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Industry Glossary Term

Digital Twin

A virtual replica of physical equipment or a facility, updated with real-time field data. Subcontractors may use it to plan maintenance, anticipate failures, and align fieldwork with current asset conditions. It reduces surprises on-site and supports more accurate scope planning.

Related Terms

Spoil Pile

Industry

Excavated soil, rock, or debris removed during trenching or grading and stockpiled on-site. Subcontractors are often responsible for its placement, management, and disposal per site plans. Improper handling can trigger environmental compliance issues and project delays.

Caustic Service

Industry

Work involving equipment or piping that handles highly alkaline chemicals, such as sodium hydroxide. Subcontractors must use compatible materials and certified personnel to avoid rapid corrosion and serious chemical burns. Specialised PPE and handling procedures are typically required by the client's safety plan.

Brownfield Site

Industry

An existing facility or infrastructure that is being modified, expanded, or recommissioned rather than built from scratch. Subcontractors should expect tighter work windows, live-equipment hazards, and strict permit-to-work requirements. Scheduling and coordination with ongoing operations are critical on brownfield projects.

Mineral Estate

Industry

The legal ownership of subsurface resources like oil, gas, and minerals on a property. Subcontractors work under operators who hold mineral rights, so understanding this ownership structure clarifies who controls site access and project authorisation. Disputes over mineral estates can halt work orders without warning.

KPI (Key Performance Indicator)

Industry

A measurable target used to evaluate a subcontractor's performance on safety, productivity, or quality. Clients track KPIs to assess contract compliance and award future work. Common field KPIs include incident rates, on-time mobilisation, and equipment uptime.

Ip Rate (initial Production Rate)

Industry

The IP Rate measures a well's output immediately after it comes online, typically in barrels or mcf per day. Operators use it to assess well performance, which directly affects how quickly field service contracts ramp up or wind down. A strong IP Rate often signals sustained work volume for subcontractors on site.

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