E&P Magazine - February 2009

As I See It

Of ice cream and presidents

The concept of continuity is especially appropriate on this day, for it is the 20th of January, the day we inaugurate a new president.

Exploration Technologies

EM for the masses

Until recently electromagnetic surveys have been the purview of a select few. One company plans to change that.

Drilling Technologies

Diversity is the key

The best way to survive industry downturns is to find new avenues for providing value through alternate services.

Completions and Production

A new look at an old problem

For industry professionals who undoubtedly spend the lion’s share of their time ‘communicating,’ it may not seem very helpful simply to say, ‘You need to do it better.’ The problem is that the best effort accounts for little when supporting infrastructure is unequal to the task.

Deepwater investment

The world financial crisis has impacted the budgets of operating companies, but deep water, which is developing into a long-term growth sector, will not be one of the line items that comes under scrutiny.

UK cuts taxes to entice investors

In a move to sharpen the country’s competitive edge, regulators in the UK are lowering taxes to attract a greater share of E&P investment.

Special Report

Cooperation puts province back on the map

Operating companies that have been active in Atlantic Canada have teamed up to speed drilling programs that could lead to additional production offshore Newfoundland and Labrador.

Digital Solutions

Finding the ‘killer app’ in industrial wireless

Technological advances, newly emergent standards, and hunger for more data at the right price are driving increased use of wireless sensor networks in the upstream oil and gas industry. Moreover, additional petroleum industry uses for wireless technology are seen in the areas of security, safety, and asset management. But as its use proliferates, so too will the need to comprehensively manage these wireless networks.

Features

An essential tool for optimizing reserves

Reservoir characterization projects should be undertaken with the end result in mind.

Atlantic Canada seeks sustainability

Newfoundland and Labrador has had its ups and downs with offshore exploration, but the approval of the Hebron development, combined with forward-looking plans initiated by the provincial government, has changed the local mood from cautiously optimistic to buoyant.

Elevated RPM with increased ROP

Application-specific roller cone bits equipped to withstand higher energy inputs can deliver better performance in critical applications.

Geologic modeling for seismic inversion

The use of impedances inverted from seismic data helps generate attributes for reservoir property analysis and estimation.

Green Point: The Next Big Shale Play?

Recent exploration in Port au Port Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador has established the presence of a rich source rock/unconventional reservoir unit within the Cambro-Ordovician Green Point formation of the Humber Arm Allochthon. Could it be the next big North American shale play?

Holistic reservoir characterization

This approach starts with raw digital data, data conditioning, and data fusion to create realistic 3-D reservoir models.

Innovative test equipment

Well testing provides answers that are not available any other way, supporting critical decisions that can affect reservoirs for their active life. Getting test data more swiftly allows operators to make faster production decisions.

Intuition to precision

New software allows wells to be drilled with fewer bits and fewer trips and aids in premium hole quality, which reduces nonproductive time in the most complex wells.

Mutiphase metering

Use of multiphase metering has seen considerable growth and adoption in the oil and gas industry the past several years. As an effective alternative to expensive and labor-intensive well-testing operations — involving test separators, cumbersome mobile well-test units, and maintenance-intensive platform facilities — the potential for growing use of multiphase meters is significant.

New system enables rigless subsea well abandonment

A uniquely engineered vessel deployment system has completed what may be the world’s deepest rigless subsea production well abandonment.

PDC technology redefines standards

PDC bit technology is fine-tuned for specific formations located in fields traditionally dominated by roller cone bit applications.

Predictive modeling reduces uncertainty

A seismic-to-simulation workflow achieved a 95% history match without porosity modifiers.

Quantec PDC sets worldwide standard

Quantec premium PDC bits are fast, tough, and stable.

Reliability – critical in slimhole drilling

Modern drilling environments require renewed focus on cost reduction. Slimhole drilling can save casing and cement costs.

Sophisticated dynamic modeling

UNIX-based finite element analysis (FEA) drilling simulation model incorporates more than 1,000,000 lines of code to accurately reflect the complexity of the total drilling system.

Subsea tool enables deepwater intervention

Intervention is necessary to maintain production levels, but when workover rig and vessel day rates are high, the costs can sometimes outweigh the benefits.

Tech Trends

Control fines migration

Nanoparticle-treated fracture proppant attracts and fixates formation fines with remarkable efficiency.

Tech Trends

A look at February tech trends.

On The Move

On the move

Who's going where in the upstream sector.

Last Word

The last dash for gas

Climate change, security of supply, and oil prices consistently well in excess of $100 a barrel in the first half of 2008 have pushed the issue of power generation to the top of the social, economic, and political agendas in many countries.

Activity Spotlight

Nova Scotia offers deepwater blocks

Increased interest in Atlantic Canada is pushing exploration into deeper water.

Another Perspective

Reinventing a company

Sometimes, a company that looks “down and out” really just needs a makeover.

Management Report

Achieving project management competence

In 2009, 40 years after NASA landed on the moon and in a world so technology-driven that seemingly only isolated tribes do not e-mail daily, one question that regularly pops up is, “What is the status of project management in the oil industry?”

Oilfield History

Yellow Dog: Icon of the American oil field

Oilpatch lore says “yellow dog” lanterns were so named because their two burning wicks resembled a dog’s glowing eyes at night. Others say the lamps cast a dog’s head shadow on the derrick floor.