FMTI

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Kamis, Juni 11, 2009

New Opportunities in Old Fields

New Opportunities in Old Fields

Discipline: Reservoir Engineering
Level: Specialized

DESIGNED FOR
Reservoir and production engineers, development geoscientists, asset team leaders, acquisition & divestiture managers, and other technical personnel involved in evaluation and exploitation of reserves in mature fields

YOU WILL LEARN HOW TO
  • Recognize production and reservoir characteristics of old fields that indicate the potential for increasing reserves and value
  • Understand whether existing recovery factors are consistent with those than can be realized with effective utilization of the natural drive mechanism(s) and the appropriate use of improved recovery methods
  • Identify under-performing wells or field areas and recommend appropriate intervention.
  • Determine the ‘upside potential’ of a field, distinguishing between incremental reserves and reserve acceleration
  • Examine alternative re-development strategies by studying case histories and working example industry problems

ABOUT THE COURSE
Don’t buy or sell a producing property before taking this course! There is nearly always ‘upside’ in mature oil and gas fields that may be particularly profitable because of existing wells and infrastructure. The keys to successful exploitation of new opportunities include 1) recognition of the new opportunities, 2) quantification of the reserves, 3) evaluation of alternative methods of exploitation, and 4) economic analysis of depletion scenarios. Case studies and class problems address each of these key items and illustrate how new opportunities can be recognized and evaluated for many different types of oil and gas reservoirs. The computer-based problems will provide the student with utility programs and solution templates that can be used in the ‘real world’.

COURSE CONTENT
  1. Why Opportunities Emerge: nature of reserves growth; operating practices and their effect on new opportunities; the contribution of evolving technology
  2. Recognizing Opportunities: reservoir characteristics and production performance indicative of new opportunities, unraveling limited data, linking operator practices to new opportunities
  3. Reserves versus Upside Potential: review of reserve classification, risk assessment, value of new information, data quality control and integration
  4. Reservoir Heterogeneity & New Opportunities: categories of heterogeneity and their implications for new opportunities, reservoir compartmentalization, application of 3D seismic in ‘old fields’, identification of ‘net pay’, fractured reservoirs
  5. Exploitation Opportunities: reservoir enhancement through fluid injection, redevelopment of mature waterfloods, infill drilling – its utility, application, and value; horizontal and multilateral wells including their use in displacement projects, re-completions in stratified reservoirs, de-bottlenecking gathering systems, produced water management, co-production of water for improved recovery

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