21st Century Marketplace Vision - Issues - Part I
People, Ideas & Objects is commencing the publication of our 2026 papers as a series of verbatim individual blog posts. This initiative caters to those who prefer consuming information in consistent, daily installments, a request we are happy to accommodate.
Our schedule includes four weekly updates released every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday. Each post is designed to cover a single section of the research, ensuring the content remains manageable and can be read in under thirty minutes. We begin this series with our initial paper, originally released on March 27, 2026.
A 21st Century Marketplace Vision for Oil & Gas:
Part I: Issues
We begin.
During the preparation of this document, the scale and intricacy of our 2026 project have grown substantially. The incorporation of Artificial Intelligence has fundamentally redefined the work's architectural scope and overall objectives. Consequently, what was previously known as the Preliminary Specification is now formally designated as the Preliminary Specification with Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration. Throughout the remainder of 2026, People, Ideas & Objects will release papers dedicated to enhancing this framework; these contributions should be viewed as incremental updates to the original Preliminary Specification.
Abstract of the Issues
In preparing this paper, it has become evident that the scope and complexity of the project we undertook for 2026 has expanded significantly. The integration of Artificial Intelligence has altered both the architecture and the ambition of the work. What was once framed as the Preliminary Specification is now more accurately described as the Preliminary Specification with Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration. Through 2026 People, Ideas & Objects will be publishing papers focused on upgrading the Preliminary Specification. Everything in these papers should be considered incremental to the Preliminary Specification itself.
Implementing such a comprehensive system today would exceed the capacity of most current producer organizations. However, we are currently in the crucial architectural and planning stage, where precision is decisive. And continues with design and development through our user community. However, during implementation, there will be limited opportunity to redesign foundational elements. Furthermore, mandatory producer participation is required for financial considerations.
A core foundational element, which will be emphasized across all our 2026 papers, is a shift toward greater reliance on markets rather than producer firms. This fully acknowledges the Joint Operating Committee and the industry's three essential markets: Petroleum Lease, Resource, and Financial.
Our user community will have the chance to expand upon these foundational elements and details once their design and development is underway—a topic we will explore in the second paper of this series.
The breadth of the field and topical discussion has expanded to a degree that makes a single comprehensive document impractical. The interdependencies between Artificial Intelligence, Information Technology, accounting, operations, governance, and oil & gas market structure cannot coherently be addressed in one volume.
Accordingly, we have adopted a serialized method of publication. A series of focused papers will be released throughout 2026. Each paper will address a discrete domain within the overall architecture. Complexity will be layered incrementally. Concepts will be introduced, reinforced, and extended over time. This approach is necessary to preserve clarity and obtain greater conceptual uptake.
This initial paper outlines the principal structural issues within the oil & gas industry that the Preliminary Specification addresses. It does not attempt to exhaust the subject. It establishes context. It identifies systemic failures. It anticipates how emerging technologies, when integrated, will reshape the industry’s administrative, accounting, and operational foundations. The scope of these issues are within the domain of markets.
Each paper will remain within a defined length threshold. The objective is to present substantial concepts without overwhelming the reader. Discipline in scope is required to maintain coherence. The common theme is the development and use of “21st Century Markets.”
This series will also represent my final substantive contributions to the project’s architectural and design development. From inception, the design contemplated a transition to our user community and their service provider organizations. Their mandate includes architecture, design, development, implementation, daily management, and ongoing sustained refinement of the software and services supporting accounting and administration in oil & gas.
The structural configuration of that community remains intact. What changes now is responsibility. Stewardship of the Preliminary Specification must transfer to our user community. It is neither feasible nor desirable for a single individual to extend this architecture past 2026. The transition being undertaken in this series of papers is necessary.
That necessity is itself confirmation of the model’s persistence. Just as with the issues in oil & gas, the Preliminary Specification, our user community, and the associated service provider organizations were designed for institutional continuity beyond individual authorship.
The transition will not be without difficulty. Structural and cultural change in a mature industry rarely proceeds smoothly. There will be resistance. There will be uncertainty. There will be institutional friction. Our user community will be the ones industry must look to for administrative and accounting leadership in this transition.
Engineers and geologists face a choice. They can continue with the status quo: being absorbed in the minutiae of administrative and accounting processes, dealing with countless transaction exceptions, and attempting to navigate the fast-paced world of crypto, AI, and Agentic AI using archaic ERP systems.
Alternatively, they can opt for a supportive, deliberative, accountable and valuable system that efficiently manages daily operations and provides meaningful guidance on the performance of their actions. Achieving this, however, demands making the changes prescribed in this and our subsequent 2026 papers.
For those prepared to engage constructively—those who recognize the current framework is not functioning—the Preliminary Specification with Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration represents either a significant opportunity or a necessary solution. The publication of this series marks the point at which that choice becomes explicit. If an area interests you as a prospective member of our user community, if you feel the current implementation is flawed and you have a superior understanding or alternative idea or you want to be part of something substantial consider this your invitation to join and contribute.
Notice
The naming of our product has evolved into a matter requiring resolution. Continued reference to the “Preliminary Specification” has become increasingly impractical, and the extended form—“Preliminary Specification with Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestration”—is not operationally viable as a working name.
Accordingly, a formal naming process was undertaken.
We have selected Synallagi. (Please note the unique spelling, it’s different for a reason, synology means something other than what we’re looking for.)
While there may be initial unfamiliarity, the name proves to be both pronounceable and memorable with minimal exposure. The domain synallagi.ai has been secured and will serve as the operating environment for our user community and their service provider organizations.
In evaluating naming alternatives within an already saturated landscape, attention turned to foundational terminology. The Greek terms for “market” and “transaction”—Agora and Synallagi—were considered. A review of the United States Patent and Trademark Office confirmed that Agora was not a viable option.
Synallagi Definition
Synallagi, the Greek term for “transaction,” is therefore adopted as the product name of People, Ideas & Objects.
Definition (Google):
"Synallagi" (συναλλαγή) is a Greek term meaning transaction, exchange, or deal, commonly used in business and banking contexts, such as in Dynamic Currency Conversion.
Most appropriate for our purposes.
A transaction is a Synallagi, but Synallagi’ are not just transactions. The difference is in this definition.
In business there are transactions and in oil & gas there will be Synallagi’. When thinking of a Synallagi, actors understand it consists of the transaction, its agreement, its regulatory environment, its participants, its stable-coin being used and the property involved…
