fws 07 l 16 - prospectscourtesy of exxonmobil lecture 16 - prospects
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FWS 07 L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
Lecture 16 - ProspectsLecture 16 - Prospects
FWS 07 L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
A Prospect
• A prospect is a location and depth that has been identified as a good place to drill for oil and/or gas
• For us to find oil or gas, certain conditions must be meet– There needs to be a source for the oil or gas – The source rocks need to be ‘cooked’ to the right degree– There needs to be a porous rock to hold the oil or gas– There needs to be a subsurface trapping geometry– There need to be a seal – There needs to be ‘plumbing’ connecting source and
reservoir
FWS 07 L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
Prospect Analysis
• Our geological and geophysical analysis helps us identify and characterize prospects in terms of these critical elements
• Geoscientists will work a prospect such that:– The volume of oil or gas that is most likely to be
present and recovered is determined, – The range of possible volumes is estimated
(maximum and minimum cases), and– The chance of success is estimated
All this information is presented to management
FWS 07 L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
Now for Some Fun – The Prospect Game
INTRODUCTION
You are part of an exploration management team with 20 prospects that your staff has worked up for your approval to drill. Your prospect portfolio is rather diverse ranging from low risk, low reward prospects to high risk, high reward opportunities. All 20 prospects are possible oil fields.
YOUR CHALLENGE• You have a drilling budget of $400 million.• Headquarters has set a goal for you to discover 500
million barrels of oil.• You want to keep the cost per barrel as low as possible
(< $1.00/barrel).
FWS 07 L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
The Prospect Game
Starting Point
Your staff has been hard at work 'maturing' each prospect.Their work for each prospect is summarized by:
• An estimated drilling cost• A prediction of the most-likely amount of oil (in millions
of barrels, MBO)• The likely range of possible oil volumes (high-side and
low-side cases) • An estimate of the chance of success for the
prospect. These data are provided on tables. If you only drill the low
risk prospects, the probability of your reaching your goal is extremely low - but not zero.
FWS 07 L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
The Prospect Game
USING YOUR BUDGET
Your team can spend some of your budget on improving the seismic data to get better predictions of the amount of oil and its range of values, and the chance of success. You can reprocess the existing seismic data over a
prospect at a cost of 10% of the well cost. Alternatively, you can acquire better seismic data at a
cost for acquisition and processing of 25% of the well cost.
OR you can spend all your money on drilling wells.
FWS 07 L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
The Prospect Game
GAME PLAN1.We will divide you up into 3 or 4 teams2.We will go over the instructions3.Your team will have 5 minutes to develop a strategy. 4.We will rotate through each team allowing them to:
• Drill one prospect without additional data, OR • Ask for reprocessing on a prospect, see the new estimates, and
then either drill the same prospect or pass, OR• Ask for a new survey, see the new estimates, and then either
drill the same prospect or pass
NOTE: No clear decision after 30 seconds is an automatic pass.
The first team to discover 500 million barrels of oil WINS
FWS 07
Drilling a Well
L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
Drilling a well is a three-step process:
1.Drill based on the data at hand or spend some money to either re-process or re-acquire & re-process the seismic
2.Roll 2 dice to determine the success of the well (function of the well’s risk and the total on the dice)
3. If the well is an oil discovery, roll 2 dice a second time to determine the volume of oil discovered.
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Drilling with the Data on Hand
L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
Prospect Number Prospect Name
Drilling Cost ($M)
Most-Likely Volume
(Unrisked) (MBO)
Low-Side Case
High-Side Case
Chance of Success
Discovery if Total on 2
Dice
1 Mouse 1 0.2 0.1 0.4 97% 3 - 12
2 Canary 2 0.4 0.2 0.8 97% 3 - 12
3 Kitten 4 0.6 0.3 1.2 92% 4 - 12
4 Terrier 6 0.9 0.45 1.8 92% 4 - 12
5 Goat 10 1.8 0.9 3.6 72% 5 - 12
6 Ram 15 2.3 1.15 4.6 72% 5 - 12
7 Kangaroo 18 4.4 2.2 8.8 58% 6 - 12
8 Bull 20 9 4.5 18 58% 6 - 12
9 Stallion 27 17 8.5 34 58% 6 - 12
10 Zebra 32 21 10.5 42 42% 7 - 12
11 Lion 38 50 25 100 42% 7 - 12
12 Bear 42 90 45 180 42% 8 - 12
13 Elk 49 125 62.5 250 28% 8 - 12
14 Moose 55 290 145 580 28% 9 - 12
15 Hippo 80 450 225 900 17% 10 - 12
16 Gorilla 100 600 300 1200 17% 10 - 12
17 Elephant 120 840 420 1680 8% 11 - 12
18 Whale 130 1180 590 2360 8% 11 - 12
19 T-Rex 140 1900 950 3800 3% 12
20 Brontosaurus 160 4500 2250 9000 3% 12
TABLE 1: Prospects with key assessment parameters
FWS 07 L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
Determining the Volume of a Discovery
If the well is a discovery, a team member rolls 2 dice a second time to see how much oil is present. This chart indicates a multiplier for the most-likely amount (range is from 1/2 to double).
e.g., for the Bull prospect (#8), the most-likely volume is 9 MBO and if the second roll has a total of 10, the volume = 9 * 1.25 = 11.25 MBO
.
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Data Re-Acquisition or Re-Processing
L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
If your team decides to re-acquire or re-process the data for one prospect, what happens?
1. Money will be subtracted from your total2. You will get a revised set of numbers (privately) for the
prospect3. Given the updated most-likely volume of oil (could be
higher or lower) and a new chance of success (always higher), your team can drill the prospect or pass.
4. If you make a discovery, a revised set of multipliers will be used
Keep the revised numbers confidential; you paid for more accurate numbers and you do not want another team to benefit at your expense!
FWS 07 L 16 - ProspectsCourtesy of ExxonMobil
End of the Game
We will keep a running total of the money spent and the volumes of oil discovered for each team. We will continue drilling if we do not run out of time. If time runs out, we will use the finding cost (MBO/Dollars spent) as a measure of success.
HINT You do not want to spend money on better seismic for the small
prospects where the chance of success is high and the range of MBO is low, even though the cost is small. It is difficult to decide on spending money on better seismic data for the large prospects - the cost is high but it could save you a dry hole.