Monday, May 20, 2013

DC competency webinar to air 23 May

Posted on 15 May 2013

sponsored-petroskills

Drilling Contractor will host a webinar, sponsored by PetroSkills, examining personnel competency from the perspective of industry “pain points” – recruiting, screening, hiring, developing and retaining entry-level staff. Industry vitally needs huge numbers of such personnel while simultaneously meeting market needs, managing costs, satisfying regulations and fulfilling client requirements.

This webinar will build on a previous DC webinar that aired in February, which also addressed competency.

Register here so you may tune in for the new competency webinar at 10am CST on 23 May.


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PETRONAS: NOCs expand globally with increasing autonomy, financial strength

By Joanne Liou, associate editor

web_IADC_20130506_DSC2605 Dato’ Wee Yiaw Hin, PETRONAS executive vice president of exploration and production, described the transformation of the company since its inception in 1974 to a Fortune 500 company with increasing global assets, at the 2013 OTC in Houston on 6 May.

National oil companies (NOCs) continue to assume an increasingly meaningful role in the oil and gas industry, a role that may not have been expected just a couple of decades ago, Dato’ Wee Yiaw Hin, PETRONAS executive vice president of exploration and production, said at the 2013 OTC in Houston on 6 May.NOCs learned from the IOCs to take a more meaningful role in management of their own assets – in the development and operations of their own assets,” he stated. Further, with increasing strategy and operational autonomy, the capacity that they’ve acquired and their financial strength, NOCs are pushing expansion outside their home countries and across the globe, he added.

NOCs hold approximately 80% of the global reserves and production, according to Dato’ Wee, and the percentage of reserves is “expected to grow as (NOCs) expand and others find more globally.” Drawing upon PETRONAS’ transformation, he explained that when the company formed in 1974, its main role was to act as a local regulator and manager of domestic research. Throughout the 1980s to 1990s, “PETRONAS started to build a lot of integrated upstream and downstream and gas projects successfully,” he noted. The company entered the international market in the ‘90s, and by 2012, Fortune Magazine ranked PETRONAS 68 and 12 in revenue and profit, respectively, in its annual listing of Fortune Global 500 Top Companies.

Operating in 55 countries, “PETRONAS is now a fully global and integrated oil and gas company,” Dato’ Wee said.

Crediting the company’s success to strategic and operational autonomy, Dato’ Wee noted that its growth has been unencumbered by governmental bureaucracy and restrictions, and PETRONAS embodies the principles of an incorporated company. “We will comply in terms of strong corporate governance, an independent board and management system,” he said. “We believe that this business model is something we can work with now, globally and in Malaysia. We should be able to stand on our own and be treated in the same way we treat the IOCs.”

PETRONAS’ daily production of 2 million bbl is set to grow by approximately 2.5% a year over the next five years via a focus on three areas: an aggressive EOR program, innovative risk service contracts for marginal and difficult fields, and aggressive exploration to grow domestic reserves and HPHT and deepwater plays, Dato’ Wee explained.

One significant difference between NOCs and IOCs continues to be the fact that NOCs often have a broader role to play in supporting the economic growth of its home country. Growth at PETRONAS, for example, has led to a 10-fold increase in economic activity in Malaysia, Dato’ Wee said. He also encouraged international service contractors to establish a presence in Malaysia, noting the continued need for more capability and technology. “We encourage the transport of technology and capability to our industry through a partnership or JV with a local service contractor,” he said. International service contractors are also encouraged to invest in Malaysia through manufacturing plants and engineering and service centers. “Today, we have 90 active PSCs in Malaysia, and we have some 30 IOCs participating and operating in Malaysia. If you can bring technology and capability, you can be competitive and you can perform; we welcome you to be successful with us.”


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Exclusive video: Keystone module enables remote control of downhole tools

Posted on 15 May 2013

http://www.drillingcontractor.org/wp-content/jw-flv-player/player.swf?file=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.drillingcontractor.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2013%2F05%2Fvideo-wfd2-05132013.flv

Paul Day, business development director for Weatherford, speaks with Drilling Contractor associate editor Katherine Scott about the company’s Keystone module on the exhibit floor of the 2013 OTC on 8 May in Houston. The Keystone module is an RFID-based, remotely operated electronic completion system to control downhole tools that can set packers or open packer setting ports, operate sliding sleeves to allow tubing to annulus circulation, close and open barrier valves, and operate fill subs. The system is made up of four elements— an RFID-hydraulic-power unit, a circulation valve, a production packer and a fall-through-flapper barrier valve.

Keystone is a trademark of Weatherford.


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Exclusive video: New composite wireline cable contains seven-conductor electrical core

Posted on 15 May 2013

http://www.drillingcontractor.org/wp-content/jw-flv-player/player.swf?file=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.drillingcontractor.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2013%2F05%2Fvideo-slb-05132013.flv

Serko Sarian, telemetry and conveyance portfolio manager for Schlumberger, talks with Drilling Contractor associate editor Katherine Scott about the company’s TuffLINE composite wireline cable on the exhibit floor at the 2013 OTC on 6 May in Houston. Developed over five years at the Schlumberger Houston Conveyance and Surface Equipment Center, the cable consists of a seven-conductor electrical core protected by two opposite wound steel armors and engineers out high-tension conveyance limitations.


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Statoil sanctions Julia development in GOM with ExxonMobil, pushes ahead with Logan

By Katherine Scott, associate editor

Caption: Speaking at the 2013 OTC, Jason Nye, senior vice president US offshore for Statoil, said the company is currently producing three fields in the Gulf of Mexico at approximately 40,000 bbls of oil/day but hopes to increase that number to approximately 200,000 bbls/day by 2020. Statoil recently also announced the sanction of the Julia field development with ExxonMobil. Speaking at the 2013 OTC, Jason Nye, senior vice president US offshore for Statoil, said the company is currently producing three fields in the Gulf of Mexico at approximately 40,000 bbls of oil/day but hopes to increase that number to approximately 200,000 bbls/day by 2020. Statoil recently also announced the sanction of the Julia field development with ExxonMobil.

Pursuing further growth in its US offshore portfolio, Statoil has sanctioned its fourth field development in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM). On 7 May, Statoil and operator ExxonMobil announced the sanction of the Julia field development; the partners each own 50%. “It’s about a $4 billion project for the first phase. I would have to say it’s one of the largest fields ever discovered in the GOM,” Jason Nye, senior vice president US offshore for Statoil, said on 8 May at the 2013 OTC in Houston. “It’s in the emerging Paleogene play, so we decided to do a phase development to reduce some of the risk because it hasn’t been widely drilled or widely produced.”

The first phase will consist of six wells, he said, and drilling operations are expected to start in 2014 and first production in early 2016. “This field is going to be producing for decades and decades, and there will be multiple phases. It’s also going to be a fantastic place to utilize some technology we’re developing and have developed going forward to extract more oil from those reservoirs.” The life of the Julia field is estimated to be up to 40 years, with an initial production rate of as much as 34,000 bbls of oil/day.

The field, located approximately 200 miles south of New Orleans, La., was discovered in 2007 and is estimated to have nearly 6 billion bbls of resource in place. The field development is projected to take approximately three years.

Julia, which is in some 7,000 ft of water and 30,000 ft under the seafloor, will be a subsea tieback to the Jack and St. Malo floating production platform, where Statoil is a co-owner with Chevron, Mr Nye said. The Jack and St. Malo platform is approximately 15 miles from Julia and was sanctioned in 2010.

Further, Statoil is pushing forward with operations in the Logan field, another Paleogene discovery and the company’s first operated discovery in the Gulf of Mexico. The company used the ultra-deepwater semisubmersible Maersk Developer to drill one well in the Logan field, which is currently in the appraisal phase, Mr Nye said. “With that one well, we’ve proved out somewhere between 1 and 2 1/2 billion bbls in place.”

With the block’s lease expiring in April 2015, Statoil has put together a tight schedule to develop Logan. “We expect to have first oil as early as 2018. This could be a stand-alone or a tie-back; it’s an interesting neighbor with some other discoveries.” Statoil will spud Logan’s appraisal well within the next week, again using the Maersk Developer, he said on 7 May, and in about 90 days will know whether to will move forward with project, though the company is very optimistic about the prospects.

Statoil currently has 340 leases in the deepwater GOM and 12 projects, operating in both the Miocene and Paleogene plays. The Miocene is more traditional, Mr Nye said, with high recoveries and high initial rates. The Paleogene play has deeper reservoirs in 7,000 to 10,000 ft of water and reservoirs at 30,000 to 31,000 ft under the seafloor. “I’d say we have a balanced portfolio because we’re evenly mixed between the more mature Miocene and the emerging Paleogene. And we have a significant presence in some of these emerging plays. (Industry has) been producing in the deepwater GOM since the ‘30s, but new plays are coming about, and we’re still finding new things.”

Statoil entered the GOM market in 2004 when the company was looking for areas with significant resource potential, Mr Nye said. “We have a long history of working in challenging and difficult environments, and we felt right at home here in the Gulf of Mexico.”

In addition to its four field developments, the company has three producing fields in its GOM portfolio, including Spiderman, Caesar Tonga and Tahiti. The three fields are currently producing at approximately 40,000 bbls of oil/day total, he said, but Statoil hopes to increase that number to about 200,000 bbls/day by 2020.

On the technology side, Statoil is pursuing a program known as “Crack the Paleogene,” which is focused on developing a tool kit of nearly 20 technologies, including electrical submersible pumps, multilateral technology, and water and gas injection. By applying these technologies, Statoil hopes to increase recovery rates from typical GOM fields from less than 10% to more than 20%, Mr Nye said. “The Gulf of Mexico has been a place where technology has been kind of the leading edge and push the envelope into deeper and deeper water and reservoirs.”


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BP commits to renewed focus on upstream oil and gas over next decade

By Katherine Scott, associate editor

web_IADC_20130506_DSC2560 Speaking at the 2013 OTC in Houston on 6 May, Lamar McKay, chief executive of BP Upstream, said the company has streamlined its upstream portfolio and is focusing on four major areas: the North Sea, Angola, Azerbaijan and the Gulf of Mexico.

Over the next decade, as much as 75% to 80% of BP‘s majority group capital expenditure will be spent in upstream, Lamar McKay, chief executive of BP Upstream, said at the 2013 OTC in Houston on 6 May. “Safe, reliable and compliant operations are the foundation for sustaining our business. With safety being at the core, we’re moving to enhance standardization, simplify our processes and drive integration across the group,” he said. “We know that at BP, to remain competitive, we need to continually adapt. We continue to take a hard look at ourselves and continually improve and refocus on how we do business.”

Mr McKay explained that the company has streamlined its portfolio to concentrate on oil and gas exploration, deepwater operations, technology development and utilization, and management of giant fields. “We moved to focus our business to a smaller operating footprint, generating cash and building a quality platform for the future.” This has primarily been achieved through a structured program of divestments and investments, as well as company reorganization to improve operations, he said. “When we decided to restructure BP Upstream, we asked ourselves a very basic question: What’s our objective? If we were to justify the immense expenditure of time, money and talent necessary to bring new energy supplies to the market, then our objective needed to be value.”

Part of the asset restructuring involved the sale of approximately 30% of BP’s well count and 50% of its pipelines while still retaining 90% of its crude reserves. “That has increased the overall quality of our remaining portfolio significantly, while simultaneously reducing its age and its complexity. We’re now more able to apply our strengths to fields that are younger with more room to grow.”

Much of BP’s current upstream focus is on Angola, Azerbaijan, the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) and the North Sea, Mr McKay said, adding that he expects these four areas to generate about half of BP’s operating income by 2020.

The North Sea is one of BP’s oldest offshore positions, “but it’s got plenty of life left in it,” he said. “After 40 years and nearly $50 billion of BP investment, we still have a staggering 40% of the resources in our portfolio yet to be produced.” He highlighted the Clair field as an example of what technology can accomplish. “This field was discovered in 1977, and due to its complex geology, first oil didn’t produce until 2005. Reserves were estimated at only 250 million bbls, but today that number could be in the billions.” He explained that insight into the field’s complex reservoir and geology was gained through a permanent 4D seismic installation that gathers time-lapsed seismic images over the same area again and again, allowing for the potential to see fluid changes over time.

Angola is the newest of the company’s four focus areas. Last December, BP started the PSVM development in Block 31 offshore Angola, which consists of four fields – Plutão, Saturno, Vénus and Marte. PSVM produces through a converted-hull FPSO that is using subsea infrastructure to develop the four fields simultaneously. “It sits in over 2,000 meters of water, features 75,000 tons of subsea equipment and 20,000 tons on the topside.” The FPSO has already produced more than 10 million bbls since coming online in December, he said, adding that Angola’s pre-salt geological formations are also excellent prospects for seismic technology in BP’s exploration program.

In Azerbaijan, BP has produced 2 billion bbls from the Caspian Sea and believes there is much more. “The region has over 40 years of oil and gas resources, and our position is strong. After 15 years of operations, we’ve produced only 18% of the available resources. We’re planning as much as $12 billion in capital expenditure between now and 2017,” he said.

The company also operates four platform hubs in the GOM, where BP is currently the largest deepwater leaseholder, with more than 700 leases, he said. “Our current plan is to invest about $4 to $5 billion a year for the rest of this decade.” BP’s GOM position is built around assets early in their life cycle, he said. “Only about 20% of our resources base has been produced.” In the GOM, BP also has three major operated projects under development: Galapagos, Na Kika Phase 3 and Mad Dog Phase 2. The operator has seven deepwater rigs in the GOM today and plans to have eight there by the end of the year.

To drive performance in these four areas, as well as other assets, BP has identified several major technology “flagships,” including seismic acquisition and interpretation, enhanced oil recovery and Field of the Future.

“Field of the Future can be described simply as turning bits of data into oil and gas incremental production and recovery,” he said. Boosting data sharing between experts sitting hundreds to thousands of miles apart, the company has laid more than 1,200 miles of fiber optic cable, “nearly the distance between Houston and Detroit.” Mr McKay explained that real-time monitoring of operating production and injection data is becoming fundamental in the management of more reservoirs. “Seismic sensors installed on the seabed gather information about a reservoirs behavior and looks for changes over time. The data is then transmitted to monitoring centers onshore where technicians can analyze it in real time. Technologies like this are helping us manage our operations from anywhere.”

Field of the Future is a registered trademark of BP.


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