Upstream Cynic

5.1K posts

Upstream Cynic

Upstream Cynic

@OGJV84

Upstream Energy guy who took far to long to realized everyone else was bullshitting as well.

Calgary & Midland شامل ہوئے Ekim 2021
629 فالونگ349 فالوورز
Jack Prandelli
Jack Prandelli@jackprandelli·
Think of a water gun The more water pressure inside, the harder it shoots. If you block the nozzle and release it later the water comes out just fine because the pressure was always there waiting. Now imagine a nearly empty water gun with almost no pressure left. Block it for a few weeks and the seal warps, air gets in, and when you unblock it barely trickles. The mechanism is damaged. That's exactly the difference between Saudi reservoirs and Iranian ones. Saudi has strong natural pressure you can pause production and restart without consequence. Iran's reservoirs are already running low pressure, meaning the oil barely pushes itself up as it is. Force those wells to stop which is what happens when Kharg Island storage fills up and there's nowhere to send the oil and water from surrounding rock seeps in to fill the void. Once that happens, the pressure doesn't rebuild. The water stays and the well produces a fraction of what it used to, permanently. That's the damage Bessent was referring to. Not an explosion, not a military strike just geology doing what geology does when you interfere with a fragile system. Don't forget to subscribe to my newsletter my latest article is here 👇 open.substack.com/pub/themerchan…
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Gublo 🇨🇦
Gublo 🇨🇦@Gubloinvestor·
Indian international students in Canada work at Fast food restaurants to get their permanent residency. Seems easy.. But what people don’t know about them is.. They are hardworking.. They have no family here.. They go through a lot due to constant changing immigration policies.. They get no meal on time.. They get no care of anyone when sick.. They have strong work ethics.. They have strong desire to contribute to the community and country.. They get exploited.. They get treatment like slave in many cases They get trapped by system.. They overpaid fees… They were lured in.. They take their youth and gain Tax slave for next 40-45 years.. i have mass respect for anyone who is trying to make it.. More power to international students who are trying to make it here…
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Upstream Cynic
Upstream Cynic@OGJV84·
@kpac_15 I’m sure they are thinking of ways right now to get Alberta $ to help offset the losses…
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Simp Police🚨
Simp Police🚨@SimpPolice911·
Your pussy is just trash
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Upstream Cynic
Upstream Cynic@OGJV84·
@jiggyOG__ Not every Nigerian is brilliant…the average IQ is like 80, a big chunk of the smart ambitious fraction leave…I don’t see how a nation can change if the west strip mines its talent..
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Jiggy O’G 6s🌟
Jiggy O’G 6s🌟@jiggyOG__·
The system will not allow talented people succeed & if by chance they do, it won’t allow them into governance without first turning them into a monster like the incompetent politicians running the system. Nigerians are brilliant abroad & are systemized to be incompetent at home.
Upstream Cynic@OGJV84

@jeremiahscholl @marcportermagee You don’t, you leave the talented Nigerians in Nigeria so they can build their own nation for their own benefit and uplift their own people..

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Marc Porter Magee 🎓
Marc Porter Magee 🎓@marcportermagee·
“the group that stands out the most is second-generation Nigerian Americans. Their educational attainment exceeds all other racial/ethnic groups, including Asian Americans”
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Upstream Cynic
Upstream Cynic@OGJV84·
@ShaleTier7 @zerohedge Carbonate reservoirs are real tricky, but this view put forward that they are some sort of black box where people can’t make any educated reservoir management decisions and that they are in effect on water drive autopilot to push oil into dimension X, is strange to me..
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zerohedge
zerohedge@zerohedge·
And here is the math x.com/zerohedge/stat…
Daniel S. Loeb@DanielSLoeb1

This is correct. Iran can’t simply turn off its oil production due to issues of water encroaching its wells. From Claude: This is a well-known technical challenge in petroleum engineering. If Iran were to deliberately curtail or shut in production across its major fields, water infiltration (also called water influx or water encroachment) would be a serious and potentially irreversible problem. Here’s why: The Core Mechanics Most of Iran’s giant fields — Ahvaz, Gachsaran, Marun, Aghajari — are carbonate reservoirs under natural water drive. Aquifers underlying or flanking the reservoir rock are under pressure, and they push water upward into the pore space as oil is produced. When you stop producing oil, you remove the pressure sink that was keeping water at bay. The aquifer doesn’t stop — it keeps pushing. Specific Technical Problems 1. Water Coning and Cresting In vertical and horizontal wells respectively, shutting in production removes the drawdown that was managing the water-oil contact. When production resumes, the water-oil interface may have moved upward significantly, meaning wells that were previously clean producers now produce predominantly water. 2. Irreversible Aquifer Encroachment Carbonate reservoirs like Iran’s have highly heterogeneous permeability — fractures, vugs, and matrix. Water preferentially invades high-permeability channels (fractures) during a shut-in, bypassing oil in the matrix. This oil becomes residually trapped and is extremely difficult to recover later. The damage is often permanent. 3. Wellbore Flooding In wells that are shut in rather than properly killed, water can migrate up the wellbore itself, particularly in older or poorly-cemented completions. Resuming production from a water-filled wellbore requires costly workover operations and risks formation damage. 4. Pressure Redistribution and Cross-Flow In multi-zone completions (common in Iran’s stacked carbonate pays), shutting in causes pressure to equilibrate between zones. Water from a water-bearing zone can cross-flow into an oil-bearing zone downhole, contaminating it without any surface signal. 5. Reservoir Pressure Maintenance Complications Iran has been injecting water into many of its fields (e.g., via the NIOC EOR programs) specifically to maintain pressure and slow natural aquifer encroachment. A sudden shut-in disrupts the carefully managed injection/production balance, potentially causing localized pressure spikes or collapses that further destabilize the water-oil contact geometry. The Scale Problem Iran’s fields are among the largest and most complex carbonate systems in the world, some with very active aquifers. The Asmari and Bangestan formations have notoriously high natural water drive energy. Unlike sandstone reservoirs where water movement is relatively slow and predictable, fractured carbonates can see very rapid water breakthrough once the equilibrium is disturbed. Practical Consequence A prolonged shut-in — even of a few months — across major Iranian fields could permanently impair ultimate recovery factors, potentially stranding hundreds of millions of barrels of recoverable oil. This is why, even during sanctions regimes, Iran has tried to maintain at least minimum production levels rather than fully shutting fields in. The engineering cost of a cold shut-in followed by restart is enormous, and the reservoir damage may not become fully apparent until years later when water cuts rise to uneconomic levels. It’s a meaningful deterrent to any strategy that contemplates a clean “off switch” for Iranian production.

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Upstream Cynic
Upstream Cynic@OGJV84·
@jeremiahscholl @marcportermagee “The system” It didn’t fall from the sky…it’s the product of the political class and its economic and cultural elites… Talented Nigerians ceding that ground to a shifting group of kleptocratic lunatics doesn’t help anyone..Capital and knowledge are not the issue.
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Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson@sarobertsonca·
Steven Guilbeault: "It is somewhat ironic that there is this narrative, pedalled by Premier Smith, that the Liberal government has been unfair to Albertans. If you look at the data, oil production increased more rapidly under Justin Trudeau than it did under Stephen Harper."
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Razor Oil
Razor Oil@RazorOil·
@nenshi Naheed, to be honest I am still a little traumatized by you guys not inspecting the water pipes in Calgary that were blowing up on us after you left. I don't think you did a good job Sir.
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Naheed Nenshi
Naheed Nenshi@nenshi·
We released our energy plan last month. One of our core proposals: a new West Coast pipeline following the TMX right-of-way to B.C.'s southern coast, built with Indigenous partners, real consultation, and a route that actually has a path forward. This week, the federal government is reported to be considering exactly that. This is what good policy under good leadership looks like: realistic, collaborative, and ready for action. Alberta's energy future is too important for chaos and posturing. It needs a steady hand, a clear plan, and a government that's ready to lead. Alberta's New Democrats are ready.
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Michael McAteer
Michael McAteer@Monetarius·
@JigarShahDC Private capital is not stepping up to plate to invest in new pipelines that Alberta wants to expand their development of the oil sands.
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Jigar Shah
Jigar Shah@JigarShahDC·
Chris Wright and Doug Burgum got on a call with 200 top oil and gas executives and begged them to drill more.⁣ ⁣ They all said no. High prices won't last. Not a good investment.⁣ ⁣ Instead oil executives are selling their own stock.
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