Interview with Hugh Winkler, Factor Technology

Smart Geosteering Continues to Break New Ground

Published
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)

A computed profile from the Wolfcamp B using Factor Drive. The dotted red line is the wellbore trajectory. The blue zone is the most probable geologic structure, while the red-orange field indicates uncertainty about that answer. The good agreement in the type log correlations at left and predicted LWD along the top confirm the plausibility of this structure.

Geosteering innovations continue to have dramatic breakthroughs in accuracy, efficiency, and real-time monitoring capabilities, thanks to pioneering work in analytics with new algorithms and approaches to machine learning. Welcome to an interview with Hugh Winkler, who will also be presenting at AAPG's U-Pitch New Technology Showcase, at IMAGE.

Hugh Winkler
Hugh Winkler

What is your name and your company?

Hugh Winkler, of Factor Technology.

What is the name of your new product, service, or process?

Factor Drive Computed Geosteering.

Why was it developed? What main problem is it designed to solve?

Geosteering, the science of landing a horizontal well in the target zone and keeping it there, wasn't being done scientifically. Geologists interpreted while-drilling data using art, intuition, and heuristics. They had desktop software to assist them drawing trial geologic structures, and evaluating the plausibility of those trial structures. But they had no way to explore the whole space of possible structures and simply compute the best one. They filled in the gaps using their geologic knowledge and intuition, and they did a good job. But they could be disastrously wrong, and even when working well, the trial-and-error approach doesn't scale. It's exhausting!

I published a Bayesian network solution to the geosteering problem in Geophysics; then I co-founded Factor, and we began commercializing that technology, because it changes the whole well positioning field. You pour your data in, you tell it some constraints, you punch a button, and out comes your answer, along with some quantitative guidance on the uncertainty.

What would you like to accomplish by participating in U-Pitch?

We'd like to develop awareness with technology scouts for oil companies.  We want to expand our base of early adopters. And we'd like to meet investors excited about using the potential of technologies like ours to drill and complete wells cheaper, and make them produce more.

What are your plans for the future?

In five years, everyone will compute geosteering interpretations. We're preparing to be the leader in that market, and to expand into adjacent spaces where our Bayesian network technology gives us a unique advantage.

Please name a person, book, or program that has influenced you in a positive way.

The University of Texas Jackson School and the U.T. Institute for Geophysics tolerated me as a grad student, beyond all reason, and the things I'm working on now are the direct application of inverse problem work I studied there long ago. My thesis supervisor, Paul Stoffa, hooked me on computational seismology, and showed by example how to think originally and back it up with theory and code.

What Can I Do?

Add Item

Enter Notes:
 
* You must be logged in to name and customize your collection.
Recommend Recommend
Printable Version Printable Version Email to a friend Email to a friend

See Also: ACE Program Paper

ACE Program Paper Exhibition Hall Using XRF, SEM and Pyrolysis for an Economic Appraisal of the Marcellus Formation of Western Pennsylvania for Fracking Purposes Using XRF, SEM and Pyrolysis for an Economic Appraisal of the Marcellus Formation of Western Pennsylvania for Fracking Purposes Desktop /Portals/0/images/ace/2015/luncheon heros/ace2015-tp1-unconventional.jpg?width=100&h=100&mode=crop&anchor=middlecenter&quality=75amp;encoder=freeimage&progressive=true 14952

See Also: Field Seminar

Field Seminar Facies and Mechanical Stratigraphy of the Cretaceous Platform Carbonates in the Sorrento Peninsula (Southern Apennines): Outcrop Analogues for Mesozoic Fractured Carbonate Reservoirs of the Tethyan Realm. Facies and Mechanical Stratigraphy of the Cretaceous Platform Carbonates in the Sorrento Peninsula (Southern Apennines): Outcrop Analogues for Mesozoic Fractured Carbonate Reservoirs of the Tethyan Realm. Desktop /Portals/0/PackFlashItemImages/WebReady/ft-eur-facies-and-mechanical-stratigraphy-of-the-cretaceous-hero.jpg?width=100&h=100&mode=crop&anchor=middlecenter&quality=75amp;encoder=freeimage&progressive=true 62384

See Also: Explorer Article

Explorer Article CCS and CCUS face many of the same challenges, but the U in CCUS provides revenue opportunities How the U Adds Value in CCUS How the U Adds Value in CCUS Desktop /Portals/0/PackFlashItemImages/WebReady/how-the-u-adds-value-in-ccus-hero.jpg?width=100&h=100&mode=crop&anchor=middlecenter&quality=75amp;encoder=freeimage&progressive=true 66934
Explorer Article Spurred by economic growth and geological similarities to recent discoveries in Africa, the Latin American country has become a sustainability leader and attracted the interest of many O&G leaders for its offshore project potential. Uruguay's Growth and Potential Uruguay's Growth and Potential Desktop /Portals/0/PackFlashItemImages/WebReady/a-model-for-energy-transition-hero.jpg?width=100&h=100&mode=crop&anchor=middlecenter&quality=75amp;encoder=freeimage&progressive=true 66714

See Also: Explorer Director’s Corner

Explorer Director’s Corner The recent pause on all pending LNG permit requests comes at a time when demand is expected to increase 50 percent by 2040. Biden Administration Hamstrings LNG Potential Biden Administration Hamstrings LNG Potential Desktop /Portals/0/PackFlashItemImages/WebReady/curtiss-david-large-aug22.jpg?width=100&h=100&mode=crop&anchor=middlecenter&quality=75amp;encoder=freeimage&progressive=true 66906