities.
|
Fayetteville shale
|
Newly developed shale deposit located in the Arkoma
Basin of Arkansas, lying at a depth of 1,500-to-6,500 feet. Previously
produced from vertical wells but all current wells are horizontal.
Technically recoverable resource is estimated by EIA to be 32 Tcf.
|
Flaring
|
The
controlled burning of natural gas that can’t be processed for sale or used
because of technical or economic reasons. Only enclosed flaring is allowed in
the UK, and then only for safety reasons.
|
Flowback water
|
The fluid that flows back to surface following a
fracturing treatment. It is a mixture of the original fracturing fluid and
saline water containing dissolved minerals from the shale formation.
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Floyd shale
|
A
shale deposit from the Mississippian geologic age located in the
resource-rich Black Warrior Basin of Mississippi and Alabama.
|
Fossil energy
|
Energy derived from crude oil, natural gas or coal.
Shale gas is a form of fossil energy.
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Fracfocus
|
A
joint effort by the Ground Water Protection Council (GWPC) and the Interstate
Oil and Gas Compact Commission (IOGCC) that is an online registry for
companies to publicly disclose the chemicals used in their hydraulic
fracturing operations. As of November 2012, more than 30,000 well sites and
200 companies were registered on the site (http://fracfocus.org/).
|
Fracturing fluid
|
The primarily water-based fluid used to fracture shale.
It is basically composed of 99 percent water, with the remainder consisting
of sand and various chemical additives. Fracturing fluid is pumped into wells
at very high pressure to break up and hold open underground rock formations,
which in turn releases natural gas.
|
Fugitive emissions
|
According
to a study by DOE’s Argonne National Laboratory, a primary air quality
concern from natural gas production (including shale gas) is leaking and
venting throughout the supply chain. These fugitive emissions can potentially
result in releases of methane, the primary constituent of natural gas and a
potent greenhouse gas (GHG). In
addition, fugitive emissions of natural gas can release volatile organic
compounds (VOCs) and hazardous air pollutants (HAPs).
|
Gas in place
|
The entire volume of gas contained in a formation
regardless of the ability to produce it.
|
Gcf or Gscf
|
Thousand
million cubic feet of gas. If it is
measured at surface temperatures and pressures Gscf is used. Since gas
expands hugely as it comes to the surface and gas is sold by volume, this
distinction is extremely important.
|
Geological formation
|
A body of earth material with distinctive and
characteristic properties and a degree of homogeneity in its physical
properties.
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GHG
|
Greenhouse
gas – type of gas which produce climate change.
|
Global warming potential
|
A measure of how much a given mass of a greenhouse gas
is estimated to contribute to global warming relative to carbon dioxide.
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Groundwater
|
The
supply of usually fresh water found beneath the surface usually in aquifers,
which are a body of permeable rock containing water and supplying wells and
springs with drinking water.
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Gothic shale
|
A newly exploited shale formation located in the
Paradox Basin of Colorado. Only a few wells have been drilled, one testing to
5,700 Mcf (million cubic feet) per day.
|
Haynesville shale
|
Along
with the Marcellus and Barnett, this is one of the major shale plays. Located
in North-western Louisiana, Haynesville is a Jurassic Age formation where
vertical wells were drilled as far back as 1905; but it was not considered a
major natural gas source until the advent of directional drilling.
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Hazard
|
A hazard is something (e.g., an object, a property of a
substance, a phenomenon or an activity) that can cause adverse effects.
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Horizontal drilling
|
The
process of drilling the deeper portion of a well horizontally to enable
access to more of the target formation. Horizontal drilling can be oriented in
a direction that maximizes the number of natural fractures present in the
shale, which provide pathways for natural gas to escape once the hydraulic
fracturing operation takes place. The more generic term, “directional
drilling,” refers to any non-vertical well.
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HSE
|
Health and Safety Executive – a UK Government agency.
|
Hydraulic fracturing
|
1.
The use of water, sand and chemical additives pumped under high pressure to
fracture subsurface non-porous rock formations such as shale to improve the
flow of natural gas into the well. Hydraulic fracturing is a mature
technology that has been used for 60 years and today accounts for 95% of all
new wells drilled.
2.
A means of increasing the flow of oil or gas from a rock formation by pumping
fluid at high pressure into the well, causing fractures to open in the
formation and increase its permeability.
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Hydrogeology
|
The geology of groundwater, especially concerning the
physical, biological and chemical properties of its occurrence and movement.
|
IEA
|
International
Energy Agency
|
Kick-off point
|
The depth at which a well starts deviating from the
vertical when drilling a directional or horizontal well.
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Lateral
|
The
horizontal portion of a horizontally drilled well.
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Leak-off test
|
A test used to determine the pressure required to
initiate fracturing of the rock formation.
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Mbbl.
|
Thousands
of barrels of oil.
|
MMbbl.
|
Millions of barrels of oil.
|
Mcf or Mscf
|
Thousand
cubic feet of gas. If it is measured
at surface temperatures and pressures Mscf is used. Since gas expands hugely
as it comes to the surface and gas is sold by volume, this distinction is
extremely important.
|
MMcf or MMscf
|
Million cubic feet of gas. If
it is measured at surface temperatures and pressures MMscf is used. Since gas
expands hugely as it comes to the surface and gas is sold by volume, this
distinction is extremely important.
|
MWh
|
Megawatthour
– a unit of energy. One may also find kWh, GWh and TWh used for a thousand
watthours, a thousand million watthours and a trillion watthours,
respectively.
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Magnitude
|
One of a number of different measures of the size or
strength of an earthquake using a logarithmic scale (please see text for
details).
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Marcellus shale
|
A
large play that underlies most of the U.S. Northeast, the Marcellus is a
Devonian-age shale that is estimated by the Energy Information Administration
to contain at least 410 Tcf of unproved, technically recoverable gas. Most of
the play is at the 5,000-to-8,000 foot level below the surface and was long
considered too expensive to access until advances in drilling and fracturing
technology.
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Microseismic
|
Very small seismic events, normally below -1.5 ML.
|
New Albany shale
|
This
Devonian to Mississippian age shale deposit is located in the Illinois Basin
and has been a producer of natural gas for over 100 years. Most wells are
shallow, between 120 and 2,100 feet; new drilling and completion technologies
and competitive prices have resulted in energy companies revisiting old
leases and drilling new wells. Estimated by EIA to contain 11 Tcf of
technically recoverable resources.
|
Natural gas
|
A naturally occurring mixture of hydrocarbon and
non-hydrocarbon gases beneath the surface, the principal component of which
(50 to 90%) is methane.
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Naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM)
|
Radioactive
elements and their decay products found in the environment that have been
generated from natural processes.
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Non-consumptive water
|
Water that is used in a process but not consumed. For
example, swimming pools.
|
On-site water treatment
|
A
practice employed by many shale gas producers to facilitate reuse of flowback
fluids. In this instance, mobile and fixed treatment units are employed using
processes such as evaporation, distillation, oxidation, and membrane
filtration for recycling and reuse. On-site treatment technologies may be
capable of returning 70-80% of the initial water to potable water standards,
making it immediately available for reuse.
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OUGO
|
Office for Unconventional Oil and Gas. A new office of
the UK Government within the DECC that was set up in 2014 for the management
of onshore shale gas and other unconventional hydrocarbon exploitation.
|
PEDL
|
Petroleum
Exploration Development License. Managed by the DECC.
|
Petrophysics
|
The study of the physical properties of all rocks,
whether they contain hydrocarbons or not.
|
Permeability
|
The
measure of the ability of a material, such as rock, to allow fluids to pass
through it.
|
Pearsall shale
|
Located in the Maverick Basin of south-western Texas.
Located about 2,500 feet below the Eagle Ford Shale and is approximately
500-600 feet in thickness.
|
Phe
|
Public
Health England – a UK Government agency.
|
Porosity
|
A ratio between the volume of the pore space in
reservoir rock and the total volume of the rock. The pore space determines
the amount of space available for fluids such as gas or water.
|
Pressure test
|
A
method of testing well integrity by raising the internal pressure of the well
up to maximum expected design parameters.
|
Produced water
|
The fluid that returns to the surface during the
production phase of a well that contains both fracturing fluid and saline
water from the rock formation.
|
Proppant
|
A
granular substance that is mixed with and carried by fracturing fluid pumped
into a shale gas well. It is often sand, but increasingly hard ceramic
spheres that have been manufactured are used, especially at great depths. Its
purpose is to keep cracks and fractures that occur during the hydraulic
fracturing process open after the initial high fracturing pressures have been
removed so trapped natural gas can escape. Otherwise the weight of rocks
above the fractures would soon close them again.
|
Proved reserves
|
The volume of resources that can be demonstrated to be
economically and legally producible using current best technology.
|
Radon action level
|
The
recommended limit for the activity concentration of radon in UK homes. Its
value, expressed as the annual average radon gas concentration in the home,
is 200 Bq m–3.
|
Radon affected areas
|
Parts of the country with a 1% probability or more of present or
future homes being above the Action Level.
|
Reclamation
|
The
clean up or restoring a well site to its pre-existing condition after
drilling operations cease. Reclamation activities, which are governed by
state, federal and local laws and regulations in the USA, can include soil
replacement, compacting and re-seeding of natural vegetation. In the UK it is
the body which grants planning permission who dictates what reclamation is
required and checks that it is carried out fully. UK reclamation is always
reversion to the sites initial pre-developed state.
|
Reservoir
|
A subsurface body of rock that
acts as a store for hydrocarbons.
|
Risk
|
A
risk is the likelihood that a hazard will actually cause its adverse effects,
together with a measure of the effect.
|
Royalty
|
A payment received by a lessor or property owner from an oil, gas or
minerals-producing company, based on the production of a well or other
extraction process and market prices.
|
Scale inhibitor
|
A
chemical treatment used to control or prevent deposits building up in the
well.
|
Seismicity
|
Sudden geological phenomena that release energy in the
form of vibrations that travel through the earth as compression (primary) or
shear (secondary) waves.
|
Seismic reflection surveys
|
A
technique that uses reflected seismic waves to map the structure of rock
layers in two- or three-dimensions.
|
Shale
|
A fine-grained sedimentary rock composed mostly of consolidated clay
or mud. Some large shale gas formations were formed more than 300 million
years ago during the Devonian period of Earth’s history, where conditions
were particularly favourable for the preservation of organic material within
the sediment. Methane that remained locked in the shale layers is the source
of today’s shale gas.
|
Shale gas
|
Natural
gas produced from shale formations. Shale gas is widely distributed around
the world and is currently being produced in 16 states of the USA.
|
Shale gas play
|
A set of discovered, undiscovered or possible natural gas
accumulations that exhibit similar geological characteristics. Shale plays
are located within basins, which are large-scale geologic depressions, often
hundreds of miles across, which also may contain other oil and natural gas
resources.
|
Surface water
|
Water
that is open to the atmosphere, such as rivers, lakes, ponds, reservoirs,
streams, impoundments, seas and estuaries.
|
Surfactant
|
A chemical that lowers the surface tension or
interfacial tension between fluids or between a fluid and a solid.
|
Sweet spot
|
Regions
in oil and gas reservoirs with high concentrations of carbon which are most
amenable to production.
|
Tcf or Tscf
|
Trillion cubic feet of gas. If
it is measured at surface temperatures and pressures Tscf is used. Since gas
expands hugely as it comes to the surface and gas is sold by volume, this
distinction is extremely important.
|
Technically recoverable resource
|
The
volume of gas within a formation considered to be recoverable with existing
technology.
|
Thermogenic methane
|
Methane produced by the alteration of organic matter
under high temperatures and pressures over long time periods.
|
Tight gas
|
Natural
gas found in low-permeability sandstones and carbonate reservoirs. The rock
layers that hold the gas are very dense, preventing easy flow.
|
Tiltmeter
|
An instrument used to detect microdeformations in
surrounding rock.
|
Tracer
|
A
chemical additive that can be used to identify the presence of the fracturing
fluid by subsequent monitoring.
|
Traffic light system
|
An early warning monitoring system with thresholds to
indicate when hydraulic fracturing operations should proceed with caution or
halt.
|
Unconventional gas
|
Gas
found in a reservoir of low permeability.
|
Unconventional natural gas reservoir
|
Coal bed methane, shale or tight gas, where the natural gas does not
flow naturally to the well, but instead requires some form of extensive
stimulation to generate economic flow rates.
|
Underground injection well
|
A steel
and concrete-encased shaft into which hazardous waste is deposited by force
and under pressure that is not allowed in the UK or the rest of Europe. The
US Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) Underground Injection Control
Program (UIC) is responsible for regulating the construction, operation,
permitting and closure of injection wells that place fluids underground for
storage or disposal. Nevertheless this process is associated with the sharp
rise in anomalous earthquakes in mid-USA.
|
Utica shale
|
An Ordovician age natural gas-containing rock formation located below
the Marcellus Shale. The formation (also called the Utica-Point Pleasant in
some areas) extends from eastern Ohio through much of Pennsylvania to western
New York. It is currently being actively developed in eastern Ohio.
|
VOC
|
Volatile
organic compounds – those organic liquids which evaporate easily.
|
The Water Exploitation Index (WEI)
|
A way of measuring how much water we use compared to
that available. It is the comparison between how much fresh water we extract
from surface sources and aquifers and the long term rainfall available for
use. Usually it is considered that a region is under ‘water stress’ if the
Water Exploitation Index is above 20%.
|
Watt (W)
|
The
watt is a unit of power describing how fast something can convert energy. It
is usually found in megawatts (MW), which is a million watts, or gigawatts
(GW) which is a thousand million watts, or terrawatts (TW) which is a
trillion watts.
|
Wellbore
|
The hole created by drilling operations, also known as
the ‘borehole’.
|
Well integrity
|
The
ability of the well to prevent hydrocarbons or operational fluids leaking
into the surrounding environment.
|
Well pad
|
The surface infrastructure of the drilling operations.
|
WHO
|
World
Health Organisation
|