BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//PESA - Energy Geoscience - ECPv6.16.2//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:PESA - Energy Geoscience
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://pesa.com.au
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for PESA - Energy Geoscience
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Australia/Perth
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0800
TZOFFSETTO:+0800
TZNAME:AWST
DTSTART:20230101T000000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Perth:20240402T110000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Perth:20240402T120000
DTSTAMP:20260607T135121
CREATED:20240327T012340Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240430T062346Z
UID:10008452-1712055600-1712059200@pesa.com.au
SUMMARY:PESA ETSIG/CSIRO CCS Knowledge Transfer Series: Installment 7
DESCRIPTION:PESA ETSIG/CSIRO CCS Knowledge Transfer Series: Installment 7 \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 7 \nMonitoring and Verification – What’s Different About CCS? – Charles Jenkins (CSIRO) \nAbstract \n\nMonitoring and verification is one of the most distinctive aspects of CCS\, but it is also one where there can be confusion about the nature and purpose of the activity. Any technical project will have methods for “monitoring and verifying”\, but this mindset can lead to the assumption that M&V is a technology problem. Monitoring methods\, be they geophysical\, geochemical\, or environmental\, are often at the forefront of discussion. In fact\, this distracts attention from the need clearly to identify the purpose of M&V.  Best practice in CCS sees M&V as a component of risk management\, with the challenge being to assess risk correctly and only then assign technologies for its management. This is particularly difficult in the area of environmental monitoring\, where CCS will occur within dynamic and evolving systems where causal chains are notoriously difficult to pin down. In this talk I will explain how to approach M&V as a part of managing the risks of CCS projects\, and suggest a definition of its scope.
URL:https://pesa.com.au/events/pesa-etsig-csiro-ccs-knowledge-transfer-series-installment-7/
LOCATION:SA
CATEGORIES:Industry,National,Online,Technical Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/avif:https://pesa.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Picture1.avif
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Perth:20240416T110000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Perth:20240416T120000
DTSTAMP:20260607T135121
CREATED:20240327T013156Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240327T013156Z
UID:10008454-1713265200-1713268800@pesa.com.au
SUMMARY:2024 PESA WEBINAR SERIES: Quantifying Subsurface Uncertainty - Facies Classification & Petrophysical Regression Examples
DESCRIPTION:Kindly supported by Rock Flow dynamics  \n  \nThis live webinar will take place at: \n11am              – Perth\n12.30pm       – Darwin\, Adelaide\n1pm                – Brisbane\, 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. \nQuantifying Subsurface Uncertainty – Facies Classification and Petrophysical Regression Examples \nPresented by Kushwant Singh (VGS & Associates) \nAbstract \n\nUncertainty or risk is conveyed by predictions sets and intervals rather than single predictions.\nConformal prediction specifies a coverage which specifies the probability that the outcome is covered by the prediction region.\nFor facies classification\, we get prediction sets – for numerical regression\, we get prediction intervals (P90-P50-P10\, etc.)
URL:https://pesa.com.au/events/2024-pesa-webinar-series-quantifying-subsurface-uncertainty/
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
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Perth:20240430T110000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Perth:20240430T120000
DTSTAMP:20260607T135121
CREATED:20240426T012023Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240430T065311Z
UID:10008574-1714474800-1714478400@pesa.com.au
SUMMARY:PESA ETSIG/CSIRO CCS Knowledge Transfer Series: Installment 8
DESCRIPTION:PESA ETSIG/CSIRO CCS Knowledge Transfer Series: Installment 8 \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\, Adelaide\n1pm                – Brisbane\, 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 8 \nGeophysical Monitoring – What’s Different About CCS? – James Gunning (CSIRO) \nAbstract \n\nMonitoring of CO2 movement is a vital part of project execution\, stakeholder engagement\, and social licence to operate in CCUS projects. Monitoring obligations are challenging because the injected fluid is of negligible commercial value compared to hydrocarbons\, whereas O&G operators in commercial fields have always the incentive of 4D monitoring to improve recovery\, in contrast to the generally defensive function of CCUS monitoring. Monitoring programs for CCS are invariably under pressure over costs\, mobilisation expenses\, frequency of acquisition\, and duration of obligations. This context provides incentives for lower cost methods\, and methods that might use permanent sensors to reduce survey costs.\n\nThe laws of physics describing the expected changes in geophysical responses are the same for CO2 and hydrocarbons of course\, but the unusual nature of CO2 at commercial depths makes its behaviour somewhat intermediate between methane and oil. Further\, typical injection scenarios are very unlike hypothetical reverse gas production\, and monitoring is typically focused on thin plumes driven predominantly by gravity forces. These factors make the surveillance of CO2 plumes often somewhat different in character to typical 4D oilfield workflows\, in addition to the expectations of reduced surface footprint and acquisition costs. In this talk I aim to rehearse some of the basic facts controlling the expected effect of CO2 presence on elastic and electromagnetic properties. The resulting effect of these changes on\nremotely detectable signals from controlled or passive sources will be discussed\, with particular attention to seismic\, our benchmark wavelike high-resolution method. I aim to illustrate the main findings  using published results on well-known CCUS projects. In addition\, a short survey of geophysical monitoring efforts using non-seismic methods\, such as diffusive or potential-fields methods using electromagnetic responses or geomechanics\, will further ornament the brief selection of published work.
URL:https://pesa.com.au/events/pesa-etsig-csiro-ccs-knowledge-transfer-series-installment-8-2/
LOCATION:SA
CATEGORIES:Industry,National,Online,Technical Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/avif:https://pesa.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/PESA-ETSIG-CSIRO-CCS-Knowledge-Transfer-Series.avif
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR