Gas injection: Cheap reserves adds

Includes net pay map over competitor lands

net pay mapMore and more companies are adding reserves cheaply by injecting gas. This operator is injecting sweet residue gas and hoping to add 7% more reserves by doing so. This injection is far below minimum miscibility pressure -- the pool pressure is only 20% of virgin.

And he included net pay mapping over his competitor's lands. If I was his competitor, I would use this information to determine whether I should sell my lands to him or try to buy his acreage.

Check out his plans and mapping. Download his submission documents from our self-serve portal.

  Get details of this cool tech   Subscribers get them for free

Each AER application contains your neighbor's perspective on the exploitation of oil and gas formations. Applications contain more technical data even than SPE papers.

Would you like to see what other operators in your areas are thinking about seismic, multifractured wells, polymer schemes and recovery? AppIntel can help.

Tags: Gas Injection, Flood, Exploration, Acquisitions

Granger Low  18 Jan 2016



Surprise! Sour gas production from a sweet thermal scheme

Dealing with surprises in the oil and gas industry. What to do next.

10 ways to increase production before Christmas

Each cost less than half a million

Using AI to reduce risk of oil and gas failure

How can you assess the risk without knowing the epic fails?

Celebrating 2025, a year of innovation

Oil and gas paradigm shifts this year

RTF: Most refused submission type in November

Leading indicators from industry

Astrobleme impacts deep well disposal scheme

Learn from the experience of other operators

Non-meridian thermal wells

Still drilling horizontal wells N‑S?  Why?

Steam surfactant co-injection

Want to win? What is your competitive advantage?

This page last updated 09 January 2026.
Copyright 2011-2026 by Regaware Systems Ltd.
  Calgary, Alberta, Canada
AppIntel is an AI service for getting intelligence from industry submissions vetted by government. Nothing on this page may be construed as engineering or geoscience advice. If you spot any errors on this site, please email our webmaster.
  Share