Friday, May 22, 2026

21st Century Marketplace Vision - Issues - Part IV

Trust

The implications of Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration—and, more broadly, Artificial Intelligence—are profound. As these systems mature, traditional visibility into the internal activity of a producer’s Enterprise Resource Planning environment diminishes. Administrative and accounting functions will require materially fewer human resources, a development that is not theoretical but already underway.

Attempts to manually intervene in daily system inputs and outputs introduce escalating risk. The more stakeholders insert themselves into autonomous and automated flows, the greater the probability of distortion, delay, and control failure. Trust, once compromised, erodes quickly in such environments. Simply understanding what is Artificial Intelligence and what is not would be the first thing being questioned.

The central lesson is clear: trust does not scale through oversight; it scales through architecture. People, Ideas & Objects Synallagi, operating through Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration, provides a structural response to this challenge. It embeds trust within system design rather than relying on individual discretion.

What has been a difficult transition into the twenty-first century for producers will not stabilize; it will compound year after year. Complexity is accelerating. For producer firms lacking the capacity to adapt structurally, the burden of managing this complexity will become their defining operational constraint. Which we argue already has.

Below is a rigorous, systems-oriented definition of trust, framed for governance, enterprise operations, and decision-making contexts.

Trust — A Detailed Definition

Trust is the justified expectation that an actor, system, or institution will behave predictably, competently, and in alignment with agreed obligations when discretion exists and verification is costly or incomplete.
At its core, trust exists only where risk, uncertainty, and dependency intersect. If outcomes are fully, perfectly observable, and costless to verify, trust is unnecessary. Trust matters precisely because those conditions never fully exist in real organizations or markets. 
Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration intensifies this reality. When transactional processes operate beyond continuous human supervision, individuals will experience a persistent cognitive dissonance—a sense that something has been overlooked or that a responsibility has not been personally validated. This unease will not dissipate simply because the system continues to function. Direct intervention is neither practical nor neutral. Inserting ad hoc adjustments into live data flows or process chains will not merely introduce risk; it will trigger unintended consequences with certainty.
Accordingly, the separation, specialization, and division of labor between humans and Artificial Intelligence must be respected. Day-to-day execution will occur within the system. Human influence must operate through architecture, governance design, analytic review, public audit and controlled process channels. Informal interference with data or transactional logic invites systemic instability and must be prohibited. Discernment as to human vs AI generated data is necessary.
Trust in Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration must therefore be institutionalized. It must flow through defined analytic pathways and formal oversight mechanisms administered by our user community. They possess the relevant Intellectual Property, authority, responsibility, and resources required to govern their operational domains. Accountability must be explicit, bounded, and enforceable.
For this reason, Trust is being elevated to Synallagi’s Eighth Organizational Construct. The foundational elements are addressed here; the formal Trust Organizational Construct will be developed over the coming months and published in a separate paper and in Synallagi’s Wiki upon completion.

Core Components of Trust

Trust is not an emotion or a moral quality; it is a governance construct made up of interdependent elements. Without People, Ideas & Objects Synallagi, our user community and their service provider organizations, North American oil & gas producers will be forced to operate in an environment that requires an autonomous and orchestrated structure without the appropriate tools. Disconcerting as this is, producers' organizational environments have demonstrated their inability to function effectively at any point in the 21st century.

Institutional Trust

In organizations and markets, trust is institutional, not personal.

Institutional trust arises when:

  • Rules are clear and enforced

  • Outcomes are auditable

  • Accountability is real and non-symbolic

  • Sanctions are credible

  • Performance history is preserved and accessible

Accounting systems, audit trails, and governance frameworks are essential trust infrastructure, not mere overhead. Under our Public Audit initiative, (to be introduced in a later 2026 paper,) we are including accounting firms as part of our user community to influence the development of their analysis and testing methods across Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration and throughout Synallagi. Our developers can implement audit controls, testing, and prepare audit materials at their discretion. This is intended to increase transparency and trust in statutory reporting and enterprise management. Direct access to People, Ideas & Objects developers as members of our user community allows the costs of this work to be distributed across the industry during development and for each subsequent annual audit for each of the producer firms. It will be necessary for producers to mandate the active participation of audit firms in these developments to control compliance costs.

Trust as an Economic Asset

Trust reduces:

  • Transaction costs

  • Monitoring overhead

  • Legal friction

  • Coordination latency

High-trust systems move faster, scale better, and allocate capital more efficiently.

Low-trust systems compensate with bureaucracy, redundancy, and defensive behavior—raising costs while reducing performance.

Trust in Artificial Intelligence and Enterprise Systems

In modern systems, trust shifts from people to processes.

An artificial intelligence system is trusted only if:

  • Its inputs are controlled and known

  • Its outputs are explainable

  • Its lineage is auditable

  • Its incentives are aligned with governance objectives

  • Its failures are detectable and correctable

Without these properties, artificial intelligence produces statistical plausibility rather than genuine trust. This limitation is why tools like Palantir and DataBricks are unsuitable for enterprise-wide transactional use. They specialize in statistical plausibility, processing "unstructured data" where outputs cannot be traced back to the original source data; their primary function is purely analytical. Unlike transaction-oriented systems such as ERPs, they are susceptible to the "garbage in, garbage out" issue.

Concise Operational Definition

Trust is the rational willingness to accept vulnerability based on evidence of capability, consistency, alignment, and enforceable accountability.

If any one of these elements is absent, trust is no longer institutional—it becomes conjecture. Participation in the development of the People, Ideas & Objects Synallagi is not compulsory. That said, a fundamental question must be addressed: what level of trust do producers presently command? For more than a decade, investor demands for meaningful accountability have gone unanswered. The credibility gap is neither theoretical nor marginal.

Entering a period widely recognized as structurally disruptive—driven by the accelerating integration of Artificial Intelligence—without a defined architectural response is imprudent. Strategic inaction in such an environment compounds risk.

If producers elect to disregard this opportunity, on what basis will that decision be defended? A claim of insufficient trustworthiness in Synallagi would lack substance if participation and engagement were never pursued. Trust cannot be evaluated in absentia. Without direct involvement and collaboration with our user community, producer skepticism becomes self-fulfilling, and their failure will be consequentially self-actualizing. 

Bandwidth for Conceptual Complexity

By the early 1980s, access to computing power—still scarce by today’s standards—was transformative. Complex industrial problems are rarely solved by engineering or finance alone; they require fluency in both. Today’s technological complexity does not concern me, what does is the reluctance of some to engage with it. With Artificial Intelligence only beginning its ascent, withdrawal is not a viable strategy. AI’s acceleration phase has just begun what may be a multi decade ascent.
For People, Ideas & Objects, the strategic issue is clear. The notion that SAAS is obsolete is incorrect, especially within corporate ERP. Artificial Intelligence is essentially a scientific toolset. The oil & gas industry is science-driven. Engineering and geology will quickly adopt these tools, dramatically expanding their analysis domains at previously unimaginable speeds. This will lead to scientific abundance in exploration, modeling, simulation, and optimization—an acceleration of engineering and geological thought.
However, this thinking will be constrained, just as it has been only mildly constrained until now. The limit will not be scientific capability; it will be business throughput.
If the business architecture remains anchored in 1970s administrative systems, scientific progress will hit structural and organizational bottlenecks. Industry output cannot grow if it is limited by narrow transactional pipelines. The same applies to accounting, administration, and Enterprise Resource Planning systems. Scientific acceleration demands proportional capacity in transactional and overall business bandwidth.
Engineers and geologists should not find themselves waiting hours to access computational business resources or navigating archaic budgetary approval processes to execute their work. If that remains the reality, progress will stall—not because of scientific limitation, but because of institutional inertia.
Synallagi addresses this throughput problem directly. Our target audience understands that preserving the status quo is not neutrality; it is regression. Resistance to structural reform is understandable—it challenges entrenched practices—but the status quo is unsustainable. As outlined in our January 20, 2025 paper, “Reconstructing Oil & Gas: Enabling Engineers and Geologists to be This Century’s Pioneers and Lead the Industries Future.” This future will only be possible after investors and lenders will ask whether producers possess the operational infrastructure to function credibly in contemporary capital markets. Investors have already experienced the prior model and made their consequential decisions in 2015. Consolidated producers now have what they believe to be a viable business model. Investors remain unconvinced.

For those working in business and transaction domains, Artificial Intelligence introduces a different burden than it does for the sciences—but a significant one nonetheless. Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration must be designed, implemented, and supported as long-term infrastructure. The pressure to deploy such systems will be intense—if the capital to build them is made available today.
Additional complexities are emerging. Stablecoins, and the securitization of oil & gas assets through crypto introduce new blockchain settlement transactional paradigms. Please see the Grumpy Economist for a summary. Micro-transactions and multi-billion-dollar asset transfers may soon exist within the same digital infrastructure. Ignoring these developments reinforces complacency. If investors and other counterparties transact in digital assets and producers cannot participate competently, the competitive consequences will be immediate.
Security and reliability will become foundational. An industry that has struggled to maintain investor confidence must demonstrate transactional integrity at the highest level. Cybersecurity, data governance, and systemic resilience will not be optional enhancements; they will be baseline requirements.
At People, Ideas & Objects, we do not subscribe to narratives of technological collapse. We do recognize that technology can expose structural weaknesses. Cultural resistance to accountability remains deeply embedded in oil & gas regarding ERP. If Artificial Intelligence is deployed constructively, it can remediate long-standing governance failures. If ignored, it will amplify them.
The decisive variable is not technology itself, It is whether leadership chooses to adapt. In a paper co-written by Kevin Warsh, who is President Trump’s nominee for Federal Reserve Chair, had the following to say.

Leadership is typically framed as the intersection of:

  1. Willingness – the intent to step forward, assume responsibility, and make decisions.

  2. Ability – the competence, judgment, and skill to execute effectively.

  3. Authority – the legitimacy to act.

That third variable is what converts intent and competence into organizational impact.

In enterprise settings—particularly in capital-intensive sectors such as oil & gas—authority may be formal (title, mandate, governance rights) or informal (credibility, trust capital, domain expertise). Sustainable leadership requires alignment across all three. Officers and directors are unwilling to exercise their responsibilities, their authority and control of the resources to remedy these issues. 

If you are approaching this from an institutional design perspective, the real leverage lies in how authority is architected: who is empowered to decide, how accountability is enforced, and whether decision rights match economic exposure. That is often where leadership either compounds—or stalls.

Building on our paper, "Reconstructing Oil & Gas: Enabling Engineers and Geologists to be This Century’s Pioneers and Lead the Industry’s Future," published on January 20, 2025, we believe that engineers and geologists can seize the opportunity to lead the industry this century. Access to the foundational AI tools needed to achieve this, and outcompete last century's producers.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

21st Century Marketplace Vision - Issues - Part III

Intellectual Property

People, Ideas & Objects identifies Intellectual Property as one of its three core competitive advantages. This position has generated some controversy among producer firms, largely due to the implications it carries and the claims associated with it. The central point is straightforward: ownership of the oil & gas asset alone is no longer sufficient. Increasingly, profitability also depends on access to the software systems that enable those assets to be operated profitably within modern markets.
Over time, this observation has only become more relevant. At this stage it is reasonable to characterize Intellectual Property not merely as a competitive advantage for People, Ideas & Objects, but as a structural issue the industry itself must confront. Recognizing the value of Intellectual Property—and the role it plays in enabling operational and financial performance—will become increasingly important for producers moving forward.
Technological developments and their broader societal implications over the next quarter century will likely exceed the scale of change experienced in previous periods. The pace and scope of transformation are already producing visible consequences across industries. Oil & gas producers would be well served to address these changes proactively rather than attempting to resist them. A defensive posture toward technological evolution is unlikely to be sustainable.
People, Ideas & Objects also maintains that many producers adopting open-source software solutions misunderstand the limitations of that model, particularly when compared with proprietary systems such as Synallagi. Our Intellectual Property framework allows revenue to be generated from producer participation and is used to support our broader user community.
The open-source model depends heavily on voluntary contributions and community-driven innovation. While this structure can be effective for certain classes of software, it is poorly suited to core operational systems such as a producer’s Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) platform. Successful ERP systems require sustained development, clear financial incentives, defined ownership, and long-term accountability. Reliance on volunteer contributions for a system that underpins the financial and operational infrastructure of an enterprise introduces material risks. From a commercial and governance perspective, depending on altruistic open-source participation for such a critical function represents a questionable strategic choice.

Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration

Within the framework proposed by People, Ideas & Objects, the concept of Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration remains in a formative stage. A fully precise definition will emerge as the series of planned papers scheduled for publication in 2026 are released. At present, the concept can be understood as an architectural model for managing large volumes of enterprise transactions through autonomous processes coordinated within an Enterprise Resource Planning environment.

Automation is a familiar element of contemporary systems, but it differs fundamentally from autonomy. Automated processes remain under direct human control and supervision. Their activities can be monitored easily and human intervention can occur at any stage. Autonomous processes, by contrast, operate with greater independence. This introduces two primary risks: uncontrolled operational activity and the possibility that ad-hoc human intervention disrupts or distorts the integrity of system processes.

The Intellectual Property architecture proposed by People, Ideas & Objects is designed specifically to mitigate these risks by establishing strict operational boundaries and governance for autonomous activity.

Licensing of this Intellectual Property is implemented through blockchain-based smart contracts. These contracts define the operational domain, scope, and authority granted to each of our user community members in the system. Autonomous processes operating within the environment can therefore determine:

  • the domain in which they are authorized to operate,

  • the scope of transactions permitted within that domain, and

  • the level of authority associated with the actor initiating or interacting with those transactions.

This licensing framework effectively constrains the search space of autonomous systems. Artificial intelligence processes interact only with the transactions, participants, and activities authorized or Synallagi within our user communities licensed domain. Activities outside that domain are treated as foreign to the system.

The user community licensing structure is intentionally dynamic. Domains and operational scope can expand or contract as the business models of People, Ideas & Objects evolve. Through blockchain smart contracts, the operational boundaries of participants can be modified or augmented through negotiated licensing changes.

Autonomous behavior represents only one dimension of the architecture. When combined with asynchronous processing, transaction activity within the ERP environment may occur continuously and at extremely high volumes. In such an environment, it becomes difficult for a human observer to maintain a coherent view of system activity at any given moment. The orchestration layer resolves this challenge by coordinating transactions, ensuring that each process executes in the correct sequence, within authorized parameters, and that outcomes are reported in a structured and intelligible manner.

The Intellectual Property framework therefore establishes the governance layer for the system. It determines the actors, domains, authorities, and permissible activities within which Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration operates.

Transaction volumes within this environment are expected to exceed those of current industry systems by a considerable margin, a subject that will be addressed in more detail in the forthcoming 2026 publications. As transaction complexity increases, so too does the risk of operational confusion if activities are not properly structured.

Within this context, producers rely on the Intellectual Property controlled by People, Ideas & Objects and implemented through our licensed user community and their service provider organizations. This framework ensures that activity within the system is organized, authorized, and visible.

Without such Intellectual Property governance, multiple actors could unknowingly perform identical tasks or execute conflicting transactions within the system. The licensing framework eliminates this possibility by authorizing work only for recognized participants operating within their defined domains. Any activity originating outside those authorized parameters is automatically treated as invalid or foreign to the system.

As a precursor to this discussion please review our March 17, 2025 paper “Hyper Specialization in Today’s IP & AI Enabled Workforce:” and its Podcast.

Targeting Frameworks

Compensation

One of the areas introduced in the forthcoming 2026 series of papers on markets is the concept of Targeting Frameworks. A comprehensive paper dedicated to this topic and its related mechanisms will be published during the year. The purpose of raising Targeting Frameworks within the Intellectual Property section of this paper is to initiate discussion around the incentive structure that motivates our user community and their service provider organizations to continue expanding and improving the operational processes within their domains.
People, Ideas & Objects previously outlined the compensation structure for our user community in the January 20, 2025 paper Catalysts for Cultural Change: The Leadership Role of People, Ideas & Objects User Community. That framework introduced a base hourly rate supplemented by completion, team, performance, innovation, and automation bonuses. These rewards represent one-time benefits earned during the initial development phase as participants work with software developers to instill a culture designed to ensure they provide oil & gas producers with the most profitable means of oil & gas operations. And that papers Podcast
However, experience in the oil & gas sector has demonstrated that static ERP definitions protect the status quo, often undermining competitiveness and governance. Synallagi is designed as a change-oriented software development model. People, Ideas & Objects revenue is generated only when improvements or modifications are requested and implemented by our user community.
Members of our user community are not passive contributors. As owners and operators of service provider organizations, they participate directly in the design, development, implementation, maintenance, and continuous improvement of Synallagi. This structure creates a dynamic system in which innovation is not only permitted but economically rewarded.
It is at the service-provider level that Targeting Frameworks become relevant. For the purposes of this paper, the concept is introduced to illustrate how participants within our user community operate a distinctive business model with the opportunity to capture meaningful economic value from their ideas and operational contributions.
Each service provider is licensed to manage a specific software process within Synallagi. Once implemented, the service provider delivers that process as an operational service to industry participants and invoices the Joint Operating Committees for its use on a recurring basis. These administrative and accounting services provide the basis for the Targeting Framework discussion.
Two components define the service provider’s revenue structure. The first is a fixed charge associated with the completion and operation of the designated work product. However, the architecture of Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration introduces a second dimension. The processes managed by service providers will increasingly contain autonomous elements. The critical question therefore becomes:
What incentive exists for service providers to continuously expand the scope, efficiency, and quality of the services they provide?
Targeting Frameworks address this question.
A useful conceptual reference appears in Peter Diamandis’ Solve Everything, which describes targeting systems as mechanisms that define measurable objectives with mathematical clarity. In the context of Synallagi, the Targeting Framework establishes a system through which measurable value generated by innovation can be identified, quantified, and shared between the industry and the service provider responsible for that innovation. 
Participants within our user community are neither “cogs in a machine” nor passive recipients of direction. At the same time, they are not intended to become “blind sleep-walking agents of whoever will feed them.” Instead, they operate as independent business operators with incentives aligned toward solving the most difficult dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable problems within the industry.
In practical terms, a rational participant seeking to manage a process within Synallagi would likely select the most problematic areas of the industry—processes that are complex, inefficient, error-prone, or administratively burdensome. Such areas frequently contain the greatest opportunity for measurable improvement and therefore the greatest potential economic return under a Targeting Framework.

The framework requires a deep understanding of system behavior and its consequences. Improvements generated through innovative Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration can then be objectively monitored and evaluated. The resulting value—whether through increased revenue, reduced costs, or improved operational efficiency—is quantifiable.
In this way, the Targeting Framework becomes a mechanism through which both the service provider and the oil & gas industry share in the value created. By defining success with measurable precision, the framework effectively creates a performance “scoreboard” that attracts both capital and talent.
When a service provider manages a process across the industry as its customer base, even small incremental improvements can generate substantial aggregate value. The monthly compensation earned by the service provider is therefore meaningful to them while remaining economically negligible relative to the benefit received by each producer and in aggregate. If the incremental fee were to be considered material, the corresponding incremental value being generated would necessarily be equally material.
This paper introduces the Targeting Framework only at a conceptual level. Many operational details remain to be addressed in a forthcoming dedicated publication. The immediate objective is to illustrate how Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration, when combined with a properly structured incentive system, benefits the entire industry.

What Gets Measured

A second critical dimension of Targeting Frameworks is the measurement of value creation.
In some cases, the value generated—or lost—is unmistakable. For example, People, Ideas & Objects has identified approximately $5 trillion in lost natural gas revenue attributable to the collapse of the historical oil-to-gas heating value ratio, which deteriorated from roughly 6:1 to levels exceeding 50:1 during the shale era. The analysis compares the expected natural gas price implied by oil prices under the historical heating value relationship with the actual prices received. The difference represents cumulative revenue foregone by the industry.
These losses continue at an estimated rate exceeding $35 billion per month, yet the issue has received little attention from producer leadership. Additional losses arise from missed LNG export opportunities and from the treatment of Permian associated gas, which has frequently been sold into Henry Hub with extreme differentials—or even negative prices—thereby depressing the continental reference price for natural gas. People, Ideas & Objects, our user community and their service provider organizations have offered our decentralized production model to remedy this issue since August 2012. 
While this example illustrates a clear and objective measurement, not every improvement introduced by our user community will be as easily quantified. This is precisely the function of the Targeting Framework. It establishes the analytical mechanisms required to objectively evaluate the impact of new designs, implementations, and process improvements developed by our user community and their service providers.
The framework serves two purposes simultaneously. First, it ensures fair compensation for the individuals responsible for generating measurable improvements. Second, it allows producers to understand the incremental value being created through these innovations. Over time, it also provides a comprehensive view of the cumulative benefits generated by Synallagi, our user community, and their service provider organizations from the first day of operation.
Not all improvements are perfectly quantifiable, and compensation structures must recognize the broader value created through innovation and system advancement. Consequently, governance over the Targeting Framework must remain objective, transparent, and continuously evaluated. All participating stakeholders must retain the ability to review outcomes, raise concerns, and adjudicate disputes. The governance structure supporting these mechanisms will be addressed in a forthcoming paper.
Finally, trust within Synallagi is engineered through a direct linkage between autonomous capabilities and explicit Intellectual Property rights. Rather than relying on traditional role-based access control, the system employs capability-based authority: without an Intellectual Property grant, the system confers no operational authority.
Intellectual Property rights therefore define domain authority, granting service providers flexibility to expand and refine the processes they manage. In addition, deterministic “commit points” within the system ensure that system state is validated before any irreversible economic transaction occurs.
Together, these mechanisms establish the governance and trust architecture required for Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration to function reliably at industry scale.

An Example

Autonomous Orchestration and Automation of the Material Balance Report

Synallagi will implement Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration within the Material Balance Report, specifically through its monthly Systems Balance.
The Systems Balance reconciles the source and disposition of the continent’s oil & gas production volumes. Historically, this has not been undertaken as it would be a manual, fragmented, and low-value compliance exercise. Under Synallagi, it becomes a fully automated control architecture extending from field data capture to financial statement reporting.
This implementation produces the following deliverables.

1. Automated End-to-End Volumetric Integrity

  • Automated capture of production volumes through Internet of Things devices at the meter level.

  • Secure transmission of data via cellular and satellite networks into the Material Balance Report environment.

  • Automated validation of volumetric data against chemical production realities and / or governing agreements.

  • Objective automated monthly volumetric reporting.

This establishes a verified, system-generated foundation for production data and information.

2. Monthly Continental Systems Balance

  • Automated, autonomous and orchestrated reconciliation of source and disposition volumes across the continent.

  • Identification and resolution workflows for volumetric discrepancies.

  • Structured accrual processes where final data remains provisional.

  • Completion of formal Systems Balance within the defined 60–90 day adjustment window.

The Systems Balance becomes a measurable, recurring control event rather than an administrative afterthought.

3. Orchestrated Production-to-Financial Integration

  • Autonomous synchronization of production volumes with subsidiary production accounting.

  • Automated generation of administrative and regulatory reporting.

  • Direct linkage between validated volumes and financial statement reporting.

  • Elimination of redundant reconciliation layers across operational and accounting functions.

Converting volumetric accuracy into financial integrity.

4. Autonomous Verification and Exception Management

  • Continuous validation routines during the post-month adjustment period.

  • Automated transaction orchestration for corrections, reallocations, and settlements.

  • Structured audit trails documenting each system-level adjustment.

  • Escalation protocols triggered only by material exceptions.

Human oversight shifts from transaction execution to system governance.

5. Regulatory and Governance Transparency

  • Automated generation of compliant regulatory filings.

  • Immutable audit documentation aligned with production agreements.

  • Cross-verification between physical production and contractual entitlement.

This creates objective, defensible reporting across jurisdictions.

6. Scalable Orchestration Infrastructure

  • Implementation of Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration across production, administration, and accounting processes.

  • A verified data layer enabling continental wide downstream automation of settlements, revenue allocation, and partnership accounting.

  • Configurable architecture capable of iterative enhancement without structural disruption.

Our Material Balance Report becomes the foundational control layer for enterprise automation.

7. Institutional Control Through Intellectual Property

Service providers operate within Synallagi under defined Intellectual Property boundaries. User community members maintain control through IP licensing structures and exclusive interaction with developers.
This ensures that process evolution remains aligned with the Organizational Constructs. Software configuration is not static. It is deliberately change-enabled.

Strategic Outcome

The monthly Systems Balance transforms a historically reactive process into a proactive control mechanism.

  • Volumes are measured objectively.

  • Transactions and balancing are orchestrated autonomously.

  • Financial reporting reflects verified physical reality.

Automation is not introduced for efficiency alone. It is introduced to establish structural integrity at scale.

What are the possibilities in the hands of the many of our user community members involved in this massive, industry wide process?

The Issue

These points are raised for two principal reasons. First, a static Enterprise Resource Planning definition is inherently inconsistent with an operational environment defined by Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration. Systems designed to remain fixed cannot function effectively within a framework that depends on continuous adaptation, dynamic transaction flows, and evolving operational processes. Second, advancing further without the administrative and technological architecture required to manage such an environment would be both reckless and dangerous.
People, Ideas & Objects have documented the treatment received from producers while attempting to introduce a framework intended to show how we provide the most profitable means of oil & gas operations. This experience has closely resembled the reception historically encountered by other Enterprise Resource Planning vendors. The pattern suggests a broader structural issue: officers and directors appear reluctant to adopt systems that impose measurable accountability. This reluctance has contributed to the erosion of investor confidence and, ultimately, the deterioration of producers’ capital structures as investors increasingly recognize unresolved structural deficiencies.
Recent strategic announcements illustrate the industry’s continuing uncertainty. Several producers have highlighted regions outside North America—such as Argentina, Libya, and Iraq—as areas of future production growth. Companies including Continental, Chevron, and Total have publicly identified these regions as potential sources of significant upside. The extent to which these prospects will translate into actual development remains uncertain.
Continental, for example, has indicated it will cease further development in the Bakken shale region. At the same time, production data from North Dakota show a measurable decline. According to the North Dakota Industrial Commission. The decline in Bakken supply may influence expectations for United States crude benchmarks and global reference grades.
North Dakota’s oil output declined by 76,000 barrels per day in December from November levels, bringing production to about 1.12 million bpd, according to the state Industrial Commission. The drop in Bakken supply may factor into expectations for U.S. benchmarks like Oil – US Crude and global reference grades such as Oil – Brent Crude, while the impact on associated gas flows could indirectly affect Natural Gas market balances.
At the outset of this paper, it was stated that the central theme of the 2026 series is the elevation of Markets as an Organizational Construct. Within this framework, the Joint Operating Committee remains the primary Organizational Construct. Markets and the producers operating within them are positioned as secondary-tier constructs, while the remaining Organizational Constructs form a tertiary layer supporting the overall institutional architecture.
Under current conditions, however, continued reliance on the leadership of many producer firms risks producing further deterioration. Over the past several years, strategic decisions by officers and directors have followed a pattern of shifting direction without addressing the structural issues confronting the industry. Examples include the movement from shale development toward clean energy initiatives, the subsequent return to shale, the pursuit of consolidation as a strategic remedy, and most recently the shift toward opportunities outside the continent. The principal beneficiaries of these shifts appear to have been the individuals directing them rather than the industry as a whole. (A typical oil & gas producers board of directors meeting.)

Historically, accountability within the industry has often been diffused. Failures have been attributed either to the Joint Operating Committee or to the operating producer, allowing decision-makers to avoid direct responsibility. Without the necessity of confronting the consequences of unsuccessful strategies, leadership has frequently defaulted to abandoning existing initiatives rather than correcting them.

Implementing Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration has the potential to fundamentally change current dynamics. By using systems that objectively measure performance and transaction outcomes, operational and financial consequences become visible immediately. However, this real-time accountability may face resistance from individuals comfortable with existing environments that limit transparency.

How and when our funding support will be resolved is unknown to me at this time and I’ve been working on this question for many decades. People, Ideas & Objects are ready and willing to undertake these developments provided we’re given the appropriate financial resources to do so. In many ways we’ve done our job and prepared our plans for the issues that have manifested themselves as we anticipated them. 

At present, however, the industry appears directionless—lacking leadership, motivation, and a coherent strategic framework. Increasing attention is directed outside both the industry and the continent at precisely the moment when reliable domestic energy production is becoming more critical. The emerging Artificial Intelligence–driven industrial expansion will require substantial and dependable energy supplies. The United States cannot realistically support that transformation on the basis of imported energy alone. Yet that possibility is increasingly becoming a concern.