Wednesday, April 08, 2020
Tuesday, April 07, 2020
Everyone Sees it Now
Only a crisis - actual or perceived - produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around. That, I believe, is our basic function: to develop alternatives to existing policies, to keep them alive and available until the politically impossible becomes the politically inevitable.
Posted by Paul Cox at 6:30 AM 0 comments
Monday, April 06, 2020
What I Mean by "Overproduction"
In economics, overproduction, oversupply or excess of supply refers to excess of supply over demand of products being offered to the market. This leads to lower prices and/or unsold goods along with the possibility of unemployment. The demand side equivalent is underconsumption; some consider supply and demand two sides to the same coin – excess supply is only relative to a given demand, and insufficient demand is only relative to a given supply – and thus consider overproduction and underconsumption equivalent. Overproduction is often attributed as due to previous overinvestment – creation of excess productive capacity, which must then either lie idle, which is unprofitable, or produce an excess supply.
Posted by Paul Cox at 6:30 AM 0 comments
Saturday, April 04, 2020
Links to White Paper and Preliminary Specification
On April 4, 2020 we found that our url shortening service was no longer in service. Hence all the url's to the White Paper and Preliminary Specification throughout this blog no longer function. We have since joined bitly and are using the following.
Posted by Paul Cox at 2:18 PM 0 comments
Thursday, April 02, 2020
A Vision and a Plan to Deal With the Largest Oil and Gas Issue, Ever
PI&O’s Preliminary Specification, user community and service provider organizations provide a comprehensive vision for the next 30 years. One in which the oil and gas industry is dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable, everywhere and always. A vision and a plan for 30 years that once adopted, will have people rallying, including investors, to oil and gas. The key here is the investors. They invest in the future earnings and cash flow of what they see the industries plan, strategy and vision can provide them. They will provide the capital for that and be somewhat patient for a year or two for that vision to manifest itself. People are the same. If they see that an industry is vibrant and there are opportunities that are fresh and exciting they’ll want to get involved. And what about OPEC+, if they saw the Preliminary Specification, its user community and service providers being funded and built would they continue with their full production strategy? This is how we begin to rebuild the oil and gas industry brick by brick, and stick by stick. Which is the only opportunity that we have available to us at this time. So much destruction has occurred that any attempt to tinker with what exists today will only fail due to cultural inertia, and would carry a significantly lower probability of success than the Preliminary Specification provides. The Preliminary Specification has been actively promoted here and through our White Paper since December 2013 and July 2019. The cognitive dissonance that these have created in the industry are adequate for our needs to start the development of the user community working on identifying and specifying exactly the details of the systems they want and need. Brick by brick, and stick by stick.
We have claimed throughout the Preliminary Specification and this blog that the issue we resolve is the largest administrative and accounting issue the oil and gas industry has ever faced. Thanks to our good friends the bureaucrats it has now become the largest issue in oil and gas, ever. We should all be pleased to be able to work towards this solution and build the new oil and gas industry, brick by brick, and stick by stick. This time of great upheaval and crisis is our greatest opportunity for the individuals with the knowledge and capability to complete these tasks. Build a stable, financially capable industry that is well managed and robust which provides affordable, abundant but profitable energy for the next three decades. Crisis is the point in time where opportunities are at their greatest. Our user community members, with the roles and responsibilities that we recently detailed, can begin this process. They will be ground zero in terms of where and how this rebuilding process begins. This is why they must be endowed with the resources that PI&O have established in that community. That is the way that it will be done in the highest quality, fastest and most efficient way. Using the capitalist system with thousands of entrepreneurs applying their knowledge and capabilities in new, exciting and innovative ways.
Bureaucrats, here’s your chance to prove to everyone that you didn’t do this deliberately to line your own pockets. That you didn’t do it out of greed and self-interest. Before you leave the stage make the commitment to build the Preliminary Specification, our user community and their service provider organizations and secure the funding for the whole project. That way at least you can say you did your best and your legacy will have at least one positive element in which you can sail into retirement.
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for profitable North American energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.
Posted by Paul Cox at 6:30 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, April 01, 2020
Production Allocation Based on Profitable Production
The world’s oil markets are at a crisis point arguably not seen in its history.
With global oil demand curtailed by an estimated twenty million barrels per day due to the coronavirus led shutdown in the world’s economy, the oil war would turn an already dire economic outlook for global energy demand into a catastrophe that could change the energy landscape forever. An increasing number of producers are now losing money on production, wells are being shut-in and in certain areas (e.g. Canada) the oil industry may never recover – a generational destruction of personal livelihoods and the end of a reliable source of national wealth and revenue.
Yes, the economic crisis caused by the coronavirus has severely affected the global oil markets but, the actions of the participants in reaction to this crisis have shown an industry in the grips of a mass suicide.
As often the case since 2017, the US is looking for others to do the ‘heavy lifting’ when it comes to the supporting of the global energy market. OPEC and OPEC+ have legitimate gripes that their support of the global oil price through production cuts has directly led to continuance the US shale industry’s exponential production growth.
US shale production has grown to such an extent that it has helped the US eclipse both Russia and Saudi Arabia in becoming the world’s largest oil producer. This has been trumpeted by the US President as the US achieving energy independence.
To the often-made complaints by OPEC and OPEC+, the US has always cited ‘free market’ forces. How ironic now that there are calls by domestic US shale producers for tariffs, duties and even limits on foreign oil to provide an ‘artificial’ oil price floor.
The current oil crisis will see the energy industry finally achieve the restructuring it so badly needs
Posted by Paul Cox at 6:30 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, March 31, 2020
User Community Developments, Part XXXIV
We have frequently discussed the Preliminary Specifications standardization of accounting and administration that will be undertaken in oil and gas by our user communities service provider organizations. Every property would be subject to the same objective and standard treatment that is applied to any other property in North America. Natural gas is much more costly to account and administer for, due to its byproducts. Some properties are significantly more complex than others. These will be reflected in the unique cost structures of each and every property. In addition the administrative and accounting costs are all variable under the Preliminary Specification. Making all of the costs of the producers variable based on production. Enabling the implementation of our price maker strategy and ensuring the profitability of each and every producing property.
It will be the role and responsibility of our user community to ensure that the accounting and administrative aspects of each property are both timely and accurate. As well as the method of accounting that is applied is both objective and standardized throughout the North American producer base. As a result producers will know that their profitable production is profitable in direct comparison to all other production across the continent. (There will need to be some special consideration for the consistent full production of heavy oil as its scalability is not economic or viable under any circumstance.) It should be noted that included in those profitability calculations will be the actual prices that were received at the property. Any differentials would be applied however there would be no consideration for any hedging. That is a corporate activity that is something the producer may consider continuing if they so desire. It does not affect the criteria of whether or not to produce a property. The property will be the only basis of evaluation in terms of profitability.
In a world of ever increasing costs due to the advancing difficulty in producing each incremental barrel of oil and gas. The need to remain active and proactive on a costing methodology for how the capital is recaptured and its cash reused by the producer is of concern. Conventional oil and gas will be treated differently than what shale would or should be. With its flush production, steep decline curves and costly reworks this will take a more precise accounting than what has taken place to date. Our user community will need to apply their most advanced thinking in terms of what and how the costs of oil and gas exploration and production are realized. As we’ve also mentioned the recognition of capital provides a return of the cash that was previously invested. Providing a ready source of capital for the producer to reinvest for the future. With the capital expenditures that are forecast the need to source adequate levels of capital are necessary. The only source of capital available to the industry is the recycling of their capital costs on a higher frequency than the multi-decade basis they’ve done in this “build a balance sheet” era. Our user community will need to ensure that adequate capital resources are provided to the producers for this purpose.
Bureaucrats have been intoxicated with the cash flow from oil and gas production in the past decades. The industry is a capital intensive industry and therefore the return of capital that was previously invested has always been strong. The deferral of capital recognition for decades has been a result of the levels of cash they’ve been able to generate in these producer organizations. It has taken them significant effort to understand and develop unique and innovative ways in which to divert these funds into their own pockets. The issue that we have today is that with the Preliminary Specification the volume of cash coming into these organizations is going to be an exponential increase from the bureaucrats' days. Luckily we’re disintermediating them and won’t have to concern ourselves with their hands sliding back into the cookie jar. Where did all that value go? Nonetheless the cash that is generated will be substantial and the need to have better control over this will need to be instilled within the industry, producers and larger oil and gas dependent economies. We should build some software like the Financial Marketplace module of the Preliminary Specification that deals with this!
We’ve seen some discussion recently about production quotas with OPEC+ and Texas, and also some discussion about government imposed production allocations. Our White Paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale” discusses these in addition to our price maker strategy. These discussions are consistent with the Alberta government's production allocations that reduced the province's production by 350,000 boe / day since January 1, 2019. These are not the remedies we’re looking for. They are ineffective as they are unable to impose the production discipline that is needed in the marketplace. Producers shut-in the production to meet the quota and then begin to figure out how to get around the quota. In Alberta there are several ways of doing so. None of the production is evaluated as to whether it is profitable or not, and therefore it is all detrimental to the producers bottom line. Currently the Alberta based production is receiving single digit oil prices. Low prices as a result of continued overproduction as the government mandate has done little to solve the problem they were created for. The only method in which the market will institute any production discipline is through the use of profitability as the means in which a producer is evaluated upon. Then they are motivated by the value enhancement of doing so. The increases in value from implementation of the Preliminary Specification includes saving the reserves for a time in which they can be produced profitably, ensuring that the costs of the reserves don’t have to carry the additional burden of the successive losses that would be incurred if the property continued to produced unprofitably, the producer only produces profitable operations and no longer dilutes their earnings with unprofitable operations and the commodity markets have the marginal production removed from the market and hence the prices will find the market price. Our user community will be the critical resource to enhancing the profitability of the energy industry. Our methodology or price maker strategy has been known in oil and gas since at least 2007. If it were able to be implemented within the current configuration of producers, would it not have been done so by now? The fact is producers and the industry are not configured in any way to provide this information or this mechanism, it is impossible for them to do so. Only the Preliminary Specification can.
Global oil inventories are alleged to be at around 750 million barrels as of Monday March 23, 2020. Oil storage capacity is believed to be about 1 billion barrels. If the demand for oil has dropped by 20 million boe / day and overproduction is at 2 million boe / day. The remaining 250 million barrels of storage may be filled in as little as ten days, or the day after April fools. When storage is full will it be the coronavirus or overproduction and oversupply that occupies the minds of the producer bureaucrats? Will President Trump have time to hear the producers concerns then? What we will know is that oil prices will go negative, the differentiated prices are not that far from zero today, single digits and falling. Maybe producers will understand the best form of storage is the reserves themselves. For example, don’t produce unprofitable production. Maybe the North American producers will wake up to the fact that they’ve been unprofitable all these decades. Maybe they’ll realize they’ve been so unprofitable that they’ve consumed value and cash with each barrel produced. They were only viable when someone else was providing consistent cash infusions. Maybe they’ll realize that investors saw this a few years ago and got out. Maybe they’ll realize that OPEC is still making money as the low cost producers, and will continue to do so. Maybe they’ll realize with all the doors slammed in their face, that blaming everyone, cutting everything and everyone the time for a reckoning will be at hand? That having the ability to withhold unprofitable production is not market manipulation as they have always claimed but just plain business sense.
In summary what’s it going to take to make the transition from the current oil and gas industry to the one we’ve described in the Preliminary Specification. First of all there has to be a continental wide destruction of any and all value contained within the oil and gas industry. Check, complete and good job bureaucrats. There is development of the Preliminary Specification with its highly capable, dynamic, innovative, accountable and profit oriented user community and service providers with the software and software development capabilities that facilitate change. Ones with the power, control, Intellectual Property, budget, leadership, people, revenue sources, licensing, distinct and comprehensive competitive advantages, timing and accuracy of the costs of exploration and production, quality of service, objectivity and standardization of administrative and accounting services and lets not forget the responsibility and authority to get it done. This is a new capacity, capability and functionality in the oil and gas industry. It is not available today and needs to be purpose built to deal with today’s issues and tomorrow’s future.
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for profitable North American energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.
Posted by Paul Cox at 6:30 AM 0 comments
Labels: Community, Service-Provider, User
Monday, March 30, 2020
Yes, of Course...
Shale Threshold. “The market is going to be out of balance for quite some time,” Morris said.
Yergin, the confidante of oil ministers and chief executives, sees the threshold for reinvigorating shale between $50 and $60 a barrel. U.S. crude was trading above the $50 level as recently as Feb. 26.
“At $50, we’ll start to see a recovery and a step up in investment, so long as people feel safe about the price floor beneath them,” he said.
It’s funny that Yergin should put it that way. A big part of shale’s resilience lies in its unique geology. Unlike the so-called conventional fields in Saudi Arabia and Russia, North American shale is rock so dense that it doesn’t degrade or collapse on itself if oil production is interrupted. In other parts of the world, disrupting output can do irreversible damage.
That’s why the bulk of Chevron’s $4 billion spending cut will take place in the Permian, CEO Mike Wirth said Tuesday. It’s a rare field where production can be turned off almost instantly without adverse long-term impacts.
With shale, “the assets don’t go away because you haven’t destroyed the field,” said Ken Medlock, senior director of Rice University’s Center for Energy Studies. “We’ll see a thinning of the herd but the assets will still be there.”
Welcome to the shut-in party pal(s). Not to suggest otherwise, but I always believed that a frac job was to “blast” the rock with water and hydraulic pressure, opening a void for the oil or gas to flow to? Their point in this is; that not until you’ve systemically, comprehensively and financially destroyed everything in the oil and gas industry will you begin to shut-in properties. That you could have shut-in production when we completed development of the Preliminary Specification in December 2013, which suggests that unprofitability is the point in which you shut-in a property. A time period in which bureaucrats lied to everyone about, my list is far too long to include everything so I’ll just list my favorite lies here, market rebalancing, capital discipline and we’ll muddle through. I am going to add “doesn’t degrade or collapse” formations to the top of my list right now. Now with all the destruction they’ve caused they’ll admit shut-in production is the way to go. The issue bureaucrats had before, with shutting in production, was that it took effort to do so.
This problem isn’t going to go away I’m afraid. As I discovered decades ago the industry is not configured to function in this way. It uses the high throughput production model. Which sees maximum capacity produced at all times to offset its large overheads. The Preliminary Specification shifts the industry to the decentralized production model which makes all the producers' costs variable. Then any property that is shut-in incurs no costs. Overheads are incurred by the service providers who will not be conducting any work on shut-in production and therefore will not render any billing for their services. Shifting the overhead costs from industry to the service providers enables producers for the first time to be able to control their overhead costs.
Not only do the service providers have a role in this but also the Joint Operating Committee as the key organizational construct of the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer. The Joint Operating Committee is the industry standard legal, financial, operational decision making, cultural, communication, innovation and strategic framework of the industry. Using it aligns these frameworks with the compliance and governance that is “currently” managed by the bureaucracy.
This shut-in production enables producers to save the reserves for a time in which they can be produced profitably. The reserves will not have to increase their return on investment when it includes the additional losses of the property if it continues to produce unprofitably. Global oil and gas storage facilities will be augmented and better managed by assuming reserves are a natural form of storage. And the commodity markets will find the marginal price when the marginal barrels of oil equivalent are removed from the marketplace. It is this logic I assume that these people now find so compelling.
Therefore here are a handful of useful questions that people may want to ask these newly enlightened bureaucrats.
- Who will be the producers that shut-in their production? Profitability has been determined by PI&O to be the only means in which to allocate production fairly and reasonably. Therefore what we’ll see from the industry is the continuation of their favorite activity. “It's not them, its other producers, we’re profitable.” The blame game.
- Which properties will be shut-in? There is not a producer in the industry that knows within a range of +/- 25% of their revenues what their profitability at any property is. Ask for the detailed reports and focus on the actual overhead charges. There are no actual overhead costs charged to the properties, anywhere on the continent. Most, probably 85% of overhead is capitalized. It must be that properties manage themselves and the overhead supports the bureaucrats? Don’t ask me, I already know the answers, ask the producers these questions, that’s why they're profitable.
- If PI&O’s Preliminary Specification makes actual overhead variable, what does this renewed interest in shutting-in consider to do with the producers overhead? The key question, and why what they’re doing doesn’t work. Their overhead is 100% fixed. The same at any level of the production profile. Therefore their profits may appear even more specious as a result. But they do have a plan of course, just lay the overhead off. Those people that were just hanging on by their fingertips trying to keep up while doing ten peoples work, might be able to let go soon. And those that are remaining get ready for more work and soon it will be your turn too. Isn’t oil and gas fun!
Just as the producers told the service industry to cut their costs by 25%, they immediately jumped at the opportunity and reduced the volume of their business which was already on its knees due to this bureaucratically induced depression. This too will inspire and motivate the remaining few people left in the producers to redouble their efforts again. As I said on Friday to the bureaucrats, before you go, initiate and fund the Preliminary Specification. That way you can do something positive for once in your lives.
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for profitable North American energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.
Posted by Paul Cox at 6:30 AM 0 comments
Friday, March 27, 2020
Epic Dishonesty
Shutting in production is the only remedy to overproduction and oversupply which PI&O suggest has been ongoing since the late 1970’s in North America. Ours has been resisted by producers for every possible reason under the sun. The costs and risks of shutting in, as noted in oilprice.com, were never mentioned at any time before and are specious, as there are a variety of temporary operational reasons producers shut-in production, such as workovers etc. The internal processes to shut-in on a wholesale basis don’t exist. Operational decision making authority resides with the Joint Operating Committee. One of the reasons that we have moved to make the Joint Operating Committee the key organizational construct in the Preliminary Specification. And the current systems information in oil and gas as to which property is profitable doesn’t exist. However these processes to shut-in production can be developed by the engineers and by developing the Preliminary Specification. Alternatively if they persist in not wanting to do that, then go out of business.
In a World Oil article it was mentioned that the lack of storage would force the producers to shut-in substantial volumes of production. They indicated that at many times in the past shutting in had been conducted for a variety of reasons, most specifically the 1986 OPEC actions to flood the market. I’m having a hard time remembering these actions. What I recall was the phenomenon of producers crying “oh, whoa is me.” Nothing was done then and only when the global oil storage is full, and prices go negative do bureaucrats wake from their slumber. This is a continuation of the dishonesty we’ve seen over the past fourteen years that PI&O have been actively developing the Preliminary Specification and promoting our solution. Does anyone remember the long held belief in “market rebalancing.” Or how about the common call that we’ve been here before and it always gets better. How many times have we heard the other industry standard bearer of “capital discipline.” There’s also the “we’ll muddle through, and do nothing” as the methods that were proposed as “actions” to deal with the declining prices and destruction of value.
I grant them today’s commentary reflects a change in the bureaucrats tone. They’re not blaming anyone and focusing on their own actions that would be necessary to remedy the situation. This to me is amazing, albeit the horses bolted long ago and are nowhere in sight, probably deceased. If it is reasonable now to shut-in production after systemically overproducing for decades and prices are in the single digits, threatening to go negative. Why would it not be reasonable to shut-in production when the property is unprofitable? Bureaucrats should look around and notice the number of groups that are supporting their organizations. No investors, banks, the service industry and all the people they have working for them. They’ve fundamentally betrayed them with their dishonesty and destruction of their money, careers and livelihood. No one is listening to them, and to say things that are not true about our history is annoying the hell out of me.
Dear Bureaucrat, here’s an idea and a short term plan of action to deal with the situation. Bow out, but before you go, initiate and finance the development of the Preliminary Specification so that you can set in place the righting of your wrongs, reverse the destruction you’ve caused and in a way apologize to all the people you’ve betrayed. Then take a hike!
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for profitable North American energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.
Posted by Paul Cox at 1:27 PM 0 comments
User Community Developments, Part XXXIII
We have seen the extent of our good friends the bureaucrats' apparent need to destroy everything that’s in front of them. We have also seen their inability to deal with People, Ideas & Objects since 2003. They’re not interested in building profitable businesses as we are. They would conspire to derail our initiative in the many ways that they’re familiar with value destruction. Just as they’ve derailed and devastated the landscape in oil and gas. We can not afford to risk the user community to this well documented bureaucratic tendency in a naive or trusting manner. They will not be the ones who are forwarding the funds to People, Ideas & Objects. People have ceased to believe, care or take the time to listen or understand those that are and have been in power in the oil and gas industry. It may now seem that all the doors that were once open to producers at one point in time have been slammed shut. The reality is that their opportunities have been closing down since the decline in natural gas prices, as a result of shale, over a decade ago. Investors, bankers and others have seen enough on the natural gas side over this past decade, they didn’t need to know more. It just takes a while for the bureaucrats to run around and test each door for any lingering opportunities. Last week when Occidental turned to investors to step in and help them with the debt they’ve committed to, I thought that this was the height of hypocrisy, boldness and obtuseness. And maybe the end.
Producers will need to become used to this form of transaction very quickly. It won’t be just ourselves that demand cash upfront before any work gets done. After destroying the industry, and the service industry in an even more comprehensive manner, no one will be coming to their financial rescue either. The key difference is that none of their decline was anything to do with their management. To conduct any field operations or get anything done the producers will need to be paying in advance until they can reestablish their trust and good governance with those that they conduct business with. Give it a decade or so before you even try I would suggest. The abuse and destruction of the service industry is the legacy of the existing producers and they will need to deal with this very soon. $18 / barrel of oil should help out tremendously here.
Switching topics now from our budget funding dynamics to communications throughout the user community. We find during this time of self isolation, advantages to the methods of organization that People, Ideas & Objects our user community and their service provider organizations are building. There will be a diverse and dynamic community represented in our user community and service providers. Each bringing their own understanding and knowledge of how their corner of the oil and gas industry operates. Collectively the full scope and scale of the industry's knowledge will be captured. Application of this knowledge in a focused direction, toward building the most profitable means of oil and gas operations, will be achieved through the communication facilities we’re bringing to our users. We are using Google Docs with the variety of tools that are available for the purpose of enhanced communication. If you’ve not had the opportunity to use these I would suggest you give them a try as the more familiar you are with them the more valuable they become.
The nature of remote work will be a feature of the developments of the Preliminary Specification and not as a result of any virus, or bug. Access by the authorized user using the appropriate device reviewing the data and information that they require is what we’ve set out to develop within our Security & Access Control module. Augmenting these features and capabilities will be Oracle’s security applications that are comprehensive and state of the art in the Information Technology and business communities. This will apply to not only our user community but also their service provider operations and extend further to almost everyone in oil and gas that needs access to financial information.
These requirements will place new demands on the skill requirements of those who are user community members and working within their service provider organizations. Information Technologies are becoming increasingly ubiquitous and will continue to demand more from users. However, People, Ideas & Objects are expecting much more from our user community. First and foremost it is important to note that the priority that we are looking for is the knowledge and understanding of the oil and gas industry. That is paramount. However the need to be able to be active in a high technological environment during development, implementation and operations will demand that these skills be of a higher grade than what may be seen as adequate today. This will be what is required to operate in our environment but also, as we noted within the user community vision, the ability to communicate with our developers.
Secondly your ability to communicate with the People, Ideas & Objects developers in their primary skill set will be necessary to enhance the communications between yourself and our developers. It is easier for you to understand the elements of these concepts in relational theory and Java then it is for them to comprehend the full understanding of the oil and gas industry as represented in the entire user community. Therefore to enhance the communications between the developers and the user community it is by far the easiest for the user community to be able to speak generally the language of the developers. As there is no way in which the developers are ever going to fully understand the full scope and scale of the oil and gas industry that is contained within the entire user community.A reasonable approach to the task at hand I believe. The connection between these two otherwise disparate points, funding and communication, are important in that the job that is falling to the user community is becoming more critical each and every day. Our user communities leadership will be needed to provide the industry with the future and profitability that it needs. The means in which you will do that is through these enhanced communication with our developers who are well versed in the language and understanding of their own world. Our enhanced understanding of that world would facilitate better communications and in the long run a prosperous oil and gas industry. However, for our user community to be looking over their shoulders concerned about the business risks of this initiative, if the bureaucrats were going to regain control of the producers after a rally in oil and gas prices etc. etc. is unacceptable. We have to eliminate the business risk for our users in order for them to concentrate on this difficult task they have ahead of them. I don’t want to add any additional unnecessary stress or concern but after four decades of mismanagement by these bureaucrats, what other choice is there, or will there be, for industry to choose in the foreseeable future?
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for profitable North American energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.
Posted by Paul Cox at 6:30 AM 0 comments
Labels: Communication, Community, Service-Provider, User