Insights: Upstream studies that matter—from proppant design to resource size and methane reality

In this Oil & Gas Journal ReEnterprised podcast episode, Alex Procyk breaks down highlights from four recent upstream studies highlighted on OGJ.com.
Feb. 3, 2026

In this Insights episode of the Oil & Gas Journal ReEnterprised podcast, Alex Procyk, Upstream Editor, recaps four recent technical papers shaping today’s upstream decisions. He looks at how lightweight and ultralight proppants are influencing fracture performance and gravel-pack stability, why updated data show the Marcellus continuing to expand without signs of productivity loss, and how airborne monitoring offshore Angola is exposing gaps in reported methane emissions.

The episode is a practical walkthrough of what the latest research means for completion design, resource expectations, and environmental oversight.

Article references

If you’d like to dig deeper, the full articles are available with your membership on OGJ.com. 

Marcellus assessment shows continued expansion [Free - Members Only]

New assessment suggests substantial Appalachian shale gas resources [Premium]

Lightweight proppants improve completion [Free - Members Only]

Airborne Angolan methane monitoring reveals discrepancies [Free - Memers Only]

 

About the Author

Alex Procyk

Upstream Editor

Alex Procyk is Upstream Editor at Oil & Gas Journal. He has also served as a principal technical professional at Halliburton and as a completion engineer at ConocoPhillips. He holds a BS in chemistry (1987) from Kent State University and a PhD in chemistry (1992) from Carnegie Mellon University. He is a member of the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE).

Sign up for our eNewsletters
Get the latest news and updates