2016 Preliminary Event Guide
Transcript of 2016 Preliminary Event Guide
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REGISTER BY APRIL 29, 2016, AND SAVE $150 ON FULL CONFERENCE REGISTRATION!
INTEGRATION + INFORMATION + MANAGEMENT
20TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PETROLEUM DATA INTEGRATION, INFORMATION AND DATA MANAGEMENT
MAY 17-19, 2016HOUSTON, TEXAS
HOUSTON MARRIOTT WESTCHASE
WWW.PNECCONFERENCES.COM
Exploring emerging trends and promoting excellence in global petroleum data and information management.
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE
www.pnecconferences.comPNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE
I’d like to invite you to the 20th International Conference on Petroleum Data, Integration and Data Management (PNEC)!
This year I have the privilege of chairing the advisory board for the 2016 PNEC conference. The board this year has been very active discerning a keynote speaker, a mission statement, and assembling a collection of quality presentations that will be intriguing, informative and relevant. This includes papers on Data Governance and Standards, Emerging Technical Trends, Strategies, Solutions, Subsurface, Field and Facility, Master Data and Analytics. The conference this year will explore specifically how operators are using data analytics as a competitive differentiator.
The 2015 Conference & Exhibition had the largest-to-date exhibit hall floor of more than 5,500 square feet and 52 exhibitors. More than 651 attendees from 27 countries and 18 states participated with 82% of them rating the quality of the conference above average. Given the current market, we hope that participants will continue to experience this 3-day event that provides opportunities to hear several topics that impact the sector across the globe.
Speakers will share real issues, best practices, developments, case studies and advances that address ever-expanding and complex data demands in today’s oil and gas industry. Upcoming changes in key technologies and visions on data management “looking forward” will also be discussed. In the exhibition hall you’ll find services and technologies that place our dynamic industry on the “fast-track” to the future.
The conference is a community gathering and truly a great opportunity to meet face-to-face with industry peers you already know, and make new acquaintances and contacts.
On behalf of the Advisory Board, PennWell, and our exhibitors and sponsors, I thank you for your participation and continued support of the PNEC Conference, and invite you to come and join us at the 2016 conference in Houston, TX.
Sincerely,
Joel AllardAdvisory Board ChairmanPrincipal Subsurface Data Management Specialist, Analysis & Improvement, Information Systems, USA, BHP Billiton
INVITATION FROM
ADVISORY BOARD CHAIR
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016 1www.pnecconferences.com
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 Who Should Attend
1 4 Ways to Register
2 Schedule of Events
3 2016 Advisory Board
42016 Sponsors and Supporting Organizations
Sponsorship Opportunities
5 Exhibition Opportunities
6 Mobile Event App - download it now!
7-24 Preliminary Conference Program
25-26 Registration Form
27 Housing Request Form
28-29 Floor Plan and Exhibitor List
30 Event Contacts
Who should attend Petroleum Network Education Conference’s 20th International Conference and Exhibition on Data Integration, Information and Data Management?Decision makers interested in enhancing profitability and productivity using petroleum data management and integration.
REGISTER AS A FULL CONFERENCE DELEGATE BY APRIL 29TH AND SAVE $150!For more information, visit www.pnecconferences.com/register
• Data & InformationManagement Professionals
• Data Standards Providers
• Application Specialists
• Information TechnologyProfessionals
• Software and Service Providers
• Petroleum Executives
• Geoscientists
• Regulators
4 WAYS TO REGISTER: 1. ONLINE:www.pnecconferences.com/register.html
Download the Registration Form at www.pnecconferences.com/register.html or fill out the form found on page 28 of this guide, and submit via:
2. FAX:Direct: +1 918 831 9161Toll-Free (US only): +1 888 299 8057
3. EMAIL:[email protected]
4. MAIL:PennWell C&E Registration (PNEC)P.O. Box 973059Dallas, TX 75397-3059 USA
FOR QUESTIONS, PLEASE CALL:Direct: +1-918-831-9160Toll-Free: +1-888-299-8016
PNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE2 www.pnecconferences.com
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS MONDAY, MAY 16
3:00 PM – 5:00 PM Exhibitor Move-in3:00 PM – 5:00 PM Registration Open
TUESDAY, MAY 177:00 AM – 6:30 PM Registration Open
7:00 AM – 11:00 AM Exhibitor Move-in7:00 AM – 7:55 AM Continental Breakfast8:00 AM – 9:00 AM Keynote Session 9:00 AM – 9:40 AM Coffee Break
9:45 AM – 11:45 AM Concurrent Conference Sessions 11:45 AM – 6:30 PM Exhibit Hall Open11:45 AM – 1:15 PM Luncheon
1:15 PM – 2:45 PM Concurrent Conference Sessions2:45 PM – 3:25 PM Coffee Break3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Concurrent Conference Sessions 5:00 PM – 6:30 PM Exhibit Hall Networking Reception
WEDNESDAY, MAY 187:00 AM – 6:00 PM Registration Open7:00 AM – 7:55 AM Continental Breakfast8:00 AM – 9:30 AM Concurrent Conference Sessions9:15 AM – 6:00 PM Exhibit Hall Open
9:30 AM – 10:10 AM Coffee Break10:15 AM – 11:45 AM Concurrent Conference Sessions
11:45 AM – 1:15 PM Luncheon1:15 PM – 2:45 PM Concurrent Conference Sessions 2:45 PM – 3:25 PM Coffee Break3:30 PM – 5:00 PM Conference Session5:00 PM – 6:00 PM Exhibit Hall Networking Reception
THURSDAY, MAY 197:00 AM – 12:30 PM Registration Open
7:00 AM – 7:55 AM Continental Breakfast8:00 AM – 9:30 AM Conference Session9:15 AM – 1:15 PM Exhibit Hall Open
9:30 AM – 10:10 AM Coffee Break10:15 AM - 12:00 PM Conference Session 12:00 PM – 1:15 PM Awards Luncheon & Drawings
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016 3www.pnecconferences.com
2016 CONFERENCE ADVISORY BOARDJoel Allard Advisory Board Chair, Principal Subsurface Data Management Specialist, Analysis & Improvement, Information Systems, USA, BHP Billiton
Philip Benyeogor Subsurface Data Lead GoM, BP America Inc.
John Berkin Technical Advisor & Information Engineering Discipline Career Manager, Schlumberger
Dan Boltz IT Programmer/Applications Analyst Advisor, Apache Corporation
Cindy Crouse Conference Mentor, Philip C. Crouse and Associates, Inc.
Trudy Curtis CEO, PPDM Association
Robin Dupre Conference Director, PennWell
Fabio Feneri E&P Information Management Coordinator, eni SpA Upstream and Technical Services
Justin Frost Senior Geophysicist, Statoil
Janet Hicks Sr. Manager, Solutions Marketing - Information Management, Halliburton/Landmark Landmark
John Jacobs Geophysical Data Manager, Anadarko Petroleum Corp.
Achim Kamelger Enterprise Architect, CIO IT Strategy & Architecture, OMV
Jawad Khalaf IT Applications-Systems Specialist, Saudi Aramco
Sean Nichols Senior Data Scientist, AEPB, American Energy Partners
Cora Poche Team Lead, Data Management and Geomatics Americas, Shell International Exploration & Production Inc.
Ton Ruijgrok Senior Geoinformation Manager, Total
Jana Schey Chief Operating Officer, Energistics
Scott Schneider President, EnergyIQ Exchange
Cynthia Schwendeman Data Management Advisor, Hess Corporation
Daljit Singh Senior Manager, Petroleum Engineering Data, Technical Global, Petronas
Ray Wall Global Chief, E&P Technical Data, ConocoPhillips
Wayne I. Wilkerson Manager Regional Data Support - Americas, ExxonMobil
PNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE4 www.pnecconferences.com
2016 SPONSORS AND SUPPORTING ORGANIZATIONS (as of 1/15/2016)
SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIESTake advantage of a variety of sponsorship opportunities designed to increase your visibility atthe International Conference on Petroleum Data Integration, Information and Data Management.Sold on a first-come, first-served basis, sponsorship packages ensure prominent exposure of your company’s product or brand to a key audience of decision makers. Choose one of our exclusive packages or work with our team to create a package customized to fit your specific needs. With a sponsorship you get maximum branding, recognition and return on investment.
ALL SPONSORS RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING ADDED VALUES:• Sponsor logo & sponsorship included
in multi-sponsor slide presented prior to plenary and conference sessions
• Sponsor logo placed on “Sponsor’s Page” in Preliminary Event Guide and Show Guide
• Opportunity to include literature, provided by sponsor, in delegate bags
• Sponsor Logo included on all on-site event signage as deemed appropriate by event management
• Sponsor logo and hyperlink placed on event website
2016 AVAILABLE SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES• Full Sponsorship with
Exhibit Space
• Full Sponsorship – Operator – SOLD
• Full Sponsorship – Independent Operator
• Delegate Bag Sponsorship
• Badge Holder Sponsorship – SOLD
• Conference eProceedings Sponsorship – SOLD
• Branding
• Break Sponsorship (Tuesday – SOLD, Wednesday, Thursday)
• Tuesday Continental Breakfast
• Wednesday Continental Breakfast
• Thursday Continental Breakfast
• Tuesday Luncheon
• Wednesday Luncheon
• Thursday Luncheon
• Tuesday Opening Reception
• Wednesday Networking Reception
• Registration & Fast Track Sponsorship
eProceedings Sponsor:
Badge Holder Sponsor:Landmark
Full Sponsorship with Exhibit Space
Full Sponsorship with Exhibit Space:
Full Sponsorship with Exhibit Space:
Full Sponsorship with Exhibit Space:
Full Conference Sponsor - Operator:
Tuesday Break Sponsor:
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016 5www.pnecconferences.com
EXHIBITION OPPORTUNITIESBook your exhibit space now for the best selection of exhibit locations!The 2015 event hosted 651 attendees from 27 countries. Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to showcase your product or service!
TYPES OF PRODUCTS & SERVICES ON DISPLAYAttendees will be researching and seeking products and services within the following disciplines:
• Integration and Processes• Cost Effective Solutions• Security and Archival• IM and Governance
• Cloud-Web Options• Interoperability• Proactive Data Sharing
• Quantity Management• Enterprise Architecture• Standards
EXHIBITORS RECEIVE:• Two (2) complimentary exhibitor delegate
registrations per exhibiting company
• Company and booth listing on the event website, and 35 word/200 character listing in the event show guide
• Extensive event advertising in industry-leading magazines including Oil and Gas Journal and Offshore
• Booth backdrop, side dividers and company identification sign
COST TO EXHIBITOPTION 1: EXHIBIT SPACE ONLYExhibit space only rate is USD $34.50 per sq. ft. The Exhibit Space only rate includes one (1) 8’ draped back wall, and two (2) 3’ drape side walls.
OPTION 2: TURNKEY BOOTH PACKAGE The Turnkey Booth Package rate is USD $39.75 per sq. ft. The Turnkey Booth Package includes the Exhibit Space as detailed above, as well as one (1) 6’ skirted table; two (2) standard chairs, one (1) trashcan, and one (1) 110 amp power drop.
For information on exhibiting and sponsorship, please contact: SARA LOWERY NG United States & Europe Phone: +1 713 963 6277Cell: +1 713 725 8536Email: [email protected]
For information on listing packages, please contact: LAUREN BRENNER Phone: +1 918 832-9276Fax: +1 918 831 9729Email: [email protected]
PACKAGES & RATES
BASIC$275
GOLD$495
PLATINUM$995
ELITE$1,995
Company Description
Online
50 words/300 char max
100 words/800 char max
150 words/1000 char max
150 words/1000 char max
Company Description in
Show Guide
35 words/250 char max
75 words/550 char max
150 words/1000 char max
150 words/1000 char max
PNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE6 www.pnecconferences.com
1. Search for and download the PNEC mobile app.
Search for “PNEC” in the App Store or Google Play.
2. Plan your entire day all from within the app.
HERE YOU WILL FIND:• Conference information• Interactive floor plan• Exhibitor profiles• Special events• Events social feed• Favorites• Notifications/Alerts• And much more... All in the palm of your hand!
With so much going on at this year’s event, we’ve made it easier and more convenient for you to maximize your event experience. Get the latest information on-the-go with the mobile event app!
DOWNLOAD THE MOBILE EVENT APP TODAY
For more information on how to stay connected, visit www.pnecconferences.com/event-info
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016 7www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
TUESDAY, MAY 17, 20167:00 – 7:55 a.m. Continental Breakfast – Salon E-H
8:00 – 9:00 a.m. OPENING PLENARY SESSION – Salon A
WELCOME & INTRODUCTIONCONFERENCE MANAGEMENTRobin Dupre, Conference Director and Offshore Sr. Technology Editor; PennWell, USA
Robin Dupre is Sr. Technical Editor of Offshore magazine, a monthly publication that covers key issues and trends relative to offshore upstream oil and gas operations, as well as Domestic Editorial Conference Director of four PennWell conferences. Dupre has 11 years of experience publishing content for print and online platforms, and she has spent the last 7 years covering the oil and gas industry.
ADVISORY BOARD CHAIR’S OPENING REMARKSJoel Allard, Principal Subsurface Data Management Specialist, Analysis & Improvement, Information Systems; BHP Billiton, USA
In 2007, Joe Allard joined BHP Billiton Petroleum serving in various capacities as a senior specialist; supervisor; manager; and principal. In his time at BHP Billiton, Allard has directly supported exploration and production teams providing well and seismic data management and well analysis as an embedded resource. He has supervised a team of embedded resources and master subsurface data management and has served on geoscience data management and subsurface project steering committees. As a principal subsurface data management specialist, he currently oversees development of the seismic master data management solution for BHP Billiton.
Allard currently serves as Advisory Board Chairman for the 2016 PNEC conference after serving several years on the advisory board.
KEYNOTE PRESENTATION CONOCOPHILLIPS DRILLS DOWN INTO ANALYTICSRichard Barclay, Manager, Analytics Innovation; ConocoPhillips, USA
Richard Barclay is the Analytics Innovation Manager for ConocoPhillips.
Barclay has more than 30 years of experience in the energy business including management roles in the downstream, midstream and upstream segments of the business. He started his career with Atlantic Richfield (ARCO) implementing process control and SCADA systems, and has worked many years on both the applications and infrastructure sides of the business.
Barclay has been with ConocoPhillips since 2012, managing the IT infrastructure and operations group for three years before moving to his current role. He earned BA and MA degrees from the University of Chicago in 1979 and 1983.
9:00 – 9:40 a.m. COFFEE BREAK – Salon E-H
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PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
TUESDAY, MAY 17, 20169:45 – 11:45 a.m. SESSION 1: TRACK 1 - SALON A
CHAIR: Justin Frost, Senior Geophysicist; Statoil, Canada
9:45 – 10:15 a.m.Trusted Data Journey of Shell’s Wells, Reservoir and Facility Management (WRFM) using Standardization & Replication
Sushma Bhan, GM, WRFM/Production Technical Data; Shell, USA
Well, Reservoir and Facility Management (WRFM) is the process of using asset interventions and decisions based on “trusted’ technical data in order to maximize production. WRFM operates under the simple principle of “anything that can be measured can be improved,” and this principle is realized through five steps of “Standardization and Replication” which is uniform across global assets in Shell.
10:15 – 10:45 a.m. Improving Business Decisions through a Practical and Robust Data Governance Framework
Dale Blue, Senior Consulting Manager; Landmark, USA
Making the most of today’s complex data environments requires well defined organizational structures, procedures and policies in addition to data management technology. Establishing a robust Data Governance framework enables organizations to build a strong data foundation to underpin their core business operations. This presentation begins with establishing a solid understanding of what Data Governance is and what it is not and then goes on to provide practical measures that companies can undertake to implement a scalable data governance framework in their organization.
10:45 – 11:15 a.m. Saudi Aramco Exploration Data Quality Improvement Program
Tawfeeq AlFaraj, Consultant; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaJawad, AlKhalaf, Consultant; Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia
Data is the “lifeblood” for all organizations across all industries. One common business goal among major businesses throughout different industries is to improve their data quality. This paper will detail how Saudi Aramco developed and implemented a data quality improvement program for the exploration organization.
11:15 – 11:45 a.m.E&P Industry Resiliency Requires an Analytics Value Chain Enabled through an Agile, Integrated and Modular Data Platform
Satyam Priyadarshy, Chief Data Scientist; Halliburton, USA
The recent drop in oil prices has changed the E&P industry landscape. Companies are looking for ways to bring costs downs and improve efficiencies and leverage existing assets. Other industries have successfully created value from their dark data by implementing a complete analytics value chain. This paper will present the E&P analytics value chain and how it creates value beginning with simple analytics to big data analytics to cognitive analytics. Effectively leveraging the analytics value chain requires a new approach to a data and information management platform. The next generation platform requires agility, modularity, and integration, so it can adapt to emerging technologies, data sources and data-driven analytics, throughout the E&P lifecycle.
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PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
TUESDAY, MAY 17, 20169:45 – 11:45 a.m. SESSION 1: TRACK 2 – SALON D
CHAIR: Wayne Wilkerson, Manager Regional Data Support – Americas; ExxonMobil, USA
9:45 – 10:15 a.m. Adopting the Logical Data Warehouse Architecture for Upstream Information Content
Hakan Sarbanoglu, Senior Upstream Enterprise Architect; Chevron, USA
Effectively managing the vast variety of upstream information content, which includes massive document management and operational surveillance data management components, as well as the usual structured data management, requires deploying multiple information management patterns in harmony. Leading Enterprise Architects have reached a conclusion that enterprise wide complex information management can be achieved by deploying repositories, virtualization and big data distributed processing methods side by side as equal peers, not as alternatives to each other and enforce these three key technologies with taxonomy management, performance monitoring, information service level management and meta-data management capabilities. This architecture style is called logical data warehousing and this paper introduces how this style can be adopted for upstream information management.
10:15 – 10:45 a.m. Is Traditional Data Management Still Relevant?
Jim Crompton, Upstream Advisor; Noah Consulting, USAGlen Sartain, Big Data Practice Lead; Noah Consulting, USA
With all the hype of emerging big data technologies and advanced analytics platforms, one important item seems to get overlooked -- data management. While data management of exploration and production is nothing new, there are several aspects of big data and advanced analytics that challenge traditional data management approaches. This paper will examine those issues and will address the question: is traditional data management still relevant?
10:45 – 11:15 a.m.Effective Data Readiness and Integration for Parallel G&G Toolkit and Corporate Data Repository Deployment
Jeremy Eade, Subsurface Data Lead; BP Lower 48, USARicardo Bohorquez, Subsurface Data Specialist; BP Lower 48 Onshore, USA
In 2015, BP’s Lower 48 Onshore business unit deployed a new G&G toolkit and a new Corporate Data Repository. We share data migration and integration best practices and lessons learned from running both projects in parallel.
11:45 a.m. – 1:15 p.m. LUNCH – Exhibit Hall
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PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
TUESDAY, MAY 17, 20161:15 – 2:45 p.m. SESSION 2: TRACK 1 – SALON A
CHAIR: John Jacobs, Geophysical Data Manager; Anadarko Petroleum Corporation, USA
1:15 – 1:45 p.m. Overcoming “Bad Data” Anxiety: How to Build Trust in the Data That Drives Your Business
William “BJ” Cummings, Executive Director, EnerHub; Stonebridge Consulting, USA
Persistent data quality (DQ) problems do more than create explicit and hidden costs; they also cause “bad data” anxiety as data consumers can’t trust in the data they use to make business decisions. There are powerful DQ tools available that, combined with best practice-based rules and process automation, help ensure high-quality data integration by flagging data violations and tracking DQ in a way that builds organizational trust. This session will provide tangible ideas and approaches for implementing rule-based DQ standards and tools in order to elevate DQ as a corporate competency.
1:45 – 2:15 p.m.Best Practices - Integrating Assets, People and Data – an Emerging Success Story in the Midst of the Oil Price Decline
Thomas Belsha, Integration Manager; LINN Energy, USA Christina LeBlanc, Manager - IT Integration & Enterprise Data; LINN Energy, USALiz van der Laag, Data Management Consultant; Noah Consulting, USA,Prasanna Balakrishnan, MDM Architect; Noah Consulting, USA
Good quality data given to talented people can create significant business value. The approach to gaining organizational consensus, engagement, effectively cleansing the data and building the capability to sustain high quality data over time are vital to creating and delivering that value.
2:15 – 2:45 p.m.A to Z Production Optimization of KOC Oil Fields / Wells Using Field Data Quality & Optimization System (FDQOS) Based on Mathematical Programming Techniques
Khawar Qureshey, Senior Engineer - Petroleum Data; Kuwait Oil Company, Kuwait
Field Data Quality and Optimization System (FDQOS) provides production strategies of oil and gas throughout the Kuwait for the day ahead. The FDQOS system generates multiple production related scenarios based on KOC Management and end user requirements.
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016 11www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
TUESDAY, MAY 17, 20161:15 – 2:45 p.m. SESSION 2: TRACK 2 – SALON D
CHAIR: Daljit Singh, Senior Manager, Petroleum Engineering Data, Technical Global; Petronas, Malaysia
1:15 – 1:45 p.m Information Management Strategy at OMV – Explore Data, Refine Information
Achim Kamelger, Chief Enterprise Architect; OMV AG, Austria
Based on the reviewed information strategy for OMV we present the main architecture building blocks and initiatives to address the challenges in terms of both data volumes and frequency from emerging technologies and the increased need for information integration.
1:45 – 2:15 p.m. BHP Billiton Petroleum Gravity & Magnetic Data Management
Alma Rodriguez, Geoscience Technical Analyst; BHP Billiton Petroleum Co., USA
By implementing a geophysical data management solution, BHP Billiton facilitated the use and integration of gravity and magnetic data from current and future exploration projects for the company’s geoscience community. This information will be presented.
2:15 – 2:45 p.m.Virtual Data Integration: Creating Environments that Enable Asset Optimization through Engineering Workflow Automation in Months, Not Years
Drew Lafleur, Engineering Coordinator, MCBU iOF; ConocoPhillips, USA
Optimizing an asset requires a holistic approach, can strain resource pools, and take years to implement. Integration of multi-discipline data sets that have many different data types is required, with different frequencies and formats. This presentation will discuss how operating philosophy and virtual data integration can enable holistic asset management/optimization and be achieved in months, not years.
2:45 – 3:25 p.m. COFFEE BREAK – Exhibit Hall
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PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
TUESDAY, MAY 17, 20163:30 – 5:00 p.m. SESSION 3: TRACK 1 – SALON A
CHAIR: Jana Schey, Chief Operating Officer; Energistics, USA
3:30 – 4:00 p.m.Technical and Adoption Benefits Brought by a Public Domain Tool to Explore and Validate RESQML V2 Standard EPC Instances
Mathieu Poudret, Research Engineer, Project Manager; Geosiris, FranceBeiting Zhu-Colas, Research Engineer, Project Manager; Geosiris, FranceMara Abel, Professor; UFRGS, BrazilAlexandre Lorenzatti, Project Manager; UFRGS, Brazil
This presentation describes the public domain tools that the RESQML community is offering for allowing developers and end users to validate RESQML EPC instances written and read by RESQML users: software vendors (Paradigm, Schlumberger, and others), petroleum companies (Total, Shell, Chevron) owning proprietary products or international research centres.
The RESQML Explorer/Validator here presented helps to certify the conformity of RESQML V2 Instances with respect to the XSD schema and to additional business rules by semantically controlling both the relationships that are in the heart of RESQML V2 and other semantic or numeric constraints textually described in the documentation.
4:00 – 4:30 p.m. Importance of International Standard and its Application in Safety Studies
Pankaj Tiwari, Executive Engineer; ONGC, India
Any standard gives a guideline to do work in a lucid and an efficient way, otherwise it becomes a cumbersome project to do any kind of work in this world. It frames a boundary in which you have to work. Without this, any organisations cannot thrive nor work properly. In my view, standards are like holy books like Gita, Bible, and the Quran that they solemnly remind us of our duties and of the prescriptions of legitimate disciplines. In the same way that if we follow the proper standard for any work than we get a sense of relief that we are doing that work safely, efficiently and in a legitimate manner.
4:30 – 5:00 p.m. Transfer Standards v2.0 Enable Data Management
Jay Hollingsworth, Chief Technology Officer; Energistics, USAJill Lewis, Managing Director; Troika International, UK
Effective data management is basically impossible without well-known data transfer standards. The next generation of transfer standards – Standards v2.0 – from SEG and Energistics are crafted to provide data managers with the data and metadata they need to implement proper data management processes. The paper will describe the new standards, their scope and the workflows they support.
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016 13www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
TUESDAY, MAY 17, 20163:30 – 5:00 p.m. SESSION 3: TRACK 2 – SALON D
CHAIR: Fabio Feneri, E&P Information Management Coordinator; Eni SpA Upstream and Technical Services, Italy
3:30 – 4:00 p.m. Data Updatability
David Heath, VP Architecture; Drilling Info, USA
In the dynamic energy market, oil companies require software that can handle large amounts of data and be easily updated with new information. In this session, we will demonstrate how DI Transform has simplified data loading by creating a rules based engine to handle conflicts between new and existing data.
4:00 – 4:30 p.m. Management of the Change of Operation Classification Coding System for the Next Leap
Mustafa Amer, Drilling Engineer; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaAmmar Fakhruddin, Petroleum Engineer/Sys Analyst; Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia Ibrahim Shehri, Petroleum Engineer/Sys Analyst; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaWilliam Contreras, Drilling Engineer; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaJoseph Canlas, IT APPL/Sys Specialist Saudi Aramco; Saudi ArabiaMohammed Hazzazi, Supvr Info Analysis and Intgn; Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia Mohammed Nefai, Pet Engrg Sys Consultant; Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia
Although drilling data has been available from the daily drilling reports, the process of performance analysis to extract knowledge and identify potential improvements has been a challenge by operations coding system limitations. These limitations require moving to a new coding system to overcome these barriers and cover any shortfalls. This paper will highlight how Saudi Aramco managed a major change in their drilling data classification system and how different challenges accompanying this change were tackled.
4:30 – 5:00 p.m.Case Study: How Energen Is Benefiting from Integrated Business Operations Across Its Enterprise
Grant Eggleton, Vice President, Production Solutions; P2 Energy Solutions, USAHarry Rush, IT Manager; Energen, USA
Based in Birmingham, AL, Energen is a low-cost producer of oil, natural gas, and NGLs that is helping redefine what a complex and fast-paced industry demands of its participants. Streamlined workflows, prudent decisions backed by accurate data, real-time visibility into operations, a single source of the truth, strong cost control – these are what the upstream industry now expects. And, with integrated business operations serving as its foundation, Energen is more than delivering.
5:00 - 6:30 p.m. NETWORKING RECEPTION - Exhibit Hall
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PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 20167:00 – 7:55 a.m. Continental Breakfast – Salon E-H
8:00 – 9:30 a.m. SESSION 4: TRACK 1 – SALON ACHAIR: John Berkin, Technical Advisor & Information Engineering
Discipline Career Manager; Schlumberger, UK
8:00 – 8:30 a.m. Implementing a Systemic Culture of Safety: The Role of IT
Dr. Scott Shemwell, Managing Director; The Rapid Response Institute, USA
The industry is in the process of implementing the required culture of safety across its supply chain. This paper addresses the role of information technology to assure that some 3,500 or more suppliers assure operators remain compliant with the tenets of a culture of safety and regulatory requirements.
8:30 – 9:00 a.m. The Internet of Things: The Revolution will be Digitized
Steve Matthews, Partner - Industry Consulting; Teradata, USA
At 20 years old, PNEC is older than Google, Facebook, and Amazon. The consumer world has been revolutionized during the past two decades, and now the same disruption is coming to the industry. The Internet of Things promises to be a business revolution that will fundamentally restructure the way that B2B companies operate. Just like any other revolution, it will be messy, confusing, and chaotic. But it might be exactly the opportunity you have been craving.
9:00 – 9:30 a.m. Recognition of Well Candidates to Optimize/Intervene through Data Analytics
Francisco Eremiev, System Engineer; Schlumberger, EcuadorCarlos Javier Escalona Quintero, Petroleum Engineer; Schlumberger, Ecuador
Based on the principle of improving the performance of wells whose production is falling outside the tolerated limit, it is possible to develop a system to process, integrate and present all the needed information that will facilitate the quick and easy identification of such wells, through the behaviour of the deviations. This solution can improve the response time of the engineers. The system based on this structure facilitates an easy and quick way to identify, future or current problems, without having to rely on a high demanding and time-consuming process to gather, compute and analyze the data.
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016 15www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 20168:00 – 9:30 a.m. SESSION 4: TRACK 2 – SALON D
CHAIR: Achim Kamelger, Enterprise Architect, CIO IT Strategy & Architecture; OMV, Austria
8:00 – 8:30 a.m. Digital Oilfield Ten Years On: A Literature Review
Peter Black, Managing Director; EnergySys Limited, Scotland
This paper reviews all of the published papers on Digital Oilfield in the last decade, and summarizes the results. This includes the application areas, the benefits claimed, and any broader lessons. Based on this data, we attempt to identify the areas that should be the focus for the future.
8:30 – 9:00 a.m. FBHP Prediction Tool to Improve Production Surveillance in Deepwater Operations
Akash Sharma, Graduate Researcher; University of Houston, USAEbenezer Ageh, Senior Production Engineering Advisor & Production Engineering Manager; Hess Corporation, USA
This work shows the implementation of simple data products into production surveillance processes and how this integration greatly improves the quality of analysis and decision making capabilities for any oil and gas operation. Gulf of Mexico has been taken as an example and the implementation strategy is discussed.
9:00 – 9:30 a.m.Identifying and Broadcasting Early Warnings through Conditional Events - An Illustrative Workflow
Seetharam Sethupathi Arumugam, Principal Consultant; Infosys Ltd., USA
This work shows the implementation of simple data products into production surveillance processes and how this integration greatly improves the quality of analysis and decision making capabilities for any oil and gas operation. Gulf of Mexico has been taken as an example and the implementation strategy is discussed.
9:30 – 10:10 a.m. COFFEE BREAK - Exhibit Hall
PNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE16 www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 201610:15 – 11:45 a.m. SESSION 5: TRACK 1 – SALON A
CHAIR: Ton Ruijgrok, Senior Geoinformation Manager; Total, France
10:15 – 10:45 a.m. The Value of Seismic Data Management Leading Practice at ConocoPhillips
Brackin Smith, L48 Geophysics Coordinator; ConocoPhillips, USAPaloma Urbano, IT Director, E&P Data Management Portfolio & Strategy; ConocoPhillips, USARay Wall, Global Chief, E&P Technical Data; ConocoPhillips, USA
ConocoPhillips spends millions of dollars every year on seismic data in support of our organic growth. The multiple stakeholders that deal with this data - exploration, development, geophysical technology, data management, land, legal, finance, procurement - each have unique processes which impact the data flow between them. We describe our efforts to define ConocoPhillips Seismic Data Management leading practice, which encompasses four areas: technology, data quality and standards, seismic data management workflow and stakeholder alignment. We will share our findings in each of the four areas and the steps to move into the current operational state.
10:45 – 11:15 a.m.A Brief Discussion of Metadata Capture for Elements and Physical Assets in an E&P Data Repository/Center
Brian Richardson, Director Data Applications; The Information Store USA, Inc., USA
E&P physical assets are created as the result of actions undertaken by a company’s employees or those of a subcontractor. All of the E&P physical assets are directly or indirectly related to E&P elements about which data are maintained in the corporate E&P data repository. The capture of pertinent metadata for each physical asset, uploading and linkage of associated images and files in native application format, and linkage to E&P elements enables rapid data interrogation and connectivity to the corporate master E&P database.
11:15 – 11:45 a.m. Optimizing IT for $50 per Barrel of Oil
Lawrence Eribarne, Director; Enaxis Consulting, USA
When business prospers, IT departments often struggle to meet the demand for new capabilities. To maximize limited resources, most IT groups seek methods to collaboratively select and prioritize projects to ensure effective delivery to the business. The result is an improved IT and business partnership, coordinated decision making, and a pace that often delivers and brings complexities and increases to the IT budget.
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PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 201610:15 – 11:45 a.m. SESSION 5: TRACK 2 – SALON D
CHAIR: Jawad Khalaf, IT Applications - Systems Specialist; Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia
10:15 – 10:45 a.m. Cracking the Well Master Code
Mark Ritch, Manager BI; Apache Corporation, USAAlan Henson, VP Solutions Architecture; EnergyIQ, USA
Apache sought a commercial well master solution to blend and aggregate disparate source well attributes into a golden well header. This presentation discusses the project’s objectives, the challenges faced, the lessons learned, and next steps for the solution.
10:45 – 11:15 a.m. Reservoir Simulation Data Lifecycle in Saudi Arabia
Santiago Ganis, PE System Analyst; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaAbdulaziz Darrab, PE System Analyst; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaMajdi Baddourah, PE System Analyst; Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia
A case study to share the implementation of a lifecycle policy to manage large amount of data produced by reservoir simulation in Saudi Arabia will be presented.
11:15 – 11:45 a.m. Data Objects as a Foundation for Effective Data Management
Steve Cooper, President; EnergyIQ, USAScott Schneider, President; EnergyIQ Exchange, USA
A Data Object is defined as a collection of data attributes combined with the information required to manage the object that should be used to support business workflows. Establishing common data objects for critical E&P information establishes a platform for effective data management and is a logical extension to accepted industry standards such as the PPDM ‘What is a Well?’ initiative. This paper will discuss the definition and structure of common data objects, along with the benefits of adopting an industry approved set for the effective management of E&P data.
11:45 a.m. – 1:15 p.m. LUNCH – Exhibit Hall
PNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE18 www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 20161:15 – 2:45 p.m. SESSION 6: TRACK 1 – SALON A
CHAIR: Sean Nichols, Senior Data Scientist, AEPB; American Energy Partners, USA
1:15 – 1:45 p.m. Fast, Flexible, Easy - Pick 3: Interactive Analysis of Structured Big Data
John Rosendahl, Lead Engineer; PetroDE, USAAlan Lindsey, CEO; PetroDE, USAKeith Robertson, Lead Engineer; PetroDE, USAJim Crompton, Managing Director; Reflections Data Consulting, USA
E&P companies have spent tremendous time and energy creating corporate data stores of structured data. We will discuss how to get value from this investment by providing useful analytics balancing flexibility, ease of use and speed.
1:45 – 2:15 p.m.Big Data: Cloud-based Infrastructure Drives Efficiency and Improves Scalability in Drilling Operations
David Johnson, VP Innovation; Petrolink, USA
A review of recent deployments of large-scale drilling and real-time data and the effect on the activities of operators including the ability to perform analytics and real-time visualization.
2:15 – 2:45 p.m. Bigger Data Requires Better Design
Ryan Campanile, Director, Business Intelligence & Analytics; SmartBridge, USA
Our appetites for big data are getting bigger, but can we consume and digest that data in a meaningful way? Regardless of how much data is behind a question, prediction, optimization, or process it still needs to be presented to the user in a succinct and intuitive way that allows the user to get the information they need exactly when they need it. In this topic we will cover the last mile of data value chain, which is how the data is organized, presented and consumed by the end user.
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PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 20161:15 – 2:45 p.m. SESSION 6: TRACK 2 – SALON D
CHAIR: Philip Benyeogor, Subsurface Data Lead GoM; BP America Inc., USA
1:15 – 1:45 p.m.Small Steps with Big Enterprise Impact - Data Governance in a Low Budget, Fast Paced Environment
Subhadra Singh, Sr. Business Analyst; Memorial Resource Development, USAJohn Deck Jr., Chief Information Officer; Memorial Resource Development, USA
Learn how Memorial Resource Development developed an effective method to synchronize data between disparate ‘source of truth’ systems, create a data management culture, introduce effective data cleanup processes and procedures, reduce data inaccuracies, and create standard enterprise level reports and dashboards to reduce cycle time and improve decision quality in low budget environment, using existing in house resources.
1:45 – 2:15 p.m. Agile Architecture for E&P Performance Management
Avinash Airani, Senior Principal; Infosys Ltd., IndiaManish Verma, Principal Consultant; Infosys Ltd., IndiaParikshit Sharma, Principal Consultant; Infosys Ltd., IndiaParas Sachdeva, Principal Consultant; Infosys Ltd., India
This paper brings out the best practices in enterprise performance management from both Oil & Gas and other industries, demonstrates the linkage between Key Performance Metrics (KPI) at the tactical level of daily E&P projects execution to performance of E&P functions, identifies the impact and potential of Advanced Analytics on E&P data in performance management, and presents an approach for real-time performance reporting and management using an agile architecture.
2:15 – 2:45 p.m. Demystifying Six Sigma: Driving Organizational Change and Improvement
Daljit Singh Sukhdev Singh; Petronas, Malaysia
There are many misconceptions, misunderstandings and confusion surrounding Six Sigma and its potential. As such, this paper intends to provide a clearer and better understanding of Six Sigma – what exactly is Six Sigma, how it works and how it has benefited many organizations.
2:45 – 3:25 p.m. COFFEE BREAK – Exhibit Hall
PNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE20 www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 20163:30 – 5:00 p.m. SESSION 7 – SALON A-D
BIG DATA AND ANALYTICS PANEL DISCUSSIONMODERATOR: Janet Hicks, Senior Manager, Information Management;
Halliburton/Landmark, USACO-MODERATOR: Scott Schneider, President; EnergyIQ Exchange, USA
PANELISTS:Alan Lindsey, CEO; PetroDE, USADuncan Irving, Industry Consultant; Teradata, UKJim Crompton, Upstream Advisor; Noah Consulting, USASunil Garg, Manager - SIS Big Data Analytic Projects; Schlumberger, USASatyam Priyadarshy, Chief Data Scientist; Halliburton, USA
5:00 – 6:00 pm NETWORKING RECEPTION – Exhibit Hall
Join your friends for a drink on the exhibit foor! Drinks and snacks will be available throughout the Exhibit Hall. The reception is the perfect opportunity to network with industry colleagues and visit with exhibitors in a relaxed atmosphere.
PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016 21www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
THURSDAY, MAY 19, 20167:00 – 7:55 a.m. Continental Breakfast – Salon E-H
8:00 – 9:30 a.m. SESSION 8: TRACK 1 – SALON ACHAIR: Cynthia Schwendeman, Data Management Advisor; Hess Corporation, USA
8:00 – 8:30 a.m. Big Data Analytics – The Next Big Revolution in E&P Information Management
Sunil Garg, Manager - SIS Big Data Analytic Projects; Schlumberger, USA
Data Analytics is all the rage because information is the new currency in a digital economy. The E&P industry has traditionally focused on descriptive or visual analytics which is amply demonstrated by the presence of a wide range of data viewers (Charts, Cross Plots, Histograms, 3D viewers, Log Viewers, Maps, etc.) produced by various E&P and IT software vendors, as well as in-house tools built by oil and gas companies themselves.
As the digital oilfield gained prominence in the last decade, the use of diagnostic analytics (e.g. production monitoring and surveillance) has also become quite prevalent. However, the rapidly changing technology landscape as evidenced by the increased instrumentation of rigs and well sites, explosion of horizontal and deep-water wells, and advances in seismic technology has resulted in the tremendous growth in volume and frequency of E&P data. This has shifted the attention of the industry on predictive and prescriptive analytics as the engines for future growth and significant cost savings throughout oilfield operations. This presentation will share the best practices as well as some practical use cases of how big data analytics is revolutionizing the E&P industry. It will also present the author’s vision and thoughts on the game-changing impact that data analytics will have on the way companies make decisions.
8:30 – 9:00 a.m. Petroleum Data Science: Getting it Right
Duncan Irving, Industry Consultant; Teradata, UKJane McConnell, Industry Consultant; Teradata, Norway
Data science is an emerging discipline in the upstream domain yet its value has yet to be widely acknowledged for a variety of reasons. The cultural, scientific and technical challenges that inhibit its wide uptake are discussed and the significant data management challenges of the discipline are exposed. Do’s and don’ts learned from several data science projects are presented along with some cool and impactful insights.
9:00 – 9:30 a.m.Stop Running Giant Data Management Initiatives—Start Small, Listen to Each Business Unit in Turn, Build on Success
Graeme Gordon, Exploration Manager; Hess Corporation, USAJames Vasquez, Data Management Specialist; Hess Corporation, USARobby Rangel, Data Management Specialist; Hess Corporation, USAJamal Cadwell, Sr. Geoscience Technician; Hess Corporation, USACynthia Schwendeman, Data Management Advisor; Hess Corporation, USAKatheryn Ward, Data Manager; Hess Corporation, USANick Larcombe, Director, IT; Hess Corporation, USATim Cordingley, VP, Exploration; Hess Corporation, USABob Gudramovics, Studio Workflow Advisor; Schlumberger, USA
In the oil and gas industry, the lifeblood by which a company makes its decisions comes from its data. But value is lost when more time is spent searching for data rather than searching for oil. The vision was to have each geoscientist to feel empowered to quickly, easily, and graphically find all relevant and validated well, seismic, and production data in corporate data stores through a single mechanism.
PNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE22 www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
THURSDAY, MAY 19, 20168:00 – 9:30 a.m. SESSION 8: TRACK 2 – SALON D
CHAIR: Dan Boltz, IT Programmer/Applications Analyst Advisor; Apache Corporation, USA
8:00 – 8:30 a.m. Embedded Data Managers Model for Exploration Teams: Bringing Expertise to the Business
Patricia Herrera Torres, Project Data Management Team Lead; Shell, Netherlands
The presentation will focus on how Shell is building and managing technical data management capabilities and support that meets the specific requirements of the subsurface communities. Over the last three years, Shell has run a structured program to establish the TDM discipline, building the right skills and knowledge, setting up standards and procedures, as well as looking at the most effective ways of organizing the delivery of support with both embedded data managers in subsurface teams and back-office operations. Today we can look at how these efforts have enabled data managers to play an elevated role and how streamlining and standardization of TDM activities can provide sound, timely and high-quality support to geoscientists.
8:30 – 9:00 a.m. Solving the Small Data Challenge: Unlocking the Hidden Potential in the Data You Already Use
Chris Josefy, Manager, Business Solutions; EP Energy, USA
In the rush to focus on Big Data, one has to wonder if E&P companies have lost their focus on the small data challenge: using the data you already have. There is an enormous amount of potential locked away in our individual transactional systems, and all we have to do to unlock is to connect the systems and make the data visible. By connecting our forecast, regulatory, land, drilling, completions, facilities, production, asset management, safety, and finance systems together and simply surfacing this information in a single, easy to use manner, employees from all disciplines immediately become empowered with information that makes them more efficient and allows for better decisions in less time.
9:00 – 9:30 a.m. The Future of E&P Data
Amit Prakash, Senior Manager; EY, USA
The oil and gas industry has been undergoing sweeping changes into the way business is done and E&P data has not been an exception. This paper aims to outline the nature, content, components, look and feel of E&P data in the future. The author aims to conclude by providing a set of recommendations for Industry players on making the most of E&P data in the future.
9:30 – 10:10 a.m. COFFEE BREAK - Exhibit Hall
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016 23www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
THURSDAY, MAY 19, 201610:15 – 12:00 p.m. SESSION 9 – SALONS A - D
CHAIR: Cora Poche, Team Lead, Data Management and Geomatics Americas; Shell International Exploration & Production Inc., USA
10:15 – 10:45 a.m. Professional Recognition for Data Managers
Trudy Curtis, CEO; PPDM Association, Canada
The face of our profession has changed over the years, making our industry stronger and more adaptable. Education, training and certification programs have emerged. Software products and consulting services are broadly available. Executive level managers responsible for data management have been appointed at operating companies, and career ladders for data managers are emerging. At the same time, our understanding of what it means to be a data management professional has begun to solidify. This is a great start, but there is still a lot of work to be done, and there are many organizations that we need to work with in order to achieve our final objective – Professional Recognition. This talk will celebrate the successes we have had, and lay out the road map for the future of Data Management as a recognized professional discipline.
10:45 – 11:15 a.m. Information Management Maturity: A Benchmark Study
Fred Kunzinger, E&P Practice Lead; Noah Consulting, USAGema Santos Martin, Head of Upstream Information Management;
Repsol Exploration SA, SpainJeff Bauer, Principal; Noah Consulting, USA
All organizations create and capture data of all types and thus by definition perform some level of information management. This benchmark study focuses on how well organizations are equipped to enable effective decision making through the use of information management. We will look at the results of the survey, the current perspective on Information Management maturity in the E&P industry, and the possible correlation between a company’s information management capabilities and their financial success.
11:15 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Field Validated Applications of Reference Information Models
Jess Kozman, Managing Director; CLTech Consulting PTE LTD, Singapore
High level Reference Information Models (RIM) allow organizations to focus on data domains which are shared across multiple disciplines and which support critical asset operations during a price downturn. The conceptual models use existing relationships between business objects and business activities developed in other asset and capital intensive industries, and support the development of standard disambiguation vocabularies, quick win projects in document management and GIS, and transition plans for downsizing and mergers and acquisition.
Jess Kozman is the Managing Director and a Senior Data Management Practitioner at CLTech Consulting Pte Ltd in Singapore, a data management practice focused on resource and extractive industries. He has 35 years of experience in oil and gas technology and business intelligence, with clients from unconventional niche operators to the largest super majors and national oil companies on the planet. Jess also serves as the Asia-Pacific Regional Representative for PPDM.
12:00 – 1:15 p.m. AWARDS LUNCH & DRAWING – Exhibit Hall
The Petroleum Network Education Conference’s primary award is the Philip C. Crouse Cornerstone Award. It recognizes distinguished contributions in the application of technical data and information principles, and outstanding achievements in or contributions to the advancement of upstream petroleum data and information management as a profession and a craft. The Cornerstone Award was initiated in 2006 for the 10th anniversary of the conference by Philip C. Crouse, founding organizer of PNEC Conferences.
PNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE24 www.pnecconferences.com
PLENARY TRACK 1 TRACK 2PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
CONFERENCE ALTERNATESThe Balanced Approach to Resolving Negative Impacts of Poor Data ManagementBernadette Bosse, Chairman and CEO; Certfied Documentation and Data Management Association Intl, Canada
Slump in Crude, Paradigm Shift, Technology to the Rescue!Vivek Ratna, Partner; Digital Learning Solutions, LLC, USA
Study of a Target Group. The influence of a Multidisciplinary Group in the Organizational Structure of an Oil Production AssetYolanda Enriquez-Mendez, Superintendent of Creativity and Innovation; Pemex, Mexico
A Unified Platform for Special Core Analysis (SCAL) Data Visualization, Integration, Quality Control and ArchivalMaclean Amabeoku, Coordinator of Special Studies; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaMohamed Gabreldar, Petrophysicist; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaHussein AlAli, PE Consultant; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaAhmed Al-Muthana, Petroleum Engineer; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaMansour Al-Dhuwaihi, Petroleum Specialist; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaMohammed Muhareb, General Supervisor, Well Testing; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaNasier Mohamed Fakier, Exploration Systems Consultant; Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia
Creating Value by Combining Business Knowledge and Information TechnologyDrew Lockard, Director; AlixPartners, USAChris Rollo, Director; AlixPartners, USASam Glidden, Associate; AlixPartners, USA
AVOCET (AVM) Back Allocation Implementation Project in KOC Hussain Alajmi, Team Leader; KOC, Kuwait
Sustainable Data Governance: The Road to Effective Data MiningSoufiane Aqachmar, Petroleum Engineering System Analyst; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaMohammad Muhareb, General Supervior of PE Data Management Division; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaAyoub Aneddame, Petroleum Engineering System Analyst; Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia
A New, Collaborative Workflow System for SCAL Data ManagementAhmed Almuthana, Petroleum Engineer; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaMaclean Amabeoku, Petroleum Engineering Specialist; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaHussein Ali, Petroleum Engineering Consultant; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaMansour Dhuwaihi, Supervisor Petroleum Data Management; Saudi Aramco, Saudi ArabiaNasier Mohamed Fakier, Expl Sys Consultant; Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia
Smart Socks, Smart Cities and Smart Oil FieldsJane McConnell, Industry Consultant; Teradata, NorwayDuncan Irving, Principal Consultant Oil and Gas; Teradata, UK
Progress Report; the Modeling Best Practices Benchmarking Project (MBP2)Steve Roemerman, Chairman; Lone Star Analysis, USA
REGISTRATION FORMPlease PrintFirst Name: Last Name:
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1. Primary Business Activity
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07 Drilling/Drilling Contractor
51 Consulting Company Engaged in
Projects or Providing Services to Oil
and/or Gas Companies
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39 Engineering Company
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REGISTRATION FORM
Payment must be received prior to the conference. If payment is not received by the conference date, the registration fee must be guaranteed on charge card until proof of payment is provided. Make check payable to PennWell/PNEC Conference 2016.
CANCELLATION: Cancellation of registration must be received in writing. Any individual, exhibitor, or corporate registrations cancelled in writing before April 16, 2016 will receive a 50% refund of registration fee. After April 16, 2016, no refunds will be permitted. Substitutions may be made at any time by contacting the registration office in writing.
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Includes:• Continental Breakfast on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday• Access to all Conference Sessions• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions• Delegate Lunch on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday (Ticketed) Paid by April 29, 2016 ...................... US$ 995 Paid after April 29, 2016 ................... US$ 1,145
2. Single Day Conference Delegate*Includes:• Continental Breakfast on corresponding day• Access to all Conference Sessions on corresponding day• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions on
corresponding day• Delegate Lunch on corresponding day (Ticketed)
Tuesday or Wednesday ...................... US$ 575 Thursday ........................................... US$ 375
(price reduction due to Thursday being a partial day)
3. Exhibitor Full Conference* (must be an exhibiting company)Includes:• Continental Breakfast on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday• Access to all Conference Sessions• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions• Delegate Lunch on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday (Ticketed)
........................................................ US$ 895 each
4. Co-Author*Includes:• Continental Breakfast on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday• Access to all Conference Sessions• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions• Delegate Lunch on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday (Ticketed)
........................................................ US$ 845
5. Student/Faculty Delegate (Full Conference Registration)Includes:• Continental Breakfast on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday• Access to all Conference Sessions• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions• Delegate Lunch on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday (Ticketed)
........................................................ US$ 250
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REGISTRATION FORM
Payment must be received prior to the conference. If payment is not received by the conference date, the registration fee must be guaranteed on charge card until proof of payment is provided. Make check payable to PennWell/PNEC Conference 2016.
CANCELLATION: Cancellation of registration must be received in writing. Any individual, exhibitor, or corporate registrations cancelled in writing before April 16, 2016 will receive a 50% refund of registration fee. After April 16, 2016, no refunds will be permitted. Substitutions may be made at any time by contacting the registration office in writing.
METHOD OF PAYMENT:
Check enclosed (in U.S. funds only) Wire (Wire information will be provided on invoice)
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CONFERENCE FEES:1. Individual Delegate (Full Conference Registration)*
Includes:• Continental Breakfast on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday• Access to all Conference Sessions• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions• Delegate Lunch on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday (Ticketed) Paid by April 29, 2016 ...................... US$ 995 Paid after April 29, 2016 ................... US$ 1,145
2. Single Day Conference Delegate*Includes:• Continental Breakfast on corresponding day• Access to all Conference Sessions on corresponding day• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions on
corresponding day• Delegate Lunch on corresponding day (Ticketed)
Tuesday or Wednesday ...................... US$ 575 Thursday ........................................... US$ 375
(price reduction due to Thursday being a partial day)
3. Exhibitor Full Conference* (must be an exhibiting company)Includes:• Continental Breakfast on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday• Access to all Conference Sessions• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions• Delegate Lunch on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday (Ticketed)
........................................................ US$ 895 each
4. Co-Author*Includes:• Continental Breakfast on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday• Access to all Conference Sessions• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions• Delegate Lunch on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday (Ticketed)
........................................................ US$ 845
5. Student/Faculty Delegate (Full Conference Registration)Includes:• Continental Breakfast on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday• Access to all Conference Sessions• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions• Delegate Lunch on Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday (Ticketed)
........................................................ US$ 250
6. Exhibit VisitorIncludes:• Access to Exhibition Hall, including Networking Receptions
........................................................ US$ 95
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2. ONLINE:www.pnecconferences.com/register.html
4. MAIL:PennWell C&E Registration (PNEC)P.O. Box 973059Dallas, TX 75397-3059 USA
1. FAX:Direct: +1 918 831 9161Toll-Free (US only): +1 888 299 8057
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Cancellation Information: The credit card provided will be chargedone night’s room and tax if the reservation is cancelled 7 days or less priorto the confirmed arrival date. In addition, a $45 processing fee will beassessed by PCS for all reservations cancelled on or after April 1, 2016.
ExhibitorAttendeeOther
ROOM TYPE DESCRIPTIONSS= Single (1 person/1bed)D = Double (2 people/1 bed)D/D = Double/Double (2 people/2 beds)H = Hospitality Suite
SELECT ONE:
CONTACT INFORMATION
5 WAYS TO RESERVE
Conference Location: On-siteAirport Information:
• George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH): 32 milesSuper Shuttle: $27 per person, one way
• William P. Hobby Airport (HOU): 28 milesSuper Shuttle: $27 per person, one way
Hotel Services:• Starbucks• Republic, A Texas Grill: Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner• Republic Lounge: Lunch and Dinner• Room Service: 6:00am - 12:00am• Fitness Center; Indoor/Outdoor Pool• Concierge Services• Internet: Enhanced high-speed internet is $6.95 per night. Basic internet is complimentary;
Parking: (subject to change)• Valet: $16.00 per night• Self Complimentary
GUARANTEE INFORMATION
HOUSING REQUEST FORM
Phone:Fax:Email:Web:Mail:
888.763.7236 or 310.906.3847310.906.3857reservations@preferred1.comwww.pnecconferences.comPNEC 2016c/o Preferred Convention Services3528 Torrance Blvd., Suite 114Torrance, CA 90503
GUEST INFORMATION
27
102
300
EnergySys
301
ENERGISTI
302IHS
303
20'iStore
304
Ovation Data
306
TalusTechn
307
Reserved
308
Reserved
311
CertisInform
312
Blueback
313
NetApp
314
315
Reserved
316
317
AVEVA Inc.
318
400
NoahCons
401
EnergyIQ
402
ExpertSyste
403
Hortonwork
404
20'Landmark-
405
Perigon
407
FlareSoluti
409
Informatic
410
INT,Inc
411
RoQC
412
Katalyst
413
Interica
414
geoLOGIC
415
petroWEB
416
DataCo USA
417
EACIIT
500 502 504 506 508 510
TroikaIntern
700
Petrolink
701
Smartbridg
702
FileTrail
703
OpenIT
704
705
706
800
801
802
803
20'
805
806
807
PennWell Booth#117
SurveyBooth
Delegate Lunch
EXIT EXIT EXIT
EXITEXIT
EX
IT
EX
IT
EX
ITE
XIT
EX
IT
EXIT
FRE
IGH
T DO
OR
14'H X
14' W
FA
FH
FHMEN WOMEN
RAMP
EX
IT
EXIT FA
EX
IT
EX
IT
PNEC 2016 | PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE28 www.pnecconferences.com
FLOOR PLAN (as of January 15, 2016)
EXHIBIT HALL HOURS:MONDAY, MAY 163:00 PM – 5:00 PM . . . . . . Exhibitor Move-in
(open to exhibitors only)
TUESDAY, MAY 177:00 AM – 11:00 AM . . . . . Exhibitor Move-in
(open to exhibitors only)
11:45 AM – 6:30 PM . . . . . Exhibit Hall Open
5:00 PM – 6:30 PM . . . . . . Exhibit Hall Networking Reception
WEDNESDAY, MAY 189:15 AM – 6:00 PM . . . . . . Exhibit Hall Open
5:00 PM – 6:00 PM . . . . . . Exhibit Hall Networking Reception
THURSDAY, MAY 199:15 AM – 1:15 PM . . . . . . Exhibit Hall Open
HOUSTON MARRIOTT WESTCHASE
PRELIMINARY EVENT GUIDE | PNEC 2016www.pnecconferences.com 29
EXHIBITOR LIST (as of January 15, 2016)
AVEVA Inc. 317
Blueback Reservoir Americas, LLC 312
Certis Information Services, Inc. 311
DataCo USA 416
EACIIT 417
ENERGISTICS 301
EnergyIQ 401
EnergySys Limited 300
Expert System 402
FileTrail 702
Flare Solutions 407
geoLOGIC Systems 414
Hortonworks, Inc. 403
IHS 302
Informatica 409
INT, Inc 410
Interica 413
iStore 303
Katalyst Data Management 412
Landmark-Halliburton 404
NetApp 313
Noah Consulting 400
Open IT 703
Ovation Data Services, Inc. 304
PennWell Corporation 117
Perigon Solutions 405
Petrolink 700
petroWEB 415
RoQC 411
Smartbridge 701
Ovation Data Services, Inc. 304
Talus Technologies 306
Troika International 510
EXHIBITOR BOOTH # EXHIBITOR BOOTH #
CONFERENCE MENTOR AND ADVISOR:CINDY CROUSEPhone: +1 214 841 0044Fax: +1 214 841 0046Email: [email protected]
CONFERENCE DIRECTOR:ROBIN DUPREPhone: +1 713 963 6223Email: [email protected]
CONFERENCE MANAGER:GAIL KILLOUGHPhone: +1 713 963 6251Email: [email protected]
SENIOR EVENT OPERATIONS MANAGER:JENNIFER LINDSEYPhone: +1 918 832 9313Fax: +1 918 831 9729Email: [email protected]
EXHIBIT & SPONSORSHIP SALES:SARA LOWERY NGUnited States & EuropePhone: +1 713 963 6277Cell: +1 713 725 8536Fax: +1 713 963 6212Email: [email protected]
SENIOR EXHIBIT SERVICES MANAGER:LAUREN BRENNERPhone: +1 918 832-9276Fax: +1 918 831 9729Email: [email protected]
EVENT MARKETING MANAGER:RACHEL CAMPBELLPhone: +1 918 831 9576Email: [email protected]
REGISTRATION DEPARTMENT:Phone: +1 918 831 9160Fax: +1 918 831 9161Toll Free: +1 888 299 8016Toll Free Fax: +1 888 299 8057
PENNWELL CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS:1421 S. Sheridan RoadTulsa, OK 74112Phone: +1 918 835 3161Fax: +1 713 963 6270www.pnecconferences.com
PENNWELL PETROLEUM GROUP:1455 West Loop South, Suite #400Houston, Texas 77027Phone: +1 713 621 9720Toll Free: +1 800 736 6935Fax: +1 713 963 6285
EVENT MANAGEMENT