Skip to main content

Global methane initiative for oil and gas

Published by , Editor - Hydrocarbon Engineering
Hydrocarbon Engineering,


The Global Methane Initiative for the Oil and Gas Sector Workshop and Exhibition took place in Al Khobar, Saudi Arabia from 27 - 30 April under the patronage of HRH Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman bin ‘Abd al-‘Aziz Al Sa‘ud, Deputy Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources. International experts gathered to discuss the challenges of balancing the ever growing worldwide need for energy with the responsibility of doing so in an environmentally sustainable manner.

“The Kingdom is fully aware that sustainable economic development will not be achieved without taking the issue of climate change into account,’’ Prince Abdulaziz said during his welcoming speech. Prince Abdulaziz reiterated the Kingdom’s commitment to devoting its full attention to making specific contributions on issues pertaining to climate change, such as methane initiatives and carbon management, to be submitted before the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2015 in Paris at the end of the year.

Saudi Aramco adopted its first environmental protection policy framework in 1963, a decade before the United Nations’ landmark conference on the Human Environment, and has an all encompassing approach to environmental stewardship. Saudi Aramco’s efforts include ensuring the proper design of facilities, innovative technological tools, conservation and waste management efforts, and comprehensive energy efficiency programmes.

Specific to the issue of tackling greenhouse gas emissions and particularly methane emissions, the company undertakes these four initiatives:

  • Methane recovery and utilisation, most notably the development of the Master Gas System 40 years ago, which captures gas produced in association with crude oil, processes it and provides it to a wide array of industries and utilities that would otherwise be consuming petroleum products. As a result, Saudi Aramco reduced its flaring to practically zero by the early 1980s.
  • A Corporate Flaring Minimisation Roadmap that establishes guidelines to further reduce and minimise flaring, and calls for the installation of flare gas recovery systems.
  • Utilisation of zero discharge technology in the company’s drilling and workover operations captures all hydrocarbons intermittently produced during drilling operations.
  • Minimising and, ideally, eliminating fugitive methane emissions from pumps, valves, tanks, pipelines and other equipment in the company’s processing facilities.

Adapted from press release by Rosalie Starling

Read the article online at: https://www.hydrocarbonengineering.com/the-environment/11052015/global-methane-initiative-for-oil-and-gas-746/

You might also like

 
 

Embed article link: (copy the HTML code below):