November 2006POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group1 Global Unique Well Identifier (GUWI)...
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November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 1
Global Unique Well Identifier (GUWI) Initiative
GUWI Steering Team Meeting30 October 2006POSC Special Interest Group Meeting7 November 2006
Core Team:John Adams ConocoPhillipsAlan Doniger POSCKristine Gibbons ShellMark Stehm ExxonMobil
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 2
Agenda
1. Welcome and Introductions
2. Review Meeting Objectives
3. Update on progress
4. Well Identity Service Agreement (POSC-IHS)
5. Well Identity Service Work Group
6. Review and Agree on Next Steps
7. Questions and Open Discussion
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 3
Continuing Steering Team• A2D
Rob Gibson
• BPSavannah Arnold
• ChevronYaw Adu
• ConocoPhillips John Adams
• DeloitteGraham Sadler
• ExxonMobilMark Stehm
• Fugro-Robertson Simon Kendall
• IHS Energy Nick Duncan
Steve Cooper
• Marathon Damon Simmons
• NexenPat Ryan
• POSCAlan Doniger
• Shell Kris Gibbons
• TobinMartin Schardt
• MMSChris Gaudry
• Wood MackenzieCharles Mitchell
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 4
Oct. 30 Team Call: Meeting Objectives
• Communicate progress on the GUWI initiative
• Formally launch the Well Identity Service Work Group (WIS WG)
• Call for participation and sponsorship of WIS WG
• Identify issues and concerns to be addressed
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 5
Steering Team Meeting DecisionsOperator Sub Group
8 May 2006
• The GUWI steering group endorse the Unique Well Identifier established by IHS Energy as the Global Unique Well Identifier for the E&P industry (for wells outside USA and Canada)
• That the proposed RFP process be suspended and that negotiations progress with IHS regarding operation of the GUWI service
• That POSC (on behalf of the GUWI Steering Team) sign a Letter of Intent with IHS documenting the key aspects of the GUWI service and the intent to establish a contractual agreement for IHS to operate the service
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 7
Key Agreements
1. Documents the intention of IHS to contribute the IHS “international” identifier to the Public Domain
2. Recognizes IHS as provider of the GUWI service for an initial period of three years
3. Recognizes POSC as the body responsible for managing the public well data on behalf of the E&P industry
4. Recognises the role of a Well Identity Services Work Group to oversee the service
5. States that future well data will be released as public unless the registering organisation specifies otherwise
6. Commits the parties to work with the Steering Team to establish detailed terms and conditions
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 8
Current IHS ServicePOSC SIG June 2006
Master Well Index
• We will initially populate the MWI with all of the IHS Energy wells in the Canadian, US, and International databases; these will be flagged as proprietary.
• Over time, we will add to this data on new and unique wells provided to us by customers; these will be flagged as public.
• New and unique wells added through IHS Energy research and accumulation processes will continue to be flagged as proprietary.
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 9
Current IHS ServicePOSC SIG June 2006
For our customers:• We will deliver the full MWI for the regions that they
subscribe to.• We will deliver records flagged as public for the
areas that they don’t subscribe to.• The proprietary content of the MWI will remain the
property of IHS Energy covered by existing data contracts.
For non-customers:• We will make the records flagged as public available
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 11
Agenda
1. Welcome and Introductions
2. Review Meeting Objectives
3. Update on progress
4. Well Identity Service Agreement (POSC-IHS)
5. Well Identity Service Work Group
6. Review and Agree on Next Steps
7. Questions and Open Discussion
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 12
Well Identity Service Agreement
• The Well Identity Service will be provided by IHS under contractual agreement with POSC (on behalf of the E&P industry)
• The agreement will include the definition of services, service levels, terms and fees
– Registration of new wells and issue of GUWI
– Matching of existing well and assignment of GUWI
– Provision of public well data set
– ...Details of services and service levels to be defined by the WIS Work Group
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 13
Well Identity Service Roles
QueryRequest
POSC Data Mgt. SIG
Alignment with other E&P standards
IHS
Service Provider
RegistrationRequest
WIS Work Group
Service definition, Industry alignment, Adoption, Funding
POSC Organization
Contract Holder
Public data custodian
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 14
WIS Work Group• Role
– Advocate, define requirements, initially review, and promote industry standards that support the GUWI initiative
– Advise POSC on services to contract to support the GUWI initiative
• Membership
– Open to all organisations– Sponsoring member
• Provide funding through membership fees (based on company revenue)• Voting rights on budget and major service changes
– Participating member• Participation in Work Group meetings• Contribute resources and expertise to activities
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 15
SIG and Initial Work Group Fees
Annual Revenue POSC Member Data Mgt SIG Fee for all of 2007 *
POSC Non-Member Data Mgt SIG Fee for all of
2007
WIS Work Group Sponsor
Fee
$100 billion + $14,400 $28,800 $40,000
$10 billion + $9,900 $19,800 $20,000
$1 billion + $4,950 $9,900 $10,000
$100 million + $1,800 $3,600 $5,000
Others (for profit) $1,000 $2,000 $2,000
Non-profit $1,000 $2,000 $5,000
Large Regulator $1,200 $2,400 $5,000
* POSC members who have the “SIG Package” pay no additional Data Mgt SIG fee.
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 16
WIS Work Group Agreements
• Work Group membership agreement with POSC is required
• Both POSC members and non-POSC members can join
• Sponsoring members must be participants in the Data Mgt. SIG
Required documents POSC & DM SIG Member
POSC Member
POSC non member
POSC Non-member participation agreement
Yes(if not already a SIG
member)
POSC Data Mgt. SIG Participation addendum
Yes Yes(if not already a DM
SIG member)
WIS Work group participation addendum
Yes Yes Yes
Full documentation at: http://www.posc.org/sig/dss/oct06_wiswg.html
Business Case Template for Support of Global Unique Well
Identifier Use by Operators
Work-in-Progressby
Mark Stehm, ExxonMobilKris Gibbons, Shell
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 18
Sample Template Business Case
• Some companies, maybe all, will want a business case documented for the use of the industry standard GUWIs in their database(s) and business transactions
• The purpose of this template is to help get started on that business case document
• You can use as much or as little of it as you need
• The final document will be available at www.posc.org
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 19
Business Case For Participation in
Global Unique Well Identifier Program
Introduction The Petrotechnical Open Standards Consortium (POSC) is sponsoring an
effort by IHS Energy to implement a Global Unique Well Identifier (GUWI) service. The purpose of this identifier is to provide a single source for a unique code that can be used by all operators, service companies and data providers to tag their information for delivery to a customer. Having a unique identifier that can be used by anyone accessing data will facilitate matching data from multiple sources and reduce the likelihood of errors thus improving performance and data quality.
Contents This publication contains the following topics:
Topic See Page
Background 2 Process 3 Investment 4 Risks 5 Benefits 6 Appendices 7
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 20
Introduction
• POSC ~ IHS ~ GUWI ~ Services• Purpose of “Identifier”
– Single source for a unique code that can be used by all operators, service companies and data providers to tag information for delivery to a customer.
– This will facilitate matching data from multiple sources
– This will reduce the likelihood of errors improved performance and data quality
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 21
Table of Contents
• Background• Process• Investment• Risks• Benefits• Appendix: Data Elements
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 22
Background
• Problem– ~ 4 million oil and gas wells, world-wide.– Status: from very old P&A through active
producers / injectors to currently drilling wells.– Regulatory agencies assign well id/names.– Id/names change due to
• Sales
• Unitization
• Life cycle changes
• Etc.
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 23
Background
• Problem (continued)– Difficult to merge well data– Difficult to merge or compare data from multiple
sources– DM staff and geoscientists & engineers must
perform matching process to make use of data– Matching can occur multiple times over the life of a
well– The challenge of matching may prevent the most
current data from being loaded and made available
– Manual matching wastes time and money
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 24
Background
• Solution– Single identifier– Assigned in a consistent manner– By one service – For every well in existence
• Condition of Success– Use of the GUWI must become wide-spread to achieve
automated matching of well data from multiple sources.
• Result– More efficient and consistent transfers within the operator’s
organization, with partners, with service companies, with regulators.
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 25
Process• Current Wells
– Operator is responsible for the well data• Knows the quality of the data
– Operator provides mandatory data element values to the Registration Service
– Registration Service assigns GUWI and provides GUWI to Operator. Data stored in Public Well Index file, available to industry
– TIGHT WELL PROVISION. Operator may declare well as ‘tight’ up to a designated date.
– NON-PUBLIC PROVISION. Operator need not declare well data “public.” Any data element values given to Service Provided kept as proprietary.
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 26
Process
• Legacy Data– For older wells, any industry company may send data
element values to Matching Service.• Match OK. Existing GUWI returned.
• Match Not-OK. Operator may use Registration Service …
– If Operator sends data for matching, data element values may be added to Public Well Index.
– NON PUBLIC PROVISION. Operator need not declare well data “public.” Any data element values given to Service Provided kept as proprietary.
– TRANSPARENCY. Matching Service Provider will not retain data element values used only for matching purposes.
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 27
Investment
• Cash Costs– Retail use of Services
• No fees if within usage limits (to be defined)• May be fees if bundled with value-added competitive services,
e.g. subscription services
– Payments to Service Provider to offset cost of delivering industry Standards-related Services
• Managing Public Well Index• Registration Service• Matching Service
– Funding• From WIS Work Group Sponsor Members• Separate from POSC dues and SIG fees
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 28
Investment
• Manpower– Cost of initial implementation– Software to retrieve Operator data to be sent to
Service Provider for Registration &/or Matching• Initial format is a spreadsheet
• Task time: few days including exception handling
– Ongoing cost to interact with Service Provider– Summary
• Few days programming and data management (once)
• Monitoring on an ongoing basis
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 29
Risks
• Release of Information– Must avoid pre-mature release of information.– Options:
• Do not register• Do not provide data element values to Service Provider (as
Public Data or otherwise)• Declare well to be ‘TIGHT’ for a period of time
• Government Data Release Rules– Restricted countries – Automatic release after “x” time countries
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 30
Benefits
• Overview– Operators use data from many sources for
prospecting and surveillance.– Manual involvement in matching data is time
consuming and costly, regardless of which type of employee does the work
– Time delays in matching processes can have negative impact of performance
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 31
Benefits
• Actual Savings– Example.
• Consider 200 project data stores containing 100,000 wells.• One data vendor provides updates weekly.
– 5% matches need manual reconciliation– 5 minutes each
• Intervention cost = 400+ man-hours per week or 10+ full-time employees.
– Example.• [Look for other examples that impact positive results rather
than cost savings.]
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 32
Appendix: Data Elements
• WELLBORE ATTRIBUTES– Mandatory
• ID
• Name
• Parent Id (if not “root” wellbore)
• Local or regulatory ID/Names
• Country
• Surface and bottom-hole LAT/LONG (WGS84, original)
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 33
Appendix: Data Elements
• Optional– Status– Content– Spud Date/Kick-off Date– TD– Indicator: Onshore/Offshore– Offshore Block– Field
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 34
Appendix: Data Elements
• Registration Data– Company– Contact (Name, Address, etc.)– Access Restrictions
• Made Public (…)
• Made Tight (…)
– Date Registered– Status (active, superseded by …)– Modification (by, date)
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 35
Final business case document will be posted on POSC website:
www.posc.org
Comments or questions, contact:
Mark Stehm 281-654-4157 [email protected] Gibbons [email protected]
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 36
Next Steps
• Core team to engage prospective members• Formal establishment of the Work Group• Continue drafting of WIS service agreement,
especially: • POSC-IHS agree WIS service agreement• Continue routine WIS WG / Service Provider
Conference Calls
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 37
Next Steps
• Core team to engage prospective members– POSC to promote activity (website + Data Mgt.
SIG Nov 7)– Template business case to be available in by
middle of November
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 38
Next Steps
• Formal establishment of the Work Group– Requires agreements from at least four
sponsoring members– Election of WIS Work Group Chair for 2007
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 39
Next Steps
• Continue drafting of WIS service agreement, especially: – Detailed service definitions, including data
elements– Service performance criteria– Service reimbursement policies and procedures
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 40
Next Steps
• POSC-IHS agree on the WIS service agreement for the primary service provider– Target: year-end– Can be followed by agreements with secondary
service providers• Act as agents for their own customers with IHS
November 2006 POSC Data Management SIG / WIS Work Group 41
Next Steps
• Continue routine WIS WG / Service Provider Conference Calls– October 30– November 15