Bulletin 134 The Use of Mud Laden Fluid in Oil and Gas Wells

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 88
- File Size:
- 1996 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1916
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines is investigating the technology of petroleum
and its products, the investigation including well-drilling methods
and the transportation, treatment, and utilization of petroleum and
of natural gas, with especial reference to the prevention of waste
and to increased efficiencyin the development of oil and gas resources
in land belonging to or controlled by the Government.
During. the winter of 1912-13 the enormous waste of the gas encountered
while drilling for oil in the Cushing field, Oklahoma,
called forth protests from various sources, and appeal was made to
the President of the United States and to the Secretary of the
Interior in behalf of the landowner and of the public in general.
The facts were wanted regarding the amount of waste and the
technical conditions that were responsible for practices causing it.
An investigation was ordered and conducted under the direct
supervision of the late J. A. Holmes, the first Director of the Bureau
of Mines. R. S.Blatchley was sent to investigate the amount of
waste going on in the Mid-Continent flelds.s In the latter part of
March, 1913, J. A. Pollard and A. G. Heggem were sent to Oklahoma
to study well-drilling methods with reference to the waste of gas
from wells on Indian lands and to suggest means of preventing the
waste of natural gas on such lands.
Pollard and Heggem decided that the mud-laden fluid process,
which had been used successfully for some years in Texas, Louisiana,
and California was the method that would meet the situation most
efficiently and economically. The method was accordingly demonstrated
in Oklahoma.
In 1914 Congress provided for the employment of six oil and gas
inspectors to supervise oil and gas mining operations on lands of the
Five Civilized Tribes in Oklahoma and to conduct investigations
with a view to the prevention of waste. Positions under this appropriation
have been held by William F. McMurray, James O. Lewis, Harry D. Aggers, Ralph R. "Weed,George W. McPherson, James C.
Fowler, Louis W. Courtney, and Carl H. Beal, the technical work
of these men being directed "byW. A. Williams, chief of the petroleum
division, Bureau of Mines. After careful and impartial investigation
of conditions in Oklahoma, these men also decided that the
mud-laden fluid process was the one best adapted to prevent further
wastes.
In 1915 laws were passed by the State of Oklahoma that provide
for the conservation of natural gas and oil, authority being given to
the corporation commission to make rules and regulations and to
employ agents to enforce them. After hearings and investigations,
the corporation commission reached substantially the same conclusions
as the Federal agents regarding the importance of the wastes
and the best methods of conserving the gas.
Technical Papers 66a and 68b were published by the Bureau of
Mines in December, 1913, and January, 1914, respectively. Technical
Paper 66 deals with the mud-laden fluid process in general and
No. 68 with its application in Oklahoma. The interest aroused by
these publications has been so widespread that within two years the
first editions have been practically exhausted. Rather than reprint
these publications, it has been considered advisable to replace them
with the present report, which includes the results of more recent
investigations.
The methods of using the mud-laden fluid are an outgrowth of the
rotary drilling system, which was developed in Texas and later employed
in Louisiana and California. Some of the principles of the
use of mud fluid had been observed and used to a limited extent for
a long time in cable-tool drilling. So far as known it was first used
successfully with a circulator and cable tools in the Coalinga field,
California, in 1906,Harry D. Aggers, one of the contributors to this
paper, working on the well. The part of the Bureau of Mines has
been to call attention to its merits and to demonstrate its practical
use in fields like those of the Mid-Continent.
Citation
APA:
(1916) Bulletin 134 The Use of Mud Laden Fluid in Oil and Gas WellsMLA: Bulletin 134 The Use of Mud Laden Fluid in Oil and Gas Wells. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1916.