Oil
drilling is classified into two main categories: offshore and onshore drilling.
The location of the drilling is the most obvious difference, but the two categories are vary in different
areas, including cost, profits, time duration for drilling and processes. Both
types of drilling have certain advantages over the other, but both are actively
used to extract oil to meet the levels of popularity of the world.
Offshore Drilling:
As
the name recommends, this type of oil drilling takes place off the shore in
ocean waters. About 30% of the global oil production comes from offshore drilling.
Drilling an offshore well is similar to the onshore
process, initially well is drilled and concrete lines the hole. The oil is pumped
up out of the hole using different systems depending on the specific type of platform
used for the operation.
For shallow water drilling fixed platform anchored to the ocean floor. To carry
the oil to the surface, rigid tubes connect the wellhead to the platform. Deep water
drilling requires a floating platform that uses flexible risers for the
movement. For extraction of oil, the setup includes
risers used to push water and gas down. Other risers extract the oil from water.
The risers are designed to keep the oil warm because of the temperature of the
water, so it continues flowing freely. Once pumped, the oil is
stored or sent directly to the shore through pipelines, depending on the setup.
Onshore oil drilling:
Onshore drilling
encompasses all of the drilling sites located on dry land. Onshore drilling
accounts for 70% of the worldwide oil production.
Onshore oil production
requires the drilling of deep holes down into the earth’s surface to reach the
oil below, Onshore drilling similar like offshore drilling but without the
difficulty of deep water between the platform and the oil. Since the ground
offers a solid platform, the drilling structures and storage areas are built directly on the soil.
To
prevent contamination new well first requires the crew to drill below the water
table. Once extraction process begins the hole is then encased in cement to
prevent the oil from seeping into the soil or groundwater supply. Based on the
specific depth of the oil trap in that area, Drilling continues to the
appropriate depth. Once drilling completed, the well uses liquids pumped into
the ground at high pressure levels to remove the oil from the rocks.
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