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3rd Edition - AAPG/EAGE Hydrocarbon Seals of the Middle East (On Demand)

Occurred Sunday, 12 December 2021 – Wednesday, 16 February 2022, 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.  |  Virtual Workshop via Swapcard (GST/GMT+4)

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What to Expect from the AAPG/EAGE Virtual Experience:

Due to the ongoing travel restrictions and differing guidelines from companies and organizations, the 3rd Edition of the AAPG/EAGE Hydrocarbon Seals of the Middle East GTW will now be taking place virtually from 12-16 December 2021 and then on-demand anytime, from anywhere, and from any device for the next 2 months. The workshop will provide the best opportunity to safely connect with industry colleagues and peers while travel restrictions, social distancing, and health concerns persist. The new dynamic all-digital platform makes it simple for you to access all the great science, networking, and technology to help you stay on the cutting edge of petroleum geoscience. Our businesses and industry are experiencing difficult times, but overcoming obstacles is what explorers do – so let’s do it together.

Benefits of our virtual events:

  • Easily view the live presentations, ask questions and chat with other attendees
  • Easily access the technical program and details of each presentation
  • View the profiles of each presenter
  • Participate in breakout discussion sessions
  • Networking with other attendees and schedule one on one meetings
  • Access to all the presentations for up to 2 months after the workshop
  • Access to a dedicated sponsorship page
  • Digital delegate bag and certificate of attendance

This five-day workshop has the primary goal to share knowledge, case studies, techniques and workflows pertaining to the understanding and prediction of hydrocarbon seals for exploration and production in the Middle East.

Seals are a fundamental element of any hydrocarbon accumulation, and can control trap integrity, migration and charge volumes; the lateral and vertical distribution of hydrocarbons in a trap; percent fill (or spill) of a reservoir; and the flow of hydrocarbons from the trap during production. As such, the long-term economic success or failure of an exploration to development project is very dependent on seal risking. Thus, consideration of subsurface hydrocarbon seals should have a high priority early on in any subsurface evaluation programme.

In many areas, despite the clear importance of seals, they often remain the least studied and integrated element of the petroleum system and are subject to lasting dogmas (e.g. the thicker the seal the greater its capacity to seal). Elements that contribute to making seals effective, such as lithology, their brittle-ductile nature, the hydrocarbon column length, the pressure regime and trap type will be reviewed.

Both vertical and lateral seals must be identified when exploring for subtle and stratigraphic traps. Seals created by faults and other types of seals will be reviewed. Quantification of effective seals and an ability to predict seal capacity before drilling is key to safe and successful exploring. In terms of seal assessment, understanding and predicting hydrocarbon seals is typically a multidisciplinary task requiring geosciences and engineering to collaborate on both dynamic and static data. In many areas of the Middle East our approach to understanding seals varies and it is now time to come together, share what we think and we know through the exchange of workflow, technique, and case study examples. The outcome of this workshop will enhance our collective understanding of hydrocarbon seals and our ability to develop new exploration concepts and make hydrocarbon discoveries.

Workshop Objectives

The workshop has a rich program of oral presentations and posters covering a variety of seal aspects. It will present integration cases of seismic, special core analysis, petrophysical, geochemical, pressure, and production data. Participants are expected to leave with knowledge and exposure to the following:

  • Regional and intraformational seals with field analogues
  • Sequence stratigraphic framework, facies and relationships to seal occurrences
  • Hydrocarbon seal architecture and capacity in carbonate, evaporite and clastic sequences
  • Static (capillary) and dynamic sealing capacity and hydrocarbon retention.
  • Integration of petrophysical, rock mechanics, seismic and engineering data for hydrocarbon seal assessment
  • The impact of structural geology & geomechanics on hydrocarbon seals
  • Sealing capacity of faults and implications for fluid flow modeling

 

Benefits of Attending

The workshop is an opportunity for attendees to receive up-to-date knowledge about hydrocarbon seals in exploration and production, exposure to regional case studies and to be introduced to workflows and techniques utilized for seal detection and capacity assessment. It is an opportunity to network and share experiences.

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Cora Navarro Marketing Manager - Middle East, Africa & Asia Pacific
Katie Steibelt Senior Events Manager, Middle East, Africa & Asia Pacific
Virtual Delegate Bag
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The American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) does not endorse or recommend any products and services that may be cited, used or discussed in AAPG publications or in presentations at events associated with AAPG.