Integrated Brownfield Opportunity Identification Using the Efficiency Factor Approach

Abstract
The long-term prosperity of oil and gas companies requires a constant influx of new volumes of producible oil and gas that can be developed to replace existing production. Without such activity it is inevitable that production will eventually fall as the resource base is gradually consumed The attractiveness of achieving more barrels from existing discovered fields has always been strong as it has long been recognized that such opportunities can be economically attractive and rapidly brought to fruition. It is also recognized however that such opportunities may be more complex relying both upon excellent subsurface understanding and successful brownfield project execution. It is therefore not surprising that in many cases actual recovery factors (produced volume/initial in-place volume) in oil and gas fields can be significantly less than what should be technically achievable. Identification of economically robust brownfield opportunities remains an industry challenge. In this paper we address this challenge by reporting a new workflow for brownfield opportunity identification leading to recovery factor improvement. Shell's Recovery Factor Improvement (RFI) Workflow was developed to address these issues and builds upon the existing best practice workflows to better explore and define the activities that would be required to achieve top quartile recovery factor performance. The workflow combines elements of various existing published approaches: (1) Shell's TQ-EUR Tool is an internal database that allows current and forecast recovery factor to be compared with that of analogue reservoirs using a reservoir complexity factor and key reservoir performance parameters as comparison criteria across the Shell portfolio. (2) An efficiency factor-based analysis of recovery factor; (3) a structured workshop to elicit new recovery factor improvement activities by addressing each individual efficiency factor in turn; (4) Consistent reporting of results. The combination of these approaches creates a powerful workflow to improve brownfield field opportunity identification and maturation. The RFI Workflow is intended to provide asset teams with a practicable and repeatable process that can be completed without specialist technical support or software to enable the identification of robust new opportunities. Experience with using the new workflow has demonstrated that it is able to bring new understanding to asset teams, consistently identify new opportunities and highlight common portfolio-wide opportunity types that would benefit from further central technology development funding.