Petroleum Geology: From Mature Basins to New Frontiers – Proceedings of the 7th Petroleum Geology Conference

‘The Proceedings of the 7th Petroleum Geology Conference is the seventh in a series that has become a tradition known as the ‘Barbican’ conferences. They started life over 35 years ago, in 1974, with a focus solely on North-West Europe, and have a reputation, both from the conferences and the accompanying Proceedings volumes, of being at the forefront of petroleum geoscience; the standard reference for successive generations of petroleum geoscientists.
North-West Europe has matured as a petroleum province and, at the same time, the conference series has matured to be a truly global event.
These Proceedings embrace many of the world’s petroleum provinces in a two-volume set. There are sections on Europe, which still provides the heart of the Proceedings; Russia, the former Soviet Union and Circum-Artic; North Africa and the Middle East; Passive Margins; and Unconventional Hydrocarbon Resources.
In addition, the three Geocontroversies debates, highly acclaimed at the conference, are included, as is a summary of the Core Workshop. A DVD complements the books and, in addition to providing electronic versions of all the papers also includes selected posters and video clips from the Virtual Field Trip session; the latter being a major success at the conference. The Proceedings volumes of this seventh conference are therefore a ‘must’ for every petroleum geoscientist’s bookshelf.
The Scott Field: revitalization of a mature field
-
Published:January 01, 2010
-
CiteCitation
G. R. Brook, J. R. Wardell, S. F. Flanagan, T. P. Regan, 2010. "The Scott Field: revitalization of a mature field", Petroleum Geology: From Mature Basins to New Frontiers – Proceedings of the 7th Petroleum Geology Conference, B. A. Vining, S. C. Pickering
Download citation file:
- Share
-
Tools
Abstract
The Scott Field, located in the UK Central North Sea, is in a mature stage of development. The Scott platform has been on production since 1993, when the Scott Field came on stream, followed in 1993 by the subsea tie-back of the Telford Field development, located to the south of Scott. By 2005 the Scott Field had produced 400×106 boe cumulative production. However, the field was producing at water cuts approaching 90% and the previously completed 2002–2004 infill drilling campaign had not met expectations. A change in strategy was undertaken in the subsequent 2005–2007 Scott drilling campaign, which...
- Atlantic Ocean
- case studies
- clastic rocks
- drilling
- Europe
- geophysical methods
- Great Britain
- interpretation
- Jurassic
- maturity
- Mesozoic
- Moray Firth
- natural gas
- North Atlantic
- North Sea
- petroleum
- production
- sandstone
- Scotland
- sedimentary rocks
- seismic methods
- United Kingdom
- Upper Jurassic
- Western Europe
- Piper Sandstone
- Scott Field
- Outer Moray Firth
- Telford Field