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This page is dedicated to the workers of the Eakring Oilfield. Workers whose contributions to all aspects of UK Oil Production, from whatever company, within UK sphere of influence (which includes Iran and Iraq) appear to have been overlooked by historians.One of the aims of this museum is to re-address this oversight.This page is a reminder to the world that Eakring and nowhere else were responsible for the following:· The first commercial oilfield in the UK sector (including the North Sea) was at DUKES WOOD and EAKRING. – Operated by first by D’Arcy Oil then by BP. ·
By
1964 this oilfield had already produced 47million barrels
of oil, this is before any field in the North Sea had been drilled. ·
The first hydrocarbon discovery in the North Sea was made by the Sea Gem
which was manned by workers employed from Eakring and indeed the majority came
from the Nottinghamshire area. Many of these men gave their lives when the rig
capsized in December 1965.
The findings from this tragedy still form part of the UK offshore operating procedures. · The first oil discovered in the UK sector (at the Forties Field) was manned by drill crew who were employed and trained at Eakring. · Many drilling techniques currently being used were first developed and tried at Eakring.
eg The Slant drilling technique, first used at Gainsborough in the 1960s, was Sir Frank Whittle invented the WORLD'S first jet powered drill first used at Plungar was developed at EAKRING and Kirklington Hall just outside Eakring. · Many (in fact most) British Drilling Engineers used during the early years in the North Sea sector received their training at Eakring. · The Dukes Wood and Eakring oilfields alone produced 2,269,305 Barrels of oil for the war effort.
There were of course other oilfields producing at this time as well as just
these two. They too were all run from Eakring by Eakring
crew. ·
The Dukes Wood and Eakring Oil
fields were producing oil when some senior officials in this country were
recommending making a deal with Nazi Germany because of the serious lack of oil.
These oilfields were making up the shortfall at this critical time. In
August 1942 Britain's secretary of Petroleum, Geoffrey Lloyd, called an
emergency meeting in London of the Oil Control Board with members of the oil
industry's advisory committee. The subject was the impending crisis in Oil. The
Admiralty had reported fuel stocks were two million barrels below safety
reserves and were sufficient to meet only two months requirement. The decision
was made to bring over American Roughnecks to drill 100 wells rapidly, they did
this in total secrecy under wartime conditions. · The oil produced at Dukes Wood and Eakring was superior in quality to Middle Eastern and North Sea Oil.
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