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CONFERENCE PREVIEW Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition 2010 APOGCE 18-20 October 2010 Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre Brisbane, Australia PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES
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Page 1: 2010 a Pog Ce Conference Preview

CONFERENCE PREVIEW

Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition2010 APOGCE

18-20 October 2010Brisbane Convention & Exhibition CentreBrisbane, Australia

PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 2

15 July 2010

On behalf of the Queensland Section of the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) and the conference organising committee, it is my pleasure to invite you to the 2010 Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition to be held at the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre in Brisbane, Australia, 18-20 October 2010.

The conference theme “Pushing the Boundaries”, is indeed the case today for the oil and gas business in the Asia Pacific region and the burgeoning gas and LNG sector in Queensland, in particular. The response of the industry to deliver through technical innovations from the members has been remarkable, and this conference hopes to showcase that aspect.

Delegates attending the conference are assured of an impressive array of international keynote and luncheon speakers. Distinguished members have been selected for four (4) panel sessions on the topics of “CSG to LNG”, “Petroleum Resources and Reserves”, “Environmental Management”, and “Stakeholder Engagement” which are significant issues of the day. A record number of 688 abstracts were reviewed to select 210 high quality papers from 26 countries for presentation at the conference.

The conference also includes industry training courses, a young professionals programme, a teachers programme, and opportunities for high school students to become acquainted with the industry through our schools liaison initiative.

A key part of the conference is the technical exhibition which showcases the latest technical developments and provides a platform for exhibitors to demonstrate the scope of their business, services, capabilities, and products.

To complete the conference, a number of social events have been arranged, including an icebreaker, a happy hour and a conference dinner. The Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre is an outstanding international venue for the conference and provides an excellent central location to relax and network, adjacent to the city centre and Southbank.

I look forward to welcoming you to the 2010 SPE Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition in October, so please highlight this most important event in your 2010 calendar.

Rod BresnehanConference Chairman

CONTENTSMESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN

Welcome Message …………………………

Technical Programme Committee ………..

Conduct Committee ………………………..

Schedule of Events …………………….....

Opening Session …………………………...

Keynote Session ……………………………

Topical Luncheon …………………………..

Panel Sessions …………………………….

Exhibition …………………………………….

SPE Asia Pacific Regional Awards …….

Young Professionals Workshop …………..

SPE Regional Student Paper Contest …...

Education Day ………………………………

Teachers Day ……………………………….

Conference Sponsors ……………….....

Technical Session Grid …………………….

Technical Programme ……………….....

Courses ………………………………....

Courses Registration Form ……………….

General Information ………………………..

Social Activities ………………………………

Tour Packages ………………………………

Advance Registration Form ……………….

Hotel Booking Form ………………………..

2010 APDT Ad………………………...........

2011 IPTC Ad……………………….............43

A Glance at 2010-2011.…………………….44

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TECHNICAL PROGRAMME COMMITTEEArif Azhan A. Manap, PETRONAS Research Sdn. Bhd. Andrew Marron, OMV New Zealand Ltd. Cholid Mas, SchlumbergerSaikat Mazumder, Shell Intl. Exploration and ProductionShige Miyazaki, Geoscience AustraliaMohamed Yazid, BG - T&T Arvo Nagel, Origin EnergyRalf Napalowski, BHP Billiton Petroleum Pty. Ltd.Uma Shankar Deo Pandey, Oil and Natural Gas Corp.Guillaume Plessis, NOV Grant PridecoWerner Ribul, Shell E&P Asia PacificSandeep Sharma, Schlumberger and CO2CRCNitin Shrimanker, BPSimon Smith, Origin EnergySergio Henrique Guerra de Sousa, HalliburtonErhart Stockhausen, Eastern Star GasPutu Suarsana, PT. Pertamina EPRaj Deo Tewari, SudapetWayne Warwick, ExxonMobil E&P Malaysia Inc.Tony Lake, Beach Petroleum Paul F. Worthington, Gaffney, Cline & Associates Zhao Guo, Daqing Oilfield Ltd. Co.

Rod Bresnehan, Bresnehan and Associates Pty. Ltd.(Conference Chairman) Don McMillan, Oil Gas CBM Services Pty. Ltd.(Technical Programme Committee Chairperson) Laurent Alessio, LEAP Energy D.M. Anwar Raja Ibrahim, Petro Malaysia Sdn. Bhd. Keith Boyle, Santos Ltd. Graham Bunn, Yarraine Consultancy Pty. Ltd. Anthony Brown, Baker HughesSaifon Daungkaew, Schlumberger Overseas S.A.Bruce Gunn, RISC Pty. Ltd.Margaret Hall, ExxonMobil Australia Pty. Ltd. Andry Halim, PT Pertamina Stephen Henzell, WorleyParsons Henricus Herwin, TOTAL E&P Nigeria Ltd.Ray Johnson Jnr., QGCGayatri Kartoatmodjo, Schlumberger Zis Katelis, Gaffney, Cline & Associates David Kersey, Saudi Aramco Khalil Rahman, Baker RDSLiu He, RIPED, PetroChina Co. Ltd. Sameh Macary, Chevron Australia Pty. Ltd.

CONDUCT COMMITTEE

[Back row, left to right in photo]Darren NicolsonSantos Ltd. (Young Professionals Workshop)

Mike WagnerWeatherford Australia Pty. Ltd. (Protocol)

Cyril DalmasArrow Energy Ltd. (Exhibition)

Jeremy Patch Halliburton (Exhibition)

[Front row, left to right in photo]Sarah BakerQGC (Education Day & Teachers Day)Ashish ChawlaArrow Energy Ltd. (Student Paper Contest)Daniel O’ Brien Santos Ltd. (Conduct Committee Chairperson, Courses and Publicity)Rod BresnehanBresnehan and Associates Pty. Ltd. (Conference Chairman)Don McMillanOil Gas CBM Services Pty. Ltd. (Technical Programme Committee Chairperson)Belinda WuSantos Ltd. (Young Professionals Workshop)Alberto KamenarKamenar & Associates (Sponsorship)

Ian Meynink (Not in Photo)Origin Energy (Social)

Matt Groves (Not in Photo)Origin Energy (Social)

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 4

SCHEDULE OF EVENTSAll functions, unless otherwise specified, are scheduled at the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre

Sunday, 17 October0900 – 1500 hours Young Professionals Workshop Plaza P10900 – 1700 hours Speakers/Authors Check-in Mezzanine M10900 – 1700 hours Speakers Preparation/AV Check Room Mezzanine M5 & M60900 – 1700 hours Exhibitors Move-In Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse1200 – 1430 hours Australia/New Zealand/Papua New Guinea

Council Meeting Mezzanine M21500 – 1700 hours Asia Pacific Regional Section Officers Conference Mezzanine M21500 – 1800 hours Registration Plaza Foyer1730 – 1900 hours Ice-Breaker Plaza Terrace

Monday, 18 October0700 – 0800 hours Authors/Session Chairpersons Breakfast Meeting Plaza P10730 – 1730 hours Registration Plaza Foyer0730 – 1730 hours Speakers/Authors Check-in Mezzanine M10730 – 1730 hours Speakers Preparation/AV Check Room Mezzanine M5 & M60830 – 1800 hours Exhibition Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse0900 – 1000 hours Opening Session Plaza Terrace Room1000 – 1030 hours Coffee Break Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse1030 – 1200 hours Keynote Session Plaza Terrace Room1215 – 1400 hours Topical Luncheon Mezzanine M3 & M41400 – 1530 hours Panel Session “CSG to LNG” Plaza P21400 – 1530 hours Technical Sessions Session 1: Enhanced Oil Recovery I Plaza P3 Session 2: Drilling - Technology Plaza P41400 – 1700 hours Regional Student Paper Contest-Undergraduate Division Mezzanine M21400 – 1700 hours Regional Student Paper Contest-Postgraduate Division Mezzanine M7 & M81530 – 1600 hours Tea Break Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse1600 – 1730 hours Technical Sessions Session 3: CBM, Reservoir Characterisation Plaza P2 Session 4: Estimating Formation Productivity Plaza P3 Session 5: Business Risk Management Plaza P41600 – 1730 hours Poster Session Mezzanine Foyer 1730 – 1830 hours Happy Hour Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse Tuesday, 19 October0700 – 0800 hours Authors/Session Chairpersons Breakfast Meeting Plaza Terrace Room0730 – 1730 hours Speakers/Authors Check-in Mezzanine M10730 – 1730 hours Speakers Preparation/AV Check Room Mezzanine M5 & M60730 – 1730 hours Registration Plaza Foyer0830 – 1730 hours Exhibition Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse0830 – 1000 hours Technical Sessions Session 6: Petrophysics Plaza P2 Session 7: Surface & Subsurface Integration Optimisation Plaza P3 Session 8: Knowledge Management Plaza P41000 – 1400 hours Education Day Plaza P11000 – 1030 hours Coffee Break Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse1030 – 1200 hours Technical Sessions Session 9: Reservoir Characterisation I Plaza P2 Session 10: Unconventional Resources Plaza P3 Session 11: Drilling - Case Studies Plaza P41215 – 1400 hours Topical Luncheon Mezzanine M3 & M41400 – 1530 hours Technical Sessions Session 12: CBM Formation Evaluation Plaza P2 Session 13: CO2 Storage Plaza P3

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Session 14: Human Resources Plaza P4 Session 15: Gas Supply & Technology Plaza P51530 – 1600 hours Tea Break Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse1600 – 1730 hours Panel Session “Petroleum Resources and Reserves” Plaza P21600 – 1730 hours Technical Sessions Session 16: Case Studies I Plaza P3 Session 17: Stimulation Plaza P41900 hours Conference Dinner Plaza Terrace Room

Wednesday, 20 October0700 – 0800 hours Authors/Session Chairpersons Breakfast Meeting Plaza Terrace Room0730 – 1730 hours Speakers/Authors Check-in Mezzanine M10730 – 1730 hours Speakers Preparation/AV Check Room Mezzanine M5 & M60730 – 1700 hours Registration Plaza Foyer0830 – 1600 hours Exhibition Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse0830 – 1000 hours Panel Session “Environmental Management” Plaza P20830 – 1000 hours Technical Sessions Session 18: CBM Stimulation Plaza P3 Session 19: Reservoir Characterisation II Plaza P41400 – 1700 hours Teachers’ Day Plaza P11000 – 1030 hours Coffee Break Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse1030 – 1200 hours Technical Sessions Session 20: Enhanced Oil Recovery II Plaza P2 Session 21: Well Completions Plaza P3 Session 22: HSE & Society Plaza P4 Session 23: Simulation, Artificial Intelligence & Modeling Plaza P51215 – 1400 hours Topical Luncheon Mezzanine M3 & M41400 – 1530 hours Panel Session “Stakeholder Engagement” Plaza P21400 – 1530 hours Technical Sessions Session 24: Facilities / Flow Assurance Plaza P3 Session 25: Sand Control Plaza P41530 – 1600 hours Tea Break Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse1600 – 1730 hours Technical Sessions Session 26: CBM Production Management / Forecasting Plaza P2 Session 27: Case Studies II Plaza P3 Session 28: Deepwater & Subsea Plaza P41630 – 2000 hours Exhibition Move-Out Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room Concourse

Thursday, 21 October0700 hours 2010 APOGCE Golf Tournament St. Lucia Golf Course 0800 – 0900 hours Course Registration To be determined 0900 – 1700 hours Courses To be determined -“Unconventional Reservoir Stimulation” by Kumar Ramurthy, Halliburton -“Transient Testing of CBM Wells” by George Stewart, Weatherford -“CSG to LNG Deliverability Assessment” by Saikat Mazumder, Arrow Energy Ltd.

Friday, 22 October0900 – 1300 hours Course To be determined -“Unconventional Reservoir Stimulation” by Kumar Ramurthy, Halliburton

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Monday, 18 October • 0900-1000 hoursPlaza Terrace Room

Bresnehan Behrooz

Rod Bresnehan, Conference Chairman, a Federal Government Official; and Behrooz Fattahi, 2010 SPE President; will open the conference and exhibition at the Monday, 18 October Opening Session scheduled 0900-1000 hours.

Attendance at this event will include senior management from major petroleum related companies, representatives from Government ministries and departments, engineering and technical industry professionals.

OPENING SESSION

TOPICAL LUNCHEONS

KEYNOTE SESSION

“Pushing the Boundaries – When, Where and How?- A Light Hearted, perhaps Controversial Approach to Progress”

Peter GaffneyFounding PartnerGaffney, Cline and Associates

Geoff BarkerPartnerRISC Pty. Ltd.

“Opportunities and Challenges in a Volatile Market”

Richard WardPresident – Asia Pacific RegionBaker Hughes

“QGC – Pioneers through Innovation” Catherine Tanna Managing Director QGC

“The Outlook for Energy, and the Role of Technology in Meeting Supply, Demand and Environmental Challenges”

John DashwoodChairmanExxonMobil Australia Pty. Ltd.

“CSM – Pushing the Boundaries”

Jeffrey SpathPresident, Reservoir ManagementSchlumberger

Monday, 18 October • 1030-1200 hoursPlaza Terrace Room

Monday, 18 October • 1215-1400 hoursMezzanine M3 & M4

Tuesday, 19 October • 1215-1400 hoursMezzanine M3 & M4

Wednesday, 20 October • 1215-1400 hoursMezzanine M3 & M4

R. PriyonoChairmanExecutive Agency for Upstream Oil and Gas Business Activities (BPMIGAS)

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Monday, 18 October • 1400-1530 hoursPlaza P2“CSG to LNG”

Maxwell Riley de Weijer In 2000, Australian coal seam gas (CSG) production was 10 Petajoules and since then annual production has increased more than ten-fold. Australian CSG is now presented as a viable entry into the international gas market, with traditional LNG producers looking to quickly diversify sources of supply. Simultaneously, domestic gas demand is likely to increase with environmental concerns and the introduction of an emissions trading framework, driving a move towards less carbon intensive energy sources.

All of this relies on a massive expansion in coal seam gas development and infrastructure requirements to achieve these goals. How is this being managed or hindered by public perception and governmental regulations? This panel session will bring many of the key players together to discuss the current factors and challenges facing the industry in achieving their goal while meeting stakeholder concerns, including:

What is the status of current projects?•How are companies managing reserves growth to •supply international and domestic markets?What has been the companies’ experience in •negotiating the regulatory framework?What infrastructure needs are required to facilitate •these key developments?

What is the market perception of the lower margin and lower energy value CSG to LNG, compared with more conventional LNG sources?

Panelists:David Maxwell, Senior Vice President, QGC; Martin Riley, General Manager Queensland CSG, Origin; Robbert de Weijer, Chief Operating Officer, Arrow Energy Ltd.

Tuesday, 19 October • 1600-1730 hoursPlaza P2“Petroleum Resources and Reserves”

Barker Conolly

Jones Horton

In 2007, SPE, the AAPG, the World Petroleum Council, and the SPEE jointly issued the Petroleum Resources Management System (PRMS). This was an update to previously issued guides and standards pertaining to the estimation and auditing of petroleum reserve information.

Shortly thereafter, the Australian Stock Exchange issued a proposal (exposure draft) to bring the relevant part of its own Listing Rules into line with the PRMS by specifically indicating that it (along with other systems) is an acceptable system for resource reporting. That proposal has yet to be implemented.

In 2008, after 25 years of enforcing its own limiting requirements, the SEC in the USA also proposed a modernizing of its rules by moving towards endorsing the PRMS as an acceptable reporting standard, at least in part. But US petroleum companies are still waiting for clarification of exactly how to interpret and implement the new rules.

In the meantime, we have seen a boom in the Coal Seam Methane industry here in Queensland. As the industry expands at breakneck speed, volumes of CSM being reported in the press and elsewhere do not always appear to follow the guidelines of the PRMS. Why not?

Is there one set of standards for conventional petroleum resources, and a different set for CSM? If companies list in the US, what are the differences between the PRMS and the revised SEC rules? Why are there any differences at all?

A panel has been assembled with specific expertise in the area of petroleum resource and reserves: from the points of view of estimation and auditing, market regulation, petroleum company reporting, and the technical financier. Panelists:Geoff Barker, Partner, RISC Pty. Ltd.; Frank Connolly, Australian Securities and Investments Commission; Greg Horton, Chief Reserves Engineer, Santos Ltd.; Clay Jones, Director and Chief Engineer, Project Finance, Societé Generale

PANEL SESSIONS

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Wednesday, 20 October • 1400-1530 hours Plaza P2 “Stakeholder Engagement”

Brereton Perkins Positive stakeholder engagement is fundamental to a successful development in the oil and gas industry. As the industry moves forward in both the development of unconventional resources and in remote but inhabited areas, the relationship between stakeholders and the oil and gas industry is evolving. Stakeholders may include traditional land owners, farmers, regulators, community and employee groups, environmental groups, and other commercial and industrial parties. The diversity of stakeholders is broader than seen previously, influenced by the scale of the development activities, changing community expectations, increasing environmental concerns, and different cultures in some of the developing areas. While the oil and gas industry activities may ultimately proceed with limited impact to stakeholders, the challenges raised and resulting perception of the industry in the community can have long term consequences and is a challenge that has been a focus area for the industry to reverse.

Stakeholder concerns such as access to wellsites, roads, water disposal, pipeline access and noise, to community welfare and employment, will require an understanding from operators to accept that the various stakeholders will have much more involvement and influence than previously seen. In order to meet both the future demands of the energy consumers and the stakeholders, the oil and gas industry will have to engage all the stakeholders early and appropriately. While the stakeholders and their respective concerns may vary between each different development area, the process for positive engagement with stakeholders could be commonly applied.

This panel will focus on examining the process for successful engagement with stakeholders, and consider learnings from case studies. Questions facing the industry include; who to engage, what level of engagement is required, and how to engage?

Panelists:David Brereton, Director, Centre for Social Responsibility in Mining, Sustainable Minerals Institute, The U. of Queensland; Trisha Perkins, Public & Government Affairs Manager, ExxonMobil Group of Companies in Australia;Third panelist is to be invited.

Wednesday, 20 October • 0830-1000 hoursPlaza P2“Environmental Management”

Bates Graham Schaaf Climate change is a serious threat facing our society. The overwhelming scientific consensus is that man-made emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG) of which carbon dioxide (CO2) is the most prolific, are contributing to increases in global temperatures and leading to climate change.

The principal sources of emissions are industry (power, cement, aluminium, steel etc.) and transport. Power generation from burning coal is the most intensive in releasing CO2. The oil and gas industry is a significant contributor as well with emissions coming from production, LNG and refining operations.

Based on the recently released IPCC report, global temperatures have risen on the average by about 0.7 degrees Celsius and if emissions continue unchecked, temperatures are expected to rise by between 1.8–4 degrees by 2100. This will lead to several consequences including water shortages, increasing frequency and severity of storms and severe loss of bio diversity. Increasing storms and flooding in coastal areas can have significant impacts on offshore upstream and coastal midstream and downstream operations.

An expert panel has been assembled to consider environmental management of both mitigation efforts and adaptation actions. The panel will also discuss the impacts our industry is likely to face and how we may prepare for such changes.

Panelists:Bryson Bates, Theme Leader, Climate Adaptation Flagship, CSIRO; Tasman Graham, General Manager-Infrastructure (General Management), WorleyParsons; Arno Schaaf, Business Development Director, Petroleum and Geothermal, CSIRO

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Recognition of significant technical and professional contributions is a hallmark of SPE. In appreciation and to acknowledge exceptional contributions by members, awards will be presented by the 2010 SPE President, Dr. Behrooz Fattahi, to the 2010 SPE Regional Award recipients. Presentations will be made in conjunction with the Monday topical luncheon to the recipients of the Distinguished Corporate Support Award, Service Award, the Technical Award and the Outstanding Young Member Award.

Distinguished Corporate Support Award The SPE Regional Distinguished Corporate Support Award recognises outstanding support by an organisation and distinguished service to SPE members in the region through excellence in leadership and through the commitment of time, energy and professional resources. It is intended to recognise companies that help make contributions to the support of SPE membership, programs, and events and not solely through financial assistance to the society or the petroleum industry.

Southern Asia Pacific Region

Santos Ltd. Australia

Regional Service Award The award acknowledges exceptional contributions to the Society of Petroleum Engineers at the section or regional level and recognises singular devotion of time and effort to the programmes and development of the member’s Section and Region that set it apart from the services rendered each year by many members of the Society.

Northern Asia Pacific Region

SPE ASIA PACIFIC REGIONAL AWARDS

Ramanrao AbdullahManaging DirectorHalliburton Energy Services (M) Sdn. Bhd.

Sam G. CarterSenior Reservoir Engineer Shell

Andrew K. BensonManaging DirectorCore Laboratories, China

Liu Zhenwu Vice President, Advisory Center China National Petroleum Corp.

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Suryono AdisoemartaAdvisor University & Technology AlliancesChevron Indonesia Company

Completions Optimisation and Technology

Raymond J. TibblesSand Control & Stimulation Advisor Schlumberger

Mark A. JacksonProduction Engineering AdvisorBHP Billiton Petroleum

Health, Safety, Security, Environment and Social Responsibility

Ashley (Ash) John StanleyDirector, Health, Safety, Environment & QualityAcergy

Reservoir Description and Dynamics

Nasir Haji DarmanCustodian Reservoir Engineer Petroleum Resource Development, PMUPETRONAS

Malcolm J. GerrardGerrardGeotech

Drilling Engineering

Benjamin J. GedgeVietnam Country ManagerWeatherford Vietnam LLC

Southern Asia Pacific Region

Regional Technical AwardThe award acknowledges exceptional contributions to the Society of Petroleum Engineers at the section or regional level and recognise singular devotion of time and effort to the programmes and development of technical expertise in one of the following eight disciplines: Completions Optimisation and Technology; Drilling Engineering; Formation Evaluation; Health, Safety, Security, Environment and Social Responsibility; Management and Information; Production and Operations; Project, Facilities and Construction and Reservoir Description and Dynamics.

Northern Asia Pacific Region

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Regional Outstanding Young Member AwardThe award recognises contributions and leadership to the public and the community, with respect to local custom, as well as to the Society, the profession of petroleum engineering, or the petroleum industry within the region.

Northern Asia Pacific Region Southern Asia Pacific Region

Lyrna Esmeralda Manager, Petroleum ServicesDeloitte LLP (UK)

Belinda WuProduction EngineerSantos Ltd.

“Business and Technology Innovation to Ensure Sustainable Energy”

The Asia Pacific Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition (APOGCE), co-sponsored by the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) and the Society of Indonesian Petroleum Engineers (IATMI), provides a platform for industry professionals to share knowledge, ranging from traditional applications to the use of cutting-edge technology, from general topics to specific technical areas, and from past results to present field experience. The committee would like to invite you and your organisation to be a part of this important conference by submitting abstracts, showcasing in the exhibition, and through the various sponsorship opportunities. The abstract submission deadline is 17 January 2011 and exhibition and sponsorship details are available now.

For more information please contact: Society of Petroleum Engineers

Tel: +60.3.2288.1233; Fax: +60.3.2282.1220; Email: [email protected] or visit the SPE website at www.spe.org.

Society of Petroleum Engineers

Society of Indonesian Petroleum Engineers

Sponsoring Organisations:

Supporting Organisation:

Official Sponsor:

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Sunday, 17 October • 0900-1500 hours • Plaza P1

As many Young Professionals are being placed with a higher level of responsibility in the industry, a greater emphasis is being put on young employees to step into challenging technical and managerial roles. Equally important, the Young Professionals have the responsibility to be proactively involved with the leadership development process and to be creative and innovative in order to meet the challenges. To help address these issues, the Young Professionals Workshop is designed for graduates and young professionals in the oil and gas industry under the age of 35 years or with less than 10 years industry experience in any technical discipline. Industry executives and young professionals will have the opportunity to engage in discussions about the future directions for young professionals in the oil and gas industry.

YOUNG PROFESSIONALS WORKSHOP “PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES: ENERGY CAREERS AT THE FRONTIER”

Co-Sponsors:

Sponsored By:

This year, the speakers will include:Behrooz Fattahi• , 2010 SPE PresidentLuechai Wongsirasawad• , Executive Vice President, Human Resources and Business Services Group, PTT Exploration and Production Public Co. Ltd. Karen Moses• , Executive Director - Finance and Strategy, Origin EnergyDarren Greer• , CEO, Easternwell GroupAlex Parks• , CEO, Mosaic Oil and 2005 SPE Regional Outstanding Young Member Award winner

For further information, please contact the Workshop Co-Chairpersons, Darren Nicholson, Tel: 61.7.3838.3575; Email: [email protected]; Belinda Wu, Tel: 61.7.3838.3735; Email: [email protected] or Hoagie Merry, Queensland U. of Technology/Santos, Tel: 61.4.4898.8422, Email: [email protected]

Monday, 18 October 2010 • 1400 to 1700 hoursUndergraduate Division - Mezzanine M2Postgraduate Division - Mezzanine M7 & M8

The SPE Asia Pacific Regional Student Paper Contest will be held Monday, 18 October 2010, and prizes will be awarded at the Tuesday luncheon. Prizes include an invitation to present at the 2011 SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition (ATCE) in Denver, Colorado, USA. The Organising Chairperson is Ashish Chawla, Arrow Energy Ltd. 8 entries received for the undergraduate division representing 5 academic institutions from 3 countries; and 13 entries for the postgraduate division representing 8 academic institutions and 4 countries. Conference delegates are encouraged to attend and support the student presentations.

Organising Chairperson: Ashish Chawla, Arrow Energy Ltd.

SPE ASIA PACIFIC REGIONAL STUDENT PAPER CONTEST

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Tuesday, 19 October • 1000-1400 hours • Plaza P1

The Education Day is an initiative to introduce students to the discipline of petroleum engineering, and the industry in general. 60 high school students with keen interest in science, who may consider majoring in Petroleum and related engineering programmes when they enter university, will be invited to attend.

A number of industry professionals have been invited to share their experience with students through talks on topics of general interest and relevance to the industry. Following the talks, the students will be given a guided tour of the exhibition area. They will be able to see first hand the high-end technology used by engineers and the sophisticated software available for solving many engineering problems. It is hoped that they will leave the conference with a better understanding of what petroleum engineers do and their role in the broader community. Equally important, they will also become aware that a petroleum engineering career is full of challenges, teamwork and responsibilities.

For further information, please contact the Education Day Coordinator, Sarah Baker, Tel: 61.7.3024.7427, Email: [email protected] or Shamalla Mahadevan, SPE Customer and Member Services Coordinator, Tel: 60.3.2288.1233, Email: [email protected].

EDUCATION DAY

TEACHERS’ DAYWednesday, 20 October • 1400-1700 hours • Plaza P1

Teachers’ Day is a new initiative programme that incorporates science, technology and energy topics to be introduced into the classroom in an exciting way. 25-30 high school teachers will be invited to attend this programme with an objective of introducing them to the oil and gas industry. In return, they will share their experience gained through this programme with students exposing them to make a career majoring in petroleum and related engineering program. Teachers will benefit from this programme by receiving comprehensive, objective information about the scientific concepts of energy and its importance, while discovering the world of oil and gas exploration.

As part of the programme, teachers will tour the exhibition area to learn about the latest high-technology equipment and software used by the oil and gas industry.

For further information, please contact the Teachers’ Day Coordinator, Sarah Baker, Tel: 61.7.3024.7427, Email: [email protected] or Shamalla Mahadevan, SPE Customer and Member Services Coordinator, Tel: 60.3.2288.1233, Email: [email protected].

Co- Sponsors:

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(Additions after 15 July will be reflected in the On-Site Conference Programme)

Becoming involved in the conference’s sponsorship programme is a sure way to receive recognition and establish your organisation’s presence at this prestigious conference. To learn more about sponsorship opportunities for the 2010 APOGCE, please direct enquiries to :

Jenny Chong, Senior Manager, Operations, Society of Petroleum Engineers, telephone 60.3.2288.1233, facsimile 60.3.2282.1220, e-mail [email protected]; or Sponsorship Chairperson, Alberto Kamenar, Kamenar & Associates, telephone 61.7.3202.7981, facsimile 61.7.3202.9800, e-mail [email protected]

The Society of Petroleum Engineers wishes to gratefully acknowledge the contributions and support of the following companies towards the 2010 APOGCE event.

CONFERENCE SPONSORS

Advanced Well Technologies Pty. Ltd.(Pens)

Arrow Energy(Bottled Drinking Water)

Baker Hughes(Conference Luncheon, Wednesday, 20th October 2010)

Beach Energy Ltd. (Morning Coffee Break, Monday, 18 October 2010)

ExxonMobil Australia (Conference Satchels)

Gaffney, Cline & Associates(Author’s Gifts)

Halliburton (Nametag Lanyards)

Mosaic Oil (Co-sponsor: Young Professionals Workshop)

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PTT Exploration & Production Public Co. Ltd. (PTTEP)

(Co-sponsor: Young Professionals Workshop

Santrol(Conference Programme)

Santos Ltd. (Student Paper Contest)

Origin Energy(Co-sponsor: Education Day)

Woodside Energy Ltd.(Co-sponsor: Education Day)

Exhibitors’ List:

Advanced Well Technologies AGR Petroleum Services

Archimedes Financial PlanningBaker Hughes

Calsep A/SDassault Systèmes

HalliburtonHarbison-Fischer AustraliaKamenar and Associates

Lufkin AustraliaLufkin Automation

Multiphase TechnologiesNalco Australia Pty. Ltd.National Oilwell Varco

R&D SolutionsRPS

SchlumbergerSciencesoft Ltd.

SenergyTAM International Asia Pacific

WelltecWelltrain Pty. Ltd.

The Technical Exhibition will include an international cross section of service and supply companies providing opportunities to learn about new products and improvements to existing technologies, and opportunities to make new contacts. Daily coffee/tea breaks will take place within the exhibit area.

EXHIBITION

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Plaza P2 Plaza P3 Plaza P4 Plaza P5Monday, 18 October0900-1000 hours Opening Session – Plaza Terrace Room1000-1030 hours Coffee Break – Exhibit Area1030-1200 hours Keynote Session – Plaza Terrace Room1215-1400 hours Topical Luncheon – Mezzanine M3 & M41400-1530 hours Panel Session

CSG to LNGSession 1

Enhanced Oil Recovery I

Session 2Drilling - Technology

1400-1700 hoursSPE Asia Pacific Regional Student Paper Contest Undergraduate Division – Mezzanine M2, Postgraduate Division – Mezzanine M7 & M8

1530-1600 hours Tea Break – Exhibit Area1600-1730 hours Poster Session – Mezzanine M1, M2 & M5-M8 Foyer

1600-1730 hoursSession 3

CBM, Reservoir Characterisation

Session 4Estimating Formation

Productivity

Session 5Business Risk Management

1730-1830 hours Happy Hour – Plaza Foyer & Plaza Terrace Room ConcourseTuesday, 19 October0830-1000 hours Session 6

PetrophysicsSession 7

Surface & Subsurface Integration

Optimisation

Session 8Knowledge

Management

1000-1030 hours Coffee Break – Exhibit Area1000-1400 hours Education Day – Plaza P11030-1200 hours Session 9

Reservoir Characterisation I

Session 10Unconventional

Resources

Session 11 Drilling – Case Studies

1200-1400 hours Topical Luncheon – Mezzanine M3 & M41400-1530 hours Session 12

CBM Formation Evaluation

Session 13CO2 Storage

Session 14Human Resources

Session 15Gas Supply & Technology

1530-1600 hours Tea Break – Exhibit Area1600-1730 hours Panel Session

Petroleum Resources and Reserves

Session 16Case Studies I

Session 17 Stimulation

1900 hours Conference Dinner – Plaza Terrace RoomWednesday, 20 October

0830-1000 hours Panel Session Environmental Management

Session 18CBM Stimulation

Session 19Reservoir

Characterisation II1000-1030 hours Coffee Break – Exhibit Area1030-1200 hours Session 20

Enhanced Oil Recovery II

Session 21Well Completions

Session 22HSE & Society Session 23

Simulation, Artificial Intelligence &

Modeling1215-1400 hours Topical Luncheon – Mezzanine M3 & M41400-1530 hours Panel Session

Stakeholder Engagement

Session 24Facilities / Flow

Assurance

Session 25Sand Control

1530-1600 hours Tea Break – Exhibit Area1600-1730 hours Session 26

CBM Production Management /

Forecasting

Session 27Case Studies II

Session 28Deepwater & Subsea

TECHNICAL SESSION GRID

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 17

TECHNICAL PROGRAMME

Monday, 18 October • 0900 - 1000 hoursOPENING SESSIONPlaza Terrace Room

Welcoming Address by • Rod Bresnehan, Conference Chairman, 2010 SPE Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and ExhibitionOfficial Opening by a Federal Government Official•Address by • Behrooz Fattahi, 2010 SPE President

Monday, 18 October • 1030 - 1200 hoursKEYNOTE SESSIONPlaza Terrace Room

“QGC – Pioneers through Innovation”• : Catherine Tanna, Managing Director, QGC“The Outlook for Energy and the Role of Technology •in Meeting Supply, Demand and Environmental Challenges” : John Dashwood, Chairman, ExxonMobil Australia Pty. Ltd.“CSM – Pushing the Boundaries”• : Jeffrey Spath, President, Reservoir Management, SchlumbergerR. Priyono• , Chairman, Executive Agency for Upstream Oil and Gas Business Activities (BPMIGAS)

Monday, 18 October • 1400 - 1530 hoursPANEL SESSION: CSG TO LNG Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons:Ray Johnson Jnr. QGCSimon Smith, Origin Energy

Panelists:David Maxwell, Senior Vice President, QGCRobbert de Weijer, Chief Operating Officer, Arrow Energy Ltd.Martin Riley, General Manager Queensland CSG, Origin

Monday, 18 October • 1400 – 1530 hours SESSION 1: ENHANCED OIL RECOVERY I Plaza P3

Session Chairpersons: Keith Boyle, Santos Ltd.Liu He, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina

SPE134082 Superheated Steam Huff and Puff to

Revivify a Marginal Pre-salt Heavy Oil Reservoir B. Dong and A. Xu, China Natl. Petroleum Corp.; and X. Wu, RIPED, PetroChina

134055 Novel Wet In-situ Combustion Technique Using a Semi-permeable Injection Fluid System P.S. Limkar, Delft U. of Technology

132491 High Resolution Reservoir Monitoring Using Crosswell Seismic Ajay Nalonnil and B.P. Marion, Schlumberger

Posters/Alternates 133849 Investigation of SAGD Recovery Process

in Complex Reservoir C.T. Dang, HCMC U. Technology; and W. Bae and N.T. Nguyen, Sejong U.

134064 The Effect of Rheological Properties of Alkali-Surfactant-Polymer System on Residual Oil Recovery Rate After Water Flooding W. Ma, Daqing Petroleum Inst.

133005 Design and Application of a New Acid-Alkali-Surfactant Flooding Formulation for Malaysian Reservoirs K.A. Elraies, I.M. Tan and M.T. Fathaddin, U. Teknologi PETRONAS

133419 Synthesis and Properties of Petroleum Sulphonates for Weak Alkali ASP/Alkali-Free SP Combination Flooding Y. Zhu, Q. Hou, H. Yuan, Z. Wang and J. Wu, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina

Monday, 18 October • 1400 – 1530 hours SESSION 2: DRILLING - TECHNOLOGY Plaza P4

Session Chairpersons: Anthony Brown, Baker Hughes Inc. Guillaume Plessis, NOV Grant Prideco

SPE133857 Deepwater and Critical Drilling with New

Connection Technology - Case Histories and Lessons Learned M.J. Jellison and R.B. Chandler, NOV Grant Prideco; and S.P. Langdon and J.K. Connor, Chevron Corp.

133873 Reelwell Drilling Method Emerge as a Competent Extended Reach Drilling Technology M. Mirrajabi, U. of Stavanger; J. Schubert, Texas A&M U.; and A.I. Nergaard, Seadrill Management Pte. Ltd.

132989 Wired Drill Pipe Telemetry Enables Real-Time Evaluation of Kick During Managed Pressure Drilling J. E. Gravdal and R.J. Lorentzen, Intl. Research Inst. of Stavanger ; and R.W. Time, U. of Stavanger

(Additions/changes made after 15 July 2010 will be reflected in the On-site Programme)

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 18

Posters/Alternates 132961 Improved Casing-while-Drilling

Performance Enables 20-in. and 13B (C<-in. Casing Strings to Be Drilled in Consecutively for the First Time Offshore Malaysia S.B. Cornel, Baker Hughes; and A. Hakam, A. Kassim and C.Y. Chung, Murphy Sarawak Oil Co. Ltd.

134504 Amplifier/Booster Joint Positioning Framework Design for a High Speed Wired Telemetry System in MWD/LWD Downhole Tool Environment S. Rath, U. of Houston; and R. Samuel, Landmark-Halliburton

133350 Real Time Checkshots While Drilling - Reducing the Risk In Exploration Drilling T.K. Lim and A. Ahmed, Schlumberger Asia Services Ltd.; and K.B. Zainun and A. Yusof, PETRONAS

133046 New Method for Predicting the Average Pore Diameter Using the NMR Data Calibrated to Core Analysis in a Clastic Reservoir A. Reda, Melrose Petroleum Co.; M. Darwish, Cairo U.; M. Nashaat, Rashid Petroleum Co.; and A. Hashem, Merlon Oil Co.

Monday, 18 October • 1400 – 1700 hours SPE Asia Pacific Regional Student Paper ContestUndergraduate Division – Mezzanine M2 Postgraduate Division – Mezzanine M7 & M8

Organising Chairperson: Ashish Chawla, Arrow Energy Ltd.

Undergraduate Division:Water Coning Management via Downhole Water •LoopingNapat Buranatavonsom, Chulalongkorn U., ThailandAn Analytical Micro-Model for the Deposition of •Mono-Dispersed Particles in Porous Media, With Application to Reservoir Formation DamageDaneil O’Reilly, U. of Adelaide, AustraliaA New Correlation to Evaluate Horizontal Wells •with Multiple Transverse Hydraulic Fractures in Low Permeability Oil ReservoirsArdian Pradhana Putra, Bandung Inst. of Technology, IndonesiaUtilization of Formation Water for Enhance •Coal Bed Methane Generation by In Seam Devolatilization and Biogenic ProcessTatzky Reza Setiawan, Gadjah Mada U., IndonesiaWell Test Equation to Estimate Gas Rate for Satun •Field, Gulf of ThailandThanakom Trekarnjanavong, Chulalongkorn U., ThailandApplication of CARET (Combined Aquifer •Reservoir Expansion Term) Method to Quickly Determine the Original Oil in Place (OOIP)Afdhol Zikri, Islamic U. of Riau, Indonesia

Postgraduate Division:Methyl Ester Sulfonate (MES) for Enhanced Oil •Recovery (EOR) SurfactantRudi Dova, Bandung Inst. of Technology, IndonesiaFacies Controlling Modeling and Prediction for •Favorable ReservoirsGang Hui, Research Inst. of Petroleum Exploration & Development (RIPED), ChinaExperimental Validation of Image-based Modelling •of Drainage Relative PermeabilityFurqan Hussain, U. of New South Wales, AustraliaNew Ideas for Determining Cleat Porosity and Gas •Content of CBM Material Balance EquationsHu Suming, China U. of Petroleum Beijing, ChinaEffects of Remaining Gas on CO• 2 Sequestration in Depleted Gas ReservoirsTatsuro Kawamura, Waseda U., JapanStudy and Application of Techniques of Washover •and Salvaging Permanent Type PackerLuo Fan, China U. of Petroleum Beijing, ChinaSand Control Using Chemicals Combination •(Resin) in Unconsolidated Formation (Gas Reservoirs)Gema Wahyudi Purnama, Bandung Inst. of Technology, IndonesiaResearch on Numerical Simulation of A Heavy Oil •Reservoir with Steam InjectionTao Liang, Research Inst. of Petroleum Exploration & Development (RIPED), ChinaTaking Advantage of Injectivity Decline for Sweep •Enhancing during Waterflood with Horizontal WellsThi Kim Phuong, Nguyen, U. of Adelaide, AustraliaA Discussion on Occurrence Condition and the •Exploration Methodologies for Gas HydrateXu Jun, China U. of Geosciences Beijing, ChinaOil/Water Inversion and Its Genetic Mechanism •in the Structural-Lithologic Reservoir of Low-Porosity and Low PermeabilityYang Fan, China U. of Geosciences Beijing, ChinaEffects of Grain Contact and Clay Content on •Resistivity Index at Low Water Saturations Sefer Yanici, U. of New South Wales, AustraliaSeismic Stimulation on Trapped Oil at Pore-Throat •- Two Phase Lattice Boltzmann Simulation StudyHirotatsu Yamabe, Kyoto U., Japan

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 19

Monday, 18 October • 1400 – 1530 hours SESSION 3: CBM, RESERVOIR CHARACTERISATION Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons: Bruce Gunn, RISC Pty. Ltd. Ray Johnson Jnr. QGC SPE133100 Dual Porosity Processes in Coal Seam

Reservoirs : The Effect of Heterogeneity of Coal Matrices M. Lu and L. Connell, CSIRO Petroleum

133015 Multiphysics of Coal-Gas Interactions: The Scientific Foundation for CBM Extraction J. Liu, Z. Chen, J. Wang, Y. Wu, D. Chen and H. Qu, U. of Western Australia

133489 An Alternative Mechanistic Model for Permeability Changes of Coalbeds During Primary Recovery of Methane S. Mazumder and R. Farajzadeh, Shell Intl. E&P B.V.

Posters/Alternates 133602 The Impact of Coal Matrix Water on

Permeability Behaviour During Primary and Enhanced CBM Recovery Z. Pan, L. Connell, M. Camilleri and D.D. Heryanto, CSIRO Petroleum

132885 Multiphase Hydrodynamics of Coal Seam Gas Wells V.K. Pareek, Curtin U. of Technology; and T. Mason, Australian Coalgas Experts Pty. Ltd.

133488 The Late Miocene Coalbed Methane System in the South Sumatra Basin of Indonesia S. Mazumder, Shell Intl. E&P B.V.; and I.B. Sosrowidjojo, Lemigas

133328 Coalbed Methane Production: Why Coal Permeability Matters? J. Liu, U. of Western Australia; and D. Chen, Z. Pan and L. Connell, CSIRO Petroleum

Monday, 18 October • 1600 - 1730 hoursSESSION 4: ESTIMATING FORMATION PRODUCTIVITY Plaza P3

Session Chairpersons: Khalil Rahman, Baker RDS Ltd. Werner Ribul, Shell E&P Asia Pacific SPE133826 Pushing the Boundaries for Carbonate

Productivity Estimations A. Bal, M. Altunbay, Baker Hughes; and L. Bolle, Baker Atlas - Geoscience

133822 Distinguishing Incremental From Accelerated Reserves In Infill Development Of Fluvial Tight Gas Environments Using Production Data Analysis: Theory & Case Studies J.R. Wong, QGC, BG-Group; S.T. Chipperfield and M.K. Headland, Santos Ltd.; R. Shrivastava, Advanced Well Technologies; and T.A. Blasingame, Petroleum Engineering/Texas A&M U.

132824 Green Testing at Hess, Belud East-1 Well I.S. Harmawan and J. Henson, Hess Corp.; and S.M. Habib and J. Kennedy, Hess Oil & Gas Sdn. Bhd.

Posters/Alternates134474 Potential Upside Reserves Of Shallow

Gas Discovered Within The Early Triassic Mount Goodwin Formation and the Early Permian Fossil Head Formation in the Blacktip Gas Field, Bonaparte Basin D. Wheller and A. Caudullo, Eni Australia Ltd.

132971 Turning Around Mature Field Production Performance by Finding and Producing New Pools - A Mutiara Field Case History, A Case Study of Successfully Grid Base Drilling Campaign in Fluvio-Deltaic Reservoir I.D. Wibowo, I.B. Sinaga, B.S. Ismanto, W.A. Rahmanto and I. Hermawaty, VICO Indonesia

130868 Comparing Wireline Formation Tester Derived Productivity Index to Drill Stem Test C.K. Khong, L. Chen and C. Ayan, Schlumberger; and L. Xu, J. Cai, S. Guo, M. Wu, H. Yang, Z. Hao, F. Pan and Z. Tan, CNOOC Ltd.

132889 Skin Measurement and Other Applications with New Sonic Measurement in the Gulf of Thailand L. Jiang, Schlumberger; and S. Pabchanda, PTT Exploration & Production Plc.

133637 Novel Method of Time Controllable Chemistry Water Shutoff Technology H. Liu, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina; and D. Xiao, PetroChina Daqing Oilfield Co. Ltd.

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 20

Monday, 18 October • 1600 - 1730 hoursSESSION 5: BUSINESS RISK MANAGEMENT Plaza P4

Session Chairpersons: Graham Bunn, Yarraine Consultancy Pty. Ltd. Cholid Mas, Schlumberger SPE131144 Human Decision-Making in the Oil and

Gas Industry S.I. Mackie, East Puffin (Sinopec); and S. Begg, C. Smith and M.B. Welsh, U. of Adelaide

133296 Appraisal Effectiveness Index: A Tool for Decision Makers to Assess the Probability of Significant Reserves Downgrade N.S. Nandurdikar and T. Mead, Independent Project Analysis

133974 A Model of The Impacts of Operational Risk and Analysis of Hedging Strategy with Derivatives for Oil Producing Companies G.A. Costa Lima, A.F. Gaspar Ravagnani, M.H. Carvalho and D.J. Schiozer, U. Estadual de Campinas

Posters/Alternates 133208 Modeling World Oil Supply: Its Peak

Production Rate and Time I.S. Nashawi and A. Malallah, Kuwait U.; and M. AL-Bisharah, Kuwait Oil Co.

133044 Valuation of Swing Contracts by Least Square Monte Carlo Simulation B.J. Willigers, Palantir Economic Solutions; S. Begg, U. of Adelaide; and R.B. Bratvold, U. of Stavanger

133246 How Good is the P90 Value as a Measure of the Reserves Downside? S. Gupta, U. of Western Australia; R. Gupta, Curtin U. of Technology; and J.F. Van Elk, Nederlandse Aardolie Maatschappij B.V.

Tuesday, 19 October • 0830 to 1000 hoursSESSION 6: PETROPHYSICS Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons: Keith Boyle, Santos Ltd. David Kersey, Saudi Aramco SPE133898 Quality-Assured Evaluation of

Freshwater-Bearing Hydrocarbon Reservoirs P.F. Worthington, Gaffney, Cline & Assocs.

133106 Case Study of Improved Oil-In-Place Determination from Petrophysical Evaluation of Resistivity Anisotropy Logging Data in a Malaysian Deepwater Turbidite Field A. Manescu, Baker Hughes Inc.; and K. Ha and S. Kho, Sarawak Shell Bhd.

132970 A New Approach for the Realistic Evaluation of Very Thin Reservoirs of Krishna Godavary Basin, East Coast, India L. Yadav, T. Dutta, A. Kundu and N. Sinha, Reliance Industries Ltd.

Posters/Alternates 132401 Integrated Multi-Well Formation Evaluation

for Diagnosing Reservoir Dynamics S.M. Ma, A.R. Belowi and Z. Ali, Saudi Aramco; and M. Zeybek, Schlumberger

133981 Integrating Reservoir Characterization: 3D Dynamic, Petrophysical and Geological Description of Reservoir Facies M.A. Knackstedt, A.P. Sheppard and S. Latham, Australian Natl. U.; and P. Jaime and A. Butcher, FEI Co.

133961 Formation Evaluation Challenges in Thin Bedded Deepwater Reservoirs: Success Story from Offshore Malaysia M. Mohd Azam, S. Daungkaew, W. Wei, N. Hademi, S.S. Haddad and J.V. Doorn, Schlumberger; and R. Hussain, Schlumberger DCS

133026 Integrated 3D Reservoir Model and Petrophysical Study to Optimize Field Development in Low Permeability Deltaic Reservoir, Badak Field-Indonesia I.A. Negara, U. Gadjah Mada; and L.P. Gultom, J.B. Corbellini, R.A. Harnondo, A. Soenoro and R. Nikijuluw, VICO Indonesia

Tuesday, 19 October • 0830 to 1000 hoursSESSION 7: SURFACE & SUBSURFACE INTEGRATION OPTIMISATIONPlaza P3

Session Chairpersons: Margaret Hall, Esso Australia Pty. Ltd. Arvo Nagel, Origin Energy Ltd. SPE133837 Optimising the Development of Oil Rims

and Gas Caps in Thin Dipping Reservoirs P. Bakker and P.G. Strobech, Brunei Shell Petroleum Sdn. Bhd.

133957 Application of Rigorous Integrated Production Modelling Methods to Greater Western Flank Gas Field Development M.J. Watson and N. Hawkes, FEESA Ltd.; P.F. Pickering, Imperial College; and C. Butler and M. Brown, Woodside Energy Ltd.

131990 Reservoir to Surface: An Effective Combination to Unlock Oil Reserves from Aging Reservoirs J.E. Moreno, G.P. Kartoatmodjo, T. Friedel, F. Zulkhifly and L. Tan, Schlumberger

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 21

Posters/Alternates 133910 Bringing New Life To Old Fields

S.V. Jakeman, PT. Shell Indonesia; and P. Jaswadi, R. Krisna and Kasijatno, Pertamina EP

133515 Real Time Production Surveillance and Optimization in a PETRONAS Carigali Field H. Lee, P.A. Whitney, A.M. Arifin, and R.C. Grigorescu, Schlumberger; and M. Zulkipli and R. Midun, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.

132855 Optimizing Well Productivity and Maximizing Recovery from a Mature Gas Field : The Application of Wellhead Compressor Technology Sumaryanto, N.H. Kontha, W.F. Turnbull and A. Lukman, VICO Indonesia

Tuesday, 19 October • 0830 to 1000 hoursSESSION 8: KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT Plaza P4

Session Chairpersons: Stephen Henzell, WorleyParsons Services Pty. Ltd. Sandeep Sharma, Schlumberger and CO2CRC SPE132973 Using Knowledge Management Techniques

and Communities of Practice to Drive Performance Improvements in Drilling Applications in Onshore China P.B. Perry, R. Lee, Y.Z. Yao and R. Clark-Moore, Baker Hughes, Inc.

133678 Electronic Rollerboard In Dispersed Engineering Execution B. Soman, Fluor Corp.

133880 Leveraging Knowledge Retention and Sharing Across the Value Chain C. McClelland, SAIC; and C. Senivongse, PTT Exploration and Production Plc.

Posters/Alternates 132983 Enhanced Reservoir Scenarios

Management Workflow A. Garcia, J. Rebeschini, D. Martins and C. Vieira, Halliburton; and F. Nunes, E. Da Silva and M.N. Herdeiro, Petrobras

133983 Are Your Geoscience Applications Maintaining the Integrity of the Geospatial Data? J.P. Stigant and M. Michell, Devon Energy Corp.; B. Schostak, Shell E&P; J.P. Davis, BP America; B.D. Barrs, ExxonMobil Technical Computing Co.; and M.B. Latef, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.

133728 Data User Experience Step One: Trusted Data P. Flichy, IO-hub; R. Clark, Energistics; and O. Timmons, 3GR

133768 Development and Application of an Improved Workflow for Reserve Estimation P.A. Lyford, S.T. Chipperfield and W.H. Cibich, Santos Ltd.; and G.P. Helfrick, Fekete Assocs. Inc.

Tuesday, 19 October • 1030 to 1200 hoursSESSION 9: RESERVOIR CHARACTERISATION I Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons: David Kersey, Saudi Aramco Paul F. Worthington, Gaffney, Cline & Assocs.

SPE133518 Uncertainty Management: A Structured

Approach Towards Recognizing, Quantifying and Managing Subsurface Unknowns L.D. Alessio and F. Rahmat, LEAP Energy Partners; and A.J. Everts, Murphy Sarawak Oil Co. Ltd.

132361 An Innovative Approach to Permeability Prediction Using the Flow Quality Indicator (FQI) Concept S.A. Akam, J. Liu, C. Nwosu and C.I. Uguru, Shell Petroleum Dev Nigeria (SPDC); T.F. Maher, Shell Offshore Inc.; C. Schell and S. Arnott, Sarawak Shell Bhd.; M.G. Prest, Brunei Shell Petroleum Sdn. Bhd.; and K.L. Goring, Shell Malaysia E&P

132399 Pressure Buildup Analysis in Karstified Carbonate Reservoir W. Djatmiko, V. Hansamuit and S. Janmaha, PTT Exploration and Production Plc.

Posters/Alternates133070 Influence of Fault Geometry on the

Coupled Hydro Geomechanical Simulation and Analysis of Fault Reactivation M. Asadi and V. Rasouli, Curtin U. of Technology; and Y. Zhang, CSIRO

133209 Permeability Prediction from Wireline Well Logs Using Fuzzy Logic and Classification Tree Analyses A. Malallah and I.S. Nashawi, Kuwait U.

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 22

134061 An Integrated Analytical Method in Identifying the Remain Potential of Thin Bed Reservoir on Deltaic System, Sengata Field M.H. Alkaff, R.K. Demak, F.P. Prasetyanto and Y.I. Widyanti, PT. Pertamina EP

Tuesday, 19 October • 1030 to 1200 hoursSESSION 10: UNCONVENTIONAL RESOURCES Plaza P3

Session Chairpersons: Bruce Gunn, RISC Pty. Ltd. Ray Johnson Jnr., QGC

IPTC 13185

Reservoir Modeling and Production Evaluation in Shale-Gas Reservoirs C.L. Cipolla, Schlumberger; E. Lolon, CARBO Ceramics, Inc.; and M.J. Mayerhofer, Pinnacle Technologies

SPE134582 3D Visualization and Classification of Pore

Structure and Pore Filling in Gas Shales E. Diaz and M. Suhrer, Ingrain, Inc.

133915 Coal Permeability and its Behaviour with Gas Desorption, Pressure and Stress L. Connell, Z. Pan, M. Lu, D.D. Heryanto and M. Camilleri, CSIRO Petroleum; and C. Detournay, Itasca Consulting Group. Inc.

Posters/Alternates 132880 FAIS: An Automated Advisor for

Characterized Analog and Interpretation of Reservoir Formations in UGR K. Cheng, W. Wu, W.B. Ayers and S.A. Holditch, Texas A&M U.

133427 Horizontal Wells with Multi-Stage Fracs Provide Better Economics for Many Lower Perm Reservoirs B.W. Mcdaniel, Halliburton

132341 Special Considerations for Drilling the Granite Heat Source of an EGS Well B.E. Holland, Westgems Prospecting

Tuesday, 19 October • 1030 to 1200 hoursSESSION 11: DRILLING - CASE STUDIES Plaza P4

Session Chairpersons: Guillaume Plessis, NOV Grant Prideco Khalil Rahman, Baker Hughes Ltd. SPE131395 Case History: Continuous Improvement in

a Staggered Drilling Campaign J.M. Gordon, AGR Petroleum Services; and R.J. Mcallan, AGR Asia Pacific

134417 System Approach to Bit and Drive System Design and Selection Improves Performance in Vietnam Top Hole Section Drilling G. Heisig, INTEQ; and W.H. Heuser, Hughes Christensen

133103 Cuttings Re-Injection as an Environmentally Safe and Economically Efficient Drilling Waste Management Option for Karachaganak Field S. Gumarov, R. Mangiameli and T.A. Shokanov, M-I Swaco; and R. Gogan and V. Mattia, Karachaganak Petroleum Operating B.V.

Posters/Alternates132251 Lightweight Water Based Mud Using Glass

Bubbles for Drilling 6” Horizontal Section in Gunung Kembang Development Well S. Rachman, PT Medco E&P Indonesia

134239 Innovative Bearing and Seal Package Improves Rollercone Bit Performance and Reliability P. Langille and J.D. Day, Marathon Oil Co.; and A. Deen and R.N. Baker, Smith Technologies

133994 Geomechanical Assessment for Underground Gas Storage and CO2 Sequestration in Depleted Hydrocarbon Reservoirs A. Khaksar and Z. Fang, Baker RDS Ltd.

134192 Geomechanical Analysis of Wellbore Stability and Trajectory Drift in a Deep Carbonate Reservoir in Kuwait K. Khan, Schlumberger; and M.N. Acharya, E.H. Al-anzi, M.M. Kabir, S.P. Pradhan and Q.M. Dashti, Kuwait Oil Co.

Tuesday, 19 October • 1400 to 1530 hoursSESSION 12: CBM FORMATION EVALUATION Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons: Keith Boyle, Santos Ltd. Saikat Mazumder, Shell Intl. B.V. SPE133356 Transient Testing of CBM Wells

G. Stewart, Weatherford Intl. Ltd. 133665 Comparison of Permeabilities and Skin

Damages Results from Flow Build-up and Injection Falloff Tests in CBM Reservoirs G. Taco and A. Kamenar, Kamenar & Associates; and J. Edgoose, Strata-Tek Pty. Ltd.

133066 Utilizing Current Technologies to Understand Permeability, Stress Azimuths and Magnitudes and their Impact on Hydraulic Fracturing Success in a Coal Seam Gas Reservoir R.L. Johnson, B. Glassborow and M.P. Scott, Queensland Gas Co. Ltd.; J.J. Meyer, JRS Petroleum Research; A. Datey and Z. John, Schlumberger; and N. Harvey, Weatherford

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Posters/Alternates 133630 Determination of Water Influx in Coal-Bed

Methane (CBM) Reservoirs A. Sekhar, Indian School of Mines

135814 Variations in Permeability of Coals I. Gray, Sigra Pty. Ltd.

135813 Gas Content and Composition Measurement Without the Use of Coring I. Gray, Sigra Pty. Ltd.

Tuesday, 19 October • 1400 to 1530 hoursSESSION 13: CO2 STORAGE Plaza P3

Session Chairpersons: Anthony Lake, Beach Petroleum Sandeep Sharma, Schlumberger and CO2CRC SPE133743 Effects of CO2 Density and Solubility on

Storage Behavior in Saline Aquifers T. Takasawa, T. Kamamura and N. Arihara, Waseda U.

133821 Understanding Value of Appraisal Information through Geologically-constrained Engineering Scenario Analysis in Economic Modeling of CO2 Storage Site N. Marmin, Schlumberger Carbon Services; and A.J. Garnett, ZeroGen

130358 Potential and Early Opportunity-Analysis on CO2 Geo-Sequestration in China Z. Xuan and C. Zhang, China U. of Petroleum Beijing

Posters/Alternates 133830 Drilling and Completion Challenges and

Remedies of CO2 Injected Wells with Emphasis to Mitigate Well Integrity Issues M. Hossain, Curtin U. of Technology ; and M. Amro, Technical University of Bergakademie Freiberg

133900 Costs of CO2 Transport and Injection in Australia P.R. Neal, W. Hou, G. Allinson and Y. Cinar, U. of New South Wales

133986 Numerical Simulation on CO2 Leakage through Fractures along Wells Using Discrete Fracture Modeling B. Gong, Chevron Energy Technology Co.; and D. Huo, Peking U.

131715 Rapid Estimation of Carbon Dioxide Compressibility Factor Using Simple Predictive ToolA. Bahadori and H.B. Vuthaluru, Curtin U. of Technology

Tuesday, 19 October • 1400 to 1530 hoursSESSION 14: HUMAN RESOURCES Plaza P4

Session Chairpersons: Graham Bunn, Yarraine Consultancy Pty. Ltd. Wayne Warwick, ExxonMobil E&P Malaysia Inc.

SPE132977 Incorporating Motivation and Inspiration

into Learning M.R. Smith, BJ Services Co.; J.T. Edwards, Cabot Oil and Gas (formerly from BJ Services Co.); and G.T. Woo, Occidental Petroleum Corp. (formerly from BJ Services Co.)

135361 Building Effective Training Models for Today’s Global Challenges W. Fiffick, D. Susko and C.W. Kenner, BJ Services Co.

133612 Who Gets to Be Boss? ……Addressing Demographic Pressures within the Petroleum IndustryR.A. Lau, L.J. Lau, N. Al Hasani and C. Eide, The Petroleum Inst.

Posters/Alternates132597 A Unique Framework for Developing,

and Mentoring the Next Generation of Reservoir Navigation R.M. Bacon and J.W. Skillings, INTEQ

131922 BHA and Drill String Fundamentals: Technology Training for Beginners S.M. Wakefield and K. Pigusch, Smith Intl.

Tuesday, 19 October • 1400 to 1530 hoursSESSION 15: GAS SUPPLY & TECHNOLOGY Plaza P5

Session Chairpersons: Margaret Hall, Esso Australia Pty. Ltd. Werner Ribul, Shell E&P Asia Pacific SPE133916 Coupling Numerical Model to Completion

Strategy Decisions for a Tight and Heterogeneous Gas Reservoir : An Approach to Risk Management R. Kumar and S.K. Singh, Schlumberger

133976 Status of Natural Gas in the Asia-Pacific Region P.J. Cockcroft, Blue Energy Ltd.

135816 Development of the Gas Resource Assessment for the Papua New Guinea PNG LNG Project A. Berryman, ExxonMobil Corp.

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Posters/Alternates 132968 Hydrate Formation Characteristics of

Natural Gas During Transient Operation of a Flow Line G.A. Sanchez Soto, Y. Seo, M. Di Lorenzo, K. Kozielski and J. Zhang, CSIRO

132309 Rapid Prediction of Carbon Dioxide and Nitrogen Adsorption Behaviour at Cryogenic TemperatureA. Bahadori and H.B. Vuthaluru, Curtin U. of Technology

134278 Producing High CO2 Gas Content Reservoirs in Pertamina Indonesia Using Multi Stage Cryogenic Process I. Suarsana, PT Pertamina EP

Tuesday, 19 October • 1600 to 1730 hoursPANEL SESSION: PETROLEUM RESOURCES AND RESERVES Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons:Graham Bunn, Yarraine Consultancy Pty. Ltd.Bruce Gunn, RISC Pty. Ltd.

Panelists:Geoff Barker, Partner, RISC Pty. Ltd.Frank Connolly, Australian Securities and Investments Commission Greg Horton, Chief Reserves Engineer, Santos Ltd.Clay Jones, Director & Chief Engineer, Project Finance, Societé Generale

Tuesday, 19 October • 1600 to 1730 hoursSESSION 16: CASE STUDIES I Plaza P3

Session Chairpersons: Laurent Alessio, LEAP Energy Partners Andrew Marron, OMV New Zealand Ltd. SPE133241 Coniston - Novara: Overcoming the

Challenges in Offshore Flow Testing of Extra Heavy Oil in the Carnarvon Basin R.D. Sankoff and K.S. Graves, Apache Energy Ltd.

133901 Introduction of a New Well Design to the Narrabri Coal Seam Gas Project L.K. Hedger, Eastern Star Gas Ltd.; and M. Cunnington, EarthReach Pty. Ltd.

134479 Maximizing Production and Extending Economic Life of the Woollybutt Field: “From Little Things, Big Things Grow” D. Wheller, K. Kostas and D. Hearty, ENI Australia; and D.G. Selvaggi and R. Loro, ENI E&P

Posters/Alternates 130767 Application of Nitrogen Foam for

Profile Modification in a Heterogeneous Multi-Layer Sandstone Oilfield H. Liu, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina; P. Ye, Northeast Petroleum U.; and W. Li, L. Song and Y. Zhong, PetroChina Daqing Oilfield Co. Ltd.

132443 New Corrosion Inhibitor Reduces Overboard Oil in Water and Maintains Asset IntegrityB. Dunsmore, R. Dunn and C. Rappa, Baker Hughes Inc. ; and R. Ashiedu, Vermillion Oil & Gas

134037 Pragmatic Approach to Gas Development Planning, Southwest Ampa Field, Brunei B.S. Carl, P.G. Strobech, B. Van Thieu, and N. Talib, Brunei Shell Petroleum Sdn. Bhd.; and D. Melanson, Shell

Tuesday, 19 October • 1600 to 1730 hoursSESSION 17: STIMULATION Plaza P4

Session Chairpersons: Liu He, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina Ralf Napalowski, BHP Billiton SPE132878 A Study of Diversion Using In-Situ Gelled

Acid: Polymer-Based Systems A.M. Gomaa and H. Nasr-El-Din, Texas A&M U.

132918 Numerical Study of PDL Induced Fracture Face Damage Using a Fracturing Mimicator R.D. Gdanski, Halliburton Energy Services Group

133953 Breaking Low Permeability Fracturing Myth - VICO Indonesia A. Wijanarko, H. Chatib, B. Dharma, VICO Indonesia; M. Rylance, BP Exploration; and I. Pizzolante, ENI

Posters/Alternates 133677 First Ever Multi-stage Proppant Fracturing

on an Openhole Horizontal Gas Well in Deep Natural Fissure Volcanic Reservoir in West China Y. Wang, Schlumberger; J. Zhang, Y.K. Zhou, PetroChina Xinjiang Oil Co.; and J. Zhang and N. Zhang, PetroChina Co. Ltd.

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132766 Acidizing: A Small Change in Recipe, A Big Improvement in Production S. Wahib and S. Nizam Effendi PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.; C.S. Wong, BJ Services Co. (formerly from PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.) ; D. Choo and R. Ramnarine, BJ Oilwell Services (M) Sdn. Bhd.

115769 The Relationship Between Fracture Complexity, Reservoir Properties, and Fracture Treatment Design C.L. Cipolla, Schlumberger; N.R. Warpinski and M.J. Mayerhofer, Pinnacle Technologies; E. Lolon, CARBO Ceramics, Inc.; and M.C. Vincent, Insight Consulting

132861 Discrete Element Simulation of Induced Damaged Zones in Perforation Process M. Sarmadivaleh, A. Nabipour and M. Asadi, Curtin U. of Technology

Wednesday, 20 October • 0830 to 1000 hoursPANEL SESSION: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons:Steve Henzell, WorleyParsons Services Pty. Ltd.Sandeep Sharma, Schlumberger and CO2CRC

Panelists:Bryson Bates, Theme Leader, Climate Adaptation Flagship, CSIRO Tasman Graham, General Manager – Infrastructure (General Management), WorleyParson Arno Schaaf, Business Development Director, Petroleum and Geothermal, CSIRO

Wednesday, 20 October • 0830 to 1000 hoursSESSION 18: CBM STIMULATION Plaza P3

Session Chairpersons: Ralf Napalowski, BHP Billiton Erhart Stockhausen, Eastern Star Gas Ltd. SPE132505 Selecting Optimal Fracturing Fluid

Systems and Techniques for CBM Wells in NSW Australia R.L. Guerra, Tiger Drilling; M.L. Roy, AGL Gas Production Pty. Ltd.; and P.L. Unwin, J.D. Michalopoulos and R. Stanley, BJ Services Co.

133063 Evaluating Hydraulic Fracture Effectiveness in a Coal Seam Gas Reservoir from Surface Tiltmeter and Microseismic Monitoring R.L. Johnson and M.P. Scott, Queensland Gas Co. Ltd. (QGC); R.G. Jeffrey and Z. Chen, CSIRO Petroleum; and S. Tcherkashnev and C.B. Vandenborn, Schlumberger

133059 Evaluating Hydraulic Fracture Geometry from Sonic Anisotropy and Radioactive Tracer Logs M.P. Scott and R.L. Johnson, Queensland Gas Co. Ltd. (QGC); A. Datey and C.B. Vandenborn, Schlumberger; and R.A. Woodroof, ProTechnics

Posters/Alternates 132958 Microseismic Mapping of Hydraulic

Treatments in Coalbed Methane (CBM) Formations - Challenges and Solutions U. Zimmer, Pinnacle Technologies

134272 Eliminating Sand Flow Back Issues in Coalbed Methane Stimulation Treatments D.P. Magill, M. Ramurthy and P.D. Nguyen, Halliburton Energy Services Group

134823 Enhancing Gas Production in Coal Bed Methane Formations with Zeta Potential Altering System S. Kakadjian, J.L. Garza and F. Zamora, Weatherford Intl. Ltd.

Wednesday, 20 October • 0830 to 1000 hoursSESSION 19: RESERVOIR CHARACTERISATION II Plaza P4

Session Chairpersons:Simon Smith, Origin Energy Ltd. Paul F. Worthington, Gaffney, Cline & Assocs. SPE133804 CO2 Storage Capacity - The Effect of

Engineering and Economics W.G. Allinson and Y. Cinar, U. of New South Wales; L. Paterson, CSIRO; and J.G. Kaldi, U. of Adelaide

132113 The Effect of Cyclic CO2- Brine Flooding on Fluid Flow Characteristics During CO2 Sequestration Processes A. Saeedi, R. Rezaee and B.J. Evans, Curtin U. of Technology; and M.B. Clennell, CSIRO Petroleum

132867 Improved Technique for Wireline Oil Sampling of a Tight Carbonate Reservoir in the Partitioned Neutral Zone (Kuwait/Saudi Arabia): A Case Study M.H. Omar, Joint Operation (Kuwait Gulf Oil Co./Saudi Arabian Chevron); B.C. Cheong and M.A. Rampurawala, Schlumberger; and A.N. Bouyabes, Kuwait Gulf Oil Co.

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Posters/Alternates 134008 Application of an Array Dielectric

Measurement to the Characterization of a Complex Sandstone Reservoir in Vietnam S.M. Farag, Schlumberger; and T.S. Murugesu, PETRONAS

134396 Estimation of Fracture Effective Permeability by Upscaling Using Ensemble Kalman Filter N. Arihara, M. Tanaka, S. Tanaka, Waseda U.; and H. Okabe, Japan Oil, Gas and Metal Natl. Corp.

133896 Success Story of Downhole Fluid Sampling in a Very Challenging Environment in the Gulf of Thailand C. Kanjanavasoontara and S. Daungkaew, Schlumberger; C.J. Platt, Pearl Oil (Thailand) Ltd.; and N. Yimyam, Institut Francais du Petrole (IFP)

133852 Equation-Of-State Modeling For Reservoir Fluid Samples Contaminated By Oil-Based Drilling Mud Using Contaminated Fluid PVT Data P. Sah and K.S. Pedersen, Calsep A/S; and G.S. Gurdial, H. Izwan and F. Ramli, Core Labs Malaysia Sdn. Bhd.

Wednesday, 20 October • 1030 to 1200 hoursSESSION 20: ENHANCED OIL RECOVERY II Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons: Anwar Raja Ibrahim, Petro Malaysia Anthony Lake, Beach Petroleum SPE131416 Acid-resistant Foamer Used to Control

Gas Breakthrough for CO2 Drive Reservoir X. Liu, B. Wang, G. Li, Z. Han, W. Xin and L. Zhang Daqing Oilfield Co. Ltd.

133345 Maximizing the Oil Recovery through Immiscible Water Alternating Gas (IWAG) in Mature Offshore field R.D. Tewari, F. Abdul Kadir, M. Abu Bakar, T.B. Tengku Othman and N. Banu, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.; S. Riyadi, PETRONAS; and C. Kittrell, Schlumberger

133812 Study and Application of Profile Modification in Offshore Fields W. Shu, Chevron; and M. Liu, CNOOC

Posters/Alternates 134623 The Potential Applications in Heavy Oil

EOR with the Nano-particle and Surfactant Stabilized Solvent-based Emulsion F. Qiu, Texas A&M U.

133214 Enhancing Waterflooding Effectiveness of the Heavy Oil Reservoir using the Viscosity Reducer F. Zhang, H. Zhang and X. Feng, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina

131989 EOR: Challenges of Translating Fine Scale Displacement into Full Field Models S. Flew, Schlumberger Data & Consulting Services; and J.E. Moreno, Schlumberger

132454 An Efficient Methodology for Characterizing EOS & Parameters T.H. Ahmed and D. Meehan, Baker Hughes Inc.

134589 Diffusion and Dispersion During Gas Injection into Naturally Fractured Reservoirs - A Review J.J. Trivedi and M. Chordia, U. of Alberta

136539 Controlled Multi-zone Water Injection: The Enfield ENC05 story D.M. Medd, D. Gibson, T. McCarthy, B. Toldo, P. Moselely and V. Pudin, Woodside Energy Ltd.

Wednesday, 20 October • 1030 to 1200 hoursSESSION 21: WELL COMPLETIONS Plaza P3

Session Chairpersons: Andrew Marron, OMV New Zealand Ltd. Mohamed Yazid, BG Trinidad & Tobago Ltd. SPE132846 The Evolution of the Role of Openhole

Packers in Advanced Horizontal Completions: From Optional Accessory to Critical Key of Success P. Gavioli, Baker Hughes Australia Pty. Ltd. ; and R. Vicario, Baker Hughes

133234 ICD Design: Revisiting Objectives and Techniques A.A. Daneshy, Daneshy Consultants Intl.; B. Guo, U. of Louisiana at Lafayette; and V. Krasnov and S. Zimin, Rosneft

132345 Advanced Cement System for Acid Gas Injection Wells Y.E. Fakhreldin, H. Sharji, A.M. Ruwehy, Petroleum Development Oman; M. Farsi, Petroleum Development Corp.; and K.M. Saadi, S. Taoutaou and S. Al Kalbani, Schlumberger

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Posters/Alternates 134477 Challenges in Designing, Planning and

Execution of Well Completions for Highly Depleted Reservoirs, and High Differential Pressure between Reservoirs T. Mohamed Imran, C. Elliott, N. Sharif, A.I. Abdullah, N. Samsudin, M.Z. Sulaiman, M. Rameli and J. Emarievbe, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.

133216 Multi-zone Completion Using An Optical Permanent Reservoir Monitoring System At Seria North Flank, Brunei K.K. Ong, C. Bechdol and L. Yeow, Weatherford Solutions Sdn. Bhd.; and P. Holweg, S. Sulaiman, P.C. Brassart, R.A. Jansen and M. Eleuch, Brunei Shell Petroleum. Sdn. Bhd.

Wednesday, 20 October • 1030 to 1200 hoursSESSION 22: HSE & SOCIETY Plaza P4

Session Chairperson: Zhao Guo, Daqing Oilfield Ltd. Co. SPE132931 Setting New Environmental, Regulatory,

and Safety Benchmarks: The 2009 Gorgon CO2 3D Baseline Seismic Project, Barrow Island, Western Australia K.C. Scott, D.J. Parker and M. Trupp, Chevron Australia Pty. Ltd.; and B. Clulow, WesterGeco

134059 Has the Safety Case Failed? B. Fitzgerald, Vanguard Solutions Pty. Ltd.

133368 Non-chemical Bacteria Control Process L. Abney, Halliburton

Posters/Alternates 134137 Water Recycling helps with Sustainability

D. Pierce, Brandt-NOV 134277 Environmental Management Performance

of Subang Field, PT Pertamina EP, Indonesia on PROPER Indicator I.P. Sembiring, Pertamina; E.A. Mulyono, PT Pertamina EP

134067 Flares in the Middle East M. Papas, Petrenee Pty. Ltd.

134115 The Method and Expert System for Risk Assessment of Drilling in High-Sulfur Gas Field Z. Yanbin and W. Ruihe, U. Petroleum China

Wednesday, 20 October • 1030 to 1200 hoursSESSION 23: SIMULATION, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE & MODELING Plaza P5

Session Chairpersons: Arvo Nagel, Origin Energy Ltd. Simon Smith, Origin Energy Ltd. SPE132860 Simulation of Dragon Wells in Thin Oil

Rim Reservoirs Using a Segmented Inflow Approach J.E. Montero and C.C. Nwankwo, Brunei Shell Petroleum Sdn. Bhd.

133838 Dynamic Well Clean-up Flow Simulation for Field Start-up Planning in the Pyrenees Development, Offshore Western Australia C. Chung, D. Marian and R. Napalowski, BHP Billiton; and J. Thomson, Schlumberger

133870 Assisted History Matching: A Brazilian Offshore Field Case Study J.M. Lacerda and D. BAMPI, Petrobras; and S.H. Sousa, Halliburton

Posters/Alternates133927 Development of a Hot Fractured Rock

Geothermal Reservoir Model Using a Black Oil Simulator J. Moriarty, Origin Energy Ltd.

133997 How to Reconcile your Multi-phase Meters in a Gas-Condensate Field by Using Representative PVT and Sales Volumes D.J. Chia, Chevron Australia Pty. Ltd. ; and I.J. Taggart, CTSOR Pty. Ltd.

133217 Upscaled Multi-Phase Flow Properties of Fracture Corridors M.O. Ahmed Elfeel, Schlumberger Overseas S.A.; and G.D. Couples, S. Geiger-Boschung and J. Ma, Heriot-Watt U.

133929 Transforming Data into Knowledge Using Data Mining Techniques: Application in Excess Water Production Problem Diagnosis in Oil Wells M. Rabiei and R. Gupta, Curtin Uni. of Technology; and G. Sanchez-Soto and Y. Cheong, CSIRO

Wednesday, 20 October • 1400 to 1530 hoursPANEL SESSION: STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons:Keith Boyle, Santos Ltd. Margaret Hall, Esso Australia Pty. Ltd.

Panelists:David Brereton, Director, Centre of Social Responsibilityin Mining,Sustainable Minerals Institute, The U. of QueenslandTrisha Perkins, Public & Government Affairs Manager, ExxonMobil Australia Pty. Ltd.

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Wednesday, 20 October • 1400 to 1530 hoursSESSION 24: FACILITIES / FLOW ASSURANCE Plaza P3

Session Chairpersons:Stephen Henzell, WorleyParsons Services Pty. Ltd. Henricus Herwin, Total E&P Nigeria Ltd. SPE133948 Flow Assurance: Wax Deposition &

Gelling in Subsea Oil Pipelines J. Hilbert, ExxonMobil Australia Pty. Ltd.

133188 Flow Instability in Deepwater Flowlines And Risers - A Case Study of Subsea Oil Production from Chinguetti Field, Mauritania A.B. Matzain, SPT Group Pty. Ltd.; J. Takei and M.B. Zainal, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.; and F. Myrland, SPT Group Inc.

132997 Production Enhancement of Hilly Terrain Onshore Remote Field M.N. Al-Khamis, S.M. Hanbzazah, A.A. Al-Shurei and N.K. Merwat, Saudi Aramco

Posters/Alternates 132920 Sand Erosion Modelling

J. Wu, C. Y. Wong, L. Graham, CSIRO; C. Solnordal, CSIRO Mathematical & Information Science and A. Zamberi, PETRONAS Research Sdn. Bhd.

133370 A New Approach to Flowline Active Heating L. Abney, Halliburton

Wednesday, 20 October • 1400 to 1530 hoursSESSION 25: SAND CONTROL Plaza P4

Session Chairpersons: Anthony Brown, Baker Hughes Inc. Ralf Napalowski, BHP Billiton SPE133922 Changing the Production Horse

Mid-Stream; Adding Value Through Geomechanics R. Butler, Senergy Australia Pty. Ltd.; and J.R. Small, BHP Billiton Petroleum Americas Inc.

130785 Design, Execution and the Results of the Longest Multizone Cased-Hole Gravel Pack Completion in Malaysia S. Saebi, A. Machado, C. Curteis, S. Tyutikov, and M.E. Rivero Colmenares, Schlumberger; M. Khalid, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.; and M.S. Habib, PETRONAS

134319 Openhole Gravel Pack Case Histories in Wells Drilled with a Synthetic Mud: Successful Implementation of an Alternative Method in Oyo Field, Nigeria M. Parlar, E. Belleggia and P. Wassouf, Schlumberger; G.P. Bopda Kontchou, Schlumberger Oilfield Services; G. Ripa and D. Staltari, Eni E&P; M. Rossi, NAE; and M. Ilobi, Allied Energy Corp.

Posters/Alternates 132497 A Decision Support System for

Cost-effective Assessment of Sand Production Risk and Selection of Completion Type K. Rahman, Baker Hughes Ltd.; A. Khaksar and T. Kayes, Baker RDS Ltd.

133321 Design Optimization of Slotted Liner Completions in Horizontal Wells of Mumbai High Field A. Kumar and A.K. Srivastava, Oil & Natural Gas Corp. Ltd.; and R. Kumar, Schlumberger DCS

133603 Advanced Sand-Face Completion Design and Application in Gas and Gas-Condensate Fields D.R. Davies and F.T. Al-Khelaiwi, Heriot-Watt U.

131078 Selection of Completion Strategy for Sand Control and Optimal Production Rate - Field Examples from Saudi Arabia’s Unayzah Gas Condensate Sandstone Reservoir Z. Rahim, A. AlKanaan and B. AlMalki, Saudi Aramco

Wednesday, 20 October • 1600 to 1730 hoursSESSION 26: CBM PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT / FORECASTING Plaza P2

Session Chairpersons: Bruce Gunn, RISC Pty. Ltd. Erhart Stockhausen, Eastern Star Gas Ltd. SPE133464 Case History Using ESP’s to De-water

Horizontal Wells L. Bassett, Global Artificial Lift

134031 Controlling Coal Fines Production in Massively Cavitated Openhole Coalbed Methane Wells D.P. Magill and M. Ramurthy, Halliburton Energy Services

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133831 Streamlined Production Workflows and Integrated Data Management - A Leap Forward in Managing CSG Assets for Origin Energy S.S. Biniwale and R. Trivedi, Schlumberger; and C.P. White, S.D. Delaney and J. Blair, Origin Energy

Posters/Alternates 133101 Incorporating Uncertainty into Economic

Assessment of CBM Reservoirs Using Monte Carlo Methods R. Sander and L. Connell, CSIRO Petroleum

133829 Proper Analysis and Integration of Production Data from CBM Reservoirs Improve Future Prediction H. Shwe, QGC

133261 Stochastic Forecasting of Production Potential in Coal Seam Gas (CSG) G. Zangl, S.S. Biniwale, V. Sharma and R. Trivedi, Schlumberger

133517 Reverse Osmosis Compatible Chemical Foamers for Gas Well Deliquification and Production Enhancement M.J. Willis, Nalco Ltd.; and G.A. Conrad, Nalco OneSource

Wednesday, 20 October • 1600 to 1730 hoursSESSION 27: CASE STUDIES II Plaza P3

Session Chairpersons: Zis Katelis, Gaffney, Cline & Assocs. Arif Azhan Manap, PETRONAS Research Sdn. Bhd. SPE133664 Surveillance Modeling and Operational

Controls Ensure Integrity of Alaska’s Grind and Inject Operations K.S. Zaki, Z. Zhai, S.A. Marinello and A.S. Abou-Sayed, Advantek Intl. Corp.; M.L. Bill, ASRC Energy Services; and H.R. Engel, BP Alaska Exploration Inc.

121373 Sand Production Prediction for a Mature Oil Field - A Case Study B. Wu, CSIRO Petroleum; C. Bahri, PETRONAS Carigali; C. Tan and H. Rahim, Schlumberger; Q. Li, Schlumberger Oman & Co. LLC; G.P. Kartoatmodjo, Schlumberger Australia Pty. Ltd.; and T. Friedel, Schlumberger Asia Services Ltd.

136538 Integration of 4D Seismic to Add Value: The Enfield ENC01 Sidetrack Story D.M. Medd, C. Sibbons, P. Thomas, M. Smith, Woodside Energy Ltd. and A. Ali, TOTAL E&P (formerly from Woodside Energy Ltd.)

Posters/Alternates 133336 Horizontal Well Optimization with Inflow

Control Devices (ICDs) Application in Heterogeneous and Dipping Gas-capped Oil Reservoirs K. Goh, Schlumberger Data & Consulting Services; R.A. Karim and M. Nuriyadi, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.; and J.A. Murison, Reslink AS

133914 Pushing the Boundary of Water Disposal - Produced Water Treatment for Zero Harm Discharge to Sensitive Environment - Case Studies And Descriptions C. Madin, Veolia Water Solutions and Technologies

132360 Effective Reservoir Management Reverses Production Decline in a Brownfield Cluster in South in South Oman - A Case Study M. Mirza, A. Effendi and H. Al Saadi, Medco LLC Oman

136540 Imaging and Developing a Thin, Viscous Oil Leg: Vincent Field, Offshore Western Australia O. Sundsby, A. Gongora, A. Hughes and S. Winters, Woodside Energy Ltd.

Wednesday, 20 October • 1600 to 1730 hoursSESSION 28: DEEPWATER & SUBSEA Plaza P4

Session Chairpersons: Sergio Henrique Guerra Sousa, Halliburton Raj Deo Tewari, Sudapet SPE133439 Performance Assessment of the DC All

Electric System D. Abichit and J. Van Den Akker, Cameron

133631 Henry Subsea Development - Challenges and Solutions S.T. Henzell, WorleyParsons Services Pty. Ltd.; and A.D. Glucina, Santos Ltd.

132516 Deepwater Developments: Challenging Equipment Limits J.M. Gordon, AGR Petroleum Services; R.J. Mcallan and P. Saicic, AGR Asia Pacific

Posters/Alternates 132701 Equipment Design Change Improves

Cementing Operations from MODUC’s Operating in Rough Sea Environment; Case Histories for Two North Sea Jobs H.E. Rogers, Halliburton Energy Services Group

131110 Evaluation of Scale Inhibitors Suitable for Deepwater Fields H. Guan and P. Farmer, M-I Swaco

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The poster session will be held at the Mezzanine Foyer of the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre. Posters will be on display during the conference and presented during 1600-1730 hours on Monday, 18 October 2010. Conference delegates are encouraged to attend the Poster Session presentation. The presentation will allow delegates to meet the authors of the poster displays and provide an opportunity to discuss some of the latest developments in the oil and gas industry.

SPE115766 Slickwater Fracturing: Food for Thought

T.T. Palisch, CARBO Ceramics, Inc.; P.J. Handren, Denbury Resources Inc.; and M.C. Vincent, Insight Consulting

115769 The Relationship Between Fracture Complexity, Reservoir Properties, and Fracture Treatment Design C.L. Cipolla, Schlumberger; N.R. Warpinski and M.J. Mayerhofer, Pinnacle Technologies; E. Lolon, CARBO Ceramics, Inc.; and M.C. Vincent, Insight Consulting

130649 Sand Control Study and Assessing Suitability of Installing Expandable Sand Screens (ESS) in Comparison with IGP in Cased and Open Hole Wells in Mansouri Field I. Oraki, Petroleum U. of Technology; and Y. Vafaeinezhad, Research Inst. of Petroleum Industry

130767 Application of Nitrogen Foam for Profile Modification in a Heterogeneous Multi-Layer Sandstone Oilfield H. Liu, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina; P. Ye, Northeast Petroleum U.; and W. Li, L. Song and Y. Zhong, PetroChina Daqing Oilfield Co. Ltd.

130868 Comparing Wireline Formation Tester Derived Productivity Index to Drill Stem Test C.K. Khong, L. Chen and C. Ayan, Schlumberger; and L. Xu, J. Cai, S. Guo, M. Wu, H. Yang, Z. Hao, F. Pan and Z. Tan, CNOOC Ltd.

131078 Selection of Completion Strategy for Sand Control and Optimal Production Rate - Field Examples from Saudi Arabia’s Unayzah Gas Condensate Sandstone Reservoir Z. Rahim, A. AlKanaan and B. AlMalki, Saudi Aramco

131110 Evaluation of Scale Inhibitors Suitable for Deepwater Fields H. Guan and P. Farmer, M-I Swaco

131715 Rapid Estimation of Carbon Dioxide Compressibility Factor Using Simple Predictive ToolA. Bahadori and H.B. Vuthaluru, Curtin U. of Technology

131922 BHA and Drill String Fundamentals: Technology Training for Beginners S.M. Wakefield and K. Pigusch, Smith Intl.

131989 EOR: Challenges of Translating Fine Scale Displacement into Full Field Models S. Flew, Schlumberger Data & Consulting Services; and J.E. Moreno, Schlumberger

132251 Lightweight Water Based Mud Using Glass Bubbles for Drilling 6” Horizontal Section in Gunung Kembang Development Well S. Rachman, PT Medco E&P Indonesia

132309 Rapid Prediction of Carbon Dioxide and Nitrogen ‘Adsorption’ Behaviour at Cryogenic TemperatureA. Bahadori and H.B. Vuthaluru, Curtin U. of Technology

132341 Special Considerations for Drilling the Granite Heat Source of an EGS Well B.E. Holland, Westgems Prospecting

132360 Effective Reservoir Management Reverses Production Decline in a Brownfield Cluster in South in South Oman - A Case Study M. Mirza, A. Effendi and H. Al Saadi, Medco LLC Oman

132401 Integrated Multi-Well Formation Evaluation for Diagnosing Reservoir Dynamics S.M. Ma, A.R. Belowi and Z. Ali, Saudi Aramco; and M. Zeybek, Schlumberger

132443 New Corrosion Inhibitor Reduces Overboard Oil in Water and Maintains Asset IntegrityB. Dunsmore, R. Dunn and C. Rappa, Baker Hughes Inc. ; and R. Ashiedu, Vermillion Oil & Gas

132454 An Efficient Methodology for Characterizing EOS & Parameters T.H. Ahmed and D. Meehan, Baker Hughes Inc.

132497 A Decision Support System for Cost-effective Assessment of Sand Production Risk and Selection of Completion Type K. Rahman, Baker Hughes Ltd.; A. Khaksar and T. Kayes, Baker RDS Ltd.

132597 A Comprehensive Framework for Developing, Training and Mentoring the Next Generation of Geosteering Engineers R.M. Bacon and J.W. Skillings, INTEQ

132659 The Development of Complete System to Allow Continuous Downhole Chemical Injection Without Affecting the Subsurface and Surface Safety SystemsR.D. Lacy and J. Jacob, Weatherford Intl.; and E. Calzoncinth and W.J. Hearn, Weatherford

132663 Maintaining Well Productivity Through Inhibiting Scale Formation and Controlling Fines Migration P.D. Nguyen, J.E. Vasquez and J.D. Weaver, Halliburton Energy Services Group

POSTER SESSION

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132701 Equipment Design Change Improves Cementing Operations from MODUC’s Operating in Rough Sea Environment; Case Histories for Two North Sea Jobs H.E. Rogers, Halliburton Energy Services Group

132766 Acidizing: A Small Change in Recipe, A Big Improvement in Production S. Wahib and S. Nizam Effendi PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.; C.S. Wong, BJ Services Co. (formerly from PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.) ; D. Choo and R. Ramnarine, BJ Oilwell Services (M) Sdn. Bhd.

132855 Optimizing Well Productivity and Maximizing Recovery from a Mature Gas Field : The Application of Wellhead Compressor Technology Sumaryanto, N.H. Kontha, W.F. Turnbull and A. Lukman, VICO Indonesia

132861 Discrete Element Simulation of Induced Damaged Zones in Perforation Process M. Sarmadivaleh, A. Nabipour and M. Asadi, Curtin U. of Technology

132880 FAIS: An Automated Advisor for Characterized Analog and Interpretation of Reservoir Formations in UGR K. Cheng, W. Wu, W.B. Ayers and S.A. Holditch, Texas A&M U.

132885 Multiphase Hydrodynamics of Coal Seam Gas Wells V.K. Pareek, Curtin U. of Technology; and T. Mason, Australian Coalgas Experts Pty. Ltd.

132889 Skin Measurement and Other Applications with New Sonic Measurement in the Gulf of Thailand L. Jiang, Schlumberger; and S. Pabchanda, PTT Exploration & Production Plc.

132917 Thermal-Poro Elastic Stress Effect on Stress Reorientation in Production and Injection Wells Z. Zhai, K.S. Zaki and A. Abousayed Advantek Intl. Corp.

132920 Sand Erosion Modelling J. Wu, C.Y. Wong, L. Graham, CSIRO and C. Solnordal, CSIRO Mathematical & Information Science and A. Zamberi, PETRONAS Research Sd. Bhd.

132958 Microseismic Mapping of Hydraulic Treatments in Coalbed Methane (CBM) Formations - Challenges and Solutions U. Zimmer, Pinnacle Technologies

132961 Improved Casing-while-Drilling Performance Enables 20-in. and 13B (C<-in. Casing Strings to Be Drilled in Consecutively for the First Time Offshore Malaysia S.B. Cornel, Baker Hughes; and A. Hakam, A. Kassim and C.Y. Chung, Murphy Sarawak Oil Co. Ltd.

132968 Hydrate Formation Characteristics of Natural Gas During Transient Operation of a Flow Line G.A. Sanchez Soto, Y. Seo, M. Di Lorenzo, K. Kozielski and J. Zhang, CSIRO

132971 Turning Around Mature Field Production Performance by Finding and Producing New Pools - A Mutiara Field Case History, A Case Study of Successfully Grid Base Drilling Campaign in Fluvio-Deltaic Reservoir I.D. Wibowo, I.B. Sinaga, B.S. Ismanto, W.A. Rahmanto and I. Hermawaty, VICO Indonesia

132983 Enhanced Reservoir Scenarios Management Workflow A. Garcia, J. Rebeschini, D. Martins and C. Vieira, Halliburton and F. Nunes, E. Da Silva and M.N. Herdeiro, Petrobras

133005 Design and Application of a New Acid-Alkali-Surfactant Flooding Formulation for Malaysian Reservoirs K.A. Elraies, I.M. Tan and M.T. Fathaddin, U. Teknologi PETRONAS

133026 Integrated 3D Reservoir Model and Petrophysical Study to Optimize Field Development in Low Permeability Deltaic Reservoir, Badak Field-Indonesia I.A. Negara, U. Gadjah Mada; and L.P. Gultom, J.B. Corbellini, R.A. Harnondo, A. Soenoro and R. Nikijuluw, VICO Indonesia

133044 Valuation of Swing Contracts by Least Square Monte Carlo Simulation B.J. Willigers, Palantir Economic Solutions; S. Begg, U. of Adelaide; and R.B. Bratvold, U. of Stavanger

133046 New Method for Predicting the Average Pore Diameter Using the NMR Data Calibrated to Core Analysis in a Clastic Reservoir A. Reda, Melrose Petroleum Co.; M. Darwish, Cairo U.; M. Nashaat, Rashid Petroleum Co.; and A. Hashem, Merlon Oil Co.

133070 Influence of Fault Geometry on the Coupled Hydro Geomechanical Simulation and Analysis of Fault Reactivation M. Asadi and V. Rasouli, Curtin U. of Technology; and Y. Zhang, CSIRO

133101 Incorporating Uncertainty into Economic Assessment of CBM Reservoirs Using Monte Carlo Methods R. Sander and L. Connell, CSIRO Petroleum

133107 Deep Open Water Interventions - From Slickline through to Drilling With Coil M. De Castro, J. Burns and B. Walker, Well Ops South East Asia

133208 Modeling World Oil Supply: Its Peak Production Rate and Time I.S. Nashawi and A. Malallah, Kuwait U.; and M. AL-Bisharah, Kuwait Oil Co.

133209 Permeability Prediction from Wireline Well Logs Using Fuzzy Logic and Classification Tree Analyses A. Malallah and I.S. Nashawi, Kuwait U.

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133214 Enhancing Waterflooding Effectiveness of the Heavy Oil Reservoir using the Viscosity Reducer F. Zhang, H. Zhang and X. Feng, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina

133216 Multi-zone Completion Using An Optical Permanent Reservoir Monitoring System At Seria North Flank, Brunei K.K. Ong, C. Bechdol and L. Yeow, Weatherford Solutions Sdn. Bhd.; and P. Holweg, S. Sulaiman, P.C. Brassart, R.A. Jansen and M. Eleuch, Brunei Shell Petroleum. Sdn. Bhd.

133217 Upscaled Multi-Phase Flow Properties of Fracture Corridors M.O. Ahmed Elfeel, Schlumberger Overseas S.A.; and G.D. Couples, S. Geiger-Boschung and J. Ma, Heriot-Watt U.

133246 How Good is the P90 Value as a Measure of the Reserves Downside? S. Gupta, U. of Western Australia; R. Gupta, Curtin U. of Technology; and J.F. Van Elk, Nederlandse Aardolie Maatschappij B.V.

133261 Stochastic Forecasting of Production Potential in Coal Seam Gas (CSG) G. Zangl, S.S. Biniwale, V. Sharma and R. Trivedi, Schlumberger

133321 Design Optimization of Slotted Liner Completions in Horizontal Wells of Mumbai High Field A. Kumar and A.K. Srivastava, Oil & Natural Gas Corp. Ltd.; and R. Kumar, Schlumberger DCS

133328 Impact of Absolute and Relative Permeabilities on Coalbed Methane Production J. Liu, U. of Western Australia; and D. Chen, Z. Pan and L. Connell, CSIRO Petroleum

134504 Amplifier/Booster Joint Positioning Framework Design for a High Speed Wired Telemetry System in MWD/LWD Downhole Tool Environment S. Rath, U. of Houston ;and R. Samuel, Landmark-Halliburton

133336 Horizontal Well Optimization with Inflow Control Devices (ICDs) Application in Heterogeneous and Dipping Gas-capped Oil Reservoirs K. Goh, Schlumberger Data & Consulting Services; R.A. Karim and M. Nuriyadi, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.; and J.A. Murison, Reslink AS

133338 Investigation the Effect of Location and Orientation of Horizontal Well on Reserves: Metamodeling Approach R.S. Shadizadeh, Petroleum U. of Technology Iran; and H. Hasani and T. Foroud, Amir-Kabir U. of Technology

133350 Real Time Checkshots While Drilling - Reducing the Risk In Exploration Drilling T.K. Lim and A. Ahmed, Schlumberger Asia Services Ltd.; and K.B. Zainun and A. Yusof, PETRONAS

133364 Successful Applications of Expandable Sand Screen (ESS) in Iran Oil Fields R. Salehi-Moorkani, Surcolumbiana U.; and G. Safian, Natl. Iranian South Oil Co.

133370 A New Approach to Flowline Active Heating L. Abney, Halliburton

133419 Synthesis and Properties of Petroleum Sulphonates for Weak Alkali ASP/Alkali-Free SP Combination Flooding Y. Zhu, Q. Hou, H. Yuan, Z. Wang and J. Wu, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina

133427 Horizontal Wells with Multi-Stage Fracs Provide Better Economics for Many Lower Perm Reservoirs B.W. Mcdaniel, Halliburton

133488 The Late Miocene Coalbed Methane System in the South Sumatra Basin of Indonesia S. Mazumder, Shell Intl. E&P B.V.; and I.B. Sosrowidjojo, Lemigas

133515 Real Time Production Surveillance and Optimization in A PETRONAS Carigali Field H. Lee, P.A. Whitney, A.M. Arifin, and R.C. Grigorescu, Schlumberger; and M. Zulkipli and R. Midun, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.

133517 Reverse Osmosis Compatible Chemical Foamers for Gas Well Deliquification and Production Enhancement M.J. Willis, Nalco Ltd.; and G.A. Conrad, Nalco OneSource

133526 Field Effectiveness of a Physical Water Treating Device to Control Carbonate Scale in Indonesia W.L. Parker, H. Muswar and F. Falsini, Weatherford Intl.; and D. Thaib, Pertamina EP

133602 The Impact of Coal Matrix Water on Permeability Behaviour During Primary and Enhanced CBM Recovery Z. Pan, L. Connell, M. Camilleri and D.D. Heryanto, CSIRO Petroleum

133603 Advanced Sand-Face Completion Design and Application in Gas and Gas-Condensate Fields D.R. Davies and F.T. Al-Khelaiwi, Heriot-Watt U.

133630 Determination of Water Influx in Coal-Bed Methane (CBM) Reservoirs A. Sekhar, Indian School of Mines

133637 Novel Method of Time Controllable Chemistry Water Shutoff Technology H. Liu, Research Inst. Petroleum Exploration and Development (RIPED), PetroChina; and D. Xiao, PetroChina Daqing Oilfield Co. Ltd.

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133677 First Ever Multi-stage Proppant Fracturing on an Openhole Horizontal Gas Well in Deep Natural Fissure Volcanic Reservoir in West China Y. Wang, Schlumberger; J. Zhang, Y.K. Zhou, PetroChina Xinjiang Oil Co.; and J. Zhang and N. Zhang, PetroChina Co. Ltd.

133728 Data User Experience Step One: Trusted Data P. Flichy, IO-hub; R. Clark, Energistics; and O. Timmons, 3GR

133768 Development and Application of an Improved Workflow for Reserve Estimation P.A. Lyford, S.T. Chipperfield and W.H. Cibich, Santos Ltd.; and G.P. Helfrick, Fekete Assocs. Inc.

133829 Proper Analysis and Integration of Production Data from CBM Reservoirs Improve Future Prediction H. Shwe, QGC

133830 Drilling and Completion Challenges and Remedies of CO2 Injected Wells with Emphasis to Mitigate Well Integrity Issues M. Hossain, Curtin U. of Technology ; and M. Amro, Technical University of Bergakademie Freiberg

133849 Investigation of SAGD Recovery Process in Complex Reservoir C.T. Dang, HCMC U. Technology; and W. Bae and N.T. Nguyen, Sejong U.

133852 Equation-Of-State Modeling for Reservoir Fluid Samples Contaminated By Oil-Based Drilling Mud Using Contaminated Fluid PVT Data P. Sah and K.S. Pedersen, Calsep A/S; and G.S. Gurdial, H. Izwan and F. Ramli, Core Labs Malaysia Sdn. Bhd.

133876 Fast Loop Optimization of Smart Single and Multilateral Wells: Production Engineer’s Perspective M.H. Al-Buali, Saudi Aramco

133896 Success Story of Downhole Fluid Sampling in a Very Challenging Environment in the Gulf of Thailand C. Kanjanavasoontara and S. Daungkaew, Schlumberger; C.J. Platt, Pearl Oil (Thailand) Ltd.; and N. Yimyam, Institut Francais du Petrole (IFP)

133900 Costs of CO2 Transport and Injection in Australia P.R. Neal, W. Hou, G. Allinson and Y. Cinar, U. of New South Wales

133905 Identification and Modelling of Inter-Reservoir Cross-flow Using a Novel Material Balance Method E.T. Montague, LENS Petroleum; and M.J. Pine, Woodside Energy

133910 Bringing New Life to Old Fields S.V. Jakeman, PT. Shell Indonesia; and P. Jaswadi, R. Krisna and Kasijatno, Pertamina EP

133914 Pushing the Boundary of Water Disposal - Produced Water Treatment for Zero Harm Discharge to Sensitive Environment - Case Studies And Descriptions C. Madin, Veolia Water Solutions and Technologies

133927 Development of a Hot Fractured Rock Geothermal Reservoir Model Using a Black Oil Simulator J. Moriarty, Origin Energy Ltd.

133929 Transforming Data into Knowledge Using Data Mining Techniques: Application in Excess Water Production Problem Diagnosis in Oil Wells M. Rabiei and R. Gupta, Curtin Uni. of Technology; and G. Sanchez-Soto and Y. Cheong, CSIRO

133961 Formation Evaluation Challenges in Thin Bedded Deepwater Reservoirs: Success Story from Offshore Malaysia M. Mohd Azam, S. Daungkaew, W. Wei, N. Hademi, S.S. Haddad and J.V. Doorn, Schlumberger; and R. Hussain, Schlumberger DCS

133981 Integrating Reservoir Characterization: 3D Dynamic, Petrophysical and Geological Description of Reservoir Facies M.A. Knackstedt, A.P. Sheppard and S. Latham, Australian Natl. U.; and P. Jaime and A. Butcher, FEI Co.

133983 Are Your Geoscience Applications Maintaining the Integrity of the Geospatial Data? J.P. Stigant and M. Michell, Devon Energy Corp.; B. Schostak, Shell E&P; J.P. Davis, BP America; B.D. Barrs, ExxonMobil Technical Computing Co.; and M.B. Latef, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.

133986 Numerical Simulation on CO2 Leakage through Fractures along Wells Using Discrete Fracture Modeling B. Gong, Chevron Energy Technology Co.; and D. Huo, Peking U.

133994 Geomechanical Assessment for Underground Gas Storage and CO2 Sequestration in Depleted Hydrocarbon Reservoirs A. Khaksar and Z. Fang, Baker RDS Ltd.

133997 How to Reconcile your Multi-phase Meters in a Gas-Condensate Field by Using Representative PVT and Sales Volumes D.J. Chia, Chevron Australia Pty. Ltd. ; and I.J. Taggart, CTSOR Pty. Ltd.

134008 Application of an Array Dielectric Measurement to the Characterization of a Complex Sandstone Reservoir in Vietnam S.M. Farag, Schlumberger; and T.S. Murugesu, PETRONAS

134037 Pragmatic Approach to Gas Development Planning, Southwest Ampa Field, Brunei B.S. Carl, P.G. Strobech, B. Van Thieu, and N. Talib, Brunei Shell Petroleum Sdn. Bhd.; and D. Melanson, Shell

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134061 An Integrated Analytical Method in Identifying the Remain Potential of Thin Bed Reservoir on Deltaic System, Sengata Field M.H. Alkaff, R.K. Demak, F.P. Prasetyanto and Y.I. Widyanti, PT. Pertamina EP

134064 The Effect of Rheological Properties of Alkali-Surfactant-Polymer System on Residual Oil Recovery Rate After Water Flooding W. Ma, Daqing Petroleum Inst.

134067 Flares in the Middle East M. Papas, Petrenee Pty. Ltd.

134115 The Method and Expert System for Risk Assessment of Drilling in High-Sulfur Gas Field Z. Yanbin and W. Ruihe, U. of Petroleum China

134137 Water Recycling Helps with Sustainability D. Pierce, Brandt-NOV

134192 Geomechanical Analysis of Wellbore Stability and Trajectory Drift in a Deep Carbonate Reservoir in Kuwait K. Khan, Schlumberger; and M.N. Acharya, E.H. Al-anzi, M.M. Kabir, S.P. Pradhan and Q.M. Dashti, Kuwait Oil Co.

134239 Innovative Bearing and Seal Package Improves Rollercone Bit Performance and Reliability P. Langille and J.D. Day, Marathon Oil Co.; and A. Deen and R.N. Baker, Smith Technologies

134272 Eliminating Sand Flow Back Issues in Coalbed Methane Stimulation Treatments D.P. Magill, M. Ramurthy and P.D. Nguyen, Halliburton Energy Services Group

134277 Environmental Management Performance of Subang Field, PT Pertamina EP, Indonesia on PROPER Indicator I.P. Sembiring, Pertamina; E.A. Mulyono, PT Pertamina EP

134278 Producing High CO2 Gas Content Reservoirs in Pertamina Indonesia Using Multi Stage Cryogenic Process I. Suarsana, PT Pertamina EP

134396 Estimation of Fracture Effective Permeability by Upscaling Using Ensemble Kalman Filter N. Arihara, Waseda U.

134474 Potential Upside Reserves of Shallow Gas Discovered Within the Early Triassic Mount Goodwin Formation and the Early Permian Fossil Head Formation in the Blacktip Gas Field, Bonaparte Basin D. Wheller and A. Caudullo, Eni Australia Ltd.

134477 Challenges in Designing, Planning and Execution of Well Completions for Highly Depleted Reservoirs, and High Differential Pressure between Reservoirs T. Mohamed Imran, C. Elliott, N. Sharif, A.I. Abdullah, N. Samsudin, M.Z. Sulaiman, M. Rameli and J. Emarievbe, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd.

OTC20842 Mechanical Performance of a Gravel Pack Prototype Under High Stress Contrast F.M. Guzman Villarroel, GeoMechanics Intl.; M. Bloch, Petrobras S.A.; and E.D. Vargas Jr., Catholic U. of Rio de Janeiro

134589 Diffusion and Dispersion During Gas Injection into Naturally Fractured Reservoirs - A Review J.J. Trivedi and M. Chordia, U. of Alberta

134623 The Potential Applications in Heavy Oil EOR with the Nano-particle and Surfactant Stabilized Solvent-based Emulsion F. Qiu, Texas A&M U.

134823 Enhancing Gas Production in Coal Bed Methane Formations with Zeta Potential Altering System S. Kakadjian, J.L. Garza and F. Zamora, Weatherford Intl. Ltd.

135813 Gas Content and Composition Measurement Without the Use of Coring I. Gray, Sigra Pty. Ltd.

135814 Variations in Permeability of Coals I. Gray, Sigra Pty. Ltd.

136539 Controlled Multi-zone Water Injection: The Enfield ENC05 story D.M. Medd, D. Gibson, T. McCarthy, B. Toldo, P. Moselely and V. Pudin, Woodside Energy Ltd.

136540 Imaging and Developing a Thin, Viscous Oil Leg: Vincent Field, Offshore Western Australia O. Sundsby, A. Gongora, A. Hughes and S. Winters, Woodside Energy Ltd.

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COURSESUNCONVENTIONAL RESERVOIR STIMULATIONThursday, 21 October • 0900 – 1700 hoursFriday, 22 October • 0900 – 1300 hoursInstructor: Kumar Ramurthy, Halliburton

Course Content:This course is designed for reservoir, production and completion engineers who are interested in learning skills and methods that are used in the stimulation of unconventional reservoirs, with an emphasis on fracture stimulation of CSG wells. This one and a half day course will provide technical professionals with an understanding of the following topics:

What are Unconventional Reservoirs?•Characterisation and Geology of Resources•Reservoir Properties and Storage Capacity•Formation Evaluation and Geomechanics•Permeability and Flow Capacity: Testing and Evaluating Coals•Fluid Compatibility and Formation Damage•Cementing and Perforating •Hydraulic Fracturing, including Fluid Selection, Use of Conditioning Pads, Stress Orientation and its effects on •Stimulation, Fracture Modelling, History Matching and Design OptimisationProduction Operations and Well Management•

Instructor:Muthukumarappan “Kumar” Ramurthy is a Technical Professional Manager with Halliburton’s technical team in Denver, USA. He received his Bachelor of Engineering in Mechanical Engineering from India and an MS in Petroleum Engineering from Mississippi State U. He has more than 10 years of conventional and unconventional gas reservoir and stimulation engineering experience with Halliburton. He has authored several SPE papers and is a co-author of “Coalbed Methane-Principles and Practices”, a CBM book that was just published in 2008. Also as co-author, he taught the course “Unconventional Reservoir Stimulation: CBM and Gas Shales” to the oil and gas industry in Australia, Canada and USA.

TRANSIENT TESTING OF CBM WELLSThursday, 21 October • 0900-1700 hours Instructor: George Stewart, Weatherford

Course Content:Introduction•Stress Dependent Permeability•Well Test Pseudo Model•Inclusion of Wellbore Storage•IFO Field Example•Forecasting of Production•Slug Testing•Boundary Effects Combined with SDPP•Skin Effect in CBM Wells•Interference Testing to Elucidate Areal Anisotropy•Extended Production Testing•Horizontal Wells in CBM•13 Hydraulically Fractured Horizontal Wells•Application of New Generation Wireline Formation Testers in CBM•

Instructor:George Stewart is the Technical Director of Weatherford’s e-production solutions division and Professor of Petroleum Engineering at Heriot-Watt U. having served with the latter since its start-up in 1975 as Senior Lecturer, Professor and Head of Department. George has over 27 years of experience in well test analysis, reservoir engineering, PVT and phase behaviour, and gas condensate engineering. He has carried out many consultancy projects worldwide in these topics.

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George has also been a key part of EPS software development since 1983, in both well testing and production software. He has given numerous industry schools and seminars on well test analysis and reservoir engineering throughout the world and has authored many papers on the subject. George has a B.Sc. in Chemical Engineering from Edinburgh U. and a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from Newcastle U.

CSG TO LNG DELIVERABILITY ASSESSMENTThursday, 21 October • 0900 – 1700 hoursInstructor: Saikat Mazumder, Arrow Energy Ltd.

Course Content:This course is designed for asset managers, geologists, reservoir engineers and production technologists who are interested in learning skills and methods that can be used to assess the deliverability of CSG to LNG projects. With an emphasis on class participation, this one day course will provide CSG professionals with an understanding of both resource assessment and deliverability assessment. The first session, covering resource assessment, will focus on:

Reservoir Geology•Property Modelling•Static Modelling•Dynamic Modelling, including: Analytical Modelling, Mechanistic Modelling, Permeability Modelling and Stress •Dependent Permeability including Matrix Shrinkage History Matching•Sensitivity Analysis•

While the second session, covering deliverability assessment, will focus on:

Integrated Workflows and Key Inputs•Development Planning, including: Drilling and Completion Options, Risks and Uncertainties, Surface Development •Options and Subsurface RealisationsDeliverability Assessment •

Instructor:Saikat Mazumder is currently working as a Principal Reservoir Engineer at Arrow Energy and a technical specialist for global CSG developments / aspirations of Shell Exploration & Production. He has or is working on numerous CSG projects in Australia, Canada, China, India, Indonesia and Poland. He has about 15 years of experience in the field of Coal Seam Gas. He has authored numerous papers and publications in international journals and presented at various conferences in the field of CSG and CO2 Sequestration in Coal.

Saikat has a Master’s Degree in Applied Geology from the Indian School of Mines and a PhD from Delft U. of Technology, The Netherlands.

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American Express Diners Club MasterCard Visa(Credit card payment would be in US Dollars only)

Card Number CVV Code

Exp. Date (mm/yy)

COURSES REGISTRATION FORMSPE ASIA PACIFIC OIL & GAS CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION

18 - 20 OCTOBER 2010 • BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA

All portions of this form must be completed. Print names as they should appear on meeting badge. Registration will not be processed without payment.

SPE Member : Yes No SPE Member NumberRegistrant’s First Name (forename) Last Name (family name)

Job Title or Position

Company

P.O. Box or Street Address

City

State Country Zip/Postal Code

Office Telephone (Include Country and City Code) Facsimile (Include Country and City Code)

E-mail Address

Registration fees include 10% GSTFEE PER PERSON

QTY COST REGISTRATIONOn/before 20 Sept. After 20 Sept.

COURSE A: Unconventional Reservoir StimulationThursday & Friday, 21 & 22 October 2010 (1 1/2day)

A$1,650/US$1,525 A$1,750/US$1,620 1. SPE MemberA$1,750/US$1,620 A$1,850/US$1,710 2. Nonmember

COURSE B: Transient Testing of CBM WellsThursday, 21 October 2010 (1-day)

A$1,100/US$1,015 A$1,200/US$1,110 1. SPE MemberA$1,200/US$1,110 A$1,300/US$1,200 2. Nonmember

COURSE C: CSG to LNG Deliverability AssessmentThursday 21 October 2010 (1-day)

A$1,100/US$1,015 A$1,200/US$1,110 1. SPE MemberA$1,200/US$1,110 A$1,300/US$1,200 2. Nonmember

Total: A$/US$

Name as it appears on card Billing address of card Zip Code/Postal code of cardTotal AmountSignature

Early BirdRegistration Deadline

20 September 2010

Mail or Fax to:Registrar-2010 APOGCE

Society of Petroleum EngineersSuite 23-02, Level 23

Centrepoint South,Mid Valley City

Lingkaran Syed Putra59200 Kuala Lumpur,

MalaysiaTel: 60.3.2288.1233Fax: 60.3.2282.1220

If you fax this form,do NOT mail original.

PAYMENT OPTIONS: Australian and US Dollars Cheque or Demand Draft payable

to Society of Petroleum Engineers

Telegraphic Transfer in Australian Dollars US Dollars(Bank details will be provided on the invoice) CANCELLATION POLICY: • Cancellation in writing must be received by this office no later than 4 October 2010 to receive a refund less A$150/US$140 processing fees.• Cancellation after 4 October 2010 is not eligible for refund.• No refund if a registrant fails to attend.

CVV code is the 3 digit code on back of VISA/ MasterCard and the 4 digit code on the front of American Express

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GENERAL INFORMATIONCONFERENCE PROCEEDINGSAdvance full conference registration guarantees one set of CD-ROM Proceedings and is available for collection at the conference. Additional Proceedings may be pre-ordered on the Advance Registration Form or purchased during registration hours at the conference for A$275/US$255 member and A$330/US$305 nonmember. Participants are encouraged to order CD-ROM Proceedings in advance, as on-site availability is limited.

HOTEL ACCOMMODATION

Hotel accommodation can be reserved at the Rydges South Bank and Mantra South Bank, where a room block with “special rate” is being held for 2010 APOGCE conference delegates. Conference delegates are advised to stay at the Rydges South Bank and Mantra South Bank, as they are adjacent to the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre. Please complete the Hotel Booking Form to ensure your hotel accommodation during the conference. Alternatively, you may visit www.rydges.com/cwp/spe for online reservation of accommodation at the Rydges South Bank.

IMMIGRATION/VISA

A valid passport with a visa is required for all non-Australian citizens attending the conference. Visas can be applied for at any office of the Australian High Commission, Embassy or Consulate. An invitation letter to facilitate the application of visa will be issued to attendees upon request. Please visit the SPE website at www.spe.org for letter of invitation request form. It is important that people wishing to travel to Australia apply for their visas well in advance. Please ensure that your passport is also valid for the period of stay you are visiting Australia.

Please check with your travel agent or the Australian Embassy on regulations relating to immigration/visa for entry to Australia before your departure or visit www.immi.gov.au for further information.

ADVANCE REGISTRATION Register by 20 September and Save!

To advance register, please complete and return the Early Bird/Advance Registration Form. Early Bird Registration deadline is 20 September 2010. The deadline for receipt of Advance Registration Form is 4 October 2010. Advance registration should be made by mail OR fax to the SPE Asia Pacific Office (Kuala Lumpur). Payment on advance registration should be mailed to the SPE Asia Pacific Office (Kuala Lumpur) as indicated on the form, or fax your completed registration form with credit card information to SPE Asia Pacific Office (Kuala Lumpur), facsimile: 60.3.2282.1220. To submit your registration on-line, please go to the SPE web site <www.spe.org> (credit card registrants only).

Advance registration payment by cheque or credit card:Australian Dollar/U.S. Dollar Cheque/Money Order 1. payable to the Society of Petroleum Engineers.

2. Credit Card payments will be in U.S. Dollars only.

Conference materials and badges will not be mailed in advance, but should be collected at the Conference Registration Counter, Plaza Foyer, Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre, during registration hours.

To avoid congestion during the event, delegates are encouraged to collect their materials/badges at the Registration Counter on Sunday, 17 October between 1500-1800 hours.

REGISTRATION PACKAGE AND FEEFull Conference Period Registration Fee includes admission to technical sessions and exhibition, ice breaker, happy hour, luncheons, daily coffee/tea breaks, and one CD-ROM Proceedings. One-Day Registration Fee includes admission to technical sessions and exhibition, luncheon and coffee/tea breaks for that day only.

Students: Registration for technical sessions and exhibition is complimentary for full time students. Complimentary registration does not include Proceedings or any function tickets.

ON-SITE REGISTRATIONDelegates may register on-site at the Registration Counter, Plaza Foyer, Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre, 1500-1800 hours on Sunday, 17 October; 0730-1730 on Monday, 18 October; 0730-1730 on Tuesday 19 October; and 0730-1700 on Wednesday 20 October.

REFUND DEADLINECancellations must be received in writing by SPE Asia Pacific Office address shown on the Early Bird/Advance Registration Form no later than 4 October 2010 to receive a refund less A$150/US$140 processing fee. No refunds will be accepted after this date. Substitutions will be accepted.

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SOCIAL ACTIVITIES may register on the advance registration form or by contacting Mike Wagner, Weatherford at 61.7.3214.3014 or email [email protected]

Tours are optional and guests may obtain further information and make direct reservations at the tour desk of Brisbane Marketing at the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre. Tours can also be booked through the website www.visitbrisbane.com.au

TOUR PACKAGES

PRE-CONFERENCE ICE BREAKER

Plaza TerraceBrisbane Convention & Exhibition CentreSunday, 17 October 2010 • 1730-1900 hoursPrice : Free for all full conference registrantsA$70/US$65 for 1-day and non-registrants/partners

All full conference registrants are invited to attend the Ice Breaker with their partners on Sunday, 17 October. This is a great way to relax on a Sunday afternoon, and also provide an excellent opportunity to catch up with industry friends and colleagues.

Dress Code: Smart Casual

CONFERENCE DINNER

Plaza Terrace RoomBrisbane Convention & Exhibition CentreTuesday, 19 October 2010 • 1900-2300 hoursPrice : A$130/US$120 per person (SPE Member)A$140/US$130 per person (Non Member)

Why not enjoy a casual evening with fellow industry friends and new acquaintances? The conference dinner is an informal opportunity for conference delegates, local members and partners to socialise and enjoy all that Brisbane has to offer. Dinner will be banquet style comprising of three (3) courses, and accompanied by superb Australian and New Zealand wines. Entertainment will also be featured to set the mood for delegates and their partners.

This will no doubt be an evening to remember and a great opportunity to relax after the second day of the conference and exhibition.

Dress Code: Smart Casual

AMBROSE GOLF CHALLENGE

St. Lucia Golf LinksThursday 21 October 2010 • 0700 hoursPrice : A$170/US$155 per person

Join your fellow golfers at the St. Lucia Golf Course for an enjoyable day of golf, followed by a BBQ lunch. This scenic course is located close to the central business district for easy access. Tee-off time is at 0800 hours for a shotgun start, with breakfast and registration beginning at 0700 hours. The cost includes green fees, motorised carts, pre-game breakfast, BBQ lunch and drinks.

Entry is limited which will be on a first-come first-serve basis. Register early to avoid disappointment. Participants

THE WHEEL OF BRISBANE

Explore the city of Brisbane from new heights in a memorable journey complete with breathtaking views stretching across the heart of Brisbane City and the iconic Brisbane River.

KOOKABURRA CRUISE

Enjoy a cruise along the Brisbane River aboard authentic paddlewheelers, and icons of the Brisbane River, the majestic Kookaburra River Queens. Made entirely of Australian timbers and based on the Mississippi originals,

NORTH STRADBROKE ISLAND

North Stradbroke Island, the world’s second largest sand island, lies within easy reach of tourists visiting Brisbane and the coast. It offers Coral Sea beaches of pristine white sand, wildlife and rich forests, wetlands and spring fed lakes.

SURFERS PARADISE

Surfers Paradise is the jewel of Queensland’s Gold Coast and one of the most popular holiday destinations in Australia.

go back to a by-gone era while seeing the sights of Brisbane.

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 40

All portions of this form must be completed. Print your name as they should appear on meeting badge. Registration would not be processed without payment.PARTICIPANT PROFILERegistrant’s First Name(Forename)

Registrant’s Last Name (Family Name)

Spouse’s/Partner’s First Name(if attending)

Spouse’s/Partner’s Last Name

Company Job Title or Position

P.O. Box or Street Address

City State/ Province

Country Zip/Postal Code

Office Telephone (Include country/city code)

Facsimile (Include country/city code)

Email Address

Emergency Contact Name Emergency Contact Telephone (Include country/city code)

SPE Member c Yes c No Membership #_______________________

FEE PER PERSON QTY COST REGISTRATION

Early Bird Registration Deadline:

20 September 2010

Advance Registration Deadline:

4 October 2010

By 20 September

After 20 September

Full conference period includes technical sessions, exhibition, ice breaker, happy hour, coffee/ tea breaks, daily luncheons and one (1) copy of the CD-ROM Proceedings

A$1,115/ US$1,030

A$1,215/ US$1,125 SPE Member *Please tick box if you will attend the Ice Breaker

(Sunday, 17 October 2010)

c Yes, I will attend.

c No

A$1,295/ US$1,200

A$1,395/ US$1,290 Nonmember

A$1,045/ US$970

A$1,145/ US$1,060

Presenter/Author/Panelist/Committee/Session Chairperson

Complimentary Comp. Student (With valid college ID only, includes technical/poster sessions, exhibition and coffee breaks)

ONE DAY REGISTRATIONA$410/ US$380

A$510/ US$470 SPE Member Includes technical/poster sessions, exhibition, coffee breaks

and daily luncheon for the day you have selectedIndicate Day c Monday c Tuesday c WednesdayA$510/

US$470A$610/ US$565 Nonmember

A$110/ US$100

A$120/ US$110 Visitor (Exhibits Only) Indicate Day c Monday c Tuesday c Wednesday

SOCIAL ACTIVITIES, ADDITIONAL TICKETS AND CD-ROM PROCEEDINGS

A$75/ US$70 Luncheon - Indicate Day(s) c Monday c Tuesday c Wednesday

A$70/ US$65 Ice Breaker (Sunday, 17 October 2010)

A$130/ US$120 Conference Dinner (Tuesday, 19 October 2010) – SPE MEMBER

A$140/ US$130 Conference Dinner (Tuesday, 19 October 2010) – NONMEMBER

A$170/ US$155 Golf Day (Thursday, 21 October)

A$275/ US$255 Additional CD-ROM Proceedings – SPE Member

A$330/ US$305 Additional CD-ROM Proceedings – Nonmember

Young Professionals Workshop

(Sunday, 17 Oct 2010)Comp.

This is a limited attendance workshop for full conference registrants. Complimentary registrations will be issued on a first-come first-served basis. Please tick box if you wish to attend. c YES! I would like to attend.

Total A$/ US$ Registration Fees include 10% GST

ONLINE www.spe.org(Credit Card Registration Only) PAYMENT OPTIONS

FAX +60.3.2284.9220(If Fax, do NOT Mail Original)

c Australian and US Dollars Cheque or Demand Draft payable to Society of Petroleum Engineersc Telegraphic Transfer in c Australian Dollars c US Dollars (Bank details will be provided on the invoice) c American Express c Diners Club c MasterCard c Visa (Credit card payment would be in US Dollars only)

Card Number CVV Code

Expiry Date (mm/yy)

Name as it appears on card Total Amount

Billing address of card Zip/Postal code of card

Signature

MAIL by 4 Oct 2010

Society of Petroleum EngineersSuite 23-02, Level 23Centrepoint South, Mid Valley City, Lingkaran Syed Putra59200 Kuala LumpurMalaysia

TEL +60.3.2288.1233

EMAIL [email protected]

CVV code is the 3 digit code on back of VISA/ MasterCard and the 4 digit code on the front of American Express

ADVANCE REGISTRATION FORMSPE ASIA PACIFIC OIL & GAS CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION

18-20 OCTOBER 2010 • BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA

Cancellation Policy• Cancellation in writing must be received by this office no later than 4 October 2010 to receive a refund less A$150/US$140 processing fees.• Cancellation after 4 October 2010 is not eligible for refund.• No refund if a registrant fails to attend.

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2010 APOGCE • Pushing The Boundaries • 41

SOCIETY OF PETROLEUM ENGINEERSASIA PACIFIC OIL & GAS CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION

18-20 OCTOBER 2010 - BRISBANE, AUSTRALIAHOTEL BOOKING FORM

Hotel accommodation at preferential rates has been reserved at the Rydges South Bank and Mantra South Bank for the conference registrants. Room rates are inclusive of 10% GST. Reservations may be made by fax or mail directly to the respective hotel. No booking can be accepted without credit card details or one night deposit. Confirmation of booking will be sent to you directly from the Rydges South Bank and Mantra South Bank.

INDICATE TYPE OF ROOM (Room rates are exclusive of breakfast)

RYDGES SOUTH BANK (Adjacent to BCEC)q Superior Room (Queen/Twin Bed)q Deluxe Room (Queen/Twin Bed)

A$269.00A$289.00

MANTRA SOUTH BANK(5 minutes walk to BCEC)

q Studio Apartment (King Bed, 1-2 persons) q Studio City View Apartment (King Bed, 1-2 persons)q One Bedroom Apartment (Queen/Twin Bed, 1-2 persons)q One Bedroom City View Apartment (Queen/Twin Bed, 1-2 persons)q Two Bedroom Apartment (King/Queen Bed, 1-4 persons)

A$211.00 A$241.00 A$256.00 A$286.00

A$411.00

Registrant’s Name : Last (Surname) Mr./Ms./Mrs. First (Forename)

Partner’s Name : Last (Surname) Mr./Ms./Mrs. First (Forename)

Company :

Address : Street Address or P.O. Box Number City State/Province Country Zip/Postal Code Telephone (Home) Telephone (Work) Facsimile

Arrival : Date Time Airline/Flight No.

Departure : Date Time Airline/Flight No.

Credit Card : Number Expiry Date Signature

American Express MasterCard Visa Others: Specify:

Payment TermsIf no credit card details are provided, then one (1) night’s deposit must be received thirty (30)• days prior to arrival. Deposits will be deemed non refundable if the Rydges South Bank and Mantra South Bank do not receive cancellation notification thirty (30) days prior to arrival.Credit cards will only be debited in the event of a “No Show”. Rydges South Bank and Mantra South Bank must be notified of cancellations thirty • (30) days prior to arrival, otherwise one (1) night’s accommodation will be debited from the credit card account.The check-in time is 1400 hours and check-out time is 1100 hours.• All accounts must be settled on departure unless prior arrangements are made in writing with the respective hotel.• Telephone reservations will not be accepted.•

MAIL/FAX HOTEL BOOKING FORM TO:Rydges South Bank, Brisbane Tel: 61.7.3364.0800 Fax: 61.7.3364.0801 E-mail: [email protected]

Mantra South Bank, Brisbane Tel: 61.7.3305.2500Fax: 6.1.7.3305.2599E-mail: [email protected]

HOTEL BOOKING DEADLINE15 September 2010

Requests will be accepted after this date, but special hotel rates and accommodation cannot be guaranteed

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IADC/SPE ASIA PACIFICDRILLING TECHNOLOGY CONFERENCE

Sponsored By: Official Supporter:

PETRO IETNAM

Value, Resourcesand Innovation :

Sustaining theNext Decade

Value, Resourcesand Innovation :

Sustaining theNext Decade

1-3 November 2010Sheraton Saigon Hotel & Towers

Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

For more information, please contact:SPE Asia Pacific Office (Kuala Lumpur)

Suite 23-02, Level 23, Centrepoint South, Mid Valley City Lingkaran Syed Putra, 59200 Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaTel: 60.3.2288.1233; Fax: 60.3.2282.1220; E-mail: [email protected]

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Web Site: www.spe.org

AMERICAS OFFICE222 Palisades Creek DriveRichardson, TX 75080-2040, U.S.A.P.O. Box 833836Tel: 1.972.952.9393 1.800.456.6863 (Toll-free in USA/Canada)Fax: 1.972.952.9435E-mail: [email protected]

ASIA PACIFIC OFFICESuite 23-02, Level 23, Centrepoint SouthMid Valley City, Lingkaran Syed Putra59200 Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaTel: 60.3.2288.1233Fax: 60.3.2282.1220E-mail: [email protected]

CANADA OFFICE425 - 500, 5th Avenue SWCalgary, AB T2P 3 L5CanadaTel: 1.403.237.5112Fax: 1.403.262.4792E-mail: [email protected]

EUROPE, RUSSIA, CASPIAN AND SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA OFFICEFirst Floor, Threeways House40/44 Clipstone StreetLondon W1W 5DW, U.K.Tel: 44.20.7299.3300Fax: 44.20.7299.3309E-mail: [email protected]

HOUSTON OFFICE10777 Westheimer RoadSuite 1075Houston, TX 77042-3455, U.S.A.Tel: 1.713.779.9595Fax: 1.713.779.4216E-mail: [email protected]

MIDDLE EAST, NORTH AFRICA, AND INDIA OFFICEDubai Knowledge VillageBlock 17, Office S07-S09Dubai, U.A.E.P.O. Box 502217Tel: 971.4.390.3540Fax: 971.4.366.4648E-mail: [email protected]

MOSCOW OFFICENizhnyaya Street, 14, Building 12nd Floor, Office No. 15Moscow, Russian Federation, 125040Tel: 7.495.748.3588E-mail: [email protected]

2010

Applied Technology Workshops

“Enhancing Sand-Free Productivity with Open Hole Sand Control”

10-13 November Penang, Malaysia

“Facilities Integrity”28 November - 1 December Penang, Malaysia

“Well Testing for Reservoir Management”5-8 December Penang, Malaysia

“Managing Contract in E&P”12-15 December Penang, Malaysia

IADC/SPE Asia Pacific Drilling Technology Conference

“Value Resources and Innovation: Sustaining the Next Decade”

1-3 November Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

2011

Applied Technology Workshops

“Chemical Flooding - EOR”16-19 January 2011 Langkawi, Kedah, Malaysia

“Tight Gas”16-19 January Perth, Australia

“Well Intervention”February Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia

“Managing Naphthenates & Soap Emulsions”March Langkawi, Kedah, Malaysia

“Carbon Capture and Sequestration”March Adelaide, Australia

Forum Series in Asia Pacific “Sour Gas Fields : Can they be Developed in an

Economical and Sustainable Mode?”8-13 May 2011 • Bali, Indonesia

Enhanced Oil Recovery Conference 19-20 July Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition“Business and Technology Innovation to Ensure

Sustainable Energy”20-22 September Jakarta, Indonesia

International Petroleum Technology Conference 15-17 November Bangkok, Thailand

SPE OFFICESA GLANCE AT 2010-2011

SOCIETY OF PETROLEUM ENGINEERS EVENTS IN ASIA PACIFIC


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