reservoir geomechanics course announcement

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Reservoir Geomechanics A Free Online Course from Stanford University April 1, 2014 – June 10, 2014 Stanford|ONLINE For More Information and to Register for the Course at No Cost visit the URL: gp202.class.stanford.edu This interdisciplinary course encompasses the fields of rock mechanics, structural geology, earthquake seismology and petroleum engineering to address a wide range of geomechanical problems that arise during the exploitation of oil and gas reservoirs. The course considers key practical issues such as prediction of pore pressure, estimation of hydrocarbon column heights and fault seal potential, determination of optimally stable well trajectories, casing set points and mud weights, changes in reservoir performance during depletion, and production-induced faulting and subsidence. The first part of the course establishes the basic principles involved in a way that allows readers from different disciplinary backgrounds to understand the key concepts. The course is intended for geoscientists and engineers in the petroleum and geothermal industries, and for research scientists interested in stress measurements and their application to problems of faulting and fluid flow in the crust. Instructors: Mark D. Zoback, Professor of Geophysics, Stanford University Arjun H. Kohli, Graduate Teaching Assistant The course consists of 20, 90 minute lectures (in ~20 minute segments). 2 lectures will be made available each week starting April 1, 2014. The lectures will remain available online through the end of the course. Most of the course

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Reservoir GeomechanicsA Free Online Course from Stanford University

April 1, 2014 – June 10, 2014

Stanford|ONLINE

For More Information and to Register for the Course at No Cost visit the URL:gp202.class.stanford.edu

This interdisciplinary course encompasses the fields of rock mechanics, structural geology, earthquake seismology and petroleum engineering to address a wide range of geomechanical problems that arise during the exploitation of oil and gas reservoirs. The course considers key practical issues such as prediction of pore pressure, estimation of hydrocarbon column heights and fault seal potential, determination of optimally stable well trajectories, casing set points and mud weights, changes in reservoir performance during depletion, and production-induced faulting and subsidence. The first part of the course establishes the basic principles involved in a way that allows readers from different disciplinary backgrounds to understand the key concepts. The course is intended for geoscientists and engineers in the petroleum and geothermal industries, and for research scientists interested in stress measurements and their application to problems of faulting and fluid flow in the crust.

Instructors:Mark D. Zoback, Professor of Geophysics, Stanford UniversityArjun H. Kohli, Graduate Teaching Assistant

The course consists of 20, 90 minute lectures (in ~20 minute segments). 2 lectures will be made available each week starting April 1, 2014. The lectures will remain available online through the end of the course. Most of the course follows Dr. Zoback’s textbook, Reservoir Geomechanics, with updated examples and applications.

Lectures 18 and 19 are on topics related to geomechanical issues affecting shale gas and tight oil recovery. Lecture 20 is on the topic of managing the risk of triggered and induced seismicity.

Reservoir Geomechanics is available from:Cambridge University Press: www.cambridge.org/zobackAmazon and Kindle: http://www.amazon.com/Reservoir-Geomechanics-Mark-D-Zoback/dp/0521146194

About the Instructors:Dr. Mark D. Zoback is the Benjamin M. Page Professor of Geophysics at Stanford University. Dr. Zoback conducts research on in situ stress, fault mechanics, and reservoir geomechanics with an emphasis on shale gas, tight gas and tight oil production. He was one of the principal investigators of the SAFOD project in which a scientific research

well was successfully drilled through the San Andreas Fault at seismogenic depth. He is the author of a textbook entitled Reservoir Geomechanics published in 2007 by Cambridge University Press. He is the author/co-author of over 300 technical papers and holds five patents. He was the co-founder of GeoMechanics International in 1996, where he was Chairman of the Board until 2008. Dr. Zoback currently serves as a Senior Executive Adviser to Baker Hughes. Dr. Zoback has received a number of awards and honors, including the 2006 Emil Wiechert Medal of the German Geophysical Society and the 2008 Walter H. Bucher Medal of the American Geophysical Union. In 2011, he was elected to the U.S. National Academy of Engineering and in 2012 elected to Honorary Membership in the Society of Exploration Geophysicists. He is the 2013 recipient of the Louis Néel Medal, European Geosciences Union and named an Einstein Chair Professor of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. He recently served on the National Academy of Engineering committee investigating the Deepwater Horizon accident and the Secretary of Energy’s committee on shale gas development and environmental protection. He served on a Canadian Council of Academies panel investigating the same topic. Dr. Zoback is currently serving on the National Academy of Sciences Advisory Board on drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.

Arjun H. Kohli, Graduate Teaching AssistantArjun H. Kohli is a 4th year Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Geophysics at Stanford and laboratory manager of the Stress and Crustal Mechanics Laboratory. Arjun conducts research on fault mechanics and microstructure with applications to plate-boundary fault zones, geothermal and petroleum reservoirs, and induced and triggered seismicity. He completed a B.S. in Geology-Physics/Mathematics at Brown University in 2010 and was awarded the Brown University Department of Geological Sciences Undergraduate Research Award for his work on dynamic fault weakening mechanisms. In 2011, he received a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship to investigate controls on the transition from stable to dynamic fault slip with Dr. Zoback at Stanford. Arjun is currently engaged in collaborative research with numerous partners including the United States Geological Survey, University of Silesia, University of Minnesota, and Stanford University Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences.