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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for PESA - Energy Geoscience
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TZID:Australia/Perth
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DTSTART:20220101T000000
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DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Perth:20231114T110000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Perth:20231114T120000
DTSTAMP:20260607T195051
CREATED:20231108T141140Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231117T013959Z
UID:10008551-1699959600-1699963200@pesa.com.au
SUMMARY:2023 PESA WEBINAR SERIES: Seismic Source Rock Global Tour
DESCRIPTION:Kindly supported by Rock Flow dynamics  \n  \nThis live webinar will take place at: \n11am              – Perth\n12.30pm       – Darwin\n1pm                – Brisbane\n1:30pm          – Adelaide\n2pm                – Canberra\, Hobart\, Melbourne\, Sydney \nUse the calendar link on this page to add this event in to your own calendar at the correct local time for your location. \nTickets are free for members (please log in to see this) and $10 for non members. \nPlease buy your tickets and immediately follow the link in the ticket e-mail (not the calendar invite or this webpage\, which is just generic and not event specific) to set up your registration with the webinar software well in advance of the time of the talk. Once registered with the webinar software you will receive a reminder e-mail 1 hour beforehand. \nSeismic Source Rock Global Tour \nPresented by Neil Hodgson (Searcher) \nAbstract \n\n“There are no source rocks south of the Walvis Ridge” was not an uncommon phrase which sounded in the industry until quite recently. This myth was finally busted in 2022 when Shell and Total Energies respectively announced the giant Graff and Venus discoveries in the Orange Basin offshore Namibia. This was the grand finale of a long-standing debate in which model and data fought a hard battle. On the one hand\, there was a model that did not support the presence\, quality and maturity of source rocks over oceanic crust. On the other hand\, the novel approach of applying seismic source rock characterization in a frontier basin was pointing to the presence of a world class source rock generating hydrocarbons migrating into large traps (Rodriguez et al.\, 2023 EAGE Uruguay) \nIn the Loseth et al.\, 2011 publication“Can hydrocarbon source rocks be identified on seismic data?” compelling evidence using a significant amount of North Sea seismic and well data indicated that seismic data can be used to identify source rocks. \nUsing a full source rock de-risking methodology and access to a large global seismic dataset has enabled identification of source rocks on seismic. This presentation will be a guided tour around the seismic expression of source rocks in frontier basins around the world.
URL:https://pesa.com.au/events/2023-pesa-webinar-series-seismic-source-rock-global-tour/
LOCATION:SA
CATEGORIES:Industry,National,Online,Technical Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/avif:https://pesa.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/online-webinar-1.avif
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DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Perth:20231128T110000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Perth:20231128T120000
DTSTAMP:20260607T195051
CREATED:20231121T125755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231201T051815Z
UID:10008553-1701169200-1701172800@pesa.com.au
SUMMARY:PESA ETSIG/CSIRO CCS Knowledge Transfer Series: Installment 4
DESCRIPTION:PESA ETSIG/CSIRO CCS Knowledge Transfer Series: Installment 4 \nThe PESA Energy Transition Special Interest Group (ETSIG)\, in conjunction with CSIRO\, is running the “CCS Knowledge Transfer Series” which aims to cover geological and geophysical aspects of CCS\, focusing on the differences from oil and gas operations. \nFurther information about the series can be found here: \nhttps://pesa.com.au/events/etsig-csiro-ccs-knowledge-transfer-series/2023-09-05/ \n  \nKindly supported by: \n \n  \nThis live webinar will take place at: \n11am              – Perth\n12.30pm       – Darwin\n1pm                – Brisbane\n1:30pm          – Adelaide\n2pm                – Canberra\, Hobart\, Melbourne\, Sydney \n  \nUse the calendar link on this page to add this event in to your own calendar at the correct local time for your location. \nTickets are free for PESA members (please log in to see this)\, free for members of the AGA\, SPE\, AAPG (Asia-Pacific) and the EAGE (Asia-Pacific).  Tickets for non-members are $10 per episode. \nPlease buy your tickets and immediately follow the link in the ticket e-mail (not the calendar invite or this webpage\, which is just generic and not event specific) to set up your registration with the webinar software well in advance of the time of the talk. Once registered with the webinar software you will receive a reminder e-mail 1 hour beforehand. \n  \n  \nCCS Knowledge Transfer Series: Installment 4 \nStorage Resource Estimation and Injection Strategies – What’s Different About CCS? – Karsten Michael (CSIRO) \nAbstract \n\nFor the successful implementation and regulation of CO2 geological storage operations\, it is important to establish a reliable definition\, classification\, and estimation of storage resources.  For this purpose\, the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) released the CO2 Storage Resources Management System (SRMS) following the concept of its industry-standard Petroleum Resources Management System (PRMS). The SRMS considers both technical and commercial factors and the major storage resource classes with increasing data knowledge and chance of commerciality are: Inaccessible Storage Resources\, Prospective Storage Resources\, Contingent Storage Resources\, Capacity\, and Stored. The volumetric estimation of storage resources involves the interpretation of the subsurface which has an inherent degree of uncertainty. Fundamental for elevating storage resources to a storage capacity is the evaluation of containment of the stored CO2 and\, most importantly\, injectivity considerations. Here\, bigger is not necessarily better. Rather the capacity of a commercial CO2 storage operation needs to be sufficient to accept the planned volume of CO2 with emphasis on injection efficiency\, safety and economics. Hence\, actual injection or formation tests and containment assessment must provide a high confidence in the commercial injectability of the characterised geologic formation. Injectivity is constrained by the allowable bottom hole pressure\, which should be safely below the reservoir fracture pressure or the pressure capable to activate any faults in the vicinity of the storage complex. Storage capacity could be increased\, at a cost\, by managing reservoir pressure through water production wells. Other than in petroleum operations\, where production wells are generally completed at the top of the reservoir for production efficiency\, CO2 injectors placed at the bottom or at the downdip portion of the storage complex may be the most efficient strategy for achieving maximum storage capacity.
URL:https://pesa.com.au/events/pesa-etsig-csiro-ccs-knowledge-transfer-series-installment-4/
LOCATION:SA
CATEGORIES:Industry,National,Online,Technical Talk
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