![]() | DrumBeat: November 26, 2007 | The Oil Drum | Nate Hagens on "The Reality Report" with Jason Bradford at Noon EST | ![]() |
47 comments on Help us List Megaprojects
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47 comments on Help us List Megaprojects
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GAIA Host Collective
What about using the www.theoildrum.com web site instead of Wiki? You might have more control over it...? Or is it hard to implement software wise?
Rigzone has some data:
http://www.rigzone.com/data/projects/project_list.asp
Looks like a lot of details, I picked one for the US, Mad Dog:
http://www.rigzone.com/data/projects/project_detail.asp?project_id=96
They have a lot of data, but it might not be up to date. It lists Ursa at 150,000, but according to people who have actually worked there recently, it was down to 75 to 80,000. They recently drilled a new well and reworked some old ones, are back up 95,000 as of a couple of months ago.
I've been thinking about this. I think for past projects, we need to put the design capacity even if reality turns out to be less (or more - Grane was designed for 214 but has been up to 240). If we start putting in actual volumes, rather than the design plateau capacity, then we aren't treating the future and the past on an equal footing.
In that approach, the decline from 150 to 75 or 95 becomes part of the decline rate (which seems appropriate).
Perhaps this is why CERA is always talking about Production Capacity? Because they can get good data on name plate capacity numbers on facilities, but not on how the fields are actually performing.
Drupal (what TOD uses) is not really set up for collaborative editing of content.
While it's fairly easy to add a wiki to any web domain (say at www.theoildrum.com/wiki), I would submit that the "authoritativeness" of Wikipedia as a source of independent information far outweighs any danger of data loss especially since "backing up" is quite straightforward.