American Petroleum Institute API PRACTICE QUESTIONS | LIMITED TIME


 

Included in This Course

168 questions

API RP 577 PRACTICE QUESTIONS >> 58 questions

API 570 PRACTICE QUESTIONS >> 52 questions

API – 570. Closed Book (API 571& 577) >> 21 questions

BASIC PIPING INSPECTION, TERMINOLOGY AND RP 574 >> 20 questions

ASME B 16.5 >> 17 questions



Description

The American Petroleum Institute (API) is the largest U.S. trade association for the oil and natural gas industry. It claims to represent nearly 600 corporations involved in production, refinement, distribution, and many other aspects of the petroleum industry.


The association describes its mission as to promote safety across the industry globally and influence public policy in support of a strong, viable U.S. oil and natural gas industry. API's chief functions on behalf of the industry include advocacy, negotiation and lobbying with governmental, legal, and regulatory agencies; research into economic, toxicological, and environmental effects; establishment and certification of industry standards; and education outreach. API both funds and conducts research related to many aspects of the petroleum industry.




Although some oil was produced commercially before 1859 as a byproduct from salt brine wells, the American oil industry started on a major scale with the discovery of oil at the Drake Well in western Pennsylvania in 1859.


The American Petroleum Institute was founded on 20 March 1919 and based in New York City.


In 1959, at a symposium organized by the American Petroleum Institute and the Columbia Graduate School of Business for the centennial of the American oil industry, the physicist Edward Teller warned then of the danger of global climate change. Edward Teller explained that carbon dioxide "in the atmosphere causes a greenhouse effect" and that burning more fossil fuels could "melt the icecap and submerge New York".


In 1969, the API decided to move its offices to Washington, DC.




API Standards Committees are made up of subcommittees and task groups that works and maintain these standards. The committees and subcommittees are:


  • Committee on Standardization of Oilfield Equipment & Materials (CSOEM)

  • SC2- Subcommittee on Offshore Structures

  • SC5- Subcommittee on Tubular Goods

  • SC6- Subcommittee on Valves & Wellhead Equipment

  • SC8- Subcommittee on Drilling Structures & Equipment

  • SC10- Subcommittee on Well Cements

  • SC11- Subcommittee on Field Operating Equipment

  • SC13- Subcommittee on Drill Completion & Fracturing Fluids

  • SC15- Subcommittee on Fiberglass & Plastic Tubulars

  • SC16- Subcommittee on Drilling Well Control Equipment

  • SC17- Subcommittee on Subsea Production Equipment

  • SC18- Subcommittee on Quality

  • SC19- Subcommittee on Completion Equipment

  • SC20- Subcommittee on Supply Chain Management

  • SC21- Subcommittee on Materials

  • Committee on Refinery Equipment (CRE)

  • SCAST - Subcommittee on Aboveground Storage Tanks

  • SCCM - Subcommittee on Corrosion & Materials

  • SCHTE - Subcommittee on Heat Transfer Equipment

  • SCIMI - Subcommittee on Inspection and Mechanical Integrity

  • SCOPV - Subcommittee on Piping & Valves

  • SCPRS - Subcommittee on Pressure-Relieving Systems

  • SOEE - Subcommittee on Electrical Equipment

  • SOICS - Subcommittee on Instruments & Control Systems

  • SOME - Subcommittee on Mechanical Equipment

  • Pipeline Standards Committees

  • Safety and Fire Protection Committee (SFPS)

  • API Committee on Petroleum Measurement (COPM)

  • Committee on Evaporation Loss Estimation

  • Committee on Gas Fluids Measurement

  • Committee on Liquid Measurement

  • Committee on Measurement Accountability

  • Committee on Measurement Quality

  • Committee on Production Measurement & Allocation

  • Committee on Measurement Education & Training[12]


API also defines the industry standard for the energy conservation of motor oil. API SN is the latest specification to which motor oils intended for spark-ignited engines should adhere since 2010. It supersedes API SM.


API also defines and drafts standards for measurement for manufactured products such as:


  • Precision thread gauges

  • Plain plug and ring gauges

  • Thread measuring systems

  • Metrology and industrial supplies

  • Measuring instruments

  • Custom gauges

  • Precision machining and grinding

  • ISO 17025 registered calibration

  • API RP 500 and RP 505 classify the locations for electrical equipment in hazardous areas.

  • API has entered petroleum industry nomenclature in a number of areas:

  • API gravity, a measure of the density of petroleum.

  • API number, a unique identifier applied to each petroleum exploration or production well drilled in the United States.

  • API unit, a standard measure of natural gamma radiation measured in a borehole.

  • "Non-API", an item (e.g., tubular connector) not conforming to API standards

  • "Non-API", (informal) slang term for anything out of the norm.


Who this course is for:

  • Nearly 600 companies in petroleum industry
  • Oil and Gas practitioners
  • Offshore Project engineers
  • Welding Workers
  • Oil and Gas stakeholders
  • Petroleum engineers
  • Project engineers


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