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Technology Key to Recovery

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Author: Stephen L. Brundage
Released 5 March 2008

MANAMA, Bahrain, March 05, 2008 --  Saudi Aramco’s operations chief challenged the world’s leading geoscientists to hone existing technologies and help create new ones to maximize oil reservoir recovery and take exploration activities to a new level of performance and sophistication.

Khalid A. Al-Falih, executive vice president of Operations, made the remarks Sunday at the opening session of the eighth Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition being held over three days in Manama.

Saudi Aramco News Saudi Aramco executive vice president of Operations, Khalid A. Al-Falih, calls for continued R&D in the field of geoscience at the eighth Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition held in Manama, Bahrain.
For several years, new technologies for evaluating reservoir conditions have been employed and have provided upstreamers with large volumes of data. Only recently has the interpretation and integration of those data streams started to provide the detail and insight needed to push reservoir management to the next level.

“Today, high-end technologies such as satellite imaging, 3D visualization rooms, I-Field development, remote control centers, real-time drilling data transmission, and megascale parallel computer systems are increasingly commonplace,” Al-Falih said.

“Looking ahead, even more sophisticated technology will be indispensable to the success of our companies, whether they are national oil enterprises, multinational majors, or specialized service companies and technology development firms.”

Al-Falih noted that roughly 60 percent of the world’s proven reserves are in the Middle East and expressed optimism that there was more oil to be found. He said research and development would be key factors both in improving returns from existing reservoirs and new breakthroughs in exploration.

“New technology doesn’t just happen, nor does it emerge fully formed overnight,” he said. “Instead, the next generation of upstream technical tools and applications will stem from sustained R&D (research and development) programs based on specific strategic objectives and technology targets. These R&D programs will require us to commit a high level of human and financial resources over the next few decades.

“In my view, successful programs will also need to be flexible enough to adapt to changing needs and new research paradigms, and to harness emerging technologies from beyond our own industry.”

Saudi Aramco, Al-Falih said, already is envisioning emerging challenges and opportunities and the futuristic technologies to address them.

“The future will see us tackling such resources as gas in tight sands and basin-centered gas,” he said. “Moreover, technology development to facilitate more effective discovery is also under way. These include low-frequency seismology for direct detection of hydrocarbons, seismic interferometry and passive seismic monitoring, as well as numerous nonseismic methods for assessing hydrocarbon potential.

“For improved recovery, we aim to move in the next few years from MRC (multiple reservoir contact) wells to next-generation extreme reservoir contact wells, which will feature 10, 20, perhaps even 50 laterals snaking through the pay zone. Other future technologies on our books include the use of nanorobots to enter reservoir rock pores and pore throats.”

Despite technological advances taking place, Al-Falih said, ultimately, it is the researchers themselves who make the difference. “The upstream sector is still at heart a people-centered business, and it takes a keen eye and a sharp intellect honed by years of experience to make sense out of mountains of data, and a leap of human imagination to develop new technologies to solve problems both large and small. And no matter how fast the rate of technological change accelerates, the upstream will continue to be about big brains, strong character - and lofty dreams.”

The conference, with 1,200 delegates and more than 4,000 visitors, runs through Wednesday and features dozens of technical programs and a large exhibit of more than 250 exhibitors, including geosciences companies and emerging technologies.

(Article by Stephen L. Brundage)

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