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The oil and gas industry are experiencing a surge in drilling activity, driven by rising demand and market expansion. Boom cycles bring growth, investment, and opportunity—but they also present risks. As drilling accelerates, companies face a pivotal question: How do we sustain this momentum without compromising safety, environmental responsibility, and profitability?

 

History has shown us that during high-growth periods, industry often struggles to maintain operational discipline. Safety protocols get overlooked, environmental protections take a backseat, and short-term profits sometimes outweigh long-term sustainability. The consequences? Higher operational risks, increased incidents, regulatory penalties, costly cleanups, and rising operational overhead. These are not just risks to the bottom line – they are risks to people, ecosystems, and the industry’s financial future.

REAL TIME FLUID MANAGEMENT

How to enhance fluid containment in drilling operations to improve rig safety, increase operational efficiency and reduce remediation costs.

When it comes to environmental performance only two countries (USA & Australia) ranked worse than Canada in a 2013 study by the Conference Board of Canada*.

The study looked at 17 developed countries and while we performed better in the some areas (water quality, forest management & threatened species), for the most part Canada’s grade was below average receiving an overall mark of “D” .

A couple of recommendations the Conference Board of Canada is suggesting includes: Canada’s success in improving its environmental performance has been mixed. It has improved air quality, reduced its energy intensity, and increased the growth of forest resources relative to forest harvest. But Canada must do more to lower greenhouse gas emissions, to use its freshwater resources more wisely, and to reduce waste; to improve its overall performance, Canada must promote economic growth without further degrading the environment, partly by encouraging more sustainable consumption.

“99.99% RECOVERY OF INVERT EMULSION FLUID VOLUME FROM TUBING-TO-SURFACE TRIP USING KATCH KAN SECONDARY CONTAINMENT SYSTEM – WITH A COST SAVINGS OF 93% IN REUSED/RECOVERED DRILLING FLUID”.

Oil companies now have an opportunity to maximize operational savings by getting their drilling contractors to cut down on excessive mud costs (drilling fluids) by using the Katch Kan™ Zero Spill System™.