PARTICIPANTS
Engineers and geoscientists who want to understand well testing principles and interpretation techniques to design, analyze, report, evaluate results or intelligently participate in the well testing process. Previous experience in production and/or reservoir engineering is recommended. Previous experience in well testing is helpful but is not required.
BENEFIT
- Analyze drawdown and buildup tests in oil and gas wells.
- Identify flow regimes using the log-log diagnostic plot.
- Describe characteristic pressure behavior for common bounded reservoir geometries.
- Identify well test data affected by various wellbore and near-wellbore phenomena.
- Design a well test to meet desired objectives.
- Estimate average drainage area pressure.
- Analyze well tests in hydraulically fractured wells, horizontal wells, and naturally fractured reservoirs.
ABOUT THE COURSE
This course stresses practical application of well test theory to design and interpret pressure transient tests. An integrated approach to well test interpretation is emphasized throughout the course. Class exercises involving hand calculations and simple spreadsheet applications will reinforce the concepts illustrated by both synthetic data sets and real field examples. Participants will be able to apply the knowledge and skills in their job assignments upon course completion.
This course includes the use of computers, which are provided at additional cost, for each two participants
DESCRIPTION SUBJECTS
- Production Well Surface And Downhole Equipments
- Introduction To Well Testing
- Radial Flow
- Log-log Type Curve Analysis
- Pressure Transient Testing for Gas Wells
- Flow Regimes and the Log-log Diagnostic Plot
- Bounded Reservoir Behavior
- Wellbore and Near-wellbore Phenomena
- Well Test Interpretation
- Well Test Design
- Estimation of Average Drainage Area Pressure
- Hydraulically Fractured Wells
- Horizontal Wells
- Naturally Fractured Reservoirs
INSTRUCTUR
Ir. Drs. St. Edi Purwaka, MT and Team