Issue: May

COLUMNS

First Oil: OTC soldiers on for another year

In his newest column, World Oil Editor-in-Chief Kurt Abraham examines OTC 2026’s continued attendance decline, concerns over the exhibition floor and why rising U.S. oil production is strengthening America’s geopolitical leverage.

John Henry vs the steam drill: Will the robots win?

In his latest Drilling Advances column, Ford Brett explores whether drilling automation can help solve North America’s looming natural gas supply challenge — and what today’s rig robots have in common with the legend of John Henry and the steam drill.

Executive viewpoint: Methane monitoring goes digital

In this Executive Viewpoint, Aramco’s Khalid Y. Al Qahtani outlines how the company is deploying satellites, drones and advanced digital monitoring tools to detect methane emissions and strengthen leak detection efforts across its operations.
FEATURES

Why oil and gas companies should invest in ruggedized edge computing

Ruggedized servers and computers can maximize uptime and reliability anywhere that physical factors or unstable power might compromise operations. Edge-based computing devices can also produce and compile data instantaneously on-site without lag time or latency associated with cloud computing.  

The strategic imperative of remanufacturing: Driving efficiency and circularity in O&G operations

Remanufacturing transforms end-of-life components into high-performance assets, enabling oil and gas operators to lower costs, strengthen supply chain resilience and achieve sustainability objectives. 

Drilling technology: Optimizing high-pressure pump performance with fluid end advances

NOV’s first-principles design approach delivered pump fluid ends that meet the demands of today’s challenging drilling operations. 

Biosurfactants are having a moment: Here’s the physics behind why they work and where

Biosurfactant chemistry is gaining favor among many operators for a number of good reasons, including their ability to reduce operational complexity and improve efficiency. 
SPECIAL FOCUS: COMPLETION TECHNOLOGY

From post-mortem to real-time: A scalable approach to fracture diagnostics

Surface-based pressure signal analysis provides real-time insights during hydraulic fracturing, enabling operators to optimize treatment outcomes, reduce operational risks and strategically lower capital expenditures. 

Simplified intelligent completion architectures improve zonal control economics

In deepwater and multizone developments, traditional hydraulic intelligent completions can limit economic optimization, due to control-line scale, installation time, and delayed interval-control valve response. Simplified intelligent completion architectures address these constraints by reducing infrastructure complexity, shortening critical‑path rig time, and allowing rapid, bidirectional zonal control without production shut‑in. 

A Baker Hughes executive assesses the electrification effort

Upstream electrification continues to progress apace, as it helps to provide simplification of systems, reliability of operations and cost reductions in the field, says Baker Hughes executive Rodrigo Farias.
MANAGEMENT ISSUES

Nova Scotia’s Premier aims to revive province’s oil and gas activity

After a long period in the regulatory “wilderness,” East Canada’s Nova Scotia province looks to make up for lost time in developing its oil and gas potential.    
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