Oil & Gas Networks — Course Home 13 modules

Self-paced · Interactive · No energy-industry background required

Understand how the world moves oil & gas — from the reservoir to the burner-tip.

A ground-up course in how hydrocarbons physically get from a mile underground to your stove, furnace, or fuel tank. We start with what's actually flowing, then build the network layer by layer: wells and gathering, processing plants, the long-haul pipelines and the stations that pressurize them, the city gate, and the last-mile mains — plus how operators control, inspect, and map it all.

13modules, ~10 min each
9+interactive widgets
0jargon left undefined

Who this is for

Anyone who needs to understand pipeline and energy networks without being a petroleum engineer — software engineers, product folks, GIS and planning staff, project managers, new field hires, or the simply curious. If you can picture water running downhill and read a map, you have everything you need to start. Every acronym is spelled out the first time it appears.

🧭 The one mental model to carry

A pipeline network is a managed pressure gradient. Gas and liquids only move from high pressure to low pressure. Compressors and pumps top the pressure back up; regulators step it back down for safe delivery. Almost everything in this course — pipe grade, station spacing, the MAOP limit, distribution tiers — is a consequence of managing pressure. Hold onto the word pressure.

The whole domain on one page

Every module below is one branch of this single picture. Skim it now — it'll fill in, piece by piece, as you go.

The oil & gas network at a glance: from reservoir to burner-tip, and everything that keeps the pressure right along the way.

The learning path

Designed to be taken in order — each module assumes the one before it. But every page stands alone if you need to jump.

Orientation — how the industry works
1

The Oil & Gas Value Chain

Upstream, midstream, downstream — follow one molecule from reservoir to burner-tip.

2

What Flows: Products & Properties

Crude, natural gas, and NGLs — and the properties (and units) that govern every decision.

Upstream into the network
3

Upstream & Gathering Systems

Wells, wellheads, and the low-pressure gathering web where the network begins.

4

Gas Processing & Treatment

Turning raw well fluid into clean, pipeline-quality gas and stable crude.

The transport network — midstream
5

Transmission Pipelines & Hydraulics

The long-haul highway: diameter, pressure, MAOP, and why pressure drops along a line.

6

Compressor & Pump Stations

Topping the pressure back up — the engines that keep the fluid moving.

7

Pipe, Materials & Protection

Line-pipe grades, coatings, cathodic protection, valves, and the welds that join it all.

8

Metering, Regulation & Custody Transfer

Measuring flow, stepping pressure down, and the meters where money changes hands.

The last mile & operations
9

Gas Distribution: The Last Mile

City gate → mains → service → meter set: how gas actually reaches a building.

10

SCADA, Control & Operations

The control room — telemetry, line pack, and running the whole system in real time.

11

Pipeline Integrity, Pigging & Safety

Corrosion, smart pigs, leak detection, class locations, and how the system stays safe.

12

Network Inventory, GIS & the Digital Twin

Two maps of one network — spatial vs. logical — plus the KPIs that decide if a system runs well.

Reference
13

Vocabulary, Glossary & Capstone Quiz

The words you'll hear daily, in one place — and a final quiz across the whole course.

How to use this course

📖

Read top to bottom

Modules build on each other. The sidebar tracks where you are and checks off what you've visited.

🎛️

Play with the widgets

Drag a pressure slider, size a pipe, read a pig trace. The interactive bits are where intuition forms.

🧠

Take the quizzes

Each module ends with a quick self-check. Active recall is how this sticks — don't skip them.

🔍

Expand the deep-dives

Optional “go deeper” panels hold the extra detail for when you want it — and stay folded when you don't.

💡 Progress is saved locally

Your visited-module checkmarks live in this browser only (no account, no server). Open index.html any time to pick up where you left off.