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The 2007 SPE/AAPG/WPC/SPEE Reserves and Resources Classification, Definitions and Guidelines. Defining the Standard!*

By

John R. Etherington1 and Ronald Harrell2

 

Search and Discovery Article #100003 (2007)

Posted August 8, 2007

 

*Adapted from oral presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Long Beach, California, April 1-4, 2007

 

1PRA International Ltd, Calgary, AB ([email protected])

2Ryder Scott (retired), Houston, Texas

 

Abstract 

In late 2004, a focused effort was begun to update the 1997 SPE/WPC Petroleum Reserves Definitions and the 2000 SPE/WPC/AAPG Petroleum Resources Classification and Definitions. The evolution of the industry, driven by advancements in technology, the international expansion of the E&P sector, and the increasing role of unconventional resources in meeting global energy needs, drove the requirement to update what had served the industry well for the last 15 years. The 2007 system builds on previous industry efforts to provide sufficient guidance to achieve a high level of consistency in estimating reserves and resource quantities; it incorporates best practices identified in other international petroleum and minerals classification systems. It recommends a rigorous approach based on applying a series of defined projects to hydrocarbon-bearing reservoirs. Resource classes are defined according to the maturity of the applied projects expressed as qualitatively or quantitatively as the chance of reaching producing status. Within each resource class, the relative uncertainty in the estimated quantities that may be recovered by each project under those conditions forecast to exist during its implementation are denoted by assignment to categories. Assessments may be conducted using deterministic and/or probabilistic methods. In order to satisfy requirements of the full range of industry stakeholders, the 2007 system introduces additional classification and categorization terminology. The resulting document is a set of technical guidelines that can be adapted by oil and gas companies to better manage their business; moreover, it forms a standard that can be referenced by government agencies in defining reporting requirements.

 

Selected Slides 

Who is the Oil and Gas Reserves Committee (OGRC)?

Evolution of petroleum evaluation guidelines.

2007 SPE-Petroleum Resources Management System (PRMS): Major principles.

Resources classification system.

Sub-classify by project maturity.

Categorize by uncertainty.

Based on forecast conditions.

 

Backup 

Major changes in proposed 20007 SPE/WPC/AAPG/SPEE-PRMS.

The “Aggregation Issue.”

SPE vision: “Universal Standard” for petroleum.

Total resource system – Project-Based.”

E&P business model.

Resource assessment process.

Resource tracking and reporting.

Influencing SEC changes.

“Project-Based” system.

SPE Oil and Gas Reserves Committee.