by Peter Carragher
I have been engaged with teams in reviewing and assuring plays and prospects since the late 1990s. I think it’s important to keep the title of this brief note front and center as a constant reminder that there is always something to learn. Continuing to learn will improve your ability to be effective in prospect evaluation and remain a valued contributor. Here are four areas to consider.
Learning from Failures
A prerequisite for learning from failures is the absolute necessity for rigorous written documentation of the pre-drill assessment. That must include all the pre-drill geological and geophysical assumptions, as well as the actual parameters and chance assessment logic you and the team used to build the assessment. Particularly instructive is writing down the possible failure modes for the prospect so you can determine if the actual failure was a surprise or not. The assignment of chance to the individual elements should reflect these concerns. Over time, you can determine the dominant failure modes in your program and take steps to address those issues with technology, or with different decisions.
Learning From Successes
Over estimation of discovered resources is a common problem, sometimes offset in a portfolio by underestimation of the chance of success, a classic case of two wrongs sort of making a right. What is happening here is that the relative ranking of prospects is incorrect, and that has consequences in the management decisions about the portfolio. For example, a company decided to drill a prospect at 100% and reject a valid farm-in / interest swap offer because the prospect resource and value was estimated to be very large. Unfortunately, one of the major risks was not recognized pre-drill. Not only was the well a dry hole, but the counterparty well was a commercial discovery.
Learning From Teams
One of the benefits of positive interaction in an assurance review is that the experience of the assurance team can help the project team in their technical work, prospect description and communications. Less well appreciated, is the necessity that the assurance team learns from the project team. Project teams bring diversity of thinking, new technology, different visualizations, new interpretation models, and the details of local geoscience data to bear on prospects. Careful, respectful listening and seeking to understand that point of view is a prerequisite for long term success in assurance.
Learning From Other Disciplines
Technological advances in the geosciences contribute towards increased specialization. Special effort is required to really learn what is going on in these specialized sub-disciplines, and how they interact with each other. For example, a 3D oil and gas migration model is critically dependent not only on the geochemistry of the source rock, but also the crustal mode that drives the temperature profile, biostratigraphy determining the ages of the burial sequence, geophysics generating depth maps and sequence stratigraphy predicting the distribution of permeability that controls migration vectors.
There is also much to learn from the wider set of disciplines involved in subsurface projects. You will become a better geoscientist if you take the time and put in the effort to learn from your colleagues in reservoir engineering, reservoir modeling and simulation, drilling, and production engineering, to list some of the opportunities. Assurance teams are best served by individuals who have taken this step, integrating learning across disciplines.
Summary
Whether you are involved as an assurance team member, or as a project team member, assurance presents a series of great opportunities to learn something new. Take them!
About the Author
Pete Carragher has been the Managing Partner of Rose & Associates LLP since July 2014. Prior to joining R&A in 2010, his last role at BP was VP of Geoscience and Exploration, working as a member of BP’s global exploration leadership. Pete and his team introduced systematic risk and volume assessment, and assurance, into Amoco in 1990. Since then, he has evaluated hundreds of prospects from most of the world’s productive and frontier basins.