The exploration community tends to talk about the big companies, the big prospects as well as the big failures. But in the meantime, the smaller projects can be just as interesting. The cover story of this issue dives into a few of those “smaller” projects, all driven by passionate people with a strong technical foundation in the oil business. It is a reflection of conversations we had at the recent NAPE Conference in Houston, where many small American independents market their prospects for investors. And instead of slick brochures, what you find at NAPE are the geologists who did all the work themselves, all the way from prospect identification to seeking a driller to prove the volumes. It is a great example of the entrepreneurial spirit that drives the American oil and gas industry, probably beyond what all these individual companies do. And of course, this is just one article in this issue; there are many more, as always.

Columns
FIRSTS
8 – Subsurface noise
10 – Energy matters – by Rodney Garrard
11 – Regional update – by Ian Cross
12 – Striking oil – New oil in an old field
INSIGHTS
84 – A Geologist Ruins Everything – You may not be thinking about politics… – by Juan Cottier
85 – Reservoir modelling – No B without A
86 – HotSpot – Conjugate margins in the Indian Ocean – by NVentures
88 – Use your brines – What else is hiding in your reservoir brine? – by István Nagy-Korodi
89 – Petroleum Systems –The tricky part of resource assessments within gas-dominated basins or petroleum systems – by Lukasz Krawczynski and Martin Neumaier
90 – Tectonics or soft-sediment deformation? – by Molly Turko
92 – Mid Atlantic ocean floor at outcrop – by Simon Schneider and Colm S. Pierce
94 – Vertical Geology – The very first core cut in the UK North Sea
Features
COVER STORY
14 – The American small independent operator – A unique blend of geology and entrepreneurship
EXPLORATION OPPORTUNITIES
20 – Seeking the Sweet Spot in offshore Ecuador ’s Sweet Shop – Searcher
36 – Salt of the Earth: Imaging the Gulf’s hidden structures – TGS
50 – Morocco’s oceanic crust – A new exploration paradigm – Geoex MCG
OIL & GAS
26 – Mexico – what’s happening
27 – Venezuela, Greenland, Iran and oil
28 – Serendipity maximisation
30 – A round-up of key development projects across Europe – a subsurface summary – David Moseley
32 – What are we risking and why is it important? – Jan de Jager
33 – Keep that well
34 – Frac hit – how does it work?
35 – “It is quite a risk hiring you” – Oscar Miron
FEATURES
42 – Applying Canadian oil industry technology abroad – Tako Koning
44 – Western Pyrenees foothills – the hotspot for natural hydrogen – Henri Puntous, Jean-Marc Fleury, Molly Boka-Mene, Aurore Laurent and Benoit Hauville
46 – Long-distance up-flank oil migration offshore Brazil – Sharon Cornelius, Kenneth Shipper, Paul Mann and Andrew Pepper
48 – United Downs – it is too early to uncork the bottle
PORTRAITS
56 – The story behind Mexico’s biggest discovery in decades
GEOTHERMAL ENERGY
62 – World’s largest geothermal reserves? – Elliot Yearsley
63 – Slim is smart
64 – The critical role of cement
SUBSURFACE STORAGE
66 – Carbon capture and mineralisation pilots in the Middle East
68 – The subsurface is a key factor in explaining the poor result of the recent Danish CCS tender
69 – The CCS parallel universe
DEEP SEA MINERALS
72 – Japan retrieves rare-earth-rich mud from 6,000 m in deep-sea’s first – by Ronny Setså
73 – The benefits of being a second mover
74 – Are sea cucumbers in a pickle?
NEW GAS
76 – Until now, hydrogen exploration wells were drilled half-blind
77 – Too early to declare a commercial success – Arnout Everts
78 – A helium prospect without a trap
TECHNOLOGY
80 – Mistaking speed for progress – Eric Andersen
81 – Turning the tide – Leen Weijers
82 – Drilling problems? Ask your CEO
