Petroleum engineering is a field of engineering concerned
with the activities related to the production of hydrocarbons, which can be
either crude oil or natural gas. Exploration and production are deemed to fall
within the upstream sector of the oil and gas industry. Exploration, by earth
scientists, and petroleum engineering are the oil and gas industry's two main
subsurface disciplines, which focus on maximizing economic recovery of
hydrocarbons from subsurface reservoirs. Petroleum geology and geophysics focus
on provision of a static description of the hydrocarbon reservoir rock, while
petroleum engineering focuses on estimation of the recoverable volume of this
resource using a detailed understanding of the physical behavior of oil, water
and gas within porous rock at very high pressure.
The combined efforts of geologists and petroleum engineers
throughout the life of a hydrocarbon accumulation determine the way in which a
reservoir is developed and depleted, and usually they have the highest impact
on field economics. Petroleum engineering requires a good knowledge of many
other related disciplines, such as geophysics, petroleum geology, formation evaluation
(well logging), drilling, economics, reservoir simulation, reservoir
engineering, well engineering, artificial lift systems, completions and
petroleum production engineering.
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