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Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir, and Facilities Management
Chairperson Dennis Dria
Myden Energy Consulting, PLLC
Jeff App Chevron
Chris Baldwin Weatherford
Wolfgang Deeg Devon
Roger Duncan Baker Hughes
Barry Freifeld Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
Kyle Friehauf ConocoPhillips
Steve Hirshblond Shell
Eric Holley Halliburton
Paul Huckabee Shell
Kelly Hughes Chevron
John Lovell DataValue Consultants
Pierre Ramondenc Schlumberger
Doug Norton Fiber Optic Pipeline Solutions
Bill Shroyer SageRider
In this workshop, reviews of distributed fiber-optic sensing case histories and mature development projects will provide a focused look at the application of this technology to better optimize well and field performance. Significant emphasis will be placed on in-well fiber-optic sensing systems designed to provide unique well and reservoir information, as well as optical sensing systems that enable economic facilities, infrastructure, and pipeline surveillance. We will examine how these subsurface and surface monitoring systems are being used to optimize completion efficiency, maximize asset value by better choice of field development parameters such as well spacing, maximize resource recovery though life-of-field production and injection monitoring and assess integrity up to and through plugging and abandonment phases. This applied sensing technology will be evaluated as a system, including acquisition instrumentation advancements, optical fiber and cable construction, deployment/installation best practices, data acquisition optimization, and data management and interpretation examples.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS
29-31 August 2017 The Brown Palace Hotel | Denver, Colorado, USA
SPE WORKSHOP
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
Internet Charging Station
OptaSense®
a QinetiQ company
Breakfast
SPONSORS
ReceptionsCoffee Breaks Lunches
CORPORATE SPONSOR
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
29-31 August 2017The Brown Palace Hotel | Denver, Colorado, USA
GENERAL INFORMATION
About Society of Petroleum EngineersThe Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) is a not-for-profit professional association for members engaging in oil and gas E&P, providing resources for technical knowledge. Income from this event will be invested back into SPE to support many other member programs. Scholarships, certification, the Distinguished Lecturer program, and SPE’s energy education program Energy4me are just a few examples.
AccessibilityOur events and functions are accessible to all attendees with wheelchairs. If you require special arrangements, please contact our staff at the registration desk.
Alcohol PolicySPE recognizes the legitimate serving of alcoholic beverages in the process of conducting business and social activities. We also recognize that the use and consumption of alcohol carries with it the requirement for all attendees to consume those beverages responsibly.
CommercialismIn remaining consistent with workshop objectives and SPE guidelines, commercialism in presentations will not be permitted. Company logos should be used only to indicate the affiliation of the presenter(s).
Continuing Education UnitsAttendees will receive 2.0 CEUs. One CEU equals 10 contact hours of participation. CEUs will be awarded through SPE Professional Development for participation and completion of SPE workshop. A permanent record of a participant’s involvement and awarding of CEUs will be maintained by SPE.
DocumentationFollowing the workshop a URL containing released copies of the workshop presentations will be available to all attendees.
Electronic DevicesAs a courtesy to the speakers and your fellow registrants, please turn off all electronic devices during presentations.
Name BadgesPlease wear your badge at all times. It is a courtesy to your fellow registrants, speakers and sponsors.
Photography and Recording PolicySPE reserves the exclusive rights to all video/audio recording or reproductions of the workshop.
Unauthorized video/audio recording is expressly prohibited in the session room(s) or poster area, whether by video, still or digital camera, mobile phone, or any other means or form of reproduction.
Any person attending may be photographed or videotaped, and by your attendance, you give permission to use your image in possible future marketing publications including print, online, and video.
Workshop FormatWorkshops maximize the exchange of ideas among attendees and presenters through brief technical presentations followed by extended Q&A periods. Focused topics attract an informed audience eager to discuss issues critical to advancing both technology and best practices.
Many of the presentations are in the form of case studies, highlighting engineering achievements and lessons learned. In order to stimulate frank discussion, no proceedings are published and members of the press are not invited to attend.
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
TECHNICAL AGENDA MONDAY, 28 AUGUST1730-1900 | Welcome Reception
Ellyngton’s Restaurant
TUESDAY, 29 AUGUSTAll technical sessions are located in the Grand Ballroom.
0700-0800 | Registration and Breakfast Grand Ballroom Foyer
0800-0810 | Chairpersons’ Welcome
0810-0845 | Keynote: Value of Fiber Optics Diagnostics and Surveillance Dennis Dria, Myden Energy Consulting
0845-1015 | Session 1: Seismic ImagingSession Chairs: Barry Freifeld, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
Steve Hirshblond, Shell n Presentation 1: Proof of Concept and Valuation of DAS
VSP for Frequent Reservoir Monitoring in Deepwater Jorge Lopez, Shell
n Presentation 2: Time-lapse Seismic Monitoring of a CO2 Plume Using DAS Kyle Harris, Carleton University
n Presentation 3: Updated DAS VSP Data Analysis at the Aquistore CO2 Sequestration Site Bogdan Kustowski, Chevron
1015-1045 | Coffee Break Grand Ballroom Foyer
UK: +44 (0) 20 8327 4210www.silixa.com US: +1 832 772 [email protected]
Redefining the limits of the possible Silixa’s engineered Carina® Sensing System offers a new level of performance in high-definition, real-time well characterisation throughout the life of the well.
• Cost-effective installation using patented cable orientation mapping
• VSP • Hydraulic frac monitoring • Microseismic• Production profiling• Well integrity • Cross-well monitoring
Depth (m) Depth (m)
Geophones5 shots for each 11 positions
Carina Sensing System5 shots, full borehole coverage
Tim
e (s
)
Depth (m) Depth (m)
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
1045-1215 | Session 2: Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) and Other Thermal Applications
Session Chairs: Chris Baldwin, Weatherford Pierre Ramondenc, Schlumberger
n Presentation 1: Multiplexed Distributed Sensing for Thermal Monitoring Applications Christopher Baldwin, Weatherford
n Presentation 2: Application of a Test Flow Loop for Steam Injection Flow Profiling Mahdy Shirdel, Chevron
n Presentation 3: Real-Time Geophysical Monitoring in a Thermally Produced Asset Roger Duncan, Baker Hughes
1215-1315 | Lunch 5280 Suite
1315-1445 | Session 3: Emerging and Enabling Technologies
Session Chairs: Barry Freifeld, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab Bill Shroyer, SageRider
n Presentation 1: DAS in Existing Telecommunications Conduits on the Stanford Campus Eileen Rose Martin, Stanford University
n Presentation 2: Fiber Optic Distributed Chemical Sensor for Subsurface Carbon Dioxide Jesús Delgado Alonso, IOS
n Presentation 3: Development and Field Validation of High Accuracy and High Reliability Fiber-Optic Pressure Gauges for use in Thermal Enhanced Oil Recovery Wells Kathy Wang, Halliburton
1445-1500 | Coffee Break Grand Ballroom Foyer
29-31 August 2017The Brown Palace Hotel | Denver, Colorado, USA
Read the case study at
slb.com/wellwatcher
*Mark of Schlumberger. © 2016 Schlumberger. 16-CO-139491
WellWatcher BriteBlue* multimode DTS fi ber provided continuous temperature profi les of individual reservoir zones,which enabled the e� ects of depletion to be monitored over time. As a result, BP adjusted its strategy for water injectionand oil drainage—facilitating the drainage of more than 100 million barrels of secondary oil and also eliminating the needto run production logging tools.
BP optimizes drainage of more than 100 million barrels of secondary oil.
MULTIMODE DTS FIBER
WellWatcher BriteBlue
dfos-ad-half-page-16-CO-139491 AD.indd 1 5/20/16 9:24 AM
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
1500-1700 | Session 4: Stimulation DiagnosticsSession Chairs: Paul Huckabee, Shell
Eric Holley, Halliburton n Presentation 1: Fiber Optic Solution and Evaluation of a
Cemented Single Point Entry System – Frac Placement Assessment Gustavo Ugueto, Shell
n Presentation 2: Use of Diagnostics in Refracturing Applications to Understand Treatment Effectiveness Peter Cook, Halliburton
n Presentation 3: Interpreting DAS and DTS in a SRV Context: Near-Well Stimulation Diagnostics Kyle Friehauf, ConocoPhillips
n Presentation 4: Controlling Flow-splitting Results Using Real-time Fiber-Optic (DAS) Measurements Matthew Lahman, Halliburton
1700-1830 | Reception Brown Palace Club
WEDNESDAY, 30 AUGUST 0700-0800 | Breakfast
Grand Ballroom Foyer
0800-0930 | Session 5: Microseismic Monitoring with DAS
Session Chairs: Kelly Hughes, Chevron Kyle Friehauf, ConocoPhillips
n Presentation 1: Microseismic Montoring of Fracture Stimulation with DAS Garth Naldrett, Silixa
n Presentation 2: DAS Microseismic Monitoring and Integration with Strain Measurements in Hydraulic Fracture Profiling Dan Kahn, Devon Energy
n Presentation 3: Interpreting DAS and DTS in a SRV Context: Cross-Well Diagnostics Ge Jin, ConocoPhillips
Distributed Temperature Sensing (DTS)
• Superior reliability • Superior ruggedness • Outstanding support • 50 km measurement range • Singlemode or multimode
Leading the Way with Passion. America’s Sales Offi ce: 214 471-3460www.apsensing.com
WELL & RESERVOIR MONITORING
AP_17005_Anzeigenkonzept_8.75x5.625_zoll_RZ.indd 1 13.02.17 12:21
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
29-31 August 2017The Brown Palace Hotel | Denver, Colorado, USA
0930-1000 | Coffee Break Grand Ballroom Foyer
1000-1130 | Session 6: Fiber DeploymentSession Chairs: Bill Shroyer, SageRider
Steve Hirshblond, Shell n Presentation 1: Real-Time DTS Monitoring of Gravel
Packing Operations and Cementing of a Well in Janggi Basin, Korea Dasom Sharon Lee, Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM)
n Presentation 2: Improved Methods for In-Well Deployment of Fiber Dhruv Arora, Shell
n Presentation 3: Permanent Reservoir Monitoring Using DAS at the ADM Site, Decatur, Illinois Shan Dou, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
1130-1300 | Lunch 5280 Suite
1300-1430 | Session 7: Data Management, Visualization, Big Data, Data Fusion
Session Chairs: Kelly Hughes, Chevron Wolfgang Deeg, Devon
n Presentation 1: Cloud Based Big Data Services for Fiber Optic Distributed Sensing Technology in Oil and Gas Applications Don Yang, Baker Hughes
n Presentation 2: Detecting Events and Anomalies from Permanently Installed Distributed Temperature Sensor in Injector & Producer Wells Abhishek Sharma, Schlumberger
n Presentation 3: Introduction of the Energistics PRODML v2.0 DAS Data Exchange Industry Standard Wilfred Berlang, Shell
1430-1500 | Coffee Break Grand Ballroom Foyer
From the reservoir to the refinery. From the depths of the sea to thepower of the cloud. BHGE is now the first and only fullstream provider tothe oil and gas industry, leveraging the best minds and most intelligentmachines to invent smarter ways to bring energy to the world.
Learn more at bhge.com
A LINE HAS BEEN DRAWN.
BETWEEN THE SAME WAY
BETWEEN ENERGY DEMAND
BETWEEN MAINSTREAM
BETWEEN THE INDUSTRIAL
BETWEEN SETTLING FOR TODAY
TODAY, A LINE HAS BEEN DRAWN.
AND THE PAST IS ON ONE SIDE
AND A NEW WAY.
AND ENERGY POTENTIAL.
AND FULLSTREAM.
AND THE DIGITAL INDUSTRIAL.
AND DEFINING TOMORROW.
AND WE’RE ON THE OTHER.
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
1500-1630 | Session 8: Standards and Standardization - Panel Discussion
Session Chairs: Chris Baldwin, Weatherford Doug Norton, Fiber Optic Pipeline Solutions
Multiple organizations exist examining the need for standards to further fiber optic sensing technology. Three organizations will provide brief overview statements of activities related to the formation of standards for fiber optic sensing (SEAFOM, IEEE, and Energistics). Panelist will cover the various activities that are being conducted to provide standards, recommended practices, and measurement specifications to fiber optic sensing technology with a focus on the oil and gas industry. Discussion topics from the general audience are encouraged.
n Panelists: Steve Hirshblond, Shell – presenting for SEAFOM
Chris Baldwin, Weatherford – presenting for IEEE
Jay Hollingsworth, Energistics – presenting for Energisitics
Ge Jin, ConocoPhillips
Wolfgang Deeg, Devon
Wilfred Berlang, Shell
1645-1745 | Optional Focus Group - DAS Data Standards
THURSDAY, 31 AUGUST 0700-0800 | Breakfast
Grand Ballroom Foyer
0800-1000 | Session 9: Production and Injection Profiling/Flow Monitoring
Session Chairs: John Lovell, DataValue Consultants Jeff App, Chevron
n Presentation 1: Water Injection Profiles from Warm Back Testing Greg Deitrick, Shell
n Presentation 2: Analytical Approaches for Reservoir Characterization Using Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing Temperature Transient Analysis Yilin Mao, Louisiana State University
n Presentation 3: Intervention Based Distributed Fiber Optics For Post-Frac Flow Evaluation and Interference Testing in Unconventional Wells Ahmed Attia, Ziebel
n Presentation 4: Modeling of the Bi-Direction Flow in Multiphase Production Well Using DTSCrystal Duan, Halliburton
1000-1030 | Coffee Break Grand Ballroom Foyer
1030-1130 | Session 10: Integrity, Flow Assurance, and Pipeline Monitoring
Session Chairs: Doug Norton, Fiber Optic Pipeline Solutions Roger Duncan, Baker Hughes
n Presentation 1: Value of Strain Sensing in the Belridge Field Matt Cannon, Shell
n Presentation 2: DTS Leak Detection Best Practices and Experience Yosmar Gonzalez, Schlumberger
1130-1200 | Workshop Wrap-Up
Poster/Alternate PresentationsOptical Fiber Design for Harsh Environments
Bill Jacobsen, AFL
DTS for Gas Lift Optimization and DesignYosmar Gonzalez, Schlumberger
Acid Placement during Multi-Stage Stimulation using both DTS and DAS
Derek Bale, Baker Hughes
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
Real-timeAll the Time
Fiber Optic ServicesDAS & DTS
Acquisition and Interpretation
sageriderinc.com
NOTES: __________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management WorkshopSPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
NOTES: ______________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
SPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management WorkshopSPE Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management Workshop
SOCIETY OF PETROLEUM ENGINEERS
A N N U A L T E C H N I C A LCONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION
San Antonio, Texas, USA 9-11 October 2017Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center
www.spe.org/go/ATCEreg
REGISTER NOW
What’s New for ATCE• The technical program received 2,521
paper proposals—the highest number ever. This response ensures a high-quality technical program, covering the latest innovations and applications.
• Senior executives in the Opening General Session will address the industry’s responsibility to provide affordable and environmentally sustainable energy for the world.
S P E C E L E B R AT E S 6 0 Y E A R S“Looking Back to Move Forward.”
12764 ATCE17 ADEN Workshop 8.5x11 2017-07-17.indd 1 7/17/17 3:38 PM
ISD Accelerates Operator’s Learning CurveSolve the most fiscally critical challenges:
» Well spacing » Fracture spacing » Well placement
Acc
eler
ated
Lea
rnin
g C
urv
e
Asset Optimization
6
Calibrated Reservoir Modeling
5
Production Analysis
4
Calibrated Fracture Modeling
3
Sensor Acquisition
2
Project Setup
1
Montney
Bakken
Utica
Marcellus
Niobrara
Barnett
Permian
Eagle Ford
Well Placement
Fracture Stage Spacing
Well Spacing
halliburton.com/pinnacle
LEVEL 1 CAPABILITY | Level 2 Capability (if applicable)INTEGRATED SENSOR DIAGNOSTICS™ (ISD)
Sales of Halliburton products and services will be in accord solely with the terms and conditions contained in the contract between Halliburton and the customer that is applicable to the sale. H012523 4/17 © 2017 Halliburton. All Rights Reserved.