Oil Based Drilling Fluid Waste: An Overview on Environmentally Persistent Pollutants

Operational discharges of spent drilling fluid, produced water, and accumulated drill cuttings from oil and gas industry are a continuous point source of environmental pollution. To meet the strict environmental standard for waste disposal, oil and gas industry is facing a numerous challenges in tec...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIOP conference series. Materials Science and Engineering Vol. 195; no. 1; pp. 12008 - 12016
Main Authors Siddique, Shohel, Kwoffie, Lorraine, Addae-Afoakwa, Kofi, Yates, Kyari, Njuguna, James
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bristol IOP Publishing 01.05.2017
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Summary:Operational discharges of spent drilling fluid, produced water, and accumulated drill cuttings from oil and gas industry are a continuous point source of environmental pollution. To meet the strict environmental standard for waste disposal, oil and gas industry is facing a numerous challenges in technological development to ensure a clean and safe environment. Oil and gas industry generates a large amount of spent drilling fluid, produced water, and drill cuttings, which are very different in every drilling operation in terms of composition and characterisation. This review article highlights the knowledge gap in identifying the different sources of waste streams in combined drilling waste. This paper also emphasises how different chemicals turn into environmentally significant pollutants after serving great performance in oil and gas drilling operations. For instance, oil based drilling fluid performs excellent in deeper drilling and drilling in the harsh geological conditions, but ended with (produces) a significant amount of persistent toxic pollutants in the environment. This review paper provides an overview on the basic concepts of drilling fluids and their functions, sources and characterisation of drilling wastes, and highlights some environmentally significant elements including different minerals present in drilling waste stream.
ISSN:1757-8981
1757-899X
DOI:10.1088/1757-899X/195/1/012008