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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Economics of CCS CO2-EOR and permanent CO2 sequestration in the UKCS

Wright, Alfiya January 2018 (has links)
Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) technology could help reduce anthropogenic CO2 emissions to the atmosphere. So far, CCS has failed to attract government support in the UK due to high costs of implementation. The broad deployment of CO2-EOR could aid the development of CCS by providing additional revenue streams for investors. The success of the CO2- EOR in the United States has raised the question of whether this success could be replicated in the UKCS. This thesis answers these questions by introducing two distinct models, which analyse the similarities and differences between the two oil provinces from the subsurface and economic perspectives. The first model integrates into the economic framework the behaviour of oil and CO2 in a reservoir. The model is applied to an oil field in the North Sea. It analyses whether the screening criteria developed based on the onshore US experience to screen for oil field candidates for the CO2 would be suitable for the oil fields in the UKCS. The second model is a theoretical CO2-EOR with storage model, which analyses how the inclusion of permanent storage changes the economics of CO2-EOR. The CO2-EOR with storage model allows for an endogenous switching point between the CO2-EOR and the permanent CO2 storage phase depending on the various economic factors, such as oil prices, sequestration subsidies and fees, CO2 price, and oil and gas tax rates. The CO2-EOR with storage model shows different behaviour compared to the case without permanent storage. On the policy level, the main difference between the two countries revealed that the UK strongly focuses on cutting CO2 emissions while the U.S. on boosting domestic oil production. Therefore, the third study in this thesis investigates the net carbon footprint of the CO2-EOR activity in the North Sea.
32

Efeito da deformação plástica na corrosão do aço API 5L X65 em solução ácida de NaCl /

Oliveira, Mariana Cristina de, 1991- January 2018 (has links)
Orientador: Eduardo Norberto Codaro / Coorientadora: Heloisa Andréa Acciari / Banca: Roberto Zenhei Nakazato / Banca: Rosinei Batista Ribeiro / Resumo: O objetivo deste trabalho foi investigar a influência da deformação plástica no comportamento corrosivo de oleodutos em ambiente ácido contendo cloreto de sódio. As tubulações trabalham em ambiente altamente corrosivo e estão sujeitas à deformação plástica, o que altera as propriedades mecânicas do aço. Com isso é necessário avaliar a integridade da tubulação em serviço. Para tanto retirou-se amostras de uma tubulação do aço de baixo carbono API 5L X65, um dos mais utilizados pela indústria do petróleo e gás para fabricação de tubulações de transporte. As amostras foram deformadas plasticamente em 0,5%; 1,0%; 1,5%; 2,0% e 2,5% por meio de um ensaio de tração. A microestrutura das amostras deformadas foi caracterizada, através da microscopia óptica e eletrônica de varredura, apresentando uma matriz de ferrita - perlita fina. Uma nova análise microestrutural foi realizada após os ensaios de corrosão, indicando que o aço sofre um processo de corrosão generalizada. Para avaliar o comportamento corrosivo foram realizados testes laboratoriais de imersão e eletroquímicos para caracterizar o processo corrosivo em solução ácida contendo 3% de cloreto de sódio. O teste de imersão teve a finalidade de comparar a perda de massa de uma amostra sem deformação plástica e outra com deformação plástica de 2,5%. Os resultados indicaram que não há diferença significativa entre as amostras. Utilizou se as técnicas eletroquímicas de OCP, polarização de Tafel, EIS e Permeação de hidrogênio, em tod... (Resumo completo, clicar acesso eletrônico abaixo) / Abstract: This work aims to investigate the influence of plastic deformation on the corrosive behavior of pipelines in acidic environment containing sodium chloride. The pipelines work in a highly corrosive environment and are subject to plastic deformation, which alters the steel's mechanical properties. Therefore, integrity assessment of a pipeline in service is necessary. For this purpose, samples were taken from a pipeline of API 5L X65 low carbon steel, one of the most used by the oil and gas industry to manufacture transport pipelines. The samples were plastically deformed in 0.5%; 1.0%; 1.5%; 2.0% and 2.5% by a tensile test. The microstructure of deformed samples was characterized by optical and scanning electronic microscopy, presenting a fine ferrite and pearlite matrix. A new microstructural analysis was performed after the corrosion tests, indicating that the corrosion process is uniform. The corrosive behavior was assessed by laboratory immersion and electrochemical tests to characterize the corrosive process in acid solution containing sodium chloride 3%. The immersion test was used to compare the mass loss between a sample without plastic deformation and another 2,5% plastic deformed. The results indicated that there was no significant difference between the samples. It was used the OCP, polarization of Tafel, EIS and Hydrogen Permeation electrochemical techniques, all techniques showed a uniform corrosion process. The corrosion process did not present significant variati... (Complete abstract click electronic access below) / Mestre
33

A study of the household cooking oil market in Hong Kong /

Ho, Sai-pak, Alfred. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.B.A.)--University of Hong Kong, 1982.
34

The production of oilseeds in Ethiopia: value chain analysis and the benefit that accrue to the primary producers.

Fanta, Elias Gebreselassie. January 2005 (has links)
<p>Oilseed is the third most important export item in Ethiopian foreign trade. It has registered a high export growth rate over recent years both in terms of volume and value. Besides its growing share in export, it is widely used for the extraction of edible oil and oilcake that is supplied to the domestic market. Although farmers are the primary producers of oilseeds, they are not able to benefit from the growing market share of the product due to the fact that they find themselves at the end of an extended market chain. As a result they only receive a very small proportion of what the final buyers are paying for the oilseed products. In addition, there is not much experience on the part of the farmers to process oilseeds, change it to edible oil and oilcake and retain the value addition in the local economy. This thesis used the value chain approach to investigate the possibilities for the primary producers to increase their income share from the selling of their products either by directly selling to exporters or by processing oilseeds, producing edible oil and oilcake, and retaining the value addition in the local economy.</p>
35

The production of oilseeds in Ethiopia: value chain analysis and the benefit that accrue to the primary producers.

Fanta, Elias Gebreselassie. January 2005 (has links)
<p>Oilseed is the third most important export item in Ethiopian foreign trade. It has registered a high export growth rate over recent years both in terms of volume and value. Besides its growing share in export, it is widely used for the extraction of edible oil and oilcake that is supplied to the domestic market. Although farmers are the primary producers of oilseeds, they are not able to benefit from the growing market share of the product due to the fact that they find themselves at the end of an extended market chain. As a result they only receive a very small proportion of what the final buyers are paying for the oilseed products. In addition, there is not much experience on the part of the farmers to process oilseeds, change it to edible oil and oilcake and retain the value addition in the local economy. This thesis used the value chain approach to investigate the possibilities for the primary producers to increase their income share from the selling of their products either by directly selling to exporters or by processing oilseeds, producing edible oil and oilcake, and retaining the value addition in the local economy.</p>
36

Wettbewerbsverhalten der deutschen Mineralölindustrie im Kraftstoffeinzelhandel, insbesondere Preisverhalten : zur Bestimmung von Kollusion und kollektiver Marktbeherrschung im Kartellrecht /

Reiber, Oliver. January 2009 (has links)
Zugl.: München, Universiẗat der Bundeswehr, Diss., 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 289-308).
37

Factors affecting environmental sustainability of the downstream oil industry in Western Cape, South Africa

Tondhlana, Lawrence January 2018 (has links)
Thesis (MTech (Business Administration))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2018. / The oil industry has been a major contributor to economic development in many countries; providing jobs, revenue, infrastructure and businesses to third parties. However, this development has also come with adversity on the physical environment. The oil industry accounts for the highest Green House Gas (GHG) emissions in the world, making it the number one polluter. In addition, South Africa has been regarded as the biggest polluter in Africa, with fossil-based fuel cited as the major cause of environmental degradation. South Africa’s physical environment is also cited as having degraded more than most countries in Africa. This proposition requires players in the oil industry to urgently address this situation. As the future of economic development is likely to be spearheaded by the oil industry, concerns have been raised at the slow rate of addressing oil companies’ operations which causes the environment to be less sustainable. This study uses a qualitative content analysis to explore the oil companies’ actions towards addressing environmental adversity caused by their unsustainable operations. In order to be environmental sustainable, oil companies must; incorporate environmental sustainability into missions and visions, financial investment into sustainable initiatives, involve top management in environmental programs, engage stakeholder, comply and align organisational processes and operations with environmental legislations and introducing renewable energy.
38

Licensing or safety : the regulatory dilemma of the Ghana Petroleum Commission

Akumperigya, Rainer January 2015 (has links)
The proposition of the thesis is, in its role as the lead offshore petroleum regulator in Ghana, the Petroleum Commission is not competent enough to oversee robust offshore health and safety regulation. Two accounts are developed to support this claim. First, the conferment of dual licensing and health and safety regulatory functions on the Petroleum Commission gives rise to a potential conflict. Secondly, even recognising a distinction between formal and de facto independence, neither is present in the Petroleum Commission. A number of factors justify these assertions: not least the fact that the law establishing the Petroleum Commission confers discretionary powers on the executive and does not provide regulatory independence as a formal requirement. In addition, the Commission's financial and administrative procedures are determinable by influences external to it. Formal independence is not, however, in itself a sufficient condition for the proper exercise of regulatory discretion. It is necessary for the regulatory body in question to be able in fact to behave independently, that is, to develop and take ownership of regulatory values, which in turn depend on the possession of relevant competence and expertise. Based on comparative analysis of global offshore regulatory regimes, and backed by empirical evidence, the thesis recommends legislative reforms in Ghana aimed at a functional separation of petroleum licensing from health and safety regulation.
39

Development and microbial community analysis of a biological treatment process for edible oil effluent

Bux, Faizal January 2003 (has links)
Thesis submitted in compliance with the requirements for the Doctoral Degree in Technology: Biotechnology at the Durban Institute of Technology, 2003. / Globally, wastewaters emanating from edible oil manufacturers contain high organic (BOD & COD) and phosphate loads and known for creating shock-loading problems for the receiving wastewater treatment installations. Discharge of poor quality final effluents also negatively impact on and cause eutrophication of natural water sources such as rivers and dams. In South Africa, a large concentration ofthe edible industries are localized in the Pietermaritzburg region of Kwa-Zulu Natal and have been regularly associated with discharge of poor quality final effluent that did not subscribe to municipal regulation standards. Current treatment of choice for wastewater's in the edible oil industry have been limited primarily to dissolved air flotation combined with the use of chemical coagulants or physical separation of oil and grease via a gravity fat trap and subsequent pH correction. These physico-chemical methods have achieved limited success and the emulsified grease tends to clog sewer pipes and pumps producing poor quality effluents. Therefore, the aim of the current research was to develop suitable treatment technology focussing on adapting activated sludge process to remediate edible oil effluents and determine the microbial community of the process using novel molecular techniques. / D
40

Oil enclave economy and sexual liaisons in Nigeria's Niger Delta region

Gandu, Yohanna Kagoro January 2011 (has links)
This thesis examines the intersection of oil enclave economy and the phenomenon of sexual liaisons in Nigeria’s Niger Delta region. The particular focus of this thesis is on the extent to which oil enclavity contributes to the emergence of sexual liaisons between local women and expatriate oil workers. Despite the fact that the Nigerian oil industry has been subjected to considerable scholarly debate for over five decades, this aspect of the social dimension of oil has not received adequate scholarly attention. Gender-specific discourse has tended to focus more on women protest. Other aspects, such as gender-specific violence that women in the region have had to live with, are either ignored or poorly articulated. Picketing of oil platforms by protesting women is celebrated as signs that women are active in the struggle against oil Transnational Companies (TNCs). While women protest is a significant struggle against oil TNCs, it has the potential of blurring our intellectual focus on the specific challenges confronting women in the Niger Delta. This study shows that since the inauguration of the Willink Commission in 1957, national palliatives meant to alleviate poverty in the Niger Delta region have not been gender sensitive. A review of the 1957 Willink Commission and others that came after it shows that the Nigerian state is yet to address the peculiar problems that the oil industry has brought to the women folk in the region. The paradox is that while oil provides enormous wealth and means of patronage to the Nigerian state elite, the oil TNCs, and better paid expatriate oil workers, a large section of the local Oil Bearing Communities (OBCs), especially women and unemployed youth, are not only dispossessed but survive in an environment characterised by anxiety and misery. With limited survival alternatives, youths resort to violent protest including oil thefts and bunkering. Local women are also immersed in this debacle because some of them resort to sexual liaisons with economically empowered expatriate oil workers as an alternative means of survival. This study therefore shifts the focus to women by exploring the extent to which sexual liaison reflects the contradictions in the enclave oil economy. The study employed an enclave economy conceptual framework to demonstrate that oil extractive activities compromise and distort the local economies of OBCs. This situation compels local women to seek for alternative means of survival by entering into sexual liaisons with more financially privileged expatriate oil workers. The study reviewed relevant secondary documentary sources of data. Further, it employed primary data collection techniques which include in-depth interviews/life histories, ethnographic observations, focus group discussions, and visual sociology. Besides obtaining the social profile and challenges facing the women involved in sexual liaisons with expatriate oil workers, the study provides an outline of participants’ narratives on the different social and economic dimensions of the intersection of oil enclave economy and sexual liaisons. The study found that some of the women involved in sexual liaisons with expatriate oil workers have been abandoned with ‘fatherless’ children. Some of them have also been rejected by their immediate family members and, in some cases, by their community. The study also found that the phenomenon of sexual liaisons and the incidents of abandoned ‘fatherless’ children that result from the practice, has over the years been played out through local resentment against oil TNCs and their expatriate employees. This finding helps to fill the gap in narratives and to make sense of the civic revolt and deepening instability in the Niger Delta region.

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