Above, you'll find a list of how many drilled but
uncompleted wells (DUC) can be found in our largest oil - producing regions.
This has led «drilled but
uncompleted wells» to reach record highs and limited the amount of revenue NOW, Inc is producing.
U.S. shale continues to add output, and they also have a huge backlog of drilled but
uncompleted wells.
It is also because of the backlog of drilled but
uncompleted wells that are being brought on production at a fraction of the incremental cost of drilling new wells.
Not exact matches
The Zeigarnik effect states that people remember
uncompleted or interrupted tasks
better than completed ones.
One of the big factors here is the drilled but
uncompleted fracked
wells.
Total frack sand demand in the 90 million to 100 million ton range assuming a flat rig count, a 15 % -20 % increase in sand per
well, and completion of several DUC (drilled,
uncompleted)
wells.
The two
best sets of biographies are by John Campbell and, as yet
uncompleted, most recently by Charles Moore.
Nine
uncompleted cars, as
well as the jigs, bucks, and other tooling needed to build more, were destroyed.
Both point to our understanding of «unfinished» as
uncompleted, with a sense of unfinished as unframed, without any kind of spatial boundary as
well as without a temporal end, which is then extended to a different sense of «unfinished,» reflected in the state of ruin and decline, through the works of Cady Noland and Robert Gober.
«Many, many companies reported that they were leaving
wells uncompleted in order to accommodate the gathering capacity of the gas gatherers,» he said.
If you are willing to assist in the transition (doing things like training your successor, finishing up
uncompleted projects, or writing an outline of your daily work responsibilities and / or unfinished project statuses), this will help ensure that you leave your job on a
good footing with your employer and colleagues.
The Ziegarnik Effect, in simple terms, is the propensity of human beings to remember
uncompleted or interrupted tasks
better than completed tasks.
Her speculation, later confirmed, was that people remember
uncompleted or interrupted tasks
better than completed tasks.