How to Manage Risk and Uncertainty in Mature Fields?Published 26.01.2016
AGRs Principal Reservoir Engineer and Trainer Mark Cook discusses effective risk and uncertainty management methods.
The quantification of risk and uncertainty is often discussed in the context of exploration and appraisal, yet most of the upstream E&P business concerns decision-making in producing assets.

In the current context of the UKCS, this translates into decision-making in mature fields.
Uncertainty-handling in development and production differs from that in E&A, as it must deal with a growing and often imperfect production database against a backdrop of constantly changing circumstances. As the life cycle progresses, initial uncertainties over volume and productivity narrow but are supplanted by new uncertainties such as sweep efficiency, fine scale architecture and changing responses to new production mechanisms and techniques.
These new issues demand a change in approach for the quantification of uncertainty. Vigilance is required to avoid the subsurface interpretation simply collapsing on to a best guess.
In my career as subsurface professional, I have experienced that often effective risk and uncertainty management can be built on three main aspects: tools, people, and team approach.

TOOLS
As engineers we are often most comfortable when we are using a piece of software as a tool to try to express reservoir uncertainty and evaluate the associated risks of development. While the software tools are increasingly sophisticated and strive for integration between geoscience and engineering, they represent only part of effective risk management.
PEOPLE
We use a collection of subsurface disciplines to perform reservoir evaluation. We are subject to human biases, for example wanting to establish a bases case (known as 'anchoring') and being influenced by readily accessible data (known as 'availability'). Such biases, or heuristics, can lead us to quick, but often misleading, conclusions. Recognizing these biases in others, and in ourselves, can help us to compensate for nature and make better evaluations of uncertainty and more reasoned investment decisions.
TEAM APPRAOCH
We are all familiar with the GANTT approach to project planning; it was introduced more than 100 years ago. The linear process is not always fast enough to produce the timely results we need, and uncertainties are often investigated at the end of study build by running sensitivities to a base case. An alternative approach is to work our disciplines in parallel, consider key uncertainties throughout the evaluation, and set specific times to convene the team to plan the next phase of the reservoir study. We call this the Forth Rail Bridge model. (FORTH RAIL BRIDGE IMAGE)
To sum it up, when we make better decisions when select the appropriate tools, recognise the influence of human bias, consider only key uncertainties rather than every possible combination, and provide cycles of thinking time to evaluate uncertainty and risk before planning the next stage of study.

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AGR Group ASA issued this content on 26 January 2016 and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 26 January 2016 14:14:22 UTC

Original Document: http://www.agr.com/media/how-to-manage-risk-and-uncertainty-in-mature-fields-