Posts Tagged ‘Petroleum Technology Transfer Council’

Freedom — And That Includes Energy Independence

July 1, 2010

With Independence Day celebrations occurring across the U.S., in cities ranging from “one stoplight” towns (or in my youth – no stoplights, one stop sign and a 2 block long main street with asphalt) to major metro areas, freedom is on our minds. Our soldiers continue bravely fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. Equally as committed, the U.S. O&G industry continues fighting to produce the natural gas and oil needed to fuel our economy and standard of life. It’s not an easy fight, and casualties do occur – the Deepwater Horizon incident being a prime example. Despite this tragedy, deepwater/ultra deepwater reserves are sorely needed.

What are also needed are the reserves, definitely oil but also natural gas, remaining in mature properties. Exploration is not needed there – but efficiency and a relook with today’s technology as many of these reservoirs were developed decades ago. It is a fact of life that many of these properties are now operated by small independents whose technical staff is limited – very knowledgeable but spread really thin. Particularly for this niche, PTTC has been a resource they can pull from to efficiently learn what they need to know to solve problems and realize opportunities. PTTC has been delivering local affordable workshops where “those who know share what they know” since 1993. The majority of the information shared is as applicable today as it was years ago when it was shared. Working together, AAPG Datapages and PTTC are now making a significant portion of this historical workshop information available in TECHPLACE at a very nominal cost. – Just $195 per year for an individual subscription, which basically equates to the cost of attending just one of PTTC’s workshops today.

PTTC’s regional organizations regularly deliver workshops that focus on the needs of independents. In an exciting development, PTTC Headquarters is augmenting this program with several series of workshops with content appropriate for mature properties. In these series of workshops there has been a conscious effort to pull in results from DOE-supported R&D projects. This is a good thing. Whatever one may think of the federal government, DOE’s oil and gas R&D program has served a niche in stimulating technology application by smaller independents. Examine the series (below), read full descriptive information on the flyers and choose which ones would work for you.:

  • IOR Field Applications and Case Histories – content tailored by
    location, so check out a few locations to see which best fits you
    •  Lafayette, LA (Aug. 24)
    • Jackson, MS (Aug. 26)
    • Houston, TX (Sep. 2)
    • Denver, CO (Sep. 8 )
    • Bakersfield, CA (Sep. 29)
  • Technologies Targeting Mature Properties – RPSEA Small Producer,
    Stripper Well Consortium (plus, there is a special feedback session – PTTC wants insight on what you want to learn
    • Shreveport, LA (Aug. 23)
    • Tulsa, OK (Aug. 25)
    • Wichita, KS (Aug. 26)
  • Mining Online Tech Information (Getting Better Answers Faster) (plus, there is that feedback session where you get to tell PTTC what you want to
    learn about)
    • Dallas, TX (Aug. 3)
    • Oklahoma City, OK (Aug. 4)
    • Golden, CO (Aug. 13)
  • Data Management & Technology for Mature Properties
    • Dallas, TX (July 21)
    • Oklahoma City (July 22)

Closing on the freedom note, there is a new study by the National Energy Policy Institute (NEPI) about “Toward a New National Energy Policy: Assessing the Options.” For now, only the executive summary is available online. There are several features in NEPI’s approach that make the study unique, so check it out. NEPI, which is located at the University of Tulsa, is a nonpartisan independent energy research organization funded by the George Kaiser Family Foundation.

———-

Lance Cole

E. Lance Cole, PTTC Operations Manager, an Oklahoma resident since 1978 and a registered professional engineer in Oklahoma, has served PTTC since 1996, beginning as Project Manager and then as Executive Director until AAPG assumed PTTC management responsibility. As National Project Manager, he was responsible for technical oversight of PTTC’s regional lead organizations and contract reporting for the national office, and served as a technical adviser on all aspects of the program. As Executive Director, he had primary staff responsibility for the overall PTTC organization. Mr. Cole received a B.S. in chemical engineering from South Dakota School of Mines and an M.S. in management from Southern Nazarene University. His professional experience encompasses reservoir and corrosion engineering, as well as reserve estimation and appraisal. He has worked with a major oil and gas company, a large integrated independent, and in engineering-oriented consulting companies. Mr. Cole is a member of SPE, AAPG, SEG, and SIPES and, in the past, has been involved with the SPE/DOE IOR Symposium in Tulsa for several years. Email Lance Cole.

E&P tech transfer: America’s secret weapon

April 9, 2010

E&P technology transfer is America’s secret weapon—its energy “magic bullet.”

Hyperbole? Maybe, but bear with me.

There is a revolution under way today in U.S. oil and gas exploration and production, and that is not hyperbole. Advances in horizontal drilling efficiencies and hydraulic fracturing methods have opened up vast new recoverable resources of unconventional gas and oil. This is proving to be a game-changer in the context of America’s energy picture. The boom in development of ultra-prolific gas shales has revolutionized the gas industry: In just a few years, the U.S. gas E&P industry has gone from drilling twice as many wells as in the past just to keep production flat to drilling half as many wells to deliver even more production—and in the process jump reserves life from a couple decades to more than a century.

A new way of thinking

More importantly, the unconventional oil and gas boom has shifted the industry’s thinking about E&P in a dramatic new way. Today we are developing hydrocarbons from source rock—pretty much unthinkable on a broad commercial scale not that long ago—and thinking of that effort not in terms of E&D success ratios and portfolio risk management but in terms of a manufacturing process with essentially zero exploratory risk. Even now, the revolution is shifting to oilier shales—the Bakken, Eagle Ford, Niobrara—and spreading to other gas shales worldwide. Some speculate that the unconventional component of gas resources outstrips the conventional component by several orders of magnitude—and that’s even before we get to methane hydrates. As a nation, we are on track for unconventional gas accounting for more than half of our gas supply within a generation.

Mitchell: Father of Shale

When shale pioneer George Mitchell “built a better mousetrap” in the Barnett Shale, did he think those efforts would lead a revolution in the nation’s gas E&P business? You’d have to ask this living legend of the industry, but rest assured the response would be blunt, honest, sprinkled with a little salty language, and delivered with a twinkle in his eye. What brought Mitchell Energy success in the Barnett Shale was dogged persistence and willingness to experiment—spending millions to try different drilling methods, new frac fluid mixtures, better redrills and recompletions, just to learn and gain enough knowledge to “crack the code” in the Barnett. This wasn’t about an individual well’s ROI or the end of the quarter’s results; it was about gaining knowledge and applying that knowledge. The result: Barnett success = a company-maker. Then when Devon Energy acquired Mitchell Energy, Devon applied its knowledge about horizontal drilling and adapted it to Mitchell’s Barnett business model—and took the venture to the next level. Mitchell spent nearly two decades trying to solve the Barnett puzzle, but that effort was not a labor of love, not just stubbornness, it was a learning process. And the knowledge gleaned from that process—the know-how, the best practices, the missteps avoided—is filtering throughout the industry.

DOE role

It’s also safe to say that U.S. unconventional gas development would not be delivering more than 40% of the country’s gas production today were it not for the pioneering research into unconventional gas by the U.S. Department of Energy from the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s. When that research started, unconventional gas accounted for only 7% of U.S. gas output. The tax credits and occasional higher gas prices also helped, but without the DOE-funded R&D, where would unconventional gas be today?

According to DOE’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL), accomplishments from that effort include:

  • The first use of nitrogen foam to effectively stimulate production of gas from shale wells,
  • The discovery of how natural gas is stored in coal seams and fractured shales,
  • Recognition of the importance of interconnected natural fractures in the production of gas from such reservoirs,
  • The first use of directional drilling in shale reservoirs to improve productivity by intersecting fractures,
  • The creation of advanced tools and methods for measuring the properties of unconventional reservoir rocks, and
  • The early development of micro-seismic monitoring techniques for mapping hydraulically created fractures.

NETL contends that the payoffs from these early investments are reflected in the commercial technologies that are making the current expansion of unconventional gas production possible.

Lessons learned

Despite some of the recent concerns voiced about declining discovery volumes, in fact, the world’s reserves and production continue to be sustained through the phenomenon of reserves growth. To fall back on an old saw, oil (and gas) is where you find it. Scarcely a tenth of the world’s endowment of oil has been produced. Who knows what the upper limit  on the global cache of gas is now? In the U.S., 218 billion barrels of technically recoverable conventional oil at depths shallower than 5,000 feet remains unproduced. Why can’t the same revolution in unconventional gas occur for improved and enhanced oil recovery? Why can’t marginally economic conventional gas benefit in the same way?

The lessons to be learned from the Mitchell and DOE examples are that step-changes in oil and gas E&P results—in U.S. oil and gas reserves and production growth—are possible. But they’re possible only with a dogged willingness to experiment (even if the results don’t show up on the bottom line right away), a commitment to research for the sake of gaining knowledge about the resources at hand that are ripe for the plucking, and a means for transferring the lessons learned, the new technology, the know-how, and the best practices to all oil and gas companies.

That’s what we’re all about at the Petroleum Technology Transfer Council. This new, biweekly blog is part of a broader effort, including our retooled website, to keep the U.S. oil and gas industry abreast of that mission. And that greater awareness in turn helps us carry out that mission. Just as DOE’s unconventional gas R&D helped spawn a sea change in America’s energy outlook through technology transfer, the next E&P revolution might be just around the corner.

I welcome your comments in the Comment space below. Let’s work up some great conversations about E&P technology advances, know-how, and best practices and keep the dialogue going!

Lance Cole
PTTC Operations Manager

E. Lance Cole, PTTC Operations Manager, an Oklahoma resident since 1978 and a registered professional engineer in Oklahoma, has served PTTC since 1996, beginning as Project Manager and then as Executive Director until AAPG assumed PTTC management responsibility. As National Project Manager, he was responsible for technical oversight of PTTC’s regional lead organizations and contract reporting for the national office, and served as a technical adviser on all aspects of the program. As Executive Director, he had primary staff responsibility for the overall PTTC organization. Mr. Cole received a B.S. in chemical engineering from South Dakota School of Mines and an M.S. in management from Southern Nazarene University. His professional experience encompasses reservoir and corrosion engineering, as well as reserve estimation and appraisal. He has worked with a major oil and gas company, a large integrated independent, and in engineering-oriented consulting companies. Mr. Cole is a member of SPE, AAPG, SEG, and SIPES and, in the past, has been involved with the SPE/DOE IOR Symposium in Tulsa for several years. Email Lance Cole at lcole@pttc.org


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.