SLB
-
Schlumberger beat Wall Street expectations in its second quarter and is seeing positive signals in its international growth prospects.
-
While Schlumberger, Halliburton, and Baker Hughes focus their legacy technology and service portfolios on driving up efficiency, driving down cost, and making current sources of energy less carbon intensive, they diverge on their approaches to scaling up development and deployment of breakthrough clean energy technologies.
-
For the entities formerly—and, sometimes, still—known as oilfield service companies, the energy transition presents new business challenges and opportunities. How are they managing?
-
The new data-management platform is designed to increase access to energy data.
-
The oilfield service giant said its plans to decarbonize are inclusive of Scope 3 emissions, or the emissions generated when customers use its technologies.
-
As electric vehicles make their move into the fast lane, the two high-profile companies are partnering to keep them on track.
-
“What is the drilling state” has become an important question among data scientists and automation experts. The simplest definition of a complicated concept is that it is what the driller is doing at the time.
-
Can a camera on the drill floor, or one on a mobile phone, measure what is going on during drilling or evaluate drill-bit wear more consistently than a human?
-
The service company announced that it will collaborate with Amazon Web Services to deploy its software, anchored by its Delfi Petrotechnical Suite, in the cloud.
-
The two companies have agreed to team up so their most-valued drilling-automation programs can be used together easily. The relationship has shined a bright light on drilling automation.