Welcome to the Oil and Gas Management course. This course focuses on an industry rather than on a theoretical concept. Oil and gas is the dominant source of energy for society as we know it – our heating, our lighting, the electricity to operate our computers, the petrol and diesel in our cars, the jet fuel that powers our flights – all comes from oil and gas. Quite literally, without oil and gas, civilisation as we know it could not function today.
This course considers the basics of how the industry operates – and examines some of the major issues that it faces (such as climate change).
As this course is about a whole industry, the approach taken is to examine the industry from various perspectives – or through various lenses and angels.
The module is delivered as 10 study topics organised into four main themes:
This theme provides you with a background to the oil and gas industry. It is designed to bring a variety of candidates up to a similar level of understanding about the industry.
As a result there are no activities within the topic workbooks, and the subject matter is not explicitly assessed. You are recommended to review the material and study it to the depth appropriate to you. If you are already knowledgeable about a subject, feel free to skip or skim-read it – if you don’t know about a subject you should read it in depth.
The basic understanding of the industry that this theme provides is essential to enable you to understand the remainder of the module – so don’t just skip over it!!
An introduction to the life cycle of an oil field, from before discovery through development to abandonment. The technologies will be outlined, the varied company strategies and tactics will be explored, and the attendant technical and financial risks will be assessed. The uses of oil and gas will also be summarised.
The learning objectives are:
An introduction to the size, scope and nature of the oil and gas industry.
The learning objectives are:
An introduction to petroleum economics, including the taxation regimes and project finance.
The learning objectives are:
A review of the risks in the industry, including the effects of oil price variations, exploration risk, construction risk, operating risk, etc.
The learning objectives are:
An examination of the role of the various organizations involved in the oil industry – governments, oil companies, service companies, regulators and external (i.e. non-industry) bodies. The emphasis will be on the UK organizations, although similar organizations elsewhere will be referred to.
The learning objectives are:
The concept of operators, and how they discharge their legal and commercial obligations, joint operating agreements, legal arrangements, etc.
The varying contractual relationships that have evolved in the industry, including various forms of partnering and alliancing.
The learning objectives are:
A review of the technical, environmental, fiscal and economic issues surrounding the process of decommissioning (or abandoning) of redundant oil- and gas-producing platforms.
The learning objectives are:
A review of the evolution of ecommerce in the oil and gas industry from the wide range of concepts that were launched in the ‘dot com’ boom to the more mature and practical use of the Internet to streamline commercial processes that we see today.
The learning objectives are:
A review of the current state of the scientific understanding, and the ways in which the oil and gas industry is responding. Also includes a review of the current status of international treaties and European/UK national legislation, and the emerging market for carbon.
The learning objectives are:
To understand the impact that CO2 – a major byproduct of oil and gas usage, is having on Earth.