First Break September 2022 - Reservoir Engineering & Geoscience

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SPECIAL TOPIC

Reservoir Engineering & Geoscience EAGE NEWS Photo contest winners announced TECHNICAL ARTICLE Deep learning swell noise estimation INDUSTRY NEWS Seismic data market recovery takes hold


OUR PLANET. FROM A NEW PERSPECTIVE. cgg.com/earthdata SEE THINGS DIFFERENTLY


FIRST BREAK® An EAGE Publication

CHAIR EDITORIAL BOARD Gwenola Michaud (Gwenola.Michaud@cognite.com) EDITOR Damian Arnold (editorfb@eage.org) MEMBERS, EDITORIAL BOARD • Paul Binns, consultant (pebinns@btinternet.com) • Lodve Berre, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (lodve.berre@ntnu.no) • Satinder Chopra, SamiGeo (satinder.chopra@samigeo.com) • Anthony Day, PGS (anthony.day@pgs.com) • Peter Dromgoole, Retired Geophysicist (peterdromgoole@gmail.com) • Rutger Gras, Consultant (r.gras@gridadvice.nl) • Hamidreza Hamdi, University of Calgary (hhamdi@ucalgary.ca) • John Reynolds, Reynolds International (jmr@reynolds-international.co.uk) • James Rickett, Schlumberger (jrickett@slb.com) • Peter Rowbotham, Apache (Peter.Rowbotham@apachecorp.com) • Dave Stewart, Dave Stewart Geoconsulting Ltd (djstewart.dave@gmail.com) • Femke Vossepoel, Delft University of Technology (f.c.vossepoel@tudelft.nl) • Angelika-Maria Wulff, Consultant (gp.awulff@gmail.com) EAGE EDITOR EMERITUS Andrew McBarnet (andrew@andrewmcbarnet.com) MEDIA PRODUCTION Saskia Nota (firstbreakproduction@eage.org)

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Modelling and simulating a high-resolution high-fidelity model for three discoveries in the Måløy Slope, Norwegian North Sea

Editorial Contents 3

EAGE News

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Personal Record Interview

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Monthly Update

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Crosstalk

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Industry News

Technical Articles 31

Deep learning swell noise estimation Amarjeet Kumar, Karen Dancer, Tom Rayment, Gary Hampson and Tim Burgess

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Joint OBN and 3D DAS-VSP data acquisition and processing in the East China Sea G. Yu, H. B. Liu, Z.L. Cao, J.J. Li, J.G. Li, Y.Z. Chen, G.M. He, J.J. Wu and X.M. Wang

PRODUCTION ASSISTANT Ivana Geurts (firstbreakproduction@eage.org) ADVERTISING INQUIRIES corporaterelations@eage.org EAGE EUROPE OFFICE Kosterijland 48 3981 AJ Bunnik The Netherlands • +31 88 995 5055 • eage@eage.org • www.eage.org EAGE MIDDLE EAST OFFICE EAGE Middle East FZ-LLC Dubai Knowledge Village Block 13 Office F-25 PO Box 501711 Dubai, United Arab Emirates • +971 4 369 3897 • middle_east@eage.org • www.eage.org EAGE ASIA PACIFIC OFFICE UOA Centre Office Suite 19-15-3A No. 19, Jalan Pinang 50450 Kuala Lumpur Malaysia • +60 3 272 201 40 • asiapacific@eage.org • www.eage.org EAGE AMERICAS SAS Calle 93 # 18-28 Oficina 704 Bogota, Colombia • +57 1 4232948 • americas@eage.org • www.eage.org

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3D demultiple techniques dramatically improve the imaging of a giant Kashagan reservoir in the ultra-shallow North Caspian Sea Darryl Anderson, Andrey Svetlichnyy, Vladimir Zhelanov, Julien Oukili, Steve Schreuder, Yerlan Taikulakov, Ivan Chikichev and Anatoly Baumstein

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Calculating volume of clay and/or shale from wireline logs Carl Fredrik Gyllenhammar

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An industry of risk appreciation Neil Hodgson and Karyna Rodriguez

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Machine Learning for property extraction from seismic MegaMerges, Northern North Sea P. Keller, M. Fawad, J. Sandvik, I. Baig and C-F. Gyllenhammar

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Modelling and simulating a high-resolution high-fidelity model for three discoveries in the Måløy Slope, Norwegian North Sea Adnan Khalid, Pablo Cifuentes, Pedro Duran, Philippa Park, Arthur Satterley, Stefan Calvert and Carolina Coll

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From seismic pre-stack elastic attributes to rock properties. A case study in the Permian Basin, onshore USA Marianne Rauch, Aravind Nangarla, M. Falk and M.Lovell

EAGE MEMBERS CHANGE OF ADDRESS NOTIFICATION Send to: EAGE Membership Dept at EAGE Office (address above) FIRST BREAK ON THE WEB www.firstbreak.org ISSN 0263-5046 (print) / ISSN 1365-2397 (online)

Feature: WhatsUp! 96

Blowing hot and cold over the Energy Transition John M. Reynolds

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Calendar

cover: Geoscientists are more in demand to help petroleum engineers with drilling operations.

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European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers

Board 2022-2023

Jean-Marc Rodriguez President

Edward Wiarda Vice-President

Pascal Breton Secretary-Treasurer

Near Surface Geoscience Division Esther Bloem Chair Andreas Aspmo Pfaffhuber Vice-Chair Alireza Malehmir Immediate Past Chair Micki Allen Contact Officer EEGS/North America Adam Booth Committee Member Hongzhu Cai Liaison China Eric Cauquil Liaison Shallow Marine Geophysics Deyan Draganov Technical Programme Officer Wolfram Gödde Liaison First Break Hamdan Ali Hamdan Liaison Middle East Vladimir Ignatev Liaison Russia / CIS Musa Manzi Liaison Africa Myrto Papadopoulou Young Professional Liaison Catherine Truffert Industry Liaison Panagiotis Tsourlos Editor in Chief Near Surface Geophysics Florina Tuluca Committee member

Oil & Gas Geoscience Division

Caroline Le Turdu Membership and Cooperation Officer

Peter Rowbotham Publications Officer

Maren Kleemeyer Education Officer

Lucy Slater Chair Yohaney Gomez Galarza Vice-Chair Michael Peter Suess Immediate Past Chair; TPC Erica Angerer Member Wiebke Athmer Member Juliane Heiland TPC Tijmen Jan Moser Editor-in-Chief Geophysical Prospecting Francesco Perrone Member Matteo Ravasi YP Liaison Jonathan Redfern Editor-in-Chief Petroleum Geoscience Giovanni Sosio DET SIC Liaison Aart-Jan van Wijngaarden Technical Programme Officer

SUBSCRIPTIONS First Break is published monthly. It is free to EAGE members. The membership fee of EAGE is € 80.00 a year including First Break, EarthDoc (EAGE’s geoscience database), Learning Geoscience (EAGE’s Education website) and online access to a scientific journal. Companies can subscribe to First Break via an institutional subscription. Every subscription includes a monthly hard copy and online access to the full First Break archive for the requested number of online users. Aart-Jan van Wijngaarden Technical Programme Officer

Esther Bloem Chair Near Surface Geoscience Division

Lucy Slater Chair Oil & Gas Geoscience Division

Orders for current subscriptions and back issues should be sent to EAGE Publications BV, Journal Subscriptions, PO Box 59, 3990 DB, Houten, The Netherlands. Tel: +31 (0)88 9955055, E-mail: subscriptions@eage.org, www.firstbreak.org. First Break is published by EAGE Publications BV, The Netherlands. However, responsibility for the opinions given and the statements made rests with the authors. COPYRIGHT & PHOTOCOPYING © 2022 EAGE All rights reserved. First Break or any part thereof may not be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transcribed in any form or by any means, electronically or mechanically, including photocopying and recording, without the prior written permission of the publisher. PAPER The publisher’s policy is to use acid-free permanent paper (TCF), to the draft standard ISO/DIS/9706, made from sustainable forests using chlorine-free pulp (Nordic-Swan standard).

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HIGHLIGHTS

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Help wanted for e-learning

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Hackathon in Berlin

Two workshops in Cape Town

Photo contest winners announced Winner of this year’s ‘Legends of Geoscience’ photo contest held jointly by EAGE and the European Federation of Geologists (EFG) is Asonkey Alexander with his photo ‘Geological terrain in Jamestown Ghana’ taken in Accra, Ghana. Second and third places went to Martha Papadopoulou, for her photo ‘Melting the secrets of rocks’, taken in Leicester, UK and Manuel Regueiro for ‘Lava flows in La Palma volcanic eruption 2021’ taken in La Palma Island, Spain. For his winning photo Alexander receives a three-credit education package that can be redeemed with any available EAGE online courses of his choice. He commented that ‘the Legends of Geoscience in my career are the environment, with its beauty, as well as the industry’. Second and third placed contestants receive a complimentary registration to join an EAGE online course, too. Through our Interactive Online

‘Geological terrain in Jamestown Ghana’ — Asonkey Alexander.

ture extraordinary actions or aspects in all fields of geoscience. The photos were presented under the following categories:

‘The Legends of Geoscience in my career are the environment, with its beauty, as well as the industry’. Short Courses, Extensive Online Courses, Online EET’s and Self-Paced Courses, they can update and strengthen their knowledge in various disciplines, while they earn CPD (Continuing Professional Development) points. These can be used to claim or maintain European Geologist (EurGeol) titles accredited by EFG. This year, EAGE members and EFG affiliated associations were invited to cap-

Geosciences for Society, Women Geoscientists, Landscape and Environment, and Geoscientists’ Life. The geoscience and engineering community was invited to submit their entries from January to March 2022. Photos were received from 26 different countries: India, Portugal, UK, Spain, Norway, Slovenia, Iran, Brazil, China, Ukraine, Thailand, Laos, Egypt, Ghana, Austria, United States, FIRST

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Argentina, Sweden, Russia, Germany, France, Italy, Mongolia, Canada, Switzerland and Iceland. The admitted entries went through a first voting round in March. The 12 top voted pictures were exhibited at the 83rd EAGE Annual Conference and Exhibition, and then, presented for a second voting round in July, where the three winners were selected. The 12 finalist photos will be featured in the EAGE 2023 calendar, available at the Near Surface Geoscience Conference and Exhibition 2022 (Belgrade, Serbia) and the GET Conference & Exhibition 2022 (The Hague, The Netherlands). They are: Arnim Berhorst: ‘Man made folding?’- Matresdalen, Norway; Carmen Corbalán Andreu: ‘Studying Reykjanes’ - Reykjanes Peninsula, Iceland; Karsten Aupers: ‘Underground mapping in Scheelite mining’ - Mittersill, Austria; Marko Komac: ‘A moment for self-reflection’ and ‘What a view!’ - Azores, Portugal; Martha Papadopoulou: ‘Three generations of geochemists’ - Buutsagaan, Mongolia; Matthias Poralla: ‘Base of till drilling in northern Sweden’ - Västerbottens län, Sweden; Mohammad Goudarzi: ‘Creativity with faults’ - Zanjan-Tabriz freeway, Iran; and Vimoltip Singtuen: ‘Female Geologist in Mekong River’ - Loei Province, boundary of Thailand and Laos. Congratulations to the participants and thanks to all of the members that, with their vote, helped us to choose this year’s ‘Legends of Geoscience’. Submissions for the EAGE/EFG Photo Contest 2023 will begin on 1 January. I

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EAGE NEWS

Fibre optic sensing is topic for Kuala Lumpur workshop The demand in novel technologies for energy industry is probably one of the highest in Asia-Pacific with the potential of fibre optic solutions high on the agenda. This makes sense as it is the most populous part of the world and consumes half of the energy produced globally. This is the reasoning behind EAGE’s 2nd Workshop on Fibre Optic Sensing for Energy Applications in Kuala-Lumpur, Malaysia, on 5-7 December 2022, chaired by Prof Roman Pevzner of Curtin University and co chaired Hafizal Mad Zahir of PETRONAS. Distributed fibre optic sensing is an already established yet still novel and rapidly developing technology. It offers a high disruptive potential for nearly the entire energy industry itself undergoing rapid transformation.. Tiny, but robust and versatile optical fibres can provide vital information about hydrocarbon reservoir production, energy transport through

wires or pipelines or subsurface storage of various fluids, such as natural gas, CO2 or hydrogen. The ability to monitor the entire process of energy production, distribution and waste management through a multiplicity of physical parameters derived from distributed optical sensors plays a critical role in process optimisation and cost reduction, both much needed by the industry. The workshop will cover a range of topics, from the relevant advances in fibre optic sensing and data analysis to showcasing of DAS, DSS and DTS applications in subsurface imaging and monitoring. It will cater for a broad range of geoscientists, geophysicists, reservoir engineers interested in the technology as well as for experts in fibre optic sensing looking to expand into the energy industry. The workshop takes place in Kuala Lumpur, with online support for remote presenters. Apart from presentations from

KL at night.

PETRONAS, Silixa, Aramco, Sercel, Schlumberger, Halliburton, Curtin University, CSIRO and many others, we will also hold a round table discussion on the uptake of fibre optic sensing versus using conventional tools and several live demos provided by some of the leading hardware and software vendors. For further information, see EAGE website.

ADDITIONS THIS MONTH The Near Surface Geoscience Conference and Exhibition 2022 will take place on 18-22 September in Belgrade, Serbia hosting three conferences as parallel programmes: • 28th European Meeting of Environmental and Engineering Geophysics • 4th Conference on Geophysics for Mineral Exploration and Mining • 3 rd Conference on Airborne, Drone and Robotic Geophysics Extended abstracts for all three conferences will be available on EarthDoc two weeks before the event. Abstracts from the 4th HGS/EAGE Conference on Latin America (14-16 September, Cartagena, Colombia), from the 6th EAGE High Performance Computing Workshop (19-21 September, Milan, Italy) and from the 6th International Conference on Fault and Top Seals (26-28 September, Vienna, Austria) will be accessible at the beginning of September. Towards the end of September, EarthDoc will start hosting abstracts from the 6th EAGE Eastern Africa Petroleum Geoscience Forum (10-12 October, Cape Town, South Africa) and from the 1st EAGE West Africa E&P Workshop (12-14 October, Cape Town, South Africa). Lastly, a new issue of Geophysical Prospecting will become available on EarthDoc in September.

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EAGE NEWS

Rio de Janeiro to host two events focused on reservoir monitoring

Rio de Janeiro is one of Brazil’s economic and cultural centres.

EAGE will be making its presence felt in Brazil in the week of 21-25 November 2022 with two outstanding events – the 1st EAGE/SBGf Workshop on Reservoir Monitoring and its role in the Energy Transition, and the 3rd EAGE Pre-salt Conference. The EAGE/SBGf Workshop will gather experts from reservoir monitoring, field management and associated technologies to present and discuss the value of the information provided by monitoring, current

practices in operating companies, success and failures stories, as well as economic and practical blockers. Discussion is also expected to cover reservoir monitoring, measurement and verification (MMV); carbon sequestration in offshore/deep offshore reservoirs; Energy Transition, by working on advanced field monitoring technologies; as well as CCUS, gas exploitation and hydrogen storage. To enrich the discussion, the attendees will have the chance to learn from

outstanding industry leaders and academic authorities, including Jonathan Brain (Shell), Mona Hanekne Andersen (Equinor), William Burnett (ExxonMobil), Adeoye Adeyemi (TotalEnergies), Marcos Grochau (Petrobras), Prof Florian Doster (Heriot-Watt University) and Denis Schiozer (University of Campinas). The Pre-salt Conference will provide a collaborative forum for professionals in the energy sector to discuss the stateof-the-art research, best practices, and opportunities across a range of technical themes that include: best practices in multi-disciplinary reservoir characterisation; reducing uncertainty in pre-salt carbonate reservoir models; and reservoir digital twins. Keynote presentations will be delivered by Alberto Ferrin (ExxonMobil), Ana Serrano (Equinor), Bruno Moczydlower (Petrobras) and Eliane Petersohn (ANP). Register for both events at https:// eage.eventsair.com/first-eagesbgf-workshop-on-reservoir-monitoring.

EAGE Online Education Calendar VELOCITIES, IMAGING, AND WAVEFORM INVERSION - THE EVOLUTION OF CHARACTERIZING THE EARTH’S SUBSURFACE, BY I.F. JONES (ONLINE EET)

SELF PACED COURSE

6 CHAPTERS OF 1 HR

GEOSTATISTICAL RESERVOIR MODELING, BY D. GRANA

SELF PACED COURSE

8 CHAPTERS OF 1 HR

CARBONATE RESERVOIR CHARACTERIZATION, BY L. GALLUCCIO

SELF PACED COURSE

8 CHAPTERS OF 1 HR

30 AUG 2 SEP

UPSCALING AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE BASED PROXIES FOR UNCERTAINTY ASSESSMENT OF RESERVOIR PRODUCTION, BY DR DOMINIQUE GUERILLOT

IOSC

4 HOURS/DAY

6-9 SEP

SEISMIC INTERPRETATION: FUNDAMENTAL FOR PROSPECT GENERATION BY DEAN POWELL

IOSC

4 HOURS/DAY, 8 MODULES

7-8 SEP

INTEGRATED SEISMIC ACQUISITION AND PROCESSING BY JACK BOUSKA

IOSC

4 HOURS/DAY, 8 MODULES

14-15 SEP

GEOPHYSICAL DATA ANALYSIS IN JULIA, INCLUDING MACHINE LEARNING BY RAJIV KUMAR

IOSC

4 HOURS/DAY, 5 MODULES

19 SEP 19 OCT

DEVELOPING DEEP LEARNING APPLICATIONS FOR THE OILFIELD: FROM THEORY TO REAL WORLD PROJECTS BY BERNARD MONTARON

EXTENSIVE ONLINE COURSE

16 HOURS (INCL. 5 WEBINARS OF 1-2 HRS EACH)

20-23 SEP

APPLIED MICROFACIES BY PROF. DR MICHAEL POPPELREITER

IOSC

4 HOURS/DAY, 8 MODULES

26-28 SEP

SEISMIC DIFFRACTION – MODELING, IMAGING AND APPLICATIONS BY TIJMEN JAN MOSER

IOSC

4 HOURS/DAY, 8 MODULES

START AT ANY TIME

* EXTENSIVE SELF PACED MATERIALS AND INTERACTIVE SESSIONS WITH THE INSTRUCTORS: CHECK SCHEDULE OF EACH COURSE FOR DATES AND TIMES OF LIVE SESSIONS FOR THE FULL CALENDAR, MORE INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION PLEASE VISIT WWW.EAGE.ORG AND WWW.LEARNINGGEOSCIENCE.ORG.

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EAGE NEWS

Help our free e-learning resources

We want to expand our portfolio of freely accessible videos available in EAGE’s e-learning resources that can provide help and knowledge for members of the geoscience and engineering community. Maybe you can contribute some ideas. During the annual conference, we highlighted some videos to help anyone interested in pursuing an opportunity to submit an abstract and present their paper in any scientific conference. These videos

cover topics such as tips and tricks in submitting a good abstract, presenting to a live audience, chairing a session, and eventually getting their research published, and are created with the help of EAGE experts from industry and academia. As we are constantly working on updating and adding relevant content to our platform, we would like to invite contributions and ideas for our next how-to video series. The first set of videos is targeted at those who are working in the scientific field and academia. As we celebrate our multi-disciplinary nature, contributions that would greatly benefit the other sectors of the Engineering and Geoscience community are most welcome. Aside from our how-to videos, we also have our E-lecture and Distinguished Lecturer Programme (DLP) webinars. DLP and E-lecture webinars are also part of EAGE’s free learning resources available to members to update them with the latest

developments in the geoscience and engineering community, through our Learning Geoscience platform. The webinars aim to encourage knowledge exchange and the development of connections among students, professionals, and enthusiasts in the geoscience and engineering community. While the webinars are only available for members, the E-lectures remain free and accessible for all. During the past few months, a number of E-lectures have been added to our selection, and more are still being produced and will be available soon. By becoming an EAGE member, you support the creation and development of free and relevant content. It also gives you countless possibilities to expand your network and update you with the latest developments. Become a member now and benefit from various perks and privileges, and at the same time enable the production of the latest knowledge that is accessible to all.

German students experience some action in Freiberg In May 2022 over 70 geophysics students from all over Germany came to Freiberg (Saxony) to meet local students for the annual geophysical action programme (GAP). It was a weekend filled with excursions and conversations with like-minded people along with presentations by companies related to geophysics. After an evening ice-breaking including various competitions between students, the Friday morning saw the start of the cultural, sporting and geophysical excursions started. The students had the choice between a visit to the Alte Hoffnung Erbstolln mine, a city trip to Dresden or Freiberg or a visit to the Freiberg University seismological observation site in Berggießhübel. After visiting the old mining site near Mittweida, the group made a trip to Kriebstein Castle and participated in a medieval festival. The Dresden tour included famous museums and the historic city centre and passed the Frauen-

Freiberg student group.

kirche, the Zwinger and the Elbterassen. Due to inclement weather the Freiberg tour option was cut short, Instead students were lucky enough to visit Terra Mineralia, said to be the biggest private mineral exhibition in the world with over 3500 exhibits. At Berggießhübel students were able to observe the analysis of seismic waves from all over the world followed by a visit to the historic show mine Marie Luise Stolln plus a look at the Thomas VIB 3246 heavy vibroseis truck belonging to Freiberg University. The eventful day finished with the sunset over historic Freiberg seen from the Alte Elisabeth former mine area. FIRST

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Saturday was set aside for the company forum at the Institute for Geoinformatics and Geophysics of the university. First Prof Dr Stefan Buske, professor of applied geophysics, introduced the institute as well as research topics. This was followed by presentations from several companies including Terratec, Ex-act, Baker Hughes, Herrenknecht, Tauber, Geosym and K-UTEC, about their work and research as well as giving insight into career opportunities, internships and job offers. In addition students spoke about their studies and work in Spitzbergen and the Neumayer Station III in Antarctica. GAP finished with the traditional party in the student club, and on Sunday everyone said their farewells. Apart from the bad weather, students were happy with this year’s GAP, which next year will be held in Karlsruhe. German version: Matthias Kemter, translated by Lena Zimmermann. I

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EAGE NEWS

Netherlands Chapter talk covers forecasting natural and induced seismicity

A moment during the technical lecture by Dr Ylona van Dinther.

Dong Zhang (EAGE Local Chapter Netherlands) writes: With the pandemic fading away, EAGE Local Chapter Netherlands held a live event at Utrecht University on 17 May focusing on understanding and forecasting natural and induced seismicity. Dr Ylona van Dinther from the Department of Earth Sciences at Utrecht University, was the speaker. She is credited with the

pioneering of the bridging of from tectonic time scales (millions of years) down to earthquake ones (milliseconds to years) in numerical models. Dr van Dinther began her talk with an introduction to earthquake sequences, combining the knowledge from observations and physics-based models. More specifically, her group combined earthquake or tectonics numerical or analytical models with geological and geophysical observations in various ways ranging from using predicting new, verifiable observations; to loose or tight data constraints; to integrating them tightly in a statistically meaningful way. It turned out that the current and future outcomes are important to improve natural and induced earthquake and tsunami hazard assessment. More cool things were also mentioned during the talk, such as applying ensemble data assimilation, a statistical

method adopted from weather forecasting to estimate and forecast the state of stress and slip on the fault, comparing natural and induced seismicity, laboratory experiments on Groningen rocks, etc. The audience onsite brought forward many insightful questions. Some were curious about whether AI could help with this problem or not. During the session Dr van Dinther also shared her work and life experiences as a woman in geosciences. Stay informed about the chapter activities through the Linkedin page https://www.linkedin.com/ groups/13690220/ and become a member by sending an email to eageLCNetherlands@gmail.com. Scan the QRcode and visit our LinkedIn Page!

Sign up details for EAGE Mentoring Programme 2022 Our Mentoring Programme will be offered again this year to EAGE members! This is a joint initiative of the Young Professionals and Women in Geoscience & Engineering Special Interest Communities involving one-on-one discussion and advice on career development for a maximum period of one year. The programme is aimed to help young professionals seeking career guidance, mid-career level professionals considering the next step in their career, members who are interested in learning about a different path, or those who are planning to move to another country and would like to seek some local advice. Topics to be discussed individuals participating in the programme and their mentors range from advice on career transitions, experience in the field of 8

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energy transition, artificial intelligence, mining/forensic/urban geophysics, and other topics related to career development. The exchange is conducted remotely and independently, with the frequency and communication system chosen and agreed on by the matched participants. This is what Dr Hon Vai Yee, principal scientist (production chemistry) group research & technology (GR&T), PETRONAS, had to say about mentoring: ‘The mentorship journey with EAGE has been a rewarding experience for both mentor and mentee. As a mentor, I’m glad that my advice has contributed towards the growth of young professionals, but most importantly, it provided me an avenue to gain perspectives through the lens of young generations, across the globe.’

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Ayhan Sengel, reservoir engineer, Türkiye Petrolleri, commented: ‘EAGE’s Mentoring Programme can help to increase your confidence in the next move in your professional life and to discover more about different insights, experiences, and challenges. It is an invaluable experience that adds to career development without boundaries. What I appreciate most is that the learning is personalised to your individual situation, so it is directed exactly where you need it. I strongly recommend all young professionals and university students to participate in the programme.’ If you want to joing the programme as either mentor or mentee, applications are open until 31 October 2022. Explore here for more information: https://eage. org/communities/mentoring-programme/.


EAGE NEWS

Bombay students out to promote energy transition The EAGE student chapter at IIT Bombay is playing its part in joining the world’s odyssey towards energy transition by committing to spread geoscientific knowledge globally, especially by connecting people from the energy industry and academia through events. The Department of Earth Sciences at IIT Bombay is devoted to the applications of geosciences in a wide range of fields involving geophysics, geochemistry, geology, and data science as applied to the current energy transformation. The overall theme of the project has been Exploration Geoscience with the aim of 1) increasing the knowledge of students enrolled in different geoscientific disciplines at the department ranging from graduates, postgraduates, and PhD students; 2) challenging student teams to work with real field data (open source) in exploring subsurface resources; 3) promoting the efforts of the EAGE as a global leader in helping everyone from

First prize nominations of Petrohunt 2022, and Treasure trove 2022.

academia to industry realize the Energy Transition; and 4) engaging the student community and the faculty to collect, disseminate and exchange geotechnical knowledge in the exploration of energy resources. This focus led to a new event called Explorati where the geosciences could be explored as a means for achieving the Energy Transition. Other events that have been organised include Petrohunt 2022, a fun case study competition designed for increasing the knowledge in the broad field of geoscience as applicable to the oil and gas industry. It challenged multi-disciplinary teams to take a shot at appraising a subsurface resource thereby working with a real dataset. Teams registered with a captain and a maximum of three members per team. The teams had to characterise a given subsurface hydrocarbon resource using an open-source dataset. Judging was based on sustainable carbon management along with an appraisal of the proposed plans. A total of 33 students participated in this exciting competition The winners received Rs 3000 and the runners-up Rs2000 - and Rs 1000 along with sponsored EAGE student chapter membership. Treasure Trove 2022 was a fun treasure-hunt game with geoscientific clues which led from one destination to another until reaching the end. The biggest challenge for the students in this event was the race against time. The winners and the runners-up received sponsored EAGE student chapter membership

Participants of Explorati event, ITT Bombay, India.

along with cash prizes of INR 3000, 2000 and 1000 respectively in addition to trophies. Carboquesta was an online international quiz open for all international students along with Indian students to share knowledge related to the energy transition and the implications for CCUS. A total of 29 student teams participated in the quiz which comprised 12 questions related to energy transition and carbon sequestration. The winners and runners-up were eligible for EAGE student membership and certificates sponsored by the EAGE student chapter. The EAGE Student Chapter at IIT Bombay is grateful to the EAGE Student Fund for supporting its activities while acknowledging the National Centre of Excellence for CCUS at IIT Bombay for its constructive feedback on the events.

EAGE Student Calendar 18-22 SEP

NEAR SURFACE GEOSCIENCE CONFERENCE & EXHIBITION 2022

BELGRADE, SERBIA

OCTOBER

LAURIE DAKE APPLICATION 2023

ONLINE

7 OCT

MINUS CO2 FINAL

ONLINE

13 OCT

STUDENT WEBINAR TAKING YOUR RESEARCH ONLINE WITH AN OPEN RESEARCH WEBSITE BY STEVES PURVES

ONLINE

FOR MORE INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION PLEASE CHECK THE STUDENT SECTION AT WWW.EAGE.ORG

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EAGE NEWS

OUR JOURNALS

THIS MONTH

Geophysical Prospecting (GP) publishes primary research on the science of geophysics as it applies to the exploration, evaluation and extraction of earth resources. Drawing heavily on contributions from researchers in the oil and mineral exploration industries, the journal has a very practical slant. The new edition (Volume 70, Issue 7) will be published in September, featuring 13 articles. Editor’s Choice articles: • The S waves geometrical spreading in elliptical orthorhombic media – Alexey Stovas • Convolution neural network application for first-break picking for land seismic data – Georgy Loginov • Applicability of cross-property differential effective medium model to the joint elastic–electrical properties of reservoir sandstones – Tongcheng Han

CHECK OUT

THE LATEST GP

Please note that for two weeks this month, we are offering free access to the Editor's Choice articles.

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Hackathon part of Subsurface Intelligence Workshop in Bahrain

Tools of the Future... to expose the past.

It’s only a month before the second edition of EAGE’s Subsurface Intelligence workshop on 28-31 October 2022, Manama, Bahrain which will also feature a hackathon. The event aims to bring together bright minds from E&P companies including NOCs, IOCs and service companies with academia and young professionals to engage in discussions, exchange ideas and to jointly discuss the state of advancements today and align plans for the future. As part of the workshop, all participants will have a chance to take part in the EAGE GeoHack, a two-day coding, problem-solving and social hackathon on 28-29 October. The goal is to offer researchers an opportunity to develop and test various algorithms to solve routine geological tasks. Focusing on solving big data geoscience problems in the energy industry, the GeoHack will facilitate a suitable atmosphere where software developers, engineers and geoscientists will spend intensive hours to hack, test and experiment with the latest advances in machine learning algorithms against open-source subsurface data. Using open-source libraries this will offer an opportunity for participants SEPTEMBER

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to create their own models to solve seismic processing and interpretation problems. Companies can also benchmark the performance of machine learning algorithms and understand successes and pitfalls in machine learning. This educational event promises everything a data scientist can wish for clean labelled data from multiple actual fields, pre-made Jupyter notebooks and instructors who will guide you through each step of enhancing your ML model. All learning materials will be made available to participants after the completion of the event. The two-day technical programme on 30-31 October, now available on the website, features keynote presentations by Aus Al-Tawil, general manager, characterisation and field development geosciences, and geophysicist Khaled Dulaijan, both from Saudi Aramco. Using subsurface intelligence (SI), we can aim to advance towards new methods and technologies to help us achieve different realisations, answers and aspects our current reservoir models. Those registered for the workshop are automatically registered for the GeoHack. To be part of the GeoHack, please make sure to register your interest early.



EAGE NEWS

Bogota students hold a climate and ocean GeoQuiz EAGE Student Chapter National University of Colombia (UNAL Bogota) recently held a Climate and Ocean Geoquiz competition that tested geology students’ knowledge on earth, atmospheric and ocean sciences. There were three virtual preliminary rounds. The highest four scores were selected for the in-person final challenge on 1 July. This last stage was focused on climate change and its understanding through geosciences. The winner, Jose Maria Cantillo de La Hoz (8 th semester student, Bachelor in Geology) received a financial award prize and a fossil sample. EAGE staff participated in the closing session presenting the benefits of being part of our student community. The UNAL Bogota Student Chapter, active since 2020, is divided into three

seedbed groups: ‘Geophysics and Seismology’, ‘Volcanology and Geothermal’, and ‘Paleoclimatology and Glaciology’. This last group was responsible for the recent Geoquiz. The first edition focused on mineralogy took place in October last year. The Chapter is one of the most active in Latin America and this year three of its members won the second place at the EAGE Online GeoQuiz. Among their upcoming activities, it is planning a series of ‘Python in Geosciences’ courses ending with a GeoHackathon in October. We send our congratulations to the winners and to the National University of Colombia Chapter, currently led by Wendy Arias (president) and Juan Manuel Jimenez (vice-president), for such great initiatives and keeping the student GeoQuiz tradition alive.

EAGE Staff with the GeoQuiz winners.

If you want to know more about EAGE Student Chapter UNAL Bogota, follow the QR code.

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EAGE NEWS

Cape Town workshops explore the next steps in exploration journey offshore East and West Africa Why you should consider joining EAGE’s two workshops taking place in Cape Town, South Africa from the 10-14 October 2022 focusing on the future of petroleum geoscience in the East Africa region and emerging exploration experiences and challenges in West Africa? The organisers explain.

Cape Town ocean view.

World-class offshore and onshore energy resources await discovery and development across Africa. With the recent pandemic and climate change, now is the time to pool our experience and look forward to planning strategic change. Africa has the right to a just transition. Ideally we need to accelerate our understanding to address new challenges and find ways to complete the carbon-cycle, to create sustainable environmentally responsible loops. We plan a sixth technical forum to discuss ways to ensure continuation with certainty. We will refer to lessons learnt from the fifth forum and the recent EAGE Annual Conference, whilst considering recent events affecting the future of petroleum geoscience in the Eastern Africa energy mix. We have to plan integrated projects that develop the local economy while also generating export revenues. The world requires energy. We urgently need to plan future development considering the new challenge to reduce carbon dioxide and methane release to the atmosphere. With discoveries made

as far back as the early 2000s, plus relative political and economic stability in recent years, the exploration and production possibilities in West Africa are promising. Regional workshops such as this one aim to bring concrete actions into play and encourage working across boundaries that we may not have explored in the past. We plan to have dedicated sessions providing a good forum to openly share thoughts on the most relevant topics. The Eastern African forum will share planning with EAGE West Africa to bring together a week of in-person events.. Main topics to be covered include Subsurface, Above Ground, Petroleum Systems and Play Understanding, Technology advances, Commercial/Above Ground, Energy Transition. The programme will include panel discussions, round table and working/small groups that will focus on knowledge sharing, collaboration and state of the industry. Parallel focus sessions will be implemented into the programme including a poster area for service companies and research projects, so that the entire FIRST

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audience remains engaged around their specific challenges. You can now review the technical programme for the sixth edition on the event website and read about the keynote speakers who will rely on their years of experience and insights to the changing climate within the industry. Register today to secure your spot and be part of this exciting week.

EAGE past president Jean Jacques Biteau with EAGE Student Chapter Africa.

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EAGE NEWS

EAGE continues its presence at Africa Oil Week

Workshop to shine spotlight on offshore eastern Canada

Africa Oil Week (AOW), being held on 3-7 October in Cape Town, is the global platform for stimulating deals and transactions across the African upstream. It provides the perfect complement for EAGE’s focused events on East and West Africa exploration in Cape Town the following week (10-14 October), see previous page. For over 25 years, the event has brought together governments, national and international oil companies, independents, investors, the G&G community, and service providers. AOW prides itself on offering unrivaled opportunities that drive investment and deal-making across the continent, thus shaping the future of Africa. EAGE has for over a decade been part of Africa Oil Week and is a strong supporter of the conference and exhibi-

A second EAGE workshop on East Canada Offshore Exploration is on the way, to be held on 14-15 November in St John’s, capital of the Newfoundland and Labrador province. The event is focusing on geological and operational challenges of exploration off eastern Canada. Federal and provincial authorities, academia, IOCs, independent operators, geological, geophysical and drilling service companies are invited to discuss the latest advances in geological and geophysical sciences; potential and proven plays; petroleum systems; geodynamic context of the North Atlantic and Labrador Sea, as well as the economic conditions under which development projects can be launched in such environments. Until 14 September 2022 the event Technical Committee will welcome proposed contributions on geological and geophysical challenges resulting from recent interpretations; emerging exploration concepts and related risks; advances in seismic imaging and pre-drill characterisation; digital technologies to improve efficiency and reduce emission; logistical challenges (metocean) and solutions; new development concepts in deep water sub-artic environments, and other related topics. Find more about the event see QR code.

Cape Town city centre.

A previous event in progress.

tion. EAGE members have the opportunity to made use of a 10% discount to their general registration cost, so be sure to take advantage of the continued savings we offer to our members. This year’s conference theme is ‘Sustainable Growth in a Low Carbon World’, and will provide both strategic and technical insights to ensure the continued growth and development of the African oil and gas market. With participation of government ministers, CEOs, policymakers and many more on this year’s programme, they will share their wealth of experience and insights to help drive the industry conversations forward. Be sure to visit EAGE’s booth and speak with the team about our future activities in Africa and share your ideas how EAGE can continue to make a difference in the region with your support. For more information please visit www. africa-oilweek.com

Visit the website!

The EAGE Student Fund supports student activities that help students bridge the gap between university and professional environments. This is only possible with the support from the EAGE community. If you want to support the next generation of geoscientists and engineers, go to donate.eagestudentfund.org or simply scan the QR code. Many thanks for your donation in advance!

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PERSONAL RECORD INTERVIEW

Ann Robertson-Tait

Personal Record Interview A relentless force for geothermal good Ann Robertson-Tait is president of GeothermEx (a Schlumberger company) and global chair of Women in Geothermal (WING). For 37 years she has been a passionate advocate of geothermal power in the international energy community and has personally been involved in at least 70 projects covering virtually every significant geothermal energy source in the world.

Your early life I grew up lucky in New York. Three of four of my grandparents were university educated, the fourth was an opera singer. We were a family of hi-fi nuts into all musical genres: Beethoven, Basie, Beatles, Bennett, Bossa Nova, Strauss (Johann and Richard), showtunes, and lots of Sinatra. I started school at Montego Bay Preparatory School in Jamaica where my father was working for a time, then it was back to Long Island, NY for the rest. I played clarinet in the band, sang in the choir and at school shows. These days my alter ego is a singer in a local dance band doing gigs here in California. The learning years I first attended community college to get my bearings, then a BS in geology, Florida Atlantic University, including a hydrogeology internship at a local water management district. I fancied an energy career, but not oil and gas, especially if it meant a life spent in hot and humid southern US states! My senior research paper was on geothermal energy, and it really caught my attention. That’s how I ended up with a Fulbright Scholarship doing a geology MSc at Auckland University in New Zealand, learning my craft through coursework and a thesis on causes of subsidence at the famous Wairakei field. Bonus: I met my spouse and soulmate — we remain together. Then what? Although warned that the work was interesting, but the office anything but fancy, I joined GeothermEx in 1985 and immediately got stuck into work on projects

in Japan, Italy, California and Nevada. To start with I didn’t know enough about non-geoscientific aspects, so pestered reservoir and drilling engineers relentlessly, slinking into power plants whenever possible.

(EGS) and ‘geothermal+’ hybrid systems that maximize clean energy production. We must advocate to governments and industry, and demand R&D support levels common to all other energy technologies except geothermal.

Projects that inspired The best ones followed the GeothermEx mantra: listen, evaluate issues, think/ discuss, identify alternatives, provide practical solutions – make geothermal happen. For example, I am proud of convincing a large, well-known bank to issue the first-ever non-recourse loan for a geothermal project; undertaking the first full-field simulation of the world’s largest geothermal field (The Geysers, now in its 53rd year of production). Another highlight was advising a major geothermal operator that exploration drilling results did not justify its development plan. Honesty and frankness (my business mantra) became a driver for an improved plan. Work continues today for this operator.

Your typical week Monday through Wednesday is always chock-a-block with client and internal meetings; reviews of company reports, proposals, confidentiality agreements, contracts, etc. interfacing with account managers and business lines needing geothermal support within Schlumberger; and knowledge transfer to company staff. The remainder of the week is given to thinking, planning and advocacy, often spending part of the weekend to catch up.

How to accelerate geothermal adoption? We need to recognise that geothermal is not a poor cousin of other renewables and acknowledge the grid-stabilizing value of clean baseload geothermal power. Spreading the word that geothermal is everywhere in one form or another is important — shallow heat exchange for space heating and cooling; direct use of hot fluids for district heating/cooling, spas and many industrial applications; recovery of critical minerals; new technologies such as stimulating hot, tight rock FIRST

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Importance of WING? We are proud to be the largest single geothermal organisation in the world, dedicated to helping women recognise their own value/uniqueness in a male-dominated industry, also knowing that WINGmen (and gender equality generally) are crucial to our mission. We encourage women to be bold, to ‘go for the no’, and to keep asking – you may get what you want – and to call out bad behaviour in a reasonable way using open questions (not accusations), a useful skill in many situations. Legacy hope On retirement (not imminent!) I hope to have imbued staff with pride in the 50 years of GeothermEx history advancing thousands of geothermal projects, providing accurate and useful advice. I

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15 September 2022 Early Registration deadline 3rd EAGE Global Energy Transition Conference & Exhibition (GET 2022) 3 October 2022 Regular Registration deadline Eighth EAGE Arabian Plate Core Geology Workshop 15 October 2022 Early Registration deadline Fourth EAGE Workshop on Unconventional Resources

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YOUR INPUT IS NEEDED! Help Us Build a New Soft-Skills Development Initiative by filling out this survey:

26-28 September 2022 Sixth International Conference on Fault and Top Seals

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CROSSTALK BY AN D R E W Mc BAR N E T

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Warming to the geothermal option The prospect of extracting heat from the earth’s core to provide a of CO2 from being released to the atmosphere. In the greater limitless and environmentally friendly source of energy remains scheme of things, this is of course small beer given the expectation as tantalising as ever. But given the freakish climate now being of world consumption of petroleum and liquid fuels is likely to experienced on a regular basis in many parts of the world, you reach around 97 million barrels per day in 2022, according to have to think that it’s time some serious money and effort should various authoritative estimates. Lund and Toth plaintively conclude that when geothermal energy becomes more competitive with be spent on R&D to extend the horizons of geothermal energy for power generation. fossil fuels, especially if carbon penalties are applied to the price, And let’s not forget home and district heating/cooling systems, and the environmental benefits are better understood and accepted, based on shallow earth geothermal energy, which most people development of the natural ‘heat from the earth’ should begin to are probably more familiar with and have been around since accelerate.This is an acknowledgement of the reality that geotherancient times. An extraordinarily detailed summation of global mal in all its applications lives in the shadow of the other talked use of geothermal ground source heat (including heat pump data) about renewable sources, especially in terms of power generation and where this might lead in the future can be found in the most where the potential impact on climate change mitigation could be recent five-yearly update Direct Utilization of Geothermal Energy significant. The facts are pretty stark. A current box score based 2020 World Review authored by John W. Lund (Geo-Heat Center, on global electricity generation in 2021 (cited by Visual Capitalist based on multiple sources) puts hydro at the head of the top five Oregon Institute of Technology) and Aniko N. Toth (Ana-Geo, Miskol, Hungary). renewable energies supplying 15.3% of global electricity at a cost An estimation of the installed thermal power for direct of $64 per MWh, wind comes second with 6.6% ($38 per MW), and solar comes third with 3.7% ($36 MWh). Biomass takes utilization at the end of 2019 in an increasing number of countries (88 at the last count, up from only 28 in 1995)) equalled 107,727 fourth place with 2.3% but at a hefty cost of $114 per MWh, and MWt, a 52% increase over the 2015 data, growing at a compound geothermal lags in fifth with less than 1% ($75 per MWh). rate of 8.73% annually. The thermal energy used is 1,020,887 TJ/yr The geographical limitations of tapping geothermal energy (283,580 GWh/yr.), a 72.3% increase over 2015, growing at a comuntil someone comes up with a way of penetrating deep down into pound rate of 11.5% annually. The distribution the earth’s hot core are well understood by the of thermal energy used by category is approx‘Spread the word on geoscience community. Geothermal resources imately 58.8% for geothermal (ground-source) have the potential to provide up to 150 GWe geothermal energy’ of sustainable energy by 2050, according to heat pumps, 18% for bathing and swimming including balneology (therapeutic bathing and Jolie et al in their review ‘Geological controls medicinal springs), 16% for space heating (of which 91% is for on geothermal resources for power generation’ in Nature Reviews district heating), 3.5% for greenhouse heating, 1.6% for industrial Earth & Environment Vol 2, 324–339 (2021). applications, 1.3% for aquaculture pond and raceway heating, 0.4% However, the authors underline that the key challenge in for agricultural drying, 0.2% for snow melting and cooling, and successfully locating and drilling geothermal wells is to understand 0.2% for other applications. how the heterogeneous structure of the subsurface controls the Bottom line: the authors suggest that energy savings amount to existence of exploitable fluid reservoirs suitable for the profita596 million barrels (81 million tonnes) of equivalent oil annually, ble utilisation of intermediate-temperature to high-temperature preventing 78.1 million tonnes of carbon and 252.6 million tonnes geothermal resources for power generation. They state ‘the main

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CROSSTALK

driver of geothermal activity is elevated crustal heat flow, which early indication might be the BP and Chevron contribution to a $40 is focused in regions of active magmatism and/or crustal thinning. million investment in Eavor Technologies, a Canadian company which is developing a ‘closed loop’ system’ for clean baseload Permeable structures, such as faults, exercise a primary control on local fluid flow patterns, with most upflow zones residing in power. The technology is said to be a scalable ‘go anywhere’ complex fault interaction zones. Major risks in geothermal resource solution, harvesting geothermal heat to generate dispatchable power with zero emissions. Last month its commercial licence assessment and operation include locating sufficient permeability for fluid extraction, in addition to declining reservoir pressure for the proposed Kleefield 1 geothermal energy plant in Hanover, and the potential of induced seismicity. Advanced computational Germany was extended. The under-funded geothermal community itself is ceaselessly methods permit effective integration of multiple datasets and, thus, exploring technologies and possibilities that could enable more can reduce potential risks. Future innovations involve engineered widespread adoption of geothermal power generation. Governgeothermal systems as well as supercritical and offshore geotherments are beginning to chip in research money. mal resources, which could greatly expand the Launched at COP21, the Global Geothermal global application of geothermal energy but ‘Real requirement is Alliance (GGA) serves as a platform for require detailed knowledge of the respective major investment’ dialogue, cooperation and coordinated action geological conditions.’ between the geothermal industry, policy makNo surprise that the current top ten couners and stakeholders worldwide and is supported by over 50 tries with installed geothermal electricity generating capability, countries as members or partners. The IEA Geothermal Energy according to analyst Think Geoenergy, are: US (3722 MW), Technology Collaboration Programme has 16 countries focused on Indonesia (2276), Philippines (1918), Turkey (1710), New Zealand advancing geothermal applications. (1037), Mexico (963), Italy (944), Kenya (861), Iceland (754), Most power plants in operation today are dry steam plants or and Japan (603) with another 1067 from other countries. Total flash plants (single, double and triple) harnessing temperatures of international power generation capacity was estimated at 15,854 more than 180°C. The largest in the world is still The Geysers, CalMW at end of 2021. ifornia, established in 1960 and currently operating 22 plants with Rather dispiritingly, the International Energy Agency (IEA) an installed capacity of 1517 MW. However, medium temperature subtitles its update Geothermal Energy (November 2021) ‘Not fields are becoming increasingly the application of choice for elecon track’. It states ‘Geothermal electricity generation increased an tricity generation or for combined heat and power. This is a result estimated 2% in 2020, falling below average growth of the previous of the advent of binary cycle technology whereby geothermal fluid five years, with a capacity increase of ~200 MW. This technology is is used via heat exchangers to heat a process fluid in a closed loop. therefor not on track with the Net Zero Emissions by 2050 Scenario, Additionally, new technologies are in the demonstration stage which requires 13% annual increases in generation over 2021-2030, in Europe and the US, being developed under the label of Enhanced corresponding to average annual capacity expansions of ~3.6 GW. Geothermal Systems (EGS). Basically, a man-made reservoir is IEA concludes what everyone in the geothermal business knows created where there is hot rock but insufficient or little natural peronly too well that ‘policies to decrease costs and tackle challenges meability or fluid saturation. Fluid is injected into the subsurface associated with predevelopment risks are needed to enlarge the to reopen pre-existing fractures. Increased permeability allows deployment of geothermal resources for power generation.’ The fluid to circulate to transport heat to the surface where electricity real requirement is major investment if this renewable application can be generated. is ever to make significant progress beyond current geographical One intriguing proposal being worked on by MIT spin-off confines. An indication of market visibility is that US Ormat Techcompany Quaise Energy is to apply high-power millimetre nologies is the only publicly listed, pure play company focused on waves, gyrotron technology from the nuclear industry, to drill installation of geothermal plants worldwide. holes to depths enabling geothermal energy plants to be built The oil and gas industry has conspicuously abstained from wherever they are needed, independent of tectonic crust edges. investment in geothermal energy over the past decade although The gyroton-powered drilling platform vaporises boreholes well aware that its expertise in every aspect of subsurface resource through rock and apparently can be done without complex exploitation seems a natural fit. Used to the returns from hydrodownhole equipment. carbons production, the geothermal business model has apparently Last month Reno, Nevada hosted the annual Geothermal had little appeal. High upfront costs, location specificity, dealing Rising conference and next year there is the World Geothermal with some toxic emissions, induced seismicity issues, production Congress in Beijing, under the auspices of the International Geosustainability and public acceptance have probably weighed thermal Association. Both events should provide pointers to the against geothermal. most promising avenues for potential development. Getting word Optimists hope that growing oil company interest in renewaout to a largely underinformed public will still be a challenge. bles such as solar and wind energy will extend to geothermal. One

Views expressed in Crosstalk are solely those of the author, who can be contacted at andrew@andrewmcbarnet.com.

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Seequent, The Bentley Subsurface Company

Make confident decisions, together. Managing risk and uncertainty in the subsurface

Visit the Seequent team at Booth 36 to learn more about processing and interpreting your Geophysics www.seequent.com


HIGHLIGHTS

INDUSTRY NEWS

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PGS wins survey offshore Indonesia

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Searcher launches India reprocessing project

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TGS buys wind energy start-up

Seismic acquisition market recovery gathers pace Companies that acquire and sell seismic data have reported healthy second quarter net profits in a further sign that their long-depressed market is in sustained recovery. TGS has reported second quarter net profit of $25 million on revenues of $230 million compared with a net loss of $15 million on revenues of $72 million in Q2 2021. PGS, which has all six of its seismic acquisition vessels back in operation, has reported second quarter net income of $19 million on revenues of $273.6 million (its second best quarterly figures since 2014), compared to a net loss of $26 million on revenues of $185.9 million in Q2 2021. CGG, which has repositioned itself as a broader data company, has reported second quarter net income of $16 million on revenues of $228 million compared to a net loss of $51 million on revenues of $172 million in Q2 2021. The uptick in sales of seismic data has coincided with another big increase in quarterly profits reported by the international oil and gas majors, who are increasing investment in frontier exploration and are reviving shelved projects that have become viable as a result of the embargo on Russian oil and gas. Kristian Johansen, CEO of TGS, said: ‘International oil companies have revived

their interest in frontier exploration, driven by high energy prices, recovery of licensing round activity, significant exploration success and renewed focus on energy security. This, in combination with continued focus on infrastructure-led exploration (ILX), has driven a significant improvement of the global market for multi-client seismic data over the past nine months. ‘As the energy transition progresses, global energy markets are growing increasingly fragmented, volatile and complex. This means that there is a growing need for data, insights and software to support decisions and manage assets,’ added Johansen, who had an early vote of confidence in the company’s recent acquisition of Magseis Fairfield as the company demonstrated the growing market for ocean bottom node seismic acquisition, posting second quarter revenue of $103 million and a tenfold increase in gross profit (see page 22 for full report). Rune Olav Pedersen, president and chief executive officer of PGS, said: ‘PGS expects global energy consumption to continue to increase longer term with oil and gas remaining an important part of the energy mix, as the global energy transition evolves. Offshore reserves will be vital for future energy supply and support demand for marine seismic services. With high oil and gas prices, the seismic market FIRST

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Seismic survey vessels are busier than they have been for several years.

has entered a recovery phase, and the positive trend is expected to continue due to increasing investments among energy companies. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has significantly increased the general focus on energy security and, combined with several years of low investment in new oil and gas supplies, has further increased oil and gas prices and investment pressures on energy companies. The seismic acquisition market is likely to benefit from a significant reduction of operated vessel supply over several years’ (see page 24 for full report). Sophie Zurquiyah, CGG CEO, said: ‘Market trends, driven by continued underinvestment in exploration and production and intensified by elevated energy security concerns, continue to support our view of a multi-year upcycle with increased spending from all clients, as they progressively refocus on exploration to meet future energy demand (see page 26 for full report). I

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TGS reports Q2 net profit of $25 million TGS has reported second quarter net profit of $25 million on revenues of $230 million compared with a net loss of $15 million on revenues of $72 million in Q2 2021. Operating profit was $31 million, compared to an operating loss of 15 million in Q2 2021. Early sales of multi-client data were $128 million compared with $38 million in Q2 2021. Late sales of $97 million were up from $30 million in Q2 2021. Free cash flow was $59 million in Q2 2022, compared with $13 million in Q2 2021. After a dividend payment of $16 mil-

lion, cash balance was $255 million on 30 June 2022 versus $223 million a year earlier. Amortization and impairments of the multi-client library were $161 million compared with $60 million in Q2 2021. The net book value of the multi-client library is now estimated to be worth $570 million. Organic multi-client investments amounted to $43.4 million in Q2 2022. Personnel costs were $21 million, up from $12 million in Q2 2021. ‘Q2 2022 was another solid quarter with late sales increasing 222%, driven by a further improvement of activity in

frontier areas and transfer fees. With a quarter-end cash balance of approximately $255 million in addition to an undrawn revolving credit facility of $100 million, we have a solid financial position that can comfortably fund the exciting M&A transactions recently announced,’ said Kristian Johansen, CEO of TGS. TGS had a cash balance of $255 million on 30 June 2022, up from $215 million on 31 December 2021. By the end of 2022, TGS expects to make multi-client investments of $200 million.

Magseis Fairfield’s second quarter revenues top $100 million as gross profit soars Magseis Fairfield expects segment revenues of $103 million in Q2 2022, up 38% from $74.7 million in Q1 2022. Segment gross profit for Q2 2022 is expected to be $14.1 million, a tenfold improvement from $1.3 million in Q1 2022. Segment EBITDA for Q2 2022 is expected at $6.2 million, compared to an EBITDA-loss of $4.3 million in Q1 2022. ‘Revenue was in line with management’ expectations for the quarter, with a somewhat weaker EBITDA reflecting a weak start to the quarter,’ said Magseis Fairfield in a statement. ‘Operations

improved through May and June, and at the end of the quarter all crews were in operation on new and higher margin contracts. Earlier in the year the company agreed a revolving credit facility of $45 million to accommodate higher working capital requirements. Total available cash at the end of Q2 2022 was $23 million. Current backlog is $235 million, compared to $257 million at the end of Q1 2022. ‘We continue to see strong demand for OBN services, allowing for 25% growth in the OBN market in 2022

and tendering activity indicating further market growth in 2023,’ added the company, which was recently acquired by TGS. Meanwhile, Magseis Fairfield has confirmed an acquisition contract in the Gulf of Mexico using the company’s ZXPLR technology. Acquisition will start in Q3 and is expected to take three months. It has also announced a conditional award of a 4D Ocean Bottom Node (OBN) project in Asia from a repeat customer. The project is scheduled to use Magseis Fairfield’s MASS technology and take one month.

GeoPartners shoots 3D survey offshore Mozambique GeoPartners has signed an exclusive agreement with the the government of Mozambique to shoot a multi-client 12,000 km2 survey in the offshore Angoche basin. The 3D project will acquire multi-client data over blocks that will be awarded in the current sixth licensing round in Mozambique. Pre-acquisition permitting has started and it is anticipated that the 3D acquisition 22

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will commence in early 2023, with an expected duration of six months and early processed results available by the end of 2023. ‘Advanced new acquisition and imaging techniques will provide better illumination of complex structures to help reduce exploration risk and fast-track the region for potential production and development,’ said Jim Gulland, director of GeoPartners.


INDUSTRY NEWS

UK releases more seismic data to aid energy transition projects

Offshore wind farm in the North Sea.

The search for carbon storage sites, wind farm locations and potential hydrocarbon fields has received a significant boost as more than 132 terabytes of seismic data has been uploaded on to the National Data Repository (NDR). The data can be used to support the UK’s first ever carbon storage licensing round, which was launched in June this year and, as the Energy Transition gathers pace, increasing numbers of NDR users are using the archive of information to aid exploration efforts. A total of 29 data sets dating from 1988 to 2015 have been transferred from tape storage to the cloud, where they can be easily accessed by companies and researchers. The data sets, the largest of which is 72 terabytes, are mostly located in

the Central North Sea and Southern North Sea and cover areas that are considered to have significant potential for carbon storage. The data can also be used for traditional petroleum exploration and for other uses such as positioning offshore wind installations. The latest upload has taken seismic field data that has previously been reported to the NSTA. Working with Moveout Data Seismic Services, the data has been made ‘processing ready’, which assists users by completing the first step of reprocessing work for them. As part of the project, around 200 tapes have been transferred from a controlled storage site into the NDR cloud, adding to the 26 similar data sets which have already been made available on the site in the last year. Prior to the transfer, these multi-terabyte data sets were less accessible to users. Now fully released and ready to be processed, the data is listed in the NDR where it can be ordered for delivery. Originally launched in 2019 with more than 130 terabytes of information – one of the largest ever single open releases of data – the NDR was refreshed to improve functionality for users last year.

PGS wins 3D survey offshore Indonesia

Ramform Sovereign will mobilise mid-October.

PGS has won a big 3D exploration acquisition contract offshore Indonesia from a major energy company. The company has also won a big 4D acquisition contract offshore Australia from an international energy company.

Vessel Ramform Sovereign will mobilize for the 3D exploration contract in Indonesia in mid-October and acquisition is expected to complete in mid-December. The vessel will continue to Australia and mobilize for the 4D contract at the end of the year and complete acquisition towards the end of February 2023. ‘These two contracts constitute an acquisition campaign of close to five months. The seismic acquisition market in Asia-Pacific has been slower than in the Atlantic basins, so it is encouraging to experience increasing demand in the region, and we have good leads for additional work beyond the campaign we have already secured,’ said PGS president and CEO Rune Olav Pedersen. FIRST

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INDUSTRY NEWS

PGS reports second quarter net profit of $19 million PGS has reported second quarter net income of $19 million on revenues of $273.6 million, compared to a net loss of $26 million on revenues of $185.9 million in Q2 2021. EBIT (ex. impairments and other charges) was $57.8 million, compared to a loss of $7.6 million in Q2 2021. Contract sales were $63 million compared to $51.5 million in Q2 2021. Multi-client prefunding was $97 million compared to $63 million in Q2 2021. Multi-client late sales were $108 million compared to $65.5 million in Q1 2021. Cash flow from operations was $43.7 million, compared to $81.4 million in Q2 2021. Cash and cash equivalents of $219.8 million, compared to $155.4 million in Q2 2021. Amortization of the multi-client library was $114 million compared with $103 million in Q2 2021. Rune Olav Pedersen, president and chief executive officer, said: ‘We continue to see an improving marine seismic

market. We delivered the second highest quarterly revenues since Q4 2014 and a positive net income for the quarter. ‘Our Q2 multi-client late sales revenues almost doubled from Q1 and increased 65% year-over-year. Significant multi-client sales, including high transfer fees, are a confirmation that our multi-client library is highly attractive to customers and that investment in exploration seismic is again increasing. Higher exploration interest further enabled us to secure strong prefunding for new multi-client surveys, including our first large-scale multi-client survey in the Norwegian Sea since 2020 and a significant survey in South Bank, offshore Canada.’ ‘All our six active 3D vessels came back into operation during Q2. The contract acquisition market continued to improve in the quarter and dominated our vessel activity.’ Pederson added that 2022 has so far been a breakthrough year for the company’s New Energy business. ‘In

2022 we see an increasing demand for seismic acquisition services related to carbon capture and storage projects and currently expect to generate revenues of approximately $30 million relating to our New Energy business for the full year.’ PGS expects full-year 2022 gross cash costs to be approximately $500 million, an increase from the approximately $475 million guided earlier due to increased project activity. Multi-client cash investments in 2022 are expected to be approximately $125 million. Approximately 65% of 2022 active 3D vessel time is expected to be allocated to contract work. Capital expenditures for 2022 are expected to be approximately $60 million. The order book totalled $359 million on June 30, 2022, compared to $315 million in on 31 March, 2022, and $410 million on 30 June, 2021. Net interest-bearing debt is $888 million compared to $955 million in Q2 2021.

Oil majors report another big rise in profits Big international energy companies have reported another big rise in year on year quarterly profits. ExxonMobil has reported estimated second-quarter 2022 earnings of $17.9 billion and cash flow from operating activities of $20 billion in second-quarter 2022. Capital and exploration expenditures were $4.6 billion in the second quarter and $9.5 billion for the first half of 2022. Equinor has reported adjusted second quarter earnings $17.6 billion and $5 billion after tax in the second quarter of 2022. Net operating income was $17.7 billion and the net income was $6.76 billion. Chevron has reported second quarter earnings of $11.6 billion, compared with $3 billion in Q2 2021. Shell has reported second quarter adjusted earnings of $11.5 billion on revenues of $103 billion up from $5.5 billion profit on revenues of $62 billion it

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reported in Q2 2021.Capex is expected to be in the $23-27 billion range in 2022. BP has tripled profits to $8.5 billion in the second quarter as a result of a big rise in oil, gas and fuel prices, soaring refining margins and ‘exceptional’ oil

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trading. This was up from $6.2 billion in Q2 2022. Net debt has been reduced to $22.8 billion. TotalEnergies has reported second quarter net income of $5.7 million, up from $3.1 billion in Q2 2021. Cash flow from operations was $16 billion.


INDUSTRY NEWS

Westwood research points to 13 big discoveries this year Thirty-eight high-impact exploration wells were drilled in the first half of 2022, compared with 39 wells completed in 2021, according to research by Westwood. The wells resulted in 13 potentially commercial discoveries at a 34% commercial success rate, delivering ~6bnboe of discovered resource. Eight of the wells tested frontier plays, with significant basin-opening discoveries at Venus and Graff in the Orange Basin offshore Namibia. Venus is the largest discovery in 2022 so far, with multi-bnboe potential in a Lower Cretaceous Aptian-Albian basin floor fan. There were, however, key frontier failures at Mlima in the Lamu Basin offshore Kenya and at Ulcinj offshore Montenegro. Eighteen wells tested emerging plays in 1H 2022 resulting in nine commercial discoveries and a 50% commercial success rate. Eight wells were completed in the Upper Cretaceous play offshore Suriname-Guyana delivering six successes. The other emerging play discoveries were in the Levantine (Athena), Perth (S Erregulla) and Orange (La Rona) basins. Key emerging play failures include Cutthroat in the Sergipe-Alagoas Basin, which tried to extend the Barra Upper Cretaceous

play, as well as Apus in the Roebuck Basin offshore Australia, which was unsuccessful in extending the Dorado play. High impact exploration in maturing/ mature plays disappointed, with only one potentially commercial discovery from 12 wells drilled, at Huron in the US Gulf of Mexico. There were multiple failures attempting to extend the pre-salt play in Brazil, as well as further disappointments in the SWAP licence in the shallow waters of Azerbaijan. High-impact drilling activity will pick up in the second half of the year, with between 80 and 90 high-impact wells expected to have been drilled by the end of 2022, the highest number since 2019 when 98 high impact wells were completed. South America will continue to be an exploration hot spot with more wells planned for the Suriname-Guyana basin and offshore Brazil. There will be a return to high-impact exploration in Africa in 2022, with key wells planned in South Africa, Mozambique and Zimbabwe after the successes in Namibia earlier in the year. Whilst activity levels in Asia-Pacific and NW Europe are relatively stable, there will be a return to high-impact exploration in the deepwater of the Eastern Mediterra-

Oil platform in Guanabara Bay, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The bay is part of the Santos Basin and is an active field.

nean in 2022 after no wells were drilled in 2021. Westwood has highlighted 13 wells planned for the remainder of 2022 as ‘key wells to watch’. These include a number of frontier play tests, for example Raia offshore Mozambique, and Pensacola, offshore UK; extensions of proven plays, including Zanderij offshore Suriname and Hoodoo, US Gulf of Mexico; and large prospects in proven plays, such as Wei, offshore Guyana.

CGG signs multi-year deal to play key role in bp’s subsurface digital strategy CGG has announced a multi-year global data transformation and curation agreement with bp to support the British energy major’s subsurface digital strategy. Ariel Flores, SVP Subsurface, bp, said: ‘In our ambition to become ever more predictable and efficient in underpinning our investment decisions, we believe this agreement will provide a true win-win opportunity to leverage the capability of both companies in bringing the hidden value of unstructured data directly into the hands of our subsurface practitioners.’

Sophie Zurquiyah, CEO, CGG, said: ‘By unlocking the true value of huge volumes of disparate unstructured data, asset teams can focus on generating new insights to better understand uncertainty and risk, improve decision-making, and deliver business value.’ Meanwhile, CGG has licensed its recently launched Geothermal Resource Assessment and Lithium Brine Screening multi-client studies to a US energy company. The two studies, which are the latest additions to CGG’s new suite of GeoVerse FIRST

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modules designed to support the energy transition, provide tools to discover, assess and compare geothermal resource and lithium brine opportunities and the scale of their potential. Dechun Lin, EVP, Earth Data, CGG, said: ‘We are delighted to receive such an early and significant endorsement of our new expert-driven, data-rich screening studies that leverage our data integration capabilities and geoscience expertise to address the challenges in areas such as critical mineral exploration, carbon and energy storage, and geothermal energy.’ I

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CGG reports second quarter net income of $16 million on revenues of $228 million CGG has reported second quarter net income of $16 million on revenues of $228 million compared with a net loss of $51 million on revenues of $172 million in Q2 2021. The company reported segment revenues of $240 million, up 66% year-onyear and up 57% sequentially. Geoscience revenues of $70m are up 16% year-on-year. ‘Geoscience commercial activity is solid with a high level of bid submissions, up 28% yearon-year. Total Geoscience order intake value was up 61% year-on-year during the period of January to June 2022,’ said CGG. Earth Data revenues of $124m are up 3.4 times year-on-year as a result of a high level of after-sales at $88 million (up from $20 million in Q2, 2021), driven by demand in Latin America. Prefunding

of $36 million was more than double $17 million prefunding in Q2 2021. Sensing and Monitoring was $46 million, down 4% year-on-year owing to a shift of deliveries to Q3 2022 as a result of continuing Covid-19 logistics disruptions, which have affected land equipment sales in particular. ‘Significantly higher activity is anticipated in H2 2022 and in 2023 driven by substantial commercial opportunities for land and marine equipment sales,’ said CGG. Segment operating income at $66m represents a 27% margin. Sophie Zurquiyah, CGG CEO, said: ‘CGG delivered strong performance this quarter mainly driven by higher Earth Data after-sales and sustained Geoscience activity. The development of our Beyond the Core businesses continues to make good progress with encourag-

ing commercial wins, successful pilots, and recent acquisition of Geocomp and successful bidding to acquire ION Geophysical Corporation’s software business that are reinforcing and expanding the portfolio of our Sensing and Monitoring business. In an inflationary market environment, the business case for our highend technology, which enables higher efficiency for our clients, becomes even stronger.’ For the first half of 2022 segment revenue was $393m, up 14% year-on-year. Segment operating income was $61m, a 15% margin. Group net loss at $2 million compared to a net loss of $136 million in H1 2021. CGG’s cash liquidity was $317 million as well as $100 million of undrawn RCF. Net debt before IFRS 16 was $812m on 30 June, 2022.

Searcher launches East Coast India 2D reprocessing project Searcher Seismic has launched a 2D reprocessing project for an area off the east coast of India. Searcher’s Phase 1 reprocessing of 10,000 km multi-vintage 2D seismic data, has started in collaboration with Shearwater GeoServices. The broadband processing flow is designed to focus on preserving amplitudes, increasing signal bandwidth and AVA/AVO-friendly data improvements. Using the latest 2D denoise and demultiple algorithms, the new data has removed artefacts and significantly improves signal-to-noise of the key prospective intervals which, when used on a regional scale, enables high-grade source kitchens and better constrained sedimentology of reservoir units, said Searcher. East Coast India has proven its potential with exploration successes from the Ganges Delta to Krishna-Godavari Basin in both shallow and ultra-deep waters, said Searcher. ‘The clear logic of dis26

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covering indigenous gas supplies close to the world’s fastest-growing energy market that otherwise would be reliant on its native coal reserves is critical in the human race’s journey to low carbon energy sustainability. Searcher is seeking new understanding of the source and reservoirs on this outstanding margin,’ said a company statement. Alan Hopping Searcher’s GM of business development, added: ‘Many global studies have now validated the technique of using seismic amplitude characteristics to not only identify hydrocarbon presence in reservoirs, but also to seek the source rocks they came from.’ Developed by studying the UK’s Kimmeridge Clay formation, seismic amplitude was a significant de-risking tool in the validation of the source rock for the super-giant Venus-1 discovery in Namibia in 2022. ‘This technology has proven application on modern reprocessed data and will be directly applicable offshore East India.’

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INDUSTRY NEWS

TGS buys stake in wind energy software start-up

The deal will help TGS to become more involved in wind energy projects.

TGS has bought a 10% stake in NASH Renewables, a start-up developing innovative Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solutions for the prospecting, construction and operations of wind energy projects. The equity stake in NASH Renewables is TGS’ first investment into a renewable energy start-up. TGS has acquired a 10% equity stake in NASH Renewables, with an option to increase to 20%, subject to pre-defined milestones. NASH is a new artificial intelligence software company established in Germany in 2022 by three founders with long track records in developing digital solutions for the global wind energy industry. The company is led by former Siemens Gamesa chief digital officer Daniel Luecht. NASH is developing a novel concept by bringing the technology and electricity market ecosystems together. Combining various data feeds, from weather and energy markets to individual turbine fatigue loads, NASH will optimize asset configuration and maximize the energy value obtained, resulting in significantly higher investment returns in post-subsidy energy markets. NASH’s AI software solutions will enable wind asset developers and investors to pivot their decision-making processes on optimizing output during periods of high energy demand rather than pursuing the highest possible annual production volume, said TGS. The choices unlock FIRST

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significantly higher value – not only for the market, grid and investors but also for decarbonizing global energy supply, the company added. Daniel Luecht, founder and CEO of NASH Renewables, said: ‘Renewable energy faces a massive growth challenge to successfully limit global warming. At the same time, renewable energy is transitioning into the post-subsidy era, instead of benefiting from fix-price remuneration schemes, the value of green energy will increasingly be determined by hourly or even quarter-hourly electricity market prices. Even better, hourly electric prices represent a powerful incentive to increase the decarbonization impact of new renewable energy asset deployments.’ Jan Schoolmeesters, EVP of digital energy solutions at TGS, said: ‘Our ambition is to become a global leader in data-driven solutions across the energy value chain. So, we need to explore disruptive technologies and business models and learn from the most innovative entrepreneurs. We now have a partnership with a highly experienced founders’ team developing SaaS solutions that could revolutionize how wind energy projects are planned, built and operated.’ Within its New Energy Solutions business unit established in 2021, TGS has developed an insight platform, WindAXIOM, to help offshore wind energy developers and stakeholders evaluate the viability of potential projects by analysing multiple resource and risk factors. Additional cross-platform functionalities can be developed with the support of NASH’s team. Further synergies can be gained by improving the predictive functions of the software platform. With its large quantities of modelled and observational data, TGS can help to enhance artificial intelligence algorithms for forecasting. TGS recently developed and introduced additional data-driven solutions for offshore wind and fully acquired two companies: 4C Offshore Ltd (offshore wind market intelligence) and Prediktor As (real-time data management and asset management solutions for solar PV, wind and oil and gas projects). I

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FULL SPECTRUM FALCON GRAVITY

EXPLORE CONGO

DATA FOR PHASE 1 ARE NOW AVAILABLE, COVERING 4 BLOCKS IN THE CUVETTE CENTRALE BASIN OF CONGO.


INDUSTRY NEWS

TGS delivers East Coast India reprocessing project

Offshore Chennai, Bay of Bengal, is one of the areas covered by the project.

TGS has delivered the first phase of its East Coast India reprocessing project. Final 2D-cubed, workstation-ready data

was due to be delivered by the end of July 2022. The TGS East Coast India 2D-cubed project comprises hundreds of thousands of kilometres of existing 2D data across an area of more than half a million square kilometres offshore India’s east coast. The project utilizes TGS’ proprietary 2D-cubed technology – a solution for generating a 3D seismic migration volume from a set of 2D seismic lines – to create a single conformable, easily accessible dataset designed to encourage and assist exploration endeavours offshore India, said TGS.

Will Ashby, executive vice-president, Eastern Hemisphere at TGS, said: ‘The new dataset is one of many TGS initiatives providing seismic to boost exploration across Asia. It will allow explorers to better develop regional models in their pre-study evaluation process. Access to this data will also increase confidence in licensing round decision-making processes and maximize the potential of existing seismic data in the region by employing innovative processing techniques.’ Final processed products will be available in Q4 2022

Oil and gas round-up Aker BP has drilled a well 7 km west of the Skarv field in the Norwegian Sea and 230 km west of Sandnessjøen. The well proved petroleum in Middle Jurassic reservoir rocks (the Garn Formation) as well as the Middle and Lower Jurassic (Ile and Tilje Formations) and in reservoir rocks in the Upper Cretaceous (Lysing Formation). Size of the discovery in the Jurassic is between 3.6 and 10.8 million Sm3 of recoverable oil equivalent. Size of the discovery in the Cretaceous is between 1.2 and 1.8 million Sm3 of recoverable oil equivalent. Canadian Overseas Petroleum (COPL) has received a resource report prepared by energy consultancy Ryder Scott confirming that its Wyoming deep discovery has total original oil in place of 993.5 million barrels. It supports COPL’s conclusion that the Frontier 2 and Dakota discoveries are large stratigraphic oil accumulations. COPL plans to drill several wells starting in the final quarter of 2022. Equinor has won a drilling permit for well 6507/8-11 S in production licence PL 124 in the Norwegian Sea. Licensees are: Equinor 35%; ConocoPhillips; Petoro 27% and Vår Energi 10%.

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Tullow Oil’s Beebei-Potaro exploration well, drilled in the Kanuku licence, offshore Guyana, has disappointed. The well encountered good-quality reservoir in the primary and secondary targets but both targets were water-bearing. The Beebei-Potaro well has drilled to a total depth of 4325 m in 71 m of water. Serinus Energy has started drilling the Canar-1 exploration well in Romania. The well will be drilled to a depth of 1600 m, targeting three prospective hydrocarbon zones. The Canar prospect is on the northern flank of the Carei Basin and the well is seeking to discover further hydrocarbons on the migration path from the Carei Basin source kitchen. ExxonMobil has made two discoveries offshore Guyana to the southeast of the Liza and Payara developments in the Stabroek block. The discoveries at Seabob and Kiru-Kiru are the sixth and seventh in Guyana this year, with the total number of discoveries in Guyana at more than 25. The Seabob-1 well encountered 40 m of high-quality hydrocarbon-bearing sandstone and was drilled in 1421 m of water. The Kiru-Kiru-1 well encountered 30 m of high-quality hydrocarbon-bearing sandstone in 1756 m of water.

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Eni has discovered 1-1.5 trillion cubic feet (TCF) of raw gas in place in its first exploration well drilled in Offshore Block 2 Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The gas-bearing reservoirs were tested with excellent flow rates. Eni holds a 70% stake and PTTEP holds the remaining 30%. Eni has drilled the first exploration well in Block CI-802 on the Baleine structure, offshore Côte d’Ivoire. The results have increased the estimated volumes of hydrocarbons in place by around 25% to 2.5 billion barrels of oil and 3.3 trillion cubic feet (TCF) of associated gas. Eni (90%) and its partner Petroci Holding (10%) drilled the well to 3165 m measured depth, in a water depth of about 1150 m. After an intense data acquisition campaign, the well confirmed a continuous oil column of 48 m in reservoir rocks with good properties. Petrobras has discovered natural gas in deep waters of Colombia, 32 km off the coast and 76 km from the city of Santa Marta, in a water depth of approx. 830 m. The Uchuva-1 well was drilled in the Tayrona Block, with Petrobras as the operator (44%), in partnership with Ecopetrol, with 55.6%.


INDUSTRY NEWS

UK North Sea Transition Authority appoints new chief executive Stuart Payne has been appointed chief executive of the North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA) after Dr Andy Samuel announced that he is stepping down after eight years. Current NSTA supply chain, decommissioning and HR director, Payne will assume responsibilities on 1 January 2023. Dr Samuel has been chief executive since the NSTA was created as an independent regulator (the UK Oil and Gas Authority) in 2015.

Stuart Payne has been appointed chief executive of the North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA).

Payne joined the NSTA in 2015. He co-chairs the industry’s Supply Chain and Exports Task Force and is a member of the

BRIEFS ExxonMobil and Hellenic Petroleum have increased their equity in acreage west and southwest of Crete after the withdrawal of TotalEnergies. The 40% interest held by TotalEnergies has been transferred, with ExxonMobil increasing its interest to 70% and Hellenic Petroleum to 30%.

Scottish Government’s Energy Transition Leadership Group. Prior to joining the NSTA, Payne held leadership positions in the oil and gas industry and was appointed CBE for services to the sector in 2020. Payne’s work will include supporting the industry on vital projects involving electrification, carbon storage, energy hubs and exploration, liaising with other organisations with interests in the North Sea. The NSTA is responsible for regulating and influencing the oil, gas and carbon storage industries. It helps to drive the energy transition, realising the significant potential of the UK Continental Shelf as a critical energy and carbon abatement resource and holding the industry to account on halving upstream energy emissions by 2030. Meanwhile, the cost of decommissioning the UK’s oil and gas infrastructure has been cut by 25% in the past five years, according to the North Sea Transition Authority’s (NSTA) Decommissioning Cost Estimate Report 2022. The forecast fell £1.5bn (2%) to £44.5bn last year, contributing to a total cut of £15bn (25%) since 2017, when the NSTA introduced an estimate of £59.7 billion and set a target of reducing costs by 35% to £39 billion ($47 billion) by the end of 2022.

Getech has signed a $1.1 million multi-year contract with a big international energy company for its Globe platform that models the Earth’s evolution over the last 400 million years. Proposed regulations for hydraulic fracturing have been published for public consultation by the South African government. The guidelines include minimum requirements for the submission of applications to utilize hydraulic fracturing. The US Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) will conduct an environmental review of six lease areas offshore New York and New Jersey. Leases for these six areas were awarded in BOEM’s February 2022 auction that brought in a record $4.3 billion. Trinidad and Tobago has launched its 2022 Onshore and Nearshore Competitive Bid Round. This bid round includes 11 blocks: Aripero, Buenos Ayres, Charuma, Cipero, Cory D, Cory F, Guayaguayare, South West Peninsula Onshore, St. Mary’s and Tulsa, in the central to southern onshore acreage of Trinidad and South West Peninsula Offshore, off the southern coast of Trinidad.

Green Energy Group confirms sale of Petrel Explorer Green Energy Group has announced that it has entered into a binding agreement to sell the vessel Petrel Explorer to an undisclosed buyer. ‘The sale of the non-strategic Petrel Explorer further strengthens the company`s balance sheet and liquidity, enabling us to deliver on our asset-light strategy while aiming to consolidate the seismic markets we are involved in’, said Ståle Rodahl, executive chairman of Green Energy Group.

Shell has taken the final investment decision (FID) to develop the Jackdaw gas field in the UK North Sea. Jackdaw will comprise a wellhead platform along with subsea infrastructure which will tie back to Shell’s existing Shearwater gas hub.The project is expected to come online in the mid-2020s, and at peak production rates, could represent over 6% of projected UK North Sea gas production in the middle of this decade, with operational emissions of less than 1% of the whole UK basin.

Meanwhile, the company has won a contract for a 2D campaign in the Eastern Hemisphere with a duration of approx. 9 months. The contract is expected to commence in September this year with rates reflective of an improving 2D market, said Green Energy Group. The company`s backlog currently shows a combined 23 months of work to be performed over the coming 14 months worth some $18 million. FIRST

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PGS becomes shareholder in Australian CCS company PGS has become a major shareholder in the carbon capture and storage project developer deepC Store (dCS). The Australian-based company has issued shares to PGS in exchange for PGS providing geological and geophysical advisory services. The companies also agreed to explore broader collaboration opportunities in the Asia Pacific region for co-developing commercial-scale CCS. dCS is actively pursuing greenhouse gas storage acreage and this agreement complements a recently awarded $3.5 million Australian government grant that

will enable dCS to commence Pre-FEED on the first offshore floating CCS project (CStore1). ‘Together with our partners, PGS is forging a new industry to enable safe and efficient carbon storage offshore. The Asia Pacific region is one of the key markets where carbon capture and storage enables a path to net-zero. We are delighted to conclude this agreement with dCS and look forward to supporting dCS in unlocking the potential of CCS value chain in the region,’ said Berit Osnes, PGS’ EVP New Energy.

CGG launches database of Brazil wells CGG has released its GeoWells Brazil database comprising reinterpreted data for 197 key wells from the Santos, Campos, and Espirito Santo basins. The GeoWells Brazil database was built by CGG’s Data Hub, which includes data scientists, subject matter experts, and machine learning and software engineers. They have devised an innovative core image interpretation workflow, which harnesses machine learning technology to predict core and thin section descriptions over hundreds of wells, and tens of thousands of images, said CGG. The database, powered by CGG’s cloud-hosted, ‘platform agnostic’ GeoVerse ecosystem, gives

a digital view of each well in the Santos, Campos, and Espirito Santo basins. ‘Available for licensing within CGG’s Earth Data library, this new GeoWells product provides every well in those three basins with a uniform, 21st-century view of the subsurface within a single digital ecosystem, enabling a better understanding of the pre-salt blocks in Brazil’s Permanent Offer initiative,’ said Dechun Lin, EVP, Earth Data, CGG. ‘After the successful release of GeoWells Mexico and GeoWells Brazil, we will further expand the GeoWells portfolio into other core basins globally to deliver high-value insights to the energy industry.’

ENERGY TRANSITION BRIEFS Wintershall and Nord-West Oelleitung (NWO) will collaborate on the BlueHyNow project in Wilhelmshaven, on Germany’s North Sea coast to produce low-carbon hydrogen using Norwegian natural gas. NWO has a partly unused pipeline infrastructure in the region and a site at the deepwater port in Wilhelmshaven. The two companies plan to complete a feasibility study for a hydrogen production plant on the NWO site in Wilhelmshaven by the end of the year. Petronas has signed a deal with six South Korean companies to do conceptual and feasibility studies on a full value chain related to CO2 capture, transport and storage. Samsung Engineering, Samsung Heavy Industries, SK Earthon, SK Energy, GS Energy Corporation and Lotte Chemical Co will work with Petronas to evaluate potential CO2 storage sites in Malaysia. A consortium of TotalEnergies, Corio Generation and Qair has been pre-selected by the French Directorate General for Energy and Climate (DGEC) to participate in a competitive tender to develop two floating windfarms in the Mediterranean Sea. The two projects would generate about 250 MW each. Shell has completed its 100% acquisition of the India-based renewable energy company Sprng Energy group from Actis Solenergi. The solar and wind assets Shell acquires through the deal will triple Shell’s present renewable capacity in operation. Wood has been appointed principal designer for Salamander, the 100MW floating wind farm development 35 km off Peterhead in the east coast of Scotland that is a joint venture between Simply Blue Group, Ørsted and Subsea 7.

Dashboard display from GeoWells Brazil. Created by geoscientists for geoscientists, GeoWells delivers fully integrated geological datasets curated to maximize workflow efficiency (image courtesy of CGG).

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Fugro has won a marine site investigation contract from Vattenfall for its 1.4 GW Norfolk Boreas offshore wind farm off England’s east coast. From August 2022, Fugro will mobilise multiple geophysical and geotechnical vessels from local ports to complete full coverage surveys.


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Special Topic

RESERVOIR ENGINEERING & GEOSCIENCE

The need to get the most out of the largest fields has never been a bigger game with more at stake, especially as many frontier exploration projects and schemes for enhancing recovery of existing fields have become more viable in recent months. As a result, geoscientists need to raise the bar in terms of the ingenious reservoir geoscience and engineering solutions that they apply. This month we look at the solutions available to petroleum engineering engineers, including established techniques as well as increasing use of machine learning. Darryl Anderson et al explain the key steps and technologies in the successful reprocessing of a legacy-sparse 3D OBC survey over the Kashagan oil field and demonstrate how it dramatically improved the quality of the images and subsequent interpretation work. Carl Fredrik Gyllenhammar compares and discusses three methods of measuring Vcl1. Neil Hodgson et al explain why exploration in frontier basins might not be as risky as you think? P. Keller et al combine seismic 3D-merges and well data in a geological context to predict petrophysical properties such as P-wave velocity, Bulk Density, Porosity, and Clay Volume from well and seismic data using machine learning (ML) techniques. Adnan Khalid et al present a high-resolution High-Fidelity Model of the Måløy Slope area integrating the operators’ geological interpretations along with CGG’s petrophysical analysis and high-resolution seismic inversion results. Marianne Rauch et al showcase a unique approach and its application using the LambdaRho-MuRho cross plot for the same task, which was the estimation of rock properties.

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Special Topic overview January

Land Seismic

First Break Special Topics are covered by a mix of original articles dealing with case studies and the latest technology. Contributions to a Special Topic in First Break can be sent directly to the editorial office (firstbreak@eage.org). Submissions will be considered for publication by the editor.

February

Digitalization / Machine Learning

March

Reservoir Monitoring

April

Unconventionals and Passive Seismic

May

Global Exploration Hotspots

June

Leading Geosciences in a New Era

It is also possible to submit a Technical Article to First Break. Technical Articles are subject to a peer review process and should be submitted via EAGE’s ScholarOne website: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/fb

July

Modelling / Interpretation

August

Near Surface Geo & Mining

September

Reservoir Engineering & Geoscience

October

Energy Transition

November

Marine Acquisition

December

Data Management and Processing

You can find the First Break author guidelines online at www.firstbreak.org/guidelines.

More Special Topics may be added during the course of the year.

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FEATURE: WHATSUP!

Blowing hot and cold over the Energy Transition John M. Reynolds, Managing Director at Reynolds International Ltd., considers tidal range as a key renewable component of the Energy Transition. The challenge With unprecedented costs for electricity (£9,724/MWh), imminent blackouts amid insufficient energy supply, growing global geopolitical insecurity, and an increasingly evident climate crisis, the Energy Transition debate is more relevant than ever. The hydrocarbon industry is using its resources to develop carbon capture and storage, but this will only manage some of the CO2 being generated; it does not help to reduce the enormous volumes being produced. Similarly, in 2021 atmospheric concentrations of methane tripled in comparison with pre-industrial levels to more than 1,900 ppb. Methane is 20 times more damaging than CO2; 60% of anthropogenic methane is derived from burning fossil fuels, leaky landfills, and gaseous livestock. Modern society is producing too much greenhouse gas and is not doing enough to improve matters anything like as quickly as is required to keep the increase in global average temperatures to <2°C by 2050. Energy generation portfolio While hydrocarbons will remain important, electricity generation needs to be better able to cope with ever-growing demand while reducing its dependence on fossil fuels. The answer is not to rely as much as governments want on the intermittent energy sources such as wind and solar; more dependable baseload generation is required. Some argue that the answer lies with nuclear, but this is beset by technical challenges, escalating costs, and ever more delays. It also comes with a highly toxic legacy of nuclear waste. Similarly, wind and solar have their environmental costs too – what to do with old turbine blades (43.5 million tonnes to landfill by 2050) and end-of-life (EOL) solar panels? Recycle as

much as possible but continue to dispose the rest in landfills in ever growing numbers? The recently published UK government energy security policy loudly emphasised a renewed push for offshore wind development and more nuclear energy, despite the many issues. Yet governments have successively blown hot and cold in their energy policies, first ramping up capacity aspirations, then threatening windfall taxes on energy producers, and so on. Investors need a more stable environment in which to commit to what are inevitably long-term projects. There are no quick fix solutions. A solution? What is needed is a strategically balanced portfolio of energy production that provides energy security and dependence, flexibility to cope with short-term demands, and yet can produce the quantity and quality of base load generation. Clearly there are roles for nuclear as well as for offshore wind and solar power generation to increase installed generating capacity. Yet what is conveniently ignored by government and policy makers is the availability of a major resource right on the UK’s doorstep – tidal energy. The UK, and especially its western coastline, is blessed with some of the highest tidal ranges in the world. While significant progress is being made to develop tidal stream technology – using the lateral flow of tidal currents – it is more suited to smaller capacity energy production in dispersed island settings for example, between mainland Scotland and the Orkneys, rather than as a major energy producer for mainland grids. It is the use of the vertical changes in tidal height – low-head marine hydropower in tidal range – that could yield 10+GW of installed capacity in the UK within a

Figure 1 Artists’s impression of part of the North Wales Tidal Lagoon project infrastructure.

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ensure that power generation can be achieved on both the ebb and flow of each tide. Given the magnitude of the construction works, significant attention is also being paid to reducing the carbon footprint in as many different processes in the supply chain as possible (production of concrete, etc.), with the use of electric or even hydrogen-powered vehicles. Furthermore, unlike other forms of power generation, the lifespan of a tidal range project is typically >120 years and requires no decommissioning of the major infrastructure, thereby removing the environmental downside associated with other power generation techniques.

decade. Tides are predictable for many years ahead and dependable. With a fleet of tidal lagoons to take advantage of the phase lag in tides around the UK, continuous generation could be produced for ~18+ hours a day. When maximum tidal generation occurs out of phase with peak electricity prices, the cheap electricity can be used for electrolysis to produce truly green hydrogen. This can be used to generate more electricity and/or as a fuel itself, such as in public transport or directly by energy-hungry manufacturing industry. One of the most attractive proposed tidal range schemes in the UK is a 2.5 GW scheme proposed along the North Wales coast. In addition to power generation, such projects could provide much-needed protection against coastal flooding, so necessary with rising sea levels, as well as other additive benefits, such as aquaculture, local mussel fisheries, enhanced protection to safeguard vulnerable bird populations, and preservation of shallow marine habitats as the diurnal tidal range would be maintained. The scheme would also provide a tourist attraction through enhanced amenities and an educational visitor centre. It would help to preserve the sandy beaches for which North Wales is famous. An existing tidal range scheme has been operational successfully at La Rance in France for many decades but uses uni-directional flow turbines. Turbine manufacturers are currently developing dual-flow turbines to

Aspiration If the hydrocarbon industry wishes to diversify more effectively into renewable energy, the answer is not necessarily just blowing in the wind. It might be lapping around our ankles at the beach with each rise and fall of the tides. As geoscientists we are well placed to play our part in providing solutions to what is an existential climate crisis. We should all in our various roles do what we can to communicate and lobby to reduce CO2 emissions, diversify the energy generation portfolio to include tidal range, increase energy efficiency, and help to reduce the cost of electricity production and make the world a better place for future generations. Complacency is not an option!

Views expressed in this article are solely those of the author, who can be contacted at jmr@reynolds-international.co.uk

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CALENDAR

CALENDAR OF EVENTS 24-27 OCTOBER 2022

5th Asia Pacific Meeting on Near Surface Geoscience & Engineering Taipei, Taiwan www.eage.org

September 2022 5-7 Sep

ECMOR 2022 European Conference on the Mathematics of Geological Reservoirs www.ecmor.org

The Hague and online

Netherlands

7-8 Sep

Second EAGE Workshop on Advanced Seismic Solutions in the Gulf of Mexico www.eage.org

Ciudad de Mexico

Mexico

12-14 Sep

MEDiNA Technical Conference and Exhibition medinace.aapg.org

Tunis

Tunisia

13-15 Sep

EAGE Conference on Digital Innovation for a Sustainable Future www.eage.org

Bangkok

Thailand

14-16 Sep

Fourth HGS/EAGE Conference on Latin America www.eage.org

Cartagena

Colombia

18-22 Sep

Near Surface Geoscience Conference & Exhibition 2022 www.nsg2022.org

Belgrade

Serbia

19-21 Sep

Sixth EAGE High Performance Computing Workshop www.eage.org

Milan

Italy

26-28 Sep

Sixth International Conference on Fault and Top Seals faultandtopseals.org

Vienna

Austria

27-28 Sep

EAGE Workshop on Innovative Reservoir Modeling into Digital Proliferation www.eage.org

Kuala Lumpur

Malaysia

Cape Town

South Africa

October 2022 3-7 Oct

Africa Oil Week https://africa-oilweek.com/Home

4-6 Oct

IX Simpósio Brasileiro de Geofísica

Curitiba

Brazil

10-12 Oct

Sixth EAGE Eastern Africa Petroleum Geoscience Forum The future of petroleum geoscience in the Eastern African energy mix www.eage.org

Cape Town

South Africa

12-14 Oct

First EAGE Western Africa Exploration & Production Workshop Collaboration in frontier and emerging exploration in Western Africa www.eage.org

Cape Town

South Africa

12-14 Oct

Second EAGE Workshop on EOR in Latin America www.eage.org

Bogotá

Colombia

EAGE Events

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14-16 Oct

Baku 2022 Fourth international conference on Geology of the Caspian Sea and Adjacent Areas www.eage.org

Baku

Azerbaijan

24-27 Oct

5 th Asia Pacific Meeting on Near Surface Geoscience & Engineering www.eage.org

Taipei

Taiwan

26-28 Oct

First EAGE Guyana-Suriname Basin Conference Discoveries and Opportunities to Harness the Potential of a New Oil Patch www.eage.org

Georgetown

Guyana

28-31 Oct

Second EAGE Subsurface Intelligence Workshop www.eage.org

Manama

Bahrain

November 2022 3-4 Nov

Second EAGE Conference on Near Surface & Mineral Exploration in Latin America www.eage.org

Bogota

Colombia

7-9 Nov

EAGE GET 2022 3 rd EAGE Global Energy Transition Conference & Exhibition www.eageget.org

The Hague and online

Netherlands

14-15 Nov

Second EAGE Workshop on East Canada Offshore Exploration www.eage.org

St John’s

Canada

15-17 Nov

Sixth EAGE Rock Physics Workshop Impacts & Trends of the Digital Transformation www.eage.org

Riyadh

Saudi Arabia

21-22 Nov

First EAGE/SBGf Workshop on Reservoir Monitoring and its Role in the Energy Transition www.eage.org

Rio de Janeiro

Brazil

23-25 Nov

Third EAGE Conference on Pre Salt Reservoirs www.eage.org

Rio de Janeiro

Brazil

28-29 Nov

Asia Petroleum Geoscience Conference & Exhibition (APGCE) www.eage.org

Kuala Lumpur

Malaysia

28-30 Nov

Eighth EAGE Arabian Plate Core Workshop: From Play Concepts to Reservoir Heterogeneity www.eage.org

Dhahran

Saudi Arabia

28 Nov 1 Dec

South African Geophysical Association’s 17th Biennial Conference & Exhibition www.sagaconference.co.za

Sun City

South Africa

December 2022 1-2 Dec

Fourth EAGE Workshop on Unconventional Resources www.eage.org

Bogota

Colombia

5-7 Dec

2 nd EAGE Workshop on Fiber Optic Sensing for Energy Applications in Asia Pacific www.eage.org

Kuala Lumpur

Malaysia

6-8 Dec

2 nd EAGE/SEG Workshop on Geophysical Aspects of Smart Cities www.eage.org

Hong Kong

China

February 2023 15-17 Feb

Fifth EAGE Naturally Fractured Reservoirs Workshop www.eage.org

Aix-en-Provence

France

21-23 Feb

2 nd AAPG/EAGE Papua New Guinea Petroleum Conference & Exhibition www.eage.org

Port Moresby

Papua New Guinea

1-3 Mar

International Petroleum Technology Conference (IPTC) 2023 2023.iptcnet.org

Bangkok

Thailand

7-9 Mar

Middle East Oil, Gas and Geosciences Show 2023 www.meos-expo.com

Sanabis

Bahrain

Energy Geoscience Conference 2023 https://www.energygeoscienceconf.org/

Aberdeen

United Kingdom

84th EAGE Annual Conference & Exhibition www.eageannual.org

Vienna

Austria

March 2023

May 2023 16-18 May June 2023 5-8 Jun

EAGE Events

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