SOCIETY OF PETROPHYSICISTS AND WELL LOG ANALYSTS
June 20-24, 2020
PRE-REGISTRATION BROCHURE
BANFF ALBERTA, CANADA
SOCIETY OF
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OPHYSICISTS AND WELL LOG ANAL
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Contact
SPWLA8866 Gulf Freeway, Suite 320Houston, TX 77017Phone: +1 713-947-8727Fax: +1 713-947-8747Email: [email protected]
2020 SYMPOSIUM ORGANIZINGCOMMITTEE MEMBERS
General ChairKevin Pyke, CNOOC International [email protected]
Assistant General ChairKelly SkuceConsultant [email protected]
Social Functions Nasir RahimConsultant Petro [email protected]
Sponsorship Mike Sullivan, [email protected]
Exhibits Matt [email protected]
Finance Kathy DiazWolverine Energy [email protected]
Transportation Jim [email protected]
Fieldtrip Gary BudgeonCabra [email protected]
Partner/Guest Activities Peter Kubicaretired/petro [email protected]
Printing/Signs Chris DicaprioExxon [email protected]
Publicity/IT Maggie MalapadBirchcliff [email protected]
Security Aaron WeberCNOOC International,[email protected]
Technical Arrangements Aaron Shelby-JamesASJ Energy Solutions [email protected]
Convention Liaisons Sharon [email protected]
Stephanie [email protected]
The information in this brochure may change slightly as planning progresses, it is recommended that delegates check the symposium website www.spwla2020.com for the most up to date information.
Photos courtesy of Banff & Lake Louise Tourism and Kevin Pyke.
The Canadian Well Logging Society (CWLS) is very excited to host the 61st Annual SPWLA Symposium in Banff, Alberta, Canada. This is not the fi rst time that the CWLS and SPWLA have teamed up and it is great to revive this relationship. The CWLS co-hosted the SPWLA annual symposiums in 1983 and 1993, then followed that with special conferences in the Kananaskis resort near Banff in 2005 & 2006.
It took me some time to put this letter together which reminds me of Sharon’s quote “Petrophysicists are great procrastinators”. I would phrase it that we all work better under pressure, as more than 75% of the abstract submissions for Banff came in on the fi nal day! Nonetheless, you made the deadline and we had an amazing pool of abstracts to frame the technical sessions and posters around.
As you will quickly realize, Banff is no ordinary venue – it is one of the top destinations in the world, and renowned for its natural beauty. The historic Fairmont Banff Springs is truly a castle nestled in the beautiful Rocky Mountains of Alberta. It was built by the Canadian Pacifi c Railway as a destination stopover, with original construction dating back to 1911, followed by several expansion phases. If your family has not asked to come along, you probably have kept it a secret! I still get the same warm feeling every time I travel West of Calgary into one of the most beautiful places on earth.
On the opening weekend we will host two amazing fi eld trips in the Rocky Mountains. During the fi rst fi eld trip you will be educated by two world class structural geologists to help unravel the complex structures and identify challenges this brings to the wellbore scale. If you are fi t and adventurous enough to go on the second fi eld trip, you will hike and see some amazing fossils at Mt. Stephen close to the world-famous Burgess Shale. On the weekend you can also choose to attend one of the on-site workshops that will be sure to advance your knowledge in some great topics. Additionally, we have put together some spousal/partner activities designed to capture anyone’s interest.
Let’s also not forget about the evening events that we are so fortunate to have with the continued support from Halliburton, Baker Hughes, and Schlumberger. I can assure you that you will not be disappointed this year and there may even be a gondola ride if you register early!
We are very fortunate to have this amazing opportunity to network, collaborate, listen, learn and have a little fun. None of this would be possible without the SPWLA board, the local committee and CWLS and the exhibitors and sponsors. The foundation of this is, of course, the hard work of all the speakers who have written papers and are willing to share ideas and stimulate minds.
The entire organizing committee and CWLS looks forward to greeting everyone in beautiful
Banff for the 61st Annual SPWLA Symposium!Kevin PykeGeneral ChairmanSPWLA/CWLS 2020 Committee
WELCOME TO BANFF!THE 61ST ANNUAL SPWLA SYMPOSIUM
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
General Information ...................................................................................................................................... 04
Symposium Highlights .................................................................................................................................. 06
Sponsors and Exhibitors ............................................................................................................................... 07
Technical Program ......................................................................................................................................... 08
Workshops...................................................................................................................................................... 15
Field Trip ...................................................................................................................................................... 19
Society Functions/ Social Events .................................................................................................................. 21
Spouse / Guest Information ......................................................................................................................... 24
Hotel Accommodations ................................................................................................................................ 26
Registration Information ............................................................................................................................... 27
Registration Form .......................................................................................................................................... 29
SPWLA Board of Directors ............................................................................................................................ 30
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CONVENTION CENTER
FAIRMONT BANFF SPRINGSCONFERENCE CENTER
405 Spray AvenueBanff, Alberta,Canada T1L 1J4
AIRPORT INFORMATION
Calgary Airport - The Fairmont Banff Springs is a scenic 147 km drive west of the Calgary International Airport (Approximate travel time 1 hr 45 min)
OFFICIAL AIRLINE
Airline Discounts - Your host committee has secured Air Canada as the Offi cial Canadian Airline for the SPWLA 2020.
Use the code EA7N6MM1 at www.aircanada.com for 10% off fl ights to Calgary (YYC).Discount is valid one week before and after the conference. Come early…stay late!
Applicable Rules:• The booking is to be made to the following city:
Calgary, YYC (AB)• The travel period begins Saturday, June 13, 2020 and
ends Wednesday, July 01, 2020.• No discount will apply to Tango bookings for travel
within Canada or between Canada and the U.S. For International travel (destinations outside North America), discounts apply to all fares including Tango.
AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION
Airport Shuttle or Private Sedan Service
Banff Airporter offers a scheduled service which departs 10x a day between Calgary Airport and Banff. Click www.banffairporter.com to book and use promo code SPWLA2020 for a 15% discount. Promo code is valid for travel from June 10, 2020 to July 4, 2020.
For private luxury transportation from the Calgary Airport along with your needs while in Banff, Banff Sedan is your best choice. To see the fl eets and make a reservation, please go to www.banffsedan.com
Note: All events take place at the Fairmont Banff Springs Conference Center unless indicated otherwise.
5
GENERAL INFORMATION
REGISTRATION
Registration for all attendees, spouses and guests will be located in the Fairmont Banff Springs Conference Center President’s Hall Foyer
DATE AND TIMESaturday, June 20 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Sunday, June 21 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Monday, June 22 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Tuesday, June 23 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Wednesday, June 24 7:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon
EXHIBITIONFairmont Banff Springs Conference CenterExhibit hours are:
Monday & Tuesday 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Wednesday 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Please note: For safety consideration, no one under the age of 13 will be allowed in the exhibit hall.
OPENING SESSION AND SPECIAL GUEST SESSION
Monday, June 22, 8:00 a.m.Join us as General Chairman, Kevin Pyke offi cially opens the SPWLA 61st Annual Logging Symposium with brief opening remarks and the introduction of the Keynote Speaker. Immediately following, SPWLA Vice President of Technology Michael O’Keefe will offi cially open the technical session.
SPEAKERS BREAKFASTAll speakers and Session Chairpersons are invited to at-tend a complimentary breakfast on the morning of their session. Breakfast is served 6:00 a.m. – 8:00am, Monday through Wednesday.
SPEAKER PREPARATION CENTERAll speakers are encouraged to view their presentation in the Preparation Center and have their fi le checked by the projectionist at their earliest convenience. The Prepara-tion Center will provide a computer for speakers to load their PowerPoint® presentations onto the symposium’s computer network and verify compatibility and consis-tency with the system. The Preparation Center is open Saturday and Sunday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Monday through Wednesday, 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. in the Bob Ritchie Room
POSTER PRESENTATIONSPosters are on display all day on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday with a dedicated session each day.
SPOUSE/GUEST SOCIAL GATHERINGTBA
All functions will be held in Fairmont Banff Springs Conference Center unless otherwise indicated.Please confi rm exact location and timing prior to event from information available at registration.
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SYMPOSIUM HIGHLIGHTS
Saturday, June 20Registration 7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Field Trip 1 - Canadian Rocky Mountain 7:30 a.m. - 7:30 p.m.Field Trip Workshop 1 – 3D Printing in Geoscience 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.and Engineering Workshop 2 – Electromagnetism 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Workshop 3 - Uncertainties in Petrophysics 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Speaker Preparation Center – 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Rob Ritchie Room Workshop Luncheon 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Sunday, June 21Registration 7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Field Trip 2 - Burgess Shale - Mt. Stephen 7:30 a.m. - 7:30 p.m.Trilobite BedsWorkshop 4 - Geomechanics 101 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Workshop 5 – The Emergent Primary 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Porosity Tool and Beyond Workshop 6 – Advances in Resistivity and 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Dielectric Logging Workshop Luncheon 11:30 a.m.- 1:30 p.m.Speaker Preparation Center – 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Rob Ritchie Room Technology Committee Meeting 5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.VP Publications Meeting 5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.Nuclear SIG Meeting 5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.Icebreaker Reception 6:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.
Monday, June 22 Speakers Breakfast 6:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m.Speaker Preparation Center – 7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Rob Ritchie Room Registration 7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Spouse/Guest Social Gathering 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Exhibition 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Opening Remarks 8:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m.Spouse/Guest Tour – Johnston Canyon 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.and Lake Louise Tour Morning Technical Sessions 9:45 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.Annual Business Meeting and Lunch 11:45 a.m.- 1:00 p.m.Networking lunch (buffet style, 11:45 a.m.- 1:00 p.m.all guest welcome)Poster Authors in Booth 1:10 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.Afternoon Technical Sessions 1:50 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Tuesday, June 23 Speakers Breakfast 6:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m.Speaker Preparation Center – 7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Rob Ritchie RoomRegistration 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Spouse/Guest Social Gathering 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Exhibition 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Spouse/Guest Day Tour – Takakkaw Falls 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.and Burgess Shales Exhibit Morning Technical Sessions 8:30 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.Awards Presentation and Lunch 11:45 a.m.- 1:00 a.m.Networking lunch (buffet style, 11:45 a.m.- 1:00 p.m.all guest welcome)Poster Authors in Booth 1:10 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.Afternoon Technical Sessions 1:50 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday, June 24 Speakers Breakfast 6:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m.Speaker Preparation Center – 7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Rob Ritchie Room Registration 7:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.Spouse/Guest Social Gathering 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Exhibition 8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.Morning Technical Sessions 8:30 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.Spouse/Guest Day Tour - Lake 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.Minnewanka Boat Tour and MuseumLunch Break – On your own 11:45 a.m.- 1:00 p.m.Leadership Lunch 11:45 a.m.- 1:00 p.m.Networking lunch (buffet style, 11:45 a.m.- 1:00 p.m.all guest welcome) Poster Authors in Booth 1:00 p.m. - 1:20 p.m.Afternoon Technical Sessions 1:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.Closing Remarks and Door Prize Drawing 5:00 p.m.
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SYMPOSIUM SPONSORSAND EXHIBITORS
EXHIBITORS
SPONSORS
Autograph International IncBaker HughesCayros Group CorpCGGCordaxEmerson
Eriksfi ordH2 LaboratoriesHalliburtonImpact SelectorKAPPA EngineeringKSWC
Lloyd’s RegisterOpenfi eld TechnologyPetromac LtdROGIISchlumbergerScientifi c Drilling
Baker HughesConocoPhillips
EmersonHalliburtonMaxwell Dynamics
SchlumbergerShell
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TECHNICAL COMMITTEE
VP Technology:Michael O’Keefe, Schlumberger
Committee Members:David Baldwin, Baldwin Petrophysical
Sap Basu, ConocoPhillipsRichard Bootle, CNOOC
Andrew Carnegie, Woodside EnergyJinhong Chen, Aramco Services
Lu Chi, HalliburtonRobert Christie, WeatherfordDonald Clarke, ExxonMobil
Michel Claverie, SchlumbergerLiz Davis, BP
Lara Demirezen, ChrysaorSandrine Donnadieu, Equinor
Ian Draper, Baker HughesHesham El-Sobky, Conocophillips
Giuseppe Galli, ENIEva Gerick, Neptune Energy
Weijun Guo, HalliburtonAdam Haecker, Continental Resources/SPWLA Regional Director
Terry Hagiwara, Aramco ServicesCaren Harris, Apache
Iulian Hulea, ShellMarianne Iversen, Equinor
Aaron Shelby James, ASJ Energy Solutions INC.Matt Jameson, Glencore UK Ltd
Yngve Johansen, AkerbpMark Ma, Aramco Services/SPWLA Regional Director
Natasa Mekic, WeatherfordAlberto Mendoza, Imperial College London
Vanessa Mendoza Barron, ShellJavier Miranda, DeGolyer and MacNaughton
Brian Moss, ConsultantGeoff Page, Baker Hughes
Tegwyn Perkins, Lloyd’s RegisterMarco Pirrone, ENI
Carole Reynaud, CVA InternationalJorge Sanchez Ramirez, BHP Billiton
Philip Singer, Rice UniversityBjorn Sirum, Clarios
Kelly Skuce, Core Petrophysical Consulting/SPWLA Regional DirectorLalitha Venkataramanan, Schlumberger
Haijing Wang, ChevronJosephine Wheeler, Shell
Chris Woods, Woodside EnergyTetsuya Yamamoto, Japan Petroleum Exploration Company
John Zhou, Maxwell Dynamic
NOTE: Tentative Program: Selected papers listed below may not be in the order in which they will be presented. The fi nal technical program may differ from that shown due to paper withdrawals. All technical sessions will be held at the Fairmont Banff Springs Hotel and Convention Center. Photography and video/audio recording of any kind is strictly prohibited in all areas including technical sessions, workshops and exhibition hall.
ADVANCES IN MACHINE LEARNING
A MACHINE LEARNING WORKFLOW TO BUILD THE MECHANICAL EARTH MODEL; Bhuvaneswari Sankaranarayanan, Ivan Diaz Granados, Aria Abubakar and Saad Kisra, Schlumberger
AI BOOSTED GEOLOGICAL FACIES ANALYSIS FROM HIGH-RESOLUTION BOREHOLE IMAGES; Shiduo Yang, Yinyu Wang, Isabelle Le Nir and Alexis He, Schlumberger
AUTOMATIC FACIES CLASSIFICATION FROM WELL LOGS; Vasileios-Marios Gkortsas and Lin Liang, Schlumberger-Doll Research; Yngve Bolstad Johansen, Aker BP; Lalitha Venkataramanan, Schlumberger-Doll Research; Harish Da r, Schlumberger
AUTOMATING MICROFACIES ANALYSIS OF PETROGRAPHIC IMAGES; Sonali Pa naik, Songhua Chen, Wei Shao and Adly Helba, Halliburton
DIGITAL SAMPLING: MULTIVARIATE PATTERN RECOGNITION, MACHINE LEARNING, AND EQUATION OF STATE, A REAL-TIME APPROACH TO EVALUATE CLEAN FORMATION-FLUID PROPERTIES AND MUD-FILTRATE CONTAMINATION; Bin Dai, Cameron Rekully, Christopher Jones and Tony Van Zuilekom, Halliburton
DOWNHOLE SIGNAL COMPRESSION AND SURFACE RECONSTRUCTION BASED ON DICTIONARY MACHINE LEARNING; Jian Li, Bin Dai, Christopher M. Jones, E enne M. Samson and Darren Gascooke, Halliburton
DUAL NEURAL NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR DETERMINING PERMEABILITY AND ASSOCIATED UNCERTAINTY; Ravinath Kausik, Augus n Prado and Lalitha Venkataramanan, Schlumberger-Doll Research; Harish Da r, Schlumberger; Yngve Bolstad Johansen, AkerBP
INTEGRATION OF 3D VOLUMETRIC CT-SCAN IMAGE DATA WITH CONVENTIONAL WELL LOGS FOR IMPROVED DETECTION OF PETROPHYSICAL ROCK CLASSES AND FLOW UNITS; Andres Gonzalez and Zoya Heidari, University of Texas at Aus n; Olivier Lopez, Equinor
MACHINE LEARNING PROXY ENABLING INTERPRETATION OF WELLBORE MEASUREMENTS; Vanessa Simoes, Schlumberger, Marianna Dantas, Patrick Pereira Machado, Lin Liang and Anna Paula Lougon Duarte, Schlumberger; Frances Abbots, Manu Singhal and Aloke Saha, Shell
MACHINE LEARNING-ENABLED AUTOMATIC SONIC SHEAR PROCESSING; Lin Liang and Ting Lei, Schlumberger-Doll Research Center
MACHINE LEARNING-ENABLED REAL TIME MONITORING AND CONTROL OF LOGGING OPERATIONS; Hani Elshahawi, Shell; Juan P. Garcia and Marcos D. Garcia, Baker Hughes
METHOD FOR PREDICTING FORMATION FLUID CONTAMINATION FROM PUMP-OUT DATA AND FORMATION PROPERTIES USING MACHINE-LEARNING METHODS; Peter Olapade, Bin Dai and Christopher Jones, Halliburton
OPEN SUBSURFACE DATA UNIVERSE : TRULY LEVERAGING SUBSURFACE DATA; Shyamalan Ramaswami, Hani Elshahawi and Johan Krebbers, Shell
PETROPHYSICAL WORKFLOWS VS MACHINE LEARNING - A COMPARATIVE CASE STUDY IN THE DAKOTA GROUP, WILLISTON BASIN; Saptaswa Basu, Sergey Skvortsov and Kyrre Johansen, ConocoPhillips
REDUCING THE UNCERTAINTY OF MULTI-WELL PETROPHYSICAL INTERPRETATION WITH NEW DATA-DRIVEN METHODS; Wen Pan, Carlos Torres-Verdín, Michael Pyrcz and Ian Duncan, The University of Texas at Aus n
SUPPORTING CRITICAL WELL DELIVERY DECISIONS BY UTILISING MACHINE LEARNING TO AID INTERPRETATION OF WELLSITE XRF DATA.; Robert Webber and Ben Fletcher, CNOOC Interna onal Ltd.; Thomas Bird, Leap Beyond Ltd.
THE BENEFITS AND DANGERS OF USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN PETROPHYSICS; Steve Cuddy, Baker Hughes
USING MACHINE LEARNING TO IMPROVE THE ACCURACY OF REAL-TIME ACOUSTIC DATA FOR PORE PRESSURE PREDICTION; Lei
Wu, Baker Hughes
CASE STUDIES
21ST CENTURY DENSITY MEASUREMENTS FOR AUSTRALIAN MINERAL LOGGING; Jennifer Market, MPC Kine c; Ashley Grant, BHP; Huw Rossiter and Brenton Armitage, MPC Kine c
ACOUSTIC BOREHOLE IMAGE LOG BASED FRACTURE AND VUGGY POROSITY ANALYSIS OF A BRAZILIAN PRE-SALT CARBONATE RESERVOIR FROM THE SANTOS BASIN, SE BRAZIL; Leandro Hartleben Melani, Ulisses Miguel da Costa Correia, João Paulo da Ponte Souza, Michelle Chaves Kuroda, Bruno César Zanardo Honório and Alexandre Campane Vidal, University of Campinas (Unicamp)
ACQUIRING A BASELINE CASING THICKNESS LOG FOR FUTURE CORROSION MONITORING WITHOUT PULLING THE TUBING; Dirk Valstar, Schlumberger
ADVANCED BOREHOLE ACOUSTIC LOGGING MEASUREMENTS APPLICATIONS AND THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS IN FRAC DESIGN OPTIMIZATION. A CASE STUDY IN TIGHT CARBONATE, TUBA RESERVOIR, NORTH KUWAIT; Ramdane Bouchou, Baker Hughes Kuwait
ADVANCED PETROPHYSICAL ANALYSIS AND WATER SATURATION PREDICTION IN THREE FORKS RESERVOIR, WILLISTON BASIN; Aldjia Boualam and Dalkhaa Chantsalmaa, Energy and Environmental Research Center; Vamegh Rasouli, University of North Dakota; Sofi ane Djezzar, Energy and Environmental Research Center
CASED HOLE RESERVOIR EVALUATION AS A MEAN OF RISK REDUCTION, PRODUCTION ENHANCEMENT AND COST CONTROL FOR MATURE FIELDS: A CASE STUDY FROM MÉXICO´S NORTHERN REGION.; Angel Olivares, Weatherford Interna onal
CONCLUSIVE PROOF OF WEAK BEDDING PLANES IN THE MARCELLUS SHALE AND PROPOSED MITIGATION STRATEGIES; Julie Kowan, Baker Hughes; Luke Schanken, EQT Corpora on
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TECHNICAL PROGRAM
DELINEATING THE GEOTHERMAL STRUCTURE AND FLOW PROPERTIES IN A SUB HORIZONTAL WELL WITH THE USE OF WIRELINE AND LWD DATA IN A MULTIPHYSICS APPROACH; Erik Wielemaker, Chiara Cavalleri, Giovanni Sosio and Alejandra Reynaldos, Schlumberger; Pierre Ungemach, Miklos An cs and Melanie Davaux, Geofl uid
FREE OR BOUND? THOMEER AND NMR POROSITY PARTITIONING IN CARBONATE RESERVOIRS, ALTA DISCOVERY, SOUTH-WESTERN BARENTS SEA; Ingrid P. Giano en, Niels Rameil, Sven Erik Foyn and Terje Kollien, Lundin Norway AS; Julio R. Marre, Miramar Julio Marre; Wim Looyes jn, Xiangmin Zhang, Sergio Fernandez and Albert Hebing, PanTerra Geoconsultants BV
GRAVITY-ASSISTED WELLBORE SEGREGATION DURING HYDROCARBON SAMPLING IN LOW-PERMEABILITY ROCK; German Garcia, Schlumberger; Olatunde Akindipe, ConocoPhillips; Hadrien Dumont, Schlumberger
INNOVATIVE FORMATION TESTER SAMPLING PROCEDURES FOR CARBON DIOXIDE AND OTHER REACTIVE COMPONENTS; Ralph Piazza, Alexandre Vieira and Luiz Alexandre Sacorague, Petrobras; Christopher Jones, Bin Dai, Megan Pearl and Helen Aguiar, Halliburton
INTEGRATED FRACTURES CHARACTERIZATION OF TIGHT CARBONATE RESERVOIR TO UNLOCK THE RESERVOIR DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITY, A CASE STUDY IN ONSHORE UAE; Syofvas Syofyan, Agus Izudin La ef, Mohsen Ahmed Al Amoudi, Anurag Grover, Tariq Ali Al-Shabibi, Jose Nava, Ashraf Lo y El Gazar and Basma Banihammad, ADNOC Onshore; Gulzira Zhunussova, Syed Hassan and Sila Uluyuz, Baker Hughes, a GE Company
INTEGRATED RESERVOIR EVALUATION USING ADVANCED WIRELINE TECHNOLOGY TO OPTIMIZE LANDING POINTS AND RESERVOIR DRAINAGE IN AN UNCONVENTIONAL RESERVOIR: A POWDER RIVER BASIN CASE STUDY; Erika A. Zahn, Isabel C. Arbelaez, Jennifer L. Kharrazi, Geoff McBryan, Paul Pavlakos and Pedro Romero, Weatherford Interna onal
LATEST WIRELINE CONVEYANCE TECHNOLOGIES SET A NEW WORLD RECORD, ACHIEVING GRAVITY DESCENT TO 79° IN OPEN HOLE, ENABLING SIGNIFICANT TIME AND COST SAVINGS; Rajesh Thatha, Mar n Leonard and Stephen Peter McCormick,
Petromac; Anoop Kumar Mishra and Dr. Ajay Kumar Samantray, Sultan Al Mazrouei, Abdulla Al Blooshi , Al Yasat Company, ADNOC; Koksal Cig, Nitesh Jha and Jobin Cherian, Schlumberger
PETROPHYSICAL IMPLICATIONS OF MAGNESIAN CLAYS IN BRAZILIAN PRE-SALT RESERVOIRS; Ronaldo Herlinger Jr, Gabriel do Nascimento Freitas and Camila Wense Dias dos Anjos, Petrobras S.A.; Luiz Fernando de Ros, UFRGS
PETROPHYSICAL MODELING AND NMR ANALYSIS FOR RESERVOIR CHARACTERIZATION OF MIXED CARBONATE-CLASTIC FORMATION OF MUMBAI OFFSHORE BASIN, INDIA.; Manisha Chaudhary, Deepak Kapoor and Dr. Harilal, ONGC
POSITIVE TOOL ORIENTATION SIGNIFICANTLY IMPROVES DATA QUALITY AND ENABLES GRAVITY DESCENTS OF WIRELINE TOOL-STRINGS TO NEAR HORIZONTAL DEVIATIONS IN THE MIDDLE EAST FOR SONIC AND BOREHOLE IMAGE DATA; Adam Donald, Erik Wielemaker and Peter Schlicht, Schlumberger; Anoop Kumar Mishra, Dr. Ajay Kumar Samantray and Sultan Al Mazrouei, Al Yasat Company, ADNOC; Rajesh Thatha and Stephen Peter McCormick, Petromac
STRESS DEPENDENT FRACTURE PROPERTY DELINEATION AND SWEET SPOT ZONATION IN UNCONVENTIONAL GEOTHERMAL RESERVOIR: SOUTH SUMATRA BASIN, INDONESIA; Sarvagya Parashar, Ivan Zhia Ming Wu, Banu Andhika and M.S Iyer, Halliburton; Marino Chris ano Baroek, Supreme Energy
STRESS MEASUREMENT CAMPAIGNS IN SCIENTIFIC DEEP BOREHOLES; Benoît Gari e, NAGRA; Jean Desroches, Geneva Petroleum; Adriaan Gisolf, Emilie Peyret and Siavash Sepehri, Schlumberger
SUCCESSFUL FLUID CHARACTERIZATION IN A MULTIPLE LAYER CARBONATE RESERVOIR FOR PRODUCTION OPTIMIZATION USING FORMATION TESTING TECHNOLOGY; Larisa Tagarieva and Nelly de Nicolais, Weatherford Interna onal; Taher Mohd Gezeeri, Kuwait Oil Company
THE GREATER ENFIELD PROJECT: SUCCESSES AND LESSONS LEARNT FROM CHALLENGING THREE-FIELD HORIZONTAL DEVELOPMENT WELL CAMPAIGN.; Chris Woods, Josh Sutcliff e, John Bretherton, Vanessa Lim, Glen Brabham and Darren Baker, Woodside Energy Ltd
THE IMPORTANCE OF CORE-LOG INTEGRATION IN LAMINATED RESERVOIRS WITH COMPLEX MINERALOGY: CASE STUDY IN LONGÁ FORMATION, A NEW EXPLORATORY PLAY IN THE PARNAÍBA BASIN - BRAZIL; Bruno Menchio Faria and Manuella Yebra, ENEVA
WIDEBAND LOGGING-WHILE-DRILLING (LWD) SONIC TO EXTRACT COMPRESSIONAL SLOWNESS IN LARGE BOREHOLES AND EXTREMELY SLOW FORMATIONS; Doug Murray and Neil Kelsall, Schlumberger
X-RAY DIFFRACTION, X-RAY FLUORESCENCE AND NEUTRON INDUCED SPECTROSCOPY BASED CORRECTION TO IVAR AASEN GEOMODEL; AN OILFIELD FROM THE NORWEGIAN NORTH SEA; Egil Romsås Fjeldberg, Yngve Bostad Johansen, Geir Frode Kvilaas, Lodve Hugo Olsborg and Tor-Ole Jøssund, Aker BP; Harish Da r, Schlumberger
COMPLETION PETROPHYSICS AND RESERVOIR SURVEILLANCE
A GEOMECHANICAL WORKFLOW AND SENSITIVITY STUDY FOR CALIBRATING AND PREDICTING ELASTIC MODULI AND MINIMUM HORIZONTAL STRESS FROM WELL LOGS IN AN ANISOTROPIC FORMATION; John Quirein, Brian Hornby, Philip Tracadas, Maged Fam and Amit Padhi, Halliburton
A NEW APPROACH TOWARDS PETROPHYSICAL SURVEILLANCE IN A GIANT NORTH SEA FIELD; Tracey Victoria Vaitekai s, Adrian Ze , Alexandra Love, Shakeel Ahmad, Alwin Noordermeer, Gerardo Cedillo and Xiaogang Han, BP
A NEW FORMATION EVALUATION PHILOSOPHY TO INTEGRATE PRODUCTION SURVEILLANCE DATA WITH RESERVOIR SIMULATION MODELS: A NORTH SEA CASE STUDY; Robert Webber and Jesus Aponte, CNOOC Interna onal Ltd
UNLOCKING DATA ANALYTICS IN SONIC AND ULTRASONIC LOGS FOR THE AUTOMATIC EVALUATION OF CEMENT BOND SCENARIOS; Dario Reolon, Federica Di Maggio, Giuseppe Galli, Sara Moriggi and Marco Pirrone, Eni S.p.A.
DEEP WATER RESERVOIR ANALYSIS
CHALLENGES IN THE PETROPHYSICAL AND DYNAMIC CHARACTERIZATION OF DEEP-WATER TURBIDITE DEPOSITS OF THE COLOMBIAN CARIBBEAN OFFSHORE - CASE
10
TECHNICAL PROGRAM
STUDY; Juan Alejandro Angel, Ricardo Andres Gomez and Carlos Alberto Mora, Ecopetrol S.A.
DIGITAL ROCK ANALYSIS OF COQUINA CARBONATE ROCKS FOR THE PRESALT SCENARIO; Caroline Mignot, Felipe Branco, William Godoy, San ago Drexler, Luis Horta Jr., Bruno Castro, Vitor Silos, Andre Barre o, Barbara Quedimann, Enrique Estrada and Milena Siqueira, Halliburton
HIGH-RESOLUTION ELECTROFACIES ANALYSIS APPLIED TO DEEP-WATER SILICICLASTIC RESERVOIR ECONOMIC EVALUATION, NORTHEAST OF BRAZIL; Anelise de Lima Souza, Pedro Paulo Pires de Deus Rocha, Lenita de Souza Fiori and Fernando Jorge Pedrosa Maia Junior, Petrobras
RECENT ROTARY SIDEWALL CORING ADVANCEMENTS FOR DEEPWATER, WITH A BACKGROUND OVERVIEW; Charlie Jackson, Halliburton
RESERVOIR CONNECTIVITY ASSESSMENT USING NEW FORMATION TESTING PLATFORM AND IMAGE LOG EVALUATION INDICATES CONNECTIVITY ACROSS A LARGE RESERVOIR OFFSHORE MEXICO; Francois-Xavier Dubost, Schlumberger; Joel Speights, Talos Energy; Jesus A. Canas and Oliver C. Mullins, Schlumberger
WIRELINE-CONVEYED PRESSURE AND SAMPLING TECHNOLOGY USAGE FOR MINIDST AND MICROFRAC; Hoda Tahani, Mehdi Azari, Gibran Hashmi, Mark Proe and Fransiska Goenawan, Halliburton
FORMATION EVALUATION BEHIND CASING
A NEW BOREHOLE-COMPENSATED NEUTRON-GAMMA POROSITY MEASUREMENT OPTIMIZED FOR CASED-HOLE FORMATION EVALUATION; Weijun Guo, Halliburton
GAS PRESSURE ESTIMATION IN CASED HOLE USING A PULSED NEUTRON LOG; David Rose, Alberto Abouganem Stephens, Tong Zhou and Laura Bolerjack, Schlumberger; Kevin Kenning, Renaissance Off shore
INTEGRATION OF NUCLEAR SPECTROSCOPY TECHNOLOGY AND CORE DATA RESULTS FOR THROUGH CASING TOC MEASUREMENT AND SATURATION ANALYSIS A CASE STUDY IN NAJMAH-SARJELU RESERVOIR, SOUTH KUWAIT; Ali Abu Ghneej, Kuwait Oil Company,
Ramdane Bouchou and Chafaa Haddad, Baker Hughes; Mohammed Nizar Alnaqeeb and Talal Al-Adwani, Kuwait Oil Company; Freddy Mendez and Nora Alarcon, Baker Hughes; Sayed Behbahani, Kuwait Oil Company
MAXIMIZING THE VALUE OF DATA ACQUISITION: GAS PRESSURE ASSESSMENT THROUGH CASING. A COMPLEX CASED HOLE PULSED NEUTRON CASE STUDY FROM THE NETHERLANDS; Chiara Cavalleri, Schlumberger; Gerrit Brouwer and Dimas Kodri, Nederlandse Aardolie Maatschappij; David Rose and Jan-Bart Theodoor Brinks, Schlumberger
MULTIDETECTOR PULSED-NEUTRON TOOL APPLICATION IN LOW- POROSITY RESERVOIR – A CASE STUDY; Aditya Arie Wijaya and Rama Aulianagara, Halliburton; Fe y Maria Naibaho, Fransiscus Xaverius Asriwan and Usman Amirudin; Pertamina Hulu Sanga-Sanga
SELF-COMPENSATED CASED HOLE PULSED NEUTRON SPECTROSCOPY MEASUREMENTS; Tong Zhou, David Rose, Jeff ery Miles and Jason Gendur, Schlumberger; Haijing Wang, Chevron U.S.A. Inc.; Michael Sullivan, Chevron Canada Ltd.
THE FOURTH PHASE. NEW DOWNHOLE SAND DETECTION TECHNOLOGY SHOWS EXCITING RESULTS AND PRESENTS LOW COSTS REMEDIAL OPPORTUNITIES; Adil Al Busaidy, Wee Wei Wa and Parijat Mukerji, Schlumberger; Daniel Chua Min Wei, Azli Yacob, Ahmad Majdi and Aiman Redzuan, CHOC
THE VALUE OF DATA INTEGRATION IN A COMPLEX WELL SCENARIO: A CASE STUDY FROM THE WEST NETHERLANDS; Abhinandan Kohli, Shell; Chiara Cavalleri, Schlumberger; Zulkifl i Ahmad, NAM; Emile Fokkema, Shell; Oscar Kelder and Daniel Sprague, NAM
FORMATION EVALUATION OF CONVENTIONAL RESERVOIRS
1D MODELLING OF LITHOTYPES AND PETROPHYSICS FOR THE GRANT GROUP AND ANDERSON FORMATION, CANNING BASIN- AUSTRALIA; Daniel Mauricio Rojas Caro and Maria Liceth Cabrera Ruiz, UIS- Universidad Industrial de Santander; Erick Johan Illigde Araujo, Juan David Badillo Requena, Alessandro Batezelli
A DATA-DRIVEN GRAPHICAL METHOD TO EVALUATE GAS RESERVOIRS WITH THE
DENSITY-NEUTRON LOGS; Khadija Al Daghar and Sultan Budebes, ADNOC; Chanh Cao Minh, Kais Gzara, Vikas Jain and David Maggs, Schlumberger
A NOVELTY...SINCE 1975. CONSOLIDATED PRACTICES AND PRAGMATIC WORKFLOWS FOR SAND/SHALE THIN BEDS ANALYSIS.; Enrico Pernarcic, Christopher Blair and Emmanuel Caroli, TOTAL
ADVANCED EVALUATION METHODS OF CARBONATE ROCK MATRICES - A CASE STUDY ON MAJOR HYDROCARBON RESERVOIRS IN THE MIDDLE EAST; O.A. AlJallad, Ingrain - a Halliburton Service; M.R. Dernaika, Formerly Ingrain - a Halliburton Service; S. Koronfol, Ingrain - a Halliburton Service, M. AlJabari, Formerly Ingrain - a Halliburton Service, David Gonzalez, Ingrain - a Halliburton Service
ADVANCED MEASUREMENTS ELIMINATING THE RISK OF BYPASSING LARGE LAMINATED LOW RESISTIVITY RESERVOIR AND ENHANCING THE SATURATION HEIGHT MODEL, A NORWEGIAN SEA CASE STUDY; Harish B. Da r, Schlumberger; Tarek Sweden and Elena Vasyutkina, Wintershall; Calum Mcdowell and Karl Erik Sylta, Schlumberger
AN INTEGRATED PETROPHYSICAL WORKFLOW FOR FLUID CHARACTERIZATION AND CONTACTS IDENTIFICATION USING NMR CONTINUOUS AND STATIONARY MEASUREMENTS IN HIGH POROSITY SANDSTONE FORMATION, OFFSHORE NORWAY; Maciej Kozlowski, Diptaroop Chakraborty, Venkat Jambunathan, Peyton Lowrey, Ron Balliet and Bob Engelman, Halliburton; Katrine Ropstad Ånensen and Artur Kotwicki and Yngve Bolstad Johansen, Aker BP
ANALYSIS OF LATERAL FLUID GRADIENTS FROM DFA MEASUREMENTS AND SIMULATION OF RESERVOIR FLUID MIXING PROCESSES OVER GEOLOGIC TIME; Qing Chen and Morten Kristensen, Schlumberger; Yngve Bolstad Johansen, Aker BP; Vladislav Achourov, Soraya S. Betancourt and Oliver C. Mullins, Schlumberger
ARPS’ APPROXIMATION REVISITED AND REVISED; W David Kennedy, QED Petrophysics LLC
CHANGE OF SATURATION EXPONENT IN POLYMER WATER-FLOODED RESERVOIRS: A CASE STUDY FROM OFFSHORE AFRICA; Benoît Guivarch and Emmanuel Caroli, TOTAL
11
TECHNICAL PROGRAM
EFFECT OF PORES TYPES ON ELECTRICAL PROPERTIES OF CARBONATE ROCKS AND DETERMINATION OF THE ELECTRICAL PARAMETERS FROM NMR LOGGING; Kewen Wang, Ning Li, Hongliang Wu, Zhou Feng, Peng Liu and Taiping Zhao, Petrochina
ENIGMATIC RESERVOIR PROPERTIES DECIPHERED WITH PETROLEUM SYSTEMS AND RESERVOIR FLUID GEODYNAMICS ANALYSIS OF WIRELINE DATA; Rob Pierpont and Kristoff er Birkeland, OMV; Li Chen, Vladislav Achourov, Soraya S. Betancourt, Jesus A. Canas, Julia C. Forsythe and Oliver C. Mullins, Schlumberger
EVALUATING PETROPHYSICAL PROPERTIES AND VOLUMETRICS UNCERTAINTIES OF SAND INJECTITE RESERVOIRS – NORWEGIAN NORTH SEA; Artur Kotwicki, AkerBP ASA; Mirza Hassan Baig, Shlumberger; Yngve Bolstad Johansen, AkerBP ASA; Mauro Firinu, Tor Arne Hansen and Bruis Giano en, Vår Energi; Odd Arne Sandstad, Guro Leirdal, Anne Me e Anthonsen and Brage Vikaunet A ret, AkerBp ASA
EVIDENCE OF MULTIPLE PAIRS OF DRILLING-INDUCED TENSILE FRACTURES IN DEEP BOREHOLES; Jean Desroches, Rocks Expert and Thomas Berard, Schlumberger
EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF TWO-PHASE FLOW PROPERTIES OF HETEROGENEOUS ROCKS FOR PRODUCTION-ORIENTED PETROPHYSICS; Pierre Aérens, Carlos Torres-Verdín and Nicolás Espinoza, The University of Texas at Aus n
FAST AND PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF LOG PROPERTY MODELING TO IMPROVE PETROPHYSICAL ANSWERS IN HIGH-ANGLE WELLS; David Maggs, Schlumberger; Vanessa Mendoza Barron, Shell; Mathias Horstmann and Mohammad Taghi Salehi, Schlumberger
FORMATION EVALUATION WITH NMR, RESISTIVITY AND PRESSURE DATA – A CASE STUDY OF A CARBONATE OILFIELD IN THE LOWER CONGO BASIN; Ting Li, Nicholas Drinkwater and Karen Whi lesey, Chevron
FROM PLUG MEASUREMENTS TO DYNAMIC SIMULATIONS: UPSCALING EFFECTS ON MODELED HYDROCARBON VOLUMES; Iulian N. Hulea, Shell Projects and Technology
HIGH-RESOLUTION ELECTROFACIES USING MACHINE LEARNING TO DECRYPT HIGH PORO-PERM ZONES IN CYCLIC SUCCESSION OF PLIOCENE BIOCLASTIC LIMESTONE:
CASE STUDY FROM MADURA STRAIT AREA, EAST JAVA BASIN; Iko Sagala, Ophir Indonesia; Sarvagya Parashar, Ivan Wu Zhia Ming, Nuntanich Ji ham and Banu Andhika, Halliburton
HIGH-RESOLUTION SPECTRAL RECONSTRUCTION: METHOD AND APPLICATIONS FOR CONTAMINATION MEASUREMENT, DIGITAL SAMPLING, AND CONTINUITY ASSESSMENT; Yngve B Johansen, Kevin Best and Artur Kotwicki, AkerBP; Christopher Jones, Cameron Rekully, Bin Dai, Bob Engelman and Anthony Van Zuilekom, Halliburton
IDENTIFYING FRACTURE-FILLING MATERIAL IN OIL-BASED MUD VIA DIELECTRIC BOREHOLE IMAGING; Peter Schlicht, Tianhua Zhang and Mar n G. Lüling Schlumberger; Brita Renee Graham and Alexandra Cournot, Equinor; Rob Sadownyk, Valeura Energy Inc
IMPROVED PETROPHYSICAL EVALUATION OF A SANDSTONE RESERVOIR USING NMR. A CASE STUDY, ONSHORE KUWAIT; Pedro A. Romero Rojas and Larisa Tagarieva, Weatherford Interna onal; Shaikha Faisal Dawood Turkey, Kuwait Oil Company
INVERSION OF ANISOTROPIC ELASTIC CONSTANTS AND MUD SPEED USING BOREHOLE SONIC MODES; Ting Lei, Romain Prioul, Adam Donald and Edgar Ignacio Velez Arteaga, Schlumberger
MAPPING COMPLEX INJECTITE BODIES WITH MULTI-WELL ELECTROMAGNETIC 3-D INVERSION DATA; Nigel Clegg, Halliburton; Kevin Best, Ingeborg Tøllefsen and Artur Kotwicki, AkerBP; Endre Eriksent, Halliburton; David Marchant, Computa onal Geosciences Inc
MAXIMIZING VALUE FROM MUDLOGS: INTEGRATED APPROACH TO DETERMINE NET PAY; Mayank Malik, Sco Hanson and Simon Clinch, Chevron
MOTION ARTIFACT FREE DATA DELIVERY IN REAL TIME FROM A LOW GRADIENT NMR TOOL; Rebecca Jachmann and Jie Yang, Halliburton; You Wang, University of Texas at Aus n
OPENHOLE PRESSURES CAN REVEAL RELATIVE PERMEABILITY HYSTERESIS IN A GAS WATER RESERVOIR; T. Gray, Andrew Carnegie and R. Crawford, Woodside Energy Ltd
PORE STRUCTURE CHARACTERIZATION OF A
COMPLEX CARBONATE RESERVOIR IN SOUTH IRAQ, USING ADVANCED INTERPRETATION OF NMR LOGS; Milad Saidian, BP America Inc
PORE-SCALE INVESTIGATION OF POROSITY-RESISTIVITY-PERMEABILITY RELATIONSHIPS: IMPLICATIONS FOR ROCK TYPING; Zhonghao Sun, Ayaz Mehmani and Carlos Torres-Verdin, The University of Texas at Aus n
REALIZATION OF OIL WET FACIES AND FLUID SATURATIONS IN TILTED WATER/OIL CONTACT RESERVOIRS; Reinaldo Jose Angulo Yznaga, Kresimir Vican, Venkat Jambunathan and Ehab Negm, Halliburton
THE LOG-DERIVED SW COMPARED TO SURFACE MEASUREMENT OF CORE SW: HOW THEY ARE RECONCILED; Bob Evere , CWLS – SPWLA; Dorian Holgate and Eric Rops, CWLS
TIME-LAPSE NMR AND MULTIFREQUENCY DIELECTRIC MEASUREMENT DEMYSTIFYING THE NATIVE OIL PROPERTIES IN A COMPLEX INJECTITES RESERVOIR; A CASE STUDY FROM NORWEGIAN SEA; Harish B. Da r, Schlumberger Norway AS; Artur Kotwicki, AkerBP ASA; Lalitha Venkataramanan, Schlumberger-Doll Research Center
WHAT’S NEXT FOR NEUTRON-GAMMA DENSITY?; Michael Evans, Nuclear Logging Concepts, LLC
FORMATION EVALUATION OF UNCONVENTIONAL RESERVOIRS
A COMPARISON AND APPLICATIONS OF THREE DIFFERENT MAXIMUM HORIZONTAL STRESS PREDICTIONS; Ehab Negm and John Quirein, Halliburton
A NEW METHOD FOR CALCULATING POISSON’S RATIO FROM XRD AND WIRELINE MINERALOGY USING A CALIBRATED CLAY TO SHALE VOLUME TRANSFORMATION; Carrie Glaser, Willame e Petrophysics; Jane Hearon and Jason Edwards, Fracture ID
A NEW METHOD OF ESTIMATING TORTUOSITY AND PORE SIZE IN UNCONVENTIONAL FORMATIONS USING NMR RESTRICTED DIFFUSION MEASUREMENTS; Xinglin Wang, Zeliang Chen, Philip M. Singer, Rice University; Harold J. Vinegar, Vinegar Technologies, LLC; George J. Hirasaki, Rice University
A NOVEL TECHNIQUE FOR DETERMINING CRITICAL DESORPTION PRESSURE OF COALS USING PRESSURE TRANSIENT ANALYSIS; Jack Harfoushian, Schlumberger Australia
12
TECHNICAL PROGRAM
APPLICATION OF MACHINE LEARNING TO INTERPRET NMR WIRELINE MEASUREMENTS; Son Dang, Heyleem Han, Carl Sondergeld and Chandra Rai, University of Oklahoma
APPLICATION OF TGIP-NMR ON AN APPALACHIAN UNCONVENTIONAL SHALE USING 2D T1-T2 NMR LOGS; Natalie Uschner-Arroyo, Schlumberger; Ravinath Kausik and Lalitha Venkataramanan, Schlumberger-Doll Research; Erik Rylander and Richard E. Lewis, Schlumberger; C. Douglas Odham, Range Resources-Appalachia, LLC
BAYESIAN METHOD FOR RAPID MULTI-WELL INTERPRETATION OF WELL LOGS AND CORE DATA IN UNCONVENTIONAL FORMATIONS; Tianqi Deng, Joaquín Ambía and Carlos Torres-Verdín, University of Texas at Aus n
COMPLEX CONDUCTIVITY MODEL FOR HIGHLY MATURE KEROGEN-BEARING FORMATIONS; Chang-Yu Hou, Denise E. Freed and Nikita Seleznev, Schlumberger-Doll Research; Dean M. Homan, John Rasmus, Gong Li Wang and Natalie Uschner, Schlumberger
DETERMINING WATER-FILLED POROSITY OF TIGHT OIL RESERVOIRS WITH A NEW INTERPRETATION METHOD FOR DIELECTRIC DISPERSION MEASUREMENTS; Nikita Seleznev and Tarek M. Habashy, Schlumberger-Doll Research Center; Michel Claverie, Schlumberger; Hanming Wang and Haijing Wang, Chevron Energy Technology Company; Amir Hermes and Jason Gendur, Schlumberger; Ling Feng and MaryEllen Loan, Schlumberger-Doll Research Center
HYDRAULIC FRACTURING EVALUATION UTILIZING SINGLE-WELL S-WAVE IMAGING: IMPROVED PROCESSING METHOD AND FIELD EXAMPLES; Peng Liu, Ning Li, Hongliang Wu, Yusheng Li, Kewen Wang and Zhou Feng, Petrochina Research Ins tute of Petroleum Explora on and Development
HYDROCARBON GAS BEHAVIOR IN NANO PORE CONFINEMENT ORGANIC SHALE SYSTEMS; Ashish Mathur, WDVG Labs; Safdar Ali, WD Von Gonten & Co.; Lee Utley and David Bocanegra, Ascent Resources; Chad Belanger and Mansoor Ali, WDVG Labs
IMPACT OF GEOCHEMISTRY AND RESERVOIR TEMPERATURE AND PRESSURE ON CONTACT ANGLE MEASUREMENTS FOR ASSESSMENT OF KEROGEN WETTABILITY; Archana Jagadisan and Zoya Heidari, University of Texas at Aus n
INTEGRATED EVALUATION OF CHEMISTRY AND MINERALOGY FROM CORE AND LOG MEASUREMENTS; Thomas J Neville, Asia-Pacifi c Forma on Evalua on Services
INTEGRATED RESERVOIR CHARACTERIZATION USING UNSUPERVISED LEARNING ON NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE (NMR) T1-T2 LOGS; Tianmin Jiang, Ron J. Bonnie, Thiago Simoes Correa, Marty C. Krueger, Shaina A. Kelly and Ma S. Wasson, ConocoPhillips
LATERAL LANDING POINT AND HYDRAULIC FRACTURE DESIGN IN DIYARBAKIR BASIN, TURKEY: AN UNCONVENTIONAL SHALE OIL WELL CASE STUDY; Samira Ahmad, Schlumberger; Ahmet Ergun Mengen and Muhammed Fa h Ayyildiz, Turkish Petroleum; Hasan Baris Gurcaglar, Heike Delius, Robert Derda, Edmund Eswein and Chiara Cavalleri, Schlumberger
LESSONS LEARNED FROM CROSS-VALIDATION OF FIBER OPTICS AND MICRO-SENSOR PRODUCTION LOGGING MEASUREMENTS IN THE UNCONVENTIONAL WELLS; Yegor Se, Chevron
MEASURING MULTIPLE ORGANIC MATTER COMPONENTS IN ORGANIC-RICH ROCKS USING COMBINED TECHNIQUES OF LOW-FIELD NMR AND ADVANCED PROGRAMMED PYROLYSIS; Z. Harry Xie, Humberto Carvajal-Or z and Thomas Gentzis, Core Laboratories, L.P.; Paul Hackley, U.S. Geological Survey
METHODOLOGY TO MAKE QUANTITATIVE ESTIMATES OF VARIABLE RESERVOIR WETTING PROPERTIES IN UNCONVENTIONAL RESERVOIRS USING TRIPLE-COMBO WELL LOG DATA; Michael Holmes, Antony M. Holmes and Dominic I. Holmes, Digital Forma on, Inc.
PERMEABILITY MEASUREMENTS ON SHALES USING NMR SPECTROSCOPY; Colton Barnes, Ashish Mathur, Safdar Ali, Chad Belanger, Brian Chin and Jus n Treadwell, W.D. Von Gonten Petroleum Engineering Laboratories
PETROPHYSICS TO BOREHOLE ACOUSTICS TRANSFORMS USING MACHINE LEARNING REGRESSION FOR UNCONVENTIONAL RESERVOIRS; Romain Prioul, Schlumberger-Doll Research; Edgar Velez and Irina Mikhaltseva, Schlumberger; Charles Laupretre, Student
PETRO-TECHNICAL ASSESSMENT AND PRODUCTIVITY EVALUATION IN THE PIMIENTA FORMATION, AN UNCONVENTIONAL RESOURCE IN MEXICO; Douglas Betancourt,
Claudio Rabe, and Eugenia Sardelli, Federal Fluminense University - Brasil
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PORE SIZE AND NMR T2 TIME FOR UNCONVENTIONAL SHALES; Felipe Cruz, Ali Tinni, Carl Sondergeld and Chandra Rai, University of Oklahoma
RESERVOIR PRESSURE IN TIGHT GAS FORMATIONS FROM A PRESSURIZED CORE SYSTEM; Luis F. Quintero, Halliburton
REVISITING THE CONCEPT OF WETTABILITY FOR ORGANIC-RICH TIGHT ROCKS.; Sanchay Mukherjee, Son Thai Dang, Chandra Rai and Carl Sondergeld, University of Oklahoma
ULTRASONIC ANGLE REFLECTIVITY IN COMPLEX ROCKS FOR IMPROVED INTERPRETATION OF SONIC AND ULTRASONIC LOGS; Daria Olszowska and Carlos Torres-Verdin, The University of Texas at Aus n
UNRAVELLING THE UNDERSTANDING OF A COMPLEX CARBONATE RESERVOIR WITH THE USE ADVANCED LOGS INTEGRATION; Harish B. Da r, Schlumberger Norway AS; Ingrid Piene Giano en and Terje Kollien, Lundin Norway AS; Karl-Erik Holm Sylta, Schlumberger Norway AS
WATER SATURATION IN UNCONVENTIONALS: THE REAL STORY; Vivek Ravi, Tim Dash, Safdar Ali, Mansoor Ali, Ricardo Hartanto and Brian Chin, WD Von Gonten Laboratories
WHAT HAPPENS TO THE PETROPHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF A DUAL-POROSITY ORGANIC-RICH CHALK DURING EARLY-STAGE ORGANIC MATURATION?; Eva G. Vinegar, The University of Texas at Aus n; Yoav O. Rosenberg, Geological Survey of Israel; Yair Gordin, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Philip M. Singer, Xinglin Wang and Zeliang Chen, Rice University; Sco V. Nguyen, 17TeraWa s; Weidong Li and Tom Bradley, Baker Hughes; Harold J. Vinegar, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and Vinegar Technologies, LLC; George J. Hirasaki, Rice University; Larry W. Lake, The University of Texas at Aus n; Yossef H. Hatzor, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
NEW BOREHOLE LOGGING TECHNOLOGY
A FAST ANN TRAINED SOLVER ENABLES REAL-TIME RADIAL INVERSION OF DIELECTRIC DISPERSION DATA & ACCURATE EVALUATION OF FORMATIONS AT UNKNOWN SALINITY; A. Hanif, F. Le, M. Nikitenko, N. Velker, M. Blinov, E. Frost Jr. and B. Corley, Baker Hughes
13
TECHNICAL PROGRAM
A NEW FORMATION TESTER AND ITS APPLICATIONS IN EXTREME ULTRAHIGH TEMPERATURE RESERVOIRS; Ari Fadjarijanto, CPOC; Wang Xiannan, CNOOC; Yosef Ronald Costam, CPOC; Tanabordee Duangprasert, Bei Gao, Simon Edmundson, Cedric Perrin, Peter Airey and Saifon Daungkaew, Schlumberger
A NEW METHOD TO DERIVE CONTAMINATION IN FORMATION TESTER SAMPLES BASED ON THE REACTION OF CAUSTIC FILTRATE COMPONENTS WITH CARBON DIOXIDE; Ralph Piazza, Alexandre Vieira and Luiz Alexandre Sacorague, Petrobras; Christopher Jones, Bin Dai, Megan Pearl and Helen Aguiar, Halliburton
A PREVIEW TO THE DIGITAL COMPONENT IN THE NEW WIRELINE FORMATION TESTING ERA; German Garcia, Schlumberger; Ben Winkelman, Talos Energy LLC; Hadrien Dumont, Simon Edmundson, Thomas Pfeiff er, Chris Babin and Sco Ebehardth, Schlumberger
A TECHNOLOGY UPDATE IN WIRELINE FORMATION TESTING; Thomas Pfeiff er, Simon Edmundson, Keith Nelson, Chen Tao, Hua Chen, Tamim Sawaf, Bo Yang, Lina Xu, Deo Dindial and Ashers Partouche, Schumberger
ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF MULTI-BARRIER TRANSIENT ELECTROMAGNETIC MEASUREMENTS; Sushant Du a and Joseph Olaiya, Baker Hughes
APPLICATION OF NATURAL FRACTURE CHARACTERIZATION USING STONELEY WAVE INVERSION IN A CARBONATE RESERVOIR; Hoda Tahani, Mark Collins, Brian Hornby, Amr Moukhtar and Philip Tracadas, Halliburton
BED BOUNDARY DETERMINATION USING JOINT INVERSION OF DEEP SHEAR WAVE IMAGING AND EXTRA-DEEP AZIMUTHAL ELECTROMAGNETIC RESISTIVITY; Zhoutuo Wei, China University of Petroleum (East China)
CALIBRATED FORMATION WATER RESISTIVITY SENSOR; Thomas Pfeiff er, Mahmut Sarili, Cong Wang, Koichi Naito, Yoko Morikami and Hua Chen, Schlumberger; Daniela Frese, Petroleum Development Oman
DISPERSION ASYMPTOTIC ANALYSIS AND ITS APPLICATIONS IN ACOUSTIC LOGGING; Yibing Zheng, Weatherford Interna onal
FIRST LWD FULLY TRIAXIAL CO-LOCATED ANTENNA SENSORS FOR REAL-TIME ANISOTROPY AND DIP ANGLE DETERMINATION; Michael Bi ar, Hsu-Hsiang (Mark) Wu, Jin Ma, Ma hew Griffi ng and Clint Lozinsky, Halliburton
FORMATION CHLORINE MEASUREMENT FROM SPECTROSCOPY ENABLES WATER SALINITY INTERPRETATION: THEORY, MODELING, AND APPLICATIONS; Jeff rey Miles, Laurent Mosse and Jim Grau, Schlumberger
HIGH-RESOLUTION GEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION IN ANY MUD TYPE USING LWD ACOUSTIC BOREHOLE IMAGE LOGS; Stephen Morris, Morgane Bizeray, Florian Bender and Jeremy Titjen, Baker Hughes
INVERSION-BASED INTERPRETATION OF BOREHOLE ACOUSTIC MEASUREMENTS ACQUIRED IN INVADED AND THINLY BEDDED FORMATIONS; Jingxuan Liu and Carlos Torres-Verdín, The University of Texas at Aus n; Elsa Maalouf, American University of Beirut
MODIFIED DIFFERENTIAL PHASE SEMBLANCE METHOD FOR MULTI-MODE DISPERSION ESTIMATION FROM BOREHOLE SONIC DATA; Ruijia Wang, Richard Coates and Jiajun Zhao, Halliburton
NONLINEAR ACOUSTICS APPLICATIONS FOR NEAR-WELLBORE FORMATION EVALUATION; Christopher Skelt, Chevron; James TenCate, Los Alamos Na onal Laboratory; Robert Guyer, University of Massachuse s; Paul Johnson, Carene Larmat and Pierre-Yves Le Bas, Los Alamos Na onal Laboratory; Kurt Nihei, Chevron; Cung Vu, Chevron (Re red)
QUANTITATIVE DEMONSTRATION OF A HIGH-FIDELITY OIL-BASED MUD RESISTIVITY IMAGER USING A CONTROLLED EXPERIMENT; Ahmed Fouda, Baris Guner, Wei Bin Ewe and David Torres, Halliburton
NEW TECHNOLOGY INTEGRATION OF REAL TIME OBM BOREHOLE IMAGES AND FORMATION SAMPLING WHILE DRILLING. LESSONS LEARNED IN CHALLENGING DEEPWATER GULF OF MEXICO ENVIRONMENTS.; Wilson Pineda, Gerardo Cedillo, Milad Saidian, Jennifer Wadsworth and Dan Halverson, BP Explora on and Produc on Inc; Hathairat Watcharophat, Sco Paul, Indrajit Basu and Aldrick Garcia Mayans, Schlumberger; Colin Schroeder, The University of Texas at Aus n
RESERVOIR STRUCTURAL CHARACTERIZATION AT MULTIPLE SCALES USING VERTICAL SEISMIC PROFILING, 3D SONIC IMAGING FROM DIPOLE AND MONOPOLE SOURCES, AND WELLBORE MICRORESISTIVITY IMAGES: CASE STUDY FROM OFFSHORE ABU DHABI, UAE; Adam Donald, Nicholas Benne and Peter Schlicht, Schlumberger; Franciscus Van Kleef, Ravi Verma and Frank Brindle ADNOC Off shore; Israa Suliman, Nobuyasu Hirabayashi, Saif Al-Kharusi and Yevgeniy Karpekin, Schlumberger
REVEALING HIDDEN INFORMATION; HIGH RESOLUTION LOGGING-WHILE-DRILLING SLOWNESS MEASUREMENTS AND IMAGING, USING ADVANCED DUAL ULTRASONIC TECHNOLOGY; Ma hew Blyth, Naoki Sakiyama, Hiroshi Hori, Hiroaki Yamamoto and Hiroshi Nakajima, Schlumberger; Adam Haecker, Con nental Resources; Mark G. Ki ridge, Occidental Petroleum
REVISITING THE FRACTURE SYSTEM IN AUSTIN CHALK WITH RECENT ADVANCES IN LWD BOREHOLE IMAGING; Roda Bradley, Marty Krueger, Meredith Miranda and Thiago Correa, Conocophillips; Chandramani Shrivastava, Dzevat Omeragic and Yong-Hua Chen, Schlumberger
THE ROAD TO ACHIEVING BUSINESS VALUE WITH REFLECTION SONIC IMAGING; Brian Hornby, Kary Green, Amit Padhi and Jeremy Bader, Halliburton
WIRELINE PRESSURE CORES: LABORATORY AND FIELD STUDY OF PRESSURE – TEMPERATURE – VOLUME RESPONSE WITHIN A CLOSED PRESSURE VESSEL; Don Westaco , Halliburton
PETROPHYSICS IN BROWNFIELDS
EXPERIMENTAL STUDY ON THE INFLUENCE OF ROCK FRACTURE ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN WATER SATURATION AND COMPLEX RESISTIVITY; Baozhi Pan, Yuhang Guo, Ruhan A, Lihua Zhang, Boyang Wei and Weiyi Zhou, Jilin University
PULSED NEUTRON LOGGING TECHNIQUE TO DETECT BYPASSED OIL AND EDGE WATER ENCROACHMENT IN COMPLEX MULTILAYERED RESERVOIR IN CASPIAN SEA; Zhandos Zhangaziyev and Mohamed Hashem, Dragon Oil
14
TECHNICAL PROGRAM
15
WORKSHOPS AND STUDENTPAPER COMPETITION
Each workshop requires a minimum number of participants to proceed, before purchasing a non-refundable airline ticket, please confi rm with SPWLA that the workshop is not cancelled. *non-registered fee applies to anyone that is not or planning to register for the SPWLA Annual Symposium. Workshops also have a maximum number of seating, early booking is recommended.
WORKSHOP 1:TITLE: 3D Printing in Geoscience and Engineering: Emerging Technology in Education, Research, and Communication
Instructors: Sergey Ishutov, Kevin Hodder, Rick Chalaturnyk (University of Alberta)
Date: Saturday, June 20, 2020 Time: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Fee: $375.00 for registered attendees; $475.00 *non-registered (includes lunch)
About the Course3D printing is a 21st century technology for transforming digital designs into tangible objects. Geoscience is a discipline infused with 3D data, hence 3D printing revolutionizes how we interact with our data and how we explain our science to non-experts. 3D printing geological and engineering models is an innovative subject that is emerging in education, research, and petroleum industry. This workshop is designed to introduce 3D printing to a broad audience of experimentalists, modelers, and those interested in technology innovations. It provides an overview of different 3D printing techniques that use both rock-like materials (e.g., sand, gypsum, clay) and polymers (e.g., plastics, resins). While these cost-effective methods are shaping the future of manufacturing, 3D printing geological media requires profound understanding of capabilities and limitations of each technique and the material properties used.
The workshop includes several modules on how to digitally design and 3D print models for use in reservoir rock analysis, geomorphology, petroleum geology/geophysics, and petrophysics. For reservoir rock analysis, 3D printing of near-identical rock proxies provides an approach to conduct repeatable laboratory experiments without destroying natural rock samples. The workshop is also aimed at encouraging discussions of case studies where 3D-printed porous models are used to investigate fundamental research questions in the areas of single and multiphase fl uid fl ow as well as reactive transport in reservoir sandstones and carbonate rocks. In addition, 3D-printed models will be compared to their digital equivalents to investigate geomechanical and transport properties (e.g., porosity, pore sizes, grain sizes, fracture apertures, connectivity of pore and fracture networks, wettability).Participants will learn how to deploy 3D-printed models to improve technical communication to diverse audiences (e.g., students, geoscientists, engineers, managers, community stakeholders). Participants will gain experience with
TouchTerrain app that allows 3D-printable terrain models to be generated with no CAD software or GIS experience. The integration of digital data sets with 3D-printed surface and subsurface features supports communication for both societal and technical objectives. The workshop will provide a unique opportunity to use 3D printing to bridge the gap between computational and experimental analyses of natural rocks as applied to geoscience research, education, and communication.
Bios:Dr. Sergey Ishutov is currently a postdoctoral fellow with [RG] 2 - at the University of Alberta. He earned a PhD in geology at Iowa State University, with a specialization in 3D printing geological models. He has received MSc in geology from California State University Long Beach and BSc in petroleum geology from the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. Dr. Ishutov received multiple awards and research grants from American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Geological Society of America, and the Society for Petroleum Engineers as well as industry grants for research in 3D printing porous media. Having a work experience with ExxonMobil, Aramco, Shell, and Oxy, Dr. Ishutov is one of the world pioneers in integrating 3D printing for reproduction of porous rock models and publishing this research in geoscience and engineering journals.
WORKSHOP 2:TITLE: SPWLA 2020 Electromagnetism
Instructors: Barbara I. Anderson, David F. Allen, Scott J. Jacobsen and Martin G. Lüling
Date: Saturday, June 20, 2020 Time: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Fee: $375.00 for registered attendees; $475.00 *non-registered (includes lunch)
About the CourseThe recent severe downturn in our industry has seen many experienced, seasoned electromagnetism experts retire or disappear. Now we must build up the next generation of petrophysicists with a deep understanding of and an open mind for our electromagnetic measurements from the low-frequency Laterolog tools to the GHz-frequency dielectric measurements. We want to offer our course for this young generation; we want to help them understand and appreciate the relevant features of these measurements and their role in the overall petrophysics workfl ow. At the same time, we will offer some new insights, which explore the evolution from vertical to deviated and horizontal wells.
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The electromagnetic logging tools were conceived and developed with an axisymmetric vertical-well–horizontal-layer paradigm in mind. Their use and interpretation in deviated wells poses new questions and challenges. We start our course with the historic origin of Wireline logging, just to get everybody into the right mood. Then we offer a brief, high-level introduction-overview of Maxwell’s electrodynamics and its use in design of electromagnetic formation-evaluation measurements for both Wireline and Logging While Drilling. We introduce anisotropy in thinly layered formations and then the Paradox of Anisotropy, which we generalize to deviated wells in orthotropic formations (a new result!). We cover the frequency spectrum of electromagnetic formation-evaluation measurements and the role and importance of dielectric permittivity and the complex-valued conductivity-permittivity inversion and interpretation. This topic leads to dispersion observations: the frequency dependence of the dielectric permittivity, as we learned to observe in the context of “Strange Induction Logs”. We will conclude presenting a list of open questions and unresolved challenges to encourage the younger generation in their pursuits. To motivate discussion, there will be invited speakers participating in several of the topic areas listed below.Outline – Major Topics (30 – 45 minutes each) 1. The Historic Origin of Wireline: Monday, 5 September
1927 2. Wireline and LWD logging tools and methods – from
vertical to deviated wells 3. Who still believes Archie’s relationship? Resistivity and
saturation relationships 4. Maxwell’s equations combining electric conductivity and
dielectric permittivity 5. Strange induction logs – and their LWD counterparts 6. Laboratory measurements on barrel and sidewall cores
– the ground truth Lunch Break7. Maxwell’s equations with anisotropy 8. The paradox of anisotropy generalized to deviated wells
in orthotropic media 9. More paradoxa of anisotropy – reaching beyond
electromagnetic measurements 10. Laterolog tool response and mud chemistry at the
borehole wall 11. The role of log simulations in interpretation and job
planning 12. Some unanswered questions
WORKSHOP 3:TITLE: Uncertainties in Petrophysics: methods of statistical analysis and data visualization
Instructors: Michel Claverie (Schlumberger), Lalitha Venkataramanan (Schlumberger Doll Research), Marco Pirrone (ENI), Laurent Mosse (Wireline Domain Center), David Allen (Schlumberger Interpretation Engineering)
Date: Saturday, June 20, 2020 Time: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Fee: $375.00 for registered attendees; $475.00 *non-registered (includes lunch)
About the CourseSubject matter experts will conduct short and interactive sessions on the defi nitions, calculation methods, applications and visual display of uncertainty in Petrophysics. They will cover the following topics, and will invite the registered participants to provide additional requests.
Components- precision and accuracy of measurements- uncertainty from models and parameters- measurements standards, characterization and calibration- role of precision in job planning- measurements of different vintages, acquired under time-lapse or different conditions
Analysis methods- error propagation from statistical and analytical methods; stand-alone and integrated software packages- value of information and decision analysis- uncertainty of machine learning algorithms
We will also provide recommendations about data visualization (histograms, crossplots, along-well displays, tables) to maximize analytical thinking and avoid the pitfalls of misused software coding and graphics design expertise.
N.B.: We will start and fi nish on time – plus/minus the tiniest possible standard deviation – guided by the principle that smaller uncertainties are better.
WORKSHOP 4:TITLE: Geomechanics 101
Instructors: Jeff Taylor and David Thurston (CNOOC International)
Date: Sunday, June 21, 2020 Time: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Fee: $375.00 for registered attendees; $475.00 *non-registered (includes lunch)
About the CourseThis one day short course on Geomechanics is designed for all upstream oil and gas subsurface professionals where we present an integrated approach to understand the basics and applications of Geomechanics and apply that to building a 1D Mechanical Earth Model. From an introduction including basic mechanical concepts to evaluating stresses in the Earth’s crust, from the study of rock failure in the lab and downhole to measuring stress orientations and magnitude.
WORKSHOPS AND STUDENTPAPER COMPETITION
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And, fi nally using these concepts to build a 1D Mechanical Earth Model.
This is a practical, hands on course where we show how to integrate seismic, well logs, core tests, wellbore images, petrophysics, pressures, mud logs and insitu stress tests.
This course is for Drilling and Reservoir Engineers who want to know about Compaction, Compaction Drive, Subsidence, Production-Induced Faulting Prediction, Optimizing Drainage of Fractured Reservoirs, Hydraulic Propagation in Vertical & Deviated Wells, Wellbore Stability During Drilling (mud weights, drilling directions), Completion Engineering (long-term wellbore stability, sand production prediction), Well Placement (Azimuth and Deviation, Sidetracks), Underbalanced Drilling to Formation Damage. And just to know how to use Geomechinics to drill and complete wells safely.
For Reservoir Geology and Geophysics who want to know about Optimizing Drainage of Fractured Reservoirs, Pore Pressure Prediction, Understanding Shear Velocity Anisotropy, Fault Seal Integrity, Hydrocarbon Migration, Reservoir Compartmentalization.
And for Petrophysicists who want to know about all of the above and build the models to predict the downhole stress fi eld.
The layout of the course will be in 2 parts:
Part 1 by Jeff Taylor
IntroductionBasic Mechanical ConceptsStressDisplacement StrainBasic Material PropertiesYoung’s ModulusPoisson’s RatioBulk ModulusAngle of Internal Friction
The Tectonic Stress Field – stress in the Earth’s crustVertical Stress, Overburden, SvPore Pressure, PpMinimum and Maximum Hz Stresses, Shmin and SHmaxAnderson Relative Stress and Fault Classifi cation
Rock failure - compression, tension and shearMohr DiagramsTriaxial Compression Stress Tests Measuring Stress Orientation and MagnitudeLogsSeismic Attributes
DFIT, LOT, XLOT testsBorehole breakouts and drilling induced fractures Faults and Friction (and confi ning the stresses)
Part 2 by David Thurston
Building a 1D Geomechanical Model
WORKSHOP 5:TITLE: NMR: The Emergent Primary Porosity Tool and Beyond
Instructors: JinHong Chen (Aramco Americas), Ron Bonnie (ConocoPhillips), Songhua Chen (Halliburton), Boqin Sun (Chevron)
Date: Sunday, June 21, 2020 Time: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Fee: $375.00 for registered attendees; $475.00 *non-registered (includes lunch)
About the CourseNMR logs, both WL and LWD, provide insights into fl uid and rock properties and their interactions at a range of reservoir conditions. The information-rich T2 distribution and/or 2D NMR data provide many petrophysical answers such as porosity, permeability, fl uid-type and volume, and hydrocarbon producibility. However, its prevalence in the oil/gas industry remains relatively low due to the complexities in data acquisition and NMR log interpretation. This course will focus on how to obtain high quality NMR measurements and how to execute reliable and consistent interpretation that bring real values to a company. The content includes:
1. Basic NMR physics and general interpretation workfl ows
2. Wireline and LWD tools, their data acquisition schemes, and job planning workfl ow
3. Applications in conventional reservoirs, including sandstone and carbonate formations
4. Applications in unconventional reservoirs and log interpretation workfl ows
Many consider NMR to be one of the most complex logging technologies to date. This course aims to demystify the NMR concept and applications. We will focus on how fl uid properties, rock properties, and the measurement conditions affect the 1D and 2D NMR logs in various formations; and consequently, how to extract correct porosity and fl uid type from the NMR logs. Core-log integration will be incorporated into the course to help interpretation and delineation of the log data. Topics of discussion include common challenges in obtaining accurate porosity values from NMR, such as hydrogen index (HI) effect, “missing porosity” in heavy oil reservoirs, and the meaning of porosity in unconventional organic-rich
WORKSHOPS AND STUDENTPAPER COMPETITION
18
shales. Operational considerations such as logging speed, tool vibration, and tool rotation, infl uencing the accuracy of porosity measurements, as well as methods to mitigate their impact, will be discussed.1. Through lectures, exercises on real problems, and group
discussion, you will learn how to:2. Decide NMR logging program – LWD versus Wireline 3. Select data acquisition sequences (T2 log versus 2D
NMR logs)4. QA/QC data delivery and inversion5. Perform basic NMR log evaluation and presentation 6. Perform fl uid typing and understand “missing porosity”7. Use advance log suites to deep dive into different
formations 8. Measure porosity and extract pore-fl uids in
unconventional shale reservoirs
WORKSHOP 6:TITLE: Advances in Resistivity and Dielectric Logging
Instructors: Hanming Wang (Chevron), Hezhu Yin (ExxonMobil), Teruhiko Hagiwara (Aramco), Michael Rabinovich (BP), John Rasmus (retired), Michel Claverie (Schlumberger), Nikita Seleznev (Schlumberger)
Date: Sunday, June 21, 2020 Time: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Fee: $375.00 for registered attendees; $475.00 *non-registered (includes lunch)
About the CourseThis event is an updated version of successful course held during the 53nd, 54rd, 59th, 60th Annual Symposium in Cartagena, New Orleans, London and Houston.
Resistivity logs continue to gain importance in Formation Evaluation, Well Placement, Reservoir Mapping. This one-day short course describes the latest technologies in electrical logging and dielectric logging and their multiple applications in the domains of petrophysics, reserve evaluation, and real time decisions. Several topics will be covered in this one-day workshop.
Electrical AnisotropyResistivity anisotropy logging plays a dual role. For the petrophysicist, it is one of the preferred methods for evaluating hydrocarbon content in laminated reservoirs, including turbidites. For the geologist anisotropy logs also measure structural dip. Wireline and LWD sensors for measuring anisotropy, and practical applications of the measurements will be presented and discussed. Case study from triaxial induction logging to identify potentially by-passed low resistivity pay formation, to predict folded geological structure nearby the salt frank and many more will be shared in the class.
Dielectric Log and Resistivity Frequency DispersionIntroduced in the 1970’s to help evaluate fresh water bearing formations, the dielectric log is also used to describe formation texture and other petrophysical parameters, based on electrical dispersion. In this topic, modern dielectric dispersion tool and interpretation methodology will be discussed. Case study will demonstrate the main applications of the dispersion measurement such as shallow resistivity curve from dielectric logging, water fi lled porosity independent from water salinity and “Archie” parameters, saturation in formation with variable water salinity, thin bed analysis and carbonate texture analysis and many more.
Interpretation of the Anomalies of LWD Resistivity Logs in Common Complex ScenariosInterpreting LWD resistivity logs is of importance for real-time operation decision. However, the anomalies resulting from borehole, tool eccentricity, anisotropy, well deviation, distance-to-boundary, drilling induced fracture, time-lapse and dielectric make the interpretation of real-time LWD resistivity logs a challenging task. In this chapter, numerical modeling result and cased studies will be shared to understand the tool response characteristics of LWD resistivity logs in aforementioned common complex scenarios.
LWD Deep, Ultra-Deep Azimuthal Resistivity:Since LWD azimuthal resistivity was fi rst introduced a decade ago followed by ultra-deep azimuthal resistivity a few years ago, the new service brought signifi cant upside to oil business. The main application of deep, ultra-deep azimuthal resistivity are, but not limited to, well placement, reservoir mapping, geo-stopping and look-ahead. In this topic, we will discuss the measurement physics, how to interpret Picasso-plot offered by service providers, the measurement sensitivity to distance-to-boundary, to dip angle and to anisotropy. We will share the successful stories, lessons learned and the best practice through case studies.
The format will be a combination of presentations by the instructors, interactive discussion and exercises in small groups working on real problems.
STUDENT PAPER COMPETITION Date: Sunday, June 21, 2020 Time: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Place: Conference Center
This full day competition will include lunch and breaks. Papers will be judged and cash prizes will be awarded at the end of the competition. Students are invited and encouraged to attend the Tuesday luncheon to be recognized during the Annual Awards Ceremony.
WORKSHOPS AND STUDENTPAPER COMPETITION
19
FIELD TRIPS
PRE-SYMPOSIUM
Field TRIP #1 - CANADIAN ROCKY MOUNTAIN FIELD TRIPSaturday, June 20th, 2020Cost, Member $250, Non-Member $350 , (CAPACITY 50)
Well known structural Geologists; Marian J. Warren and Mark Cooper will guide you through the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Marian and Mark have extensive experience helping oil and gas companies understand the subsurface.
This one-day fi eld trip in the Canadian Rockies Front Ranges examines several stratigraphic intervals equivalent to important conventional and unconventional reservoirs in the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin. The focus is on deformation at multiple scales including fractures and larger-scale reservoir deformation that may be below seismic resolution. Log or wellbore scale examples of various structural features with examples of resolution issues and what might get missed beyond the wellbore. Equivalent stratigraphic intervals have produced many tens of Tcf of gas and signifi cant oil in the Foothills and adjacent deep foreland basin of western Canada. Understanding structural complexities have provided both opportunities and challenges for exploration and production.
The format of the trip is a combination of roadside stops and short walks, all in an area of outstanding scenery as well as geology. None of the walks are very strenuous, with a maximum distance of about 4 km (2.5 miles) and maximum elevation gain of about 200 m (650 ft) on well maintained trails that are not steep. The trip will start and fi nish at the Banff Springs Hotel, with stops near Banff, Canmore and along the very scenic Highway 40 in Kananaskis Country.
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FIELD TRIPS
Field Trip #2, - BURGESS SHALE - MT. STEPHEN TRILOBITE BEDSSunday, June 21st, 2020Cost, Member $200, Non-Member $300, (CAPACITY 24)
If you are new to the Burgess Shale and wish to see abundant and obvious Cambrian fossils, this is the hike to do. The site is strewn with rock slabs containing appendages of the Cambrian predator Anomalocaris canadensis; trilobites Ogygopsis klotzi, Olenoides serratus and Elrathina cordillerae as well as brachiopods and sponges.
The Mount Stephen Fossil Beds were discovered in 1886, after railway workers reported fi nding what they called “stone bugs” in the talus on the slopes of Mount Stephen. Learn about the environment in which these creatures lived and perished and why many of the species that are found here do not occur at the Walcott Quarry site.
This will be a strenuous hike with 800 meters of elevation gain and decent, so you must be physically fi t. Do not attempt this hike if you have any respiratory, circulatory or joint problems, if unsure check with your physician. Proper hiking footwear and clothing will be required as weather conditions in the mountains at higher elevation can change quickly. Further details for suggested clothing will be communicated to those who enroll.https://www.burgess-shale.bc.ca/stephen
Target audience: Anyone who likes to walk, petrophysicists, petroleum engineers and geologists, historians and environmentalists.Attire: Casual clothes and walking or hiking shoesWhat to bring: Sun screen, insect repellant and a hat/cap.Exertion: Transportation by passenger van. Walking on uneven surface.
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SOCIETY FUNCTIONS /SOCIAL EVENTS
STUDENT PAPER COMPETITION
Date: Sunday, June 21, 2020 Time: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Place: Conference Center
This event will allow students competing to engage with colleagues from other schools and industry professionals. We hope both graduate and undergraduate students will share their work and research for the opportunity of being awarded “best paper presentation”. The competition will be in held three groups: Bachelor, MSc and PhD.
SPWLA ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING AND LUNCH
Date: Monday, June 22, 2020Time: 11:45 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.Fee: $45
The SPWLA Annual Business Meeting is a lunch meeting open to all delegate attendees. During the lunch the 2019-2020 President and Board Members will share their accomplishments made during their tenure. Followed by the introduction and welcoming of the 2020-2021 President and Board Members.
SPWLA AWARDS PRESENTATION AND LUNCH
Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2020Time: 11:45 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.Fee: $45
The SPWLA Annual Awards luncheon is open to all delegates, their spouses and guests. During the lunch, individuals will be honored and rewarded for their out-standing achievements and contributions to the Society and industry.
NETWORKING LUNCHDate: Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, June 22-24, 2020Time: 11:45 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.Fee: $30
This buffet style lunch is open to all attendees who want a quick and easy lunch while visiting with colleagues, clients and friends before returning to the scheduled program.
If you do not pre-plan your lunch through SPWLA you may have a diffi cult time being served lunch in the Hotel restaurants during the symposium lunch break.Lunch options outside of the Hotel are some distance away.
SPWLA LEADERSHIP LUNCHEON*
Date: Wednesday, June 24, 2020Time: 11:45 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
All current SPWLA Chapter Presidents (outgoing and incoming), all Past SPWLA Presidents an SIG coordinators are invited to a complimentary luncheon.*BY INVITATION ONLY
SOCIETY FUNCTIONS /SOCIAL EVENTS
22
ICEBREAKER RECEPTIONDate: Sunday, June 21, 2020 Time: 5:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. Fee: Complimentary
Proudly hosted and sponsored by Halliburton
Halliburton is pleased to sponsor the Icebreaker reception at the Upper/Garden Terrace, accessible through the Rundle Lounge of the Fairmont Banff Springs. Enjoy the stunning mountain view and the “Castle in the Rockies” as you connect with your colleagues and capture the breathtaking scenery. In case of inclement weather, join us next door at the Alhambra, a unique, oval ballroom with large bronze gates that were imported from Spain in the 1920s. Geologists will especially enjoy checking out the stone staircase, leading from “Rundle Rock,” a local mountain with fossils imbedded in the stairs.
Cocktails and hors d’oeuvres will be served.
SOCIETY FUNCTIONS /SOCIAL EVENTS
MONDAY EVENING RECEPTIONDate: Monday, June 22, 2020 Time: 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. Fee: Complimentary
Proudly hosted and sponsored by Baker Hughes
Baker Hughes will be sponsoring an evening high above the Banff Springs. A gondola ride will take you to the top of Sulfur mountain for truly unique evening with lasting memories.
TUESDAY EVENING RECEPTION Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2020 Time: 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. Fee: Complimentary
Proudly hosted and sponsored by Schlumberger
Schlumberger is sponsoring a night at the Banff Springs in the Alhambra room. The fi nal evening social of the conference is sure to be a special one.
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SPOUSE / GUEST PROGRAMS
SPOUSE HOSPITALITY SUITE
Date: Monday – WednesdayTime 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.Fee: included in registration If you’re looking for a place to catch up with old friends, visit the Hospitality Suite for refreshments and companionship. The suite will be open to registered accompanying spouses, family members and guests of conference attendees.
MONDAY - JOHNSTON CANYON andLAKE LOUISE TOUR
DATE: Monday, June 22, 2020TIME: 9:00AM – 4:00PMCOST: $100 USINCLUDED: Transport, lunch and guiding.
Maximum capacity: 50 people
Take a walk along the boardwalk trail winding gently through Johnston Canyon. Carved steeply into the limestone bedrock by thousands of years of water erosion, the dramatic Johnston canyon is a must-visit natural attraction in Banff National Park. Overhanging canyon walls, waterfalls, the deep pools of Johnston Creek, and lush forest are sure to leave a memorable impression. It can all be experienced via an easy hike along smooth trails and boardwalk, making it ideal for families and people of all fi tness levels and ages.
Then travel to the Chateau Lake Louise for lunch and another walking tour by the lake. Lake Louise is world famous for its turquoise water, Victoria Glacier and soaring mountain backdrop of extraordinary natural beauty.
Dress: Casual, comfortable shoes. Bring: A hat and sun cream for sun protection, a bottle of water to prevent dehydration, a sweater and light jacket for rain or cooler temperatures.
TUESDAY - TAKAKKAW FALLS andBURGESS SHALES EXHIBIT
DATE: Tuesday, June 23, 2020TIME: 9:00AM – 4:00PMCOST: $100 USINCLUDED: Transport, lunch and guiding
Maximum capacity: 50 people
JOHNSTON CANYON
EMERALD LAKE
LAKE LOUISE
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SPOUSE / GUEST PROGRAMS
The group will visit and take a short walk to experience Takakkaw Falls, a dramatic waterfall located in Yoho National Park. “Takakkaw” translates to “wonderful” in Cree, a dialect spoken by some indigenous people in Canada. The falls have a total height of 373 meters (1,224 ft), making it the 2nd tallest waterfall in Canada. The falls are fed by the meltwater of the Daly Glacier which is part of the Waputik Icefi eld.
Then it’s off to enjoy lunch at Emerald Lake Lodge located in Yoho National Park. After lunch, we take a walk by the lake, a place of wonder, and natural beauty. On the way back we will stop at an exhibit of ancient Burgess Shales fossils. The Burgess Shale is a record of one of the earliest marine ecosystems giving a tantalizing glimpse of life as it was over 500 million years ago. The Burgess Shale (high up on a mountain) is one of the most important fossil sites in the world and a UNESCO World Heritage site.
This excursion is ideal for families and people of all fi tness levels and ages.
Dress: Casual, comfortable shoes. Bring: A hat and sun cream for sun protection, a bottle of water to prevent dehydration, a sweater and light jacket for rain or cooler temperatures.
WEDNESDAY - LAKE MINNEWANKABOAT TOUR AND MUSEUM
DATE: Wednesday, June 24, 2020.TIME: 9:00AM – 1:00PMCOST: $90 USINCLUDED: Transport, entry fees and guiding
Maximum capacity: 50 people
Join us for a morning sightseeing boat tour on Lake Minnewanka and experience breathtaking views of surrounding mountains. After the boat tour we will visit the Cave and Basin National Historic Site, the birthplace of Canada’s national parks, and learn about the natural and cultural history of the mountains. Explore the underground cave where the thermal springs were fi rst discovered. Visit historic buildings and state of the art exhibits.
This excursion is ideal for families and people of all fi tness levels and ages.
Dress: Casual, comfortable shoes. Bring: A hat and sun cream for sun protection, a bottle of water to prevent dehydration, a sweater and light jacket for rain or cooler temperatures.
TAKAKKAW FALLS
LAKE MINNEWANKA
CAVE & BASIN NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE
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ACCOMMODATIONSWHERE TO STAY!
BOOK EARLY DISCOUNT RATES EXPIRE MAY 20TH
Fairmont Banff Springs Hotel, Convention Center and Golf Course
Located in the heart of Banff National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the world famous Banff Springs hotel stands as a landmark in the picturesque alpine town of Banff, Alberta. Canada’s “Castle in the Rockies,” has been providing legendary hospitality to their guests for more than 130 years.
Please book your reservations through the SPWLA headquarter hotel, this will help SPWLA meet hotel room block commitments and avoid penalties that could ultimately increase conference expenses. To take advantage of our convention discount rates you must book on or before May 20, 2020.
Fairmont Banff Springs405 Spray AvenueBanff, Alberta,Canada T1L 1J4
For reservations go online to the SPWLA web site accommodations tab: www.spwla2020.com
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REGISTRATION INFORMATION
WAYS TO REGISTER
Pre-registration Deadline: Monday, June 1, 2020
By Mail: Mail completed registration form to: SPWLA Symposium 8866 Gulf Freeway, Suite 320 Houston, TX 77017
By Fax: +1-713-947-8747 The fax line is open 24 hours. DO NOT send another copy by mail.
Online at www.spwla.org
Full payment must accompany registration. Please register one attendee per form. If your spouse or guest is attending, be sure to include that person’s full name for the computerized badge. Members may not register as a spouse or guest.
REGISTRATION TYPE / PACKAGE INCLUDES
DELEGATES: Admission to technical program and exhibits Symposium transactions on USB Complimentary Tickets to Social Events (Request On-site with Badge Pickup)
SPOUSE/PARTNER: Admission to Spouse Hospitality Suite Admission to the Exhibition Hall Complimentary Tickets to Social Events (Request On-site with Badge Pickup)
STUDENT: Admission to technical program and exhibits Symposium transactions on USB Complimentary Tickets to Social Events (Request On-site with Badge Pickup)
DAY PASS: • $375.00 per day • Admission to technical program and exhibits• Symposium transactions on USB
How to pay for registrationRegistration cannot be processed unless full payment is received with your registration form. Please register one attendee per form. If your spouse or guest is attending, be sure to include that person’s full name for the computerized badge. Delegates cannot register as a spouse or guest. Payments may be made by:
• Check or Money Order payable in US dollars to: SP WLA Symposium
• Credit Card (Visa, Master Card, Discover or American Express)
• Wire Transfer (Bank Information must be requested by sending email to [email protected])
REGISTRATION*
Before June 1, 2020 $ 850.00 SPWLA Member $ 950.00 Non-member $ 100.00 Spouse $ 50.00 Student$375.00 One Day Pass
On-Site$950.00 SPWLA Member$1050.00 Non-member$100.00 Spouse$50.00 Student$375.00 One Day Pass
*Registration payments made after June 1, 2020 will refl ect On-site price. On-Site Registration Hours
Saturday, June 20 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Sunday, June 21 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Monday, June 22 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Tuesday, June 23 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Wednesday, June 24 7:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon
CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGSConference Proceedings are available digitally hosted on OnePetro© library or on USB and are included in full registration fee. Additional copies may be purchased for $40.00 each on site.
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CONFIRMATIONYou will receive a confi rmation notice by email listing your registration fees and activities. Please check confi rmation for accuracy. Should you need assistance email [email protected]
REQUEST FOR NAME CHANGEAll name substitutions addressed to [email protected] before May 1, 2020, will be processed at no extra charge. Requests made thereafter and on-site will be subject to a $35.00 processing fee.
CANCELLATION POLICY• General conditions - All cancellations notices must
be made in writing to [email protected].• Refunds will be issued after the Symposium in
accordance with the Cancellation Terms and Conditions.
• Field Trip and Workshop maybe cancelled due to a low enrolment. Should this be the case, registered guest will have the option of a full refund or
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
reassignment to another workshop of his/her choice providing space is available.
• Hotel cancellations must be made directly with the hotel.
CANCELLATION TERMS AND CONDITIONSRegistration, fi eld trip, paid lunches, spouse/partner tours and workshop fees:Cancellation notices received on or before May 1, 2020: Full refund (less 25% admin fee)Cancellation notices received after May 1, 2020: No refund.
COMPLIMENTARY FUNCTIONSAdmittance to complimentary functions is by show badge.
• Registered guest are welcome to attend. • Space may be limited. Entry will be based on a fi rst
come, fi rst serve. • Entry is not guaranteed. It is the policy of this
organization to provide equal opportunities of our guest while keeping safety our number one goal.
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REGISTRATION FORM
29
SPWLA INTERNATIONAL 2019-2020 BOARD OF DIRECTORS
REGIONAL DIRECTORS
SPWLA BOARD OF DIRECTORS
PresidentJesus SalazarMarathon Oil CompanyHouston, TX, USA
President-ElectJames HemingwayConsultantManitou Springs, CO, USA
VP TechnologyMichael O’KeefeSchlumbergerBucharest, Romania
VP Educa onKaterina YaredSM Energy
VP Publica ons Tom NevilleSchlumbergerBrisbane, Australia
VP Finance, Secretary,and Administra onDoug Pa ersonBaker Hughes, a GE Company Houston, Texas, USA
VP ITLin LiangSchlumberger-Doll ResearchCambridge, MA, USA
N. America 1Adam HaeckerCon nental ResourcesOklahoma City, OK, USA
N. America 2Kelly SkuceCore Petrophysical Consul ngCalgary, Canada
Europe Craig LindsayCore Specialist Services Ltd.Aberdeenshire, United Kingdom
Middle East/AfricaShouxiang (Mark) MaSaudi AramcoDhahran, Saudi Arabia
La n AmericaNadege Bize-ForestSchlumbergerRio de Janeiro, Brazil
Asia and AustraliaJennifer MarketMPC Kine cPerth, Australia
Execu ve DirectorSharon Johnson SPWLAHouston, TX 77017
30
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SPWLA8866 Gulf Freeway, Suite 320Houston, TX 77017
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