- GL5002 - Finding Oil - Geosciences in the Oil and Gas Industry
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Unknown
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
The course aims to cover important aspects of geology, geophysics and prospect evaluation over a three week period. Assignments (60%) are set during the teaching weeks and the exam is in December.
Structure
Assessment
- GL5006 - Overview of the Energy Industry
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor D. MacDonald
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course gives an overview of all aspects of the MSc program. It is delivered through the Wessex Fieldtrip and the first week of structured teaching. It covers Petroleum Economics, Petroleum Geology, The North Sea, Enterprise, Presentation Skills and Petroleum Technology. Assignments (60%) will be set in Wessex, and during the first week of teaching. Exam (40%) will be in December. An assessed presentation task will be set for each student and this takes place in early December.
Structure
Assessment
- GL5007 - Well and Facilities Engineering
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr David Jolley
Pre-requisites
Entrance to Safety Engineering MSc/PgDip/PgCert.
Co-requisites
First degree and relevant experience.
Overview
this course will deliver an overview of Well and Facilities engineering in the Oil and Gas industry.
The main learning outcomes are to provide an understanding of the current technology in facilities and well engineering in the hydrocarbon industry both onshore and offshore, in exploration, production and development.Structure
Two threads with a total of 54 contact hours time, delivered by external staff by lectures and practical work sessions in half day to day long sessions.
Assessment
Formal examination, 3 hour paper (70%), continuous assessment project (30%).
- GL5010 - Master Dissertation
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- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Stuart Archer
Pre-requisites
120 credits from the Hydrocarbon Exploration courses
Co-requisites
The course may only be taken as part of the Hydrocarbon Exploration programme, or by permission of the Head of Geosciences.
Overview
The content of the projects will depend on the industrial sponsor, with input from an academic sponsor
Structure
The dissertation is undertaken by the student with the guidance of an oil industry related academic staff member in Geology and Petroleum Geology and an advisor within the company whose data they are working on.
Assessment
100% thesis. The course organiser may allow flexibility in the imposition of submission deadlines where there is good cause (due to individual student circumstances) for doing so.
- GL5204 - Engineering from Borehole to Surface 1
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr David Jolley
Pre-requisites
Entrance to PGT programmes in Oil and Gas Enterprise Management, Energy Futures, and Safety Engineering.
Co-requisites
First degree and relevant experience.
Notes
xOverview
This course covers reservoir, well/drilling engineering and facilities management. The teaching takes place over three weeks and assignments (60%) will be set then, the exam in December.
Structure
x
Assessment
x
- GL5306 - Engineering from Borehole to Surface 2
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr David Jolley
Pre-requisites
Entrance to PGT programmes in Oil and Gas Enterprise Management, Energy Futures and Safety Engineering.
Co-requisites
First degree and relevant experience.
Overview
This course will provide an understanding of the current technology in facilities and safety engineering in the hydrocarbon industry, both onshore and offshore, in exploration, production and development programmes. It will also give an understanding of approaches to risk management and psychology that will enhance management decision-making.
Structure
Two threads with a total of 57 contact hours time, delivered by external staff in lectures and practical work sessions, lasting half a day to a full day.
Assessment
Formal examination, 3 hour paper (70%), continuous project (30%)
- GL5500 - Portfolio Optimisation - decision making and investment appraisal in petroleum economics
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor Alex Kemp
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course will start in late January and run for three weeks, covering petroleum economics. Assessments are set during the three weeks and the exam is held in late April/early May, at the end of the Easter vacation.
Structure
Assessment
- GL5501 - Fiscal systems, commercial law and reporting: reserve definition and unit agreement around the world
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Unknown
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course covers taxation, reporting, sustainable development and aspects of U.K. law which deal with the oil and gas industry. It takes place over two weeks and assignments (60%) are set, with the exam (40%) held in late April/early May, at the end of the Easter vacation.
Structure
Assessment
- GL5505 - Petroleum Economics
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- David Jolley
Pre-requisites
Entrance to MSc Oil & Gas Enterprise Management
Co-requisites
First degree and/or relevant work experience
Overview
This course will examine the collection of economic rent and other licensing and policy issues. It will consider the concept of economic rent and evaluate the devised for its collection, for example, bonus bidding, royalties, production tax, corporate income tax, Resource Rent Tax, Brown Tax, production sharing (including R-Factor and rate of return based on profit sharing). Other licensing and policy issues will examine the criteria for award under discretionary system (work programme, contribution to economy etc), relinquishment conditions, pricing policy, depletion policy, state partition and procurement policy. The economic aspects of different contractual arrangements are discussed, e.g. concessions, production sharing agreements, buy back contracts.
Structure
Block teaching at start of second half-session. Seminar/lectures 30 hours in mornings, self-directed learning 40 hours, assignments and independent work 60 hours.
Assessment
60% written examination (3 hours), 40% continuous assessment.
- GL5700 - Dealing and Negotiation
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Unknown
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course covers hydrocarbon enterprise and entrepreneurship , organisational psychology, and conflict and oil. It takes place over three weeks and assignments (60%) are set then, with the exam (40%) taking place in late April/early May, at the end of the Easter vacation.
Structure
Assessment
- GL5701 - Team-building and course integration
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor David Macdonald
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course will take place at the start of the Easter vacation. We will spend a week on a team project based partly onsite, the details of which we only reveal during that week itself. This week is supplemented by another ‘game’ held offsite in the Aberdeen area. Assessment is 100% of this course. The BP Chalybeat two-day team-building in December is a non-assessed part of the course.
The last part of the course, the individual project, is an integral part of the training, and forms a large part of the assessment of each student (12 credits, equivalent to four courses). It is our experience that students mature greatly during this part of the course, both personally and technically. For this reason, and given the intensive and challenging nature of the course, we believe the students must complete the entire programme before we attempt to assess their ultimate potential.
Structure
Assessment
- GL5903 - Reservoir Characterisation
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- Credit Points
- 7.5
- Course Coordinator
- David Jolley
Pre-requisites
Entrance to MSc Oil & Gas Enterprise Management; GL5002
Co-requisites
First degree and/or work experience.
Overview
This course is designed to build on the basic geological concepts delivered by GL5002, Finding Oil. Students will be exposed to complex terrestrial and marine rock sequences which include strata of reservoir potential. They will examine variation in reservoir quality and the geometry of reservoir bodies. This will be carried on into a difficult exploration setting where reservoir definition is less predictable. These examples will be analysed in depth in the field and the results carried into seminar based workshops which will provide experience of reserve calculation and the estimation of risk.
Structure
Two one-day field excursions, one to a mixed terrestrial and marine sequence on the Fife coast and another to demonstrate alternative prospect formation and difficulties in mixed fluvial and volcanic strata. These field days will be followed by half-day workshops in which students will be trained in reservoir volume calculations and building reservoir models.
Assessment
Field notes x 2 (60%); assessed exercises x 2 (40%).
- GL5904 - Module 4: Play and prospect analysis
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Stuart Archer
Pre-requisites
None
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Entry to the programme will be restricted to those with an honours degree or above in geology, geophysics or a cognate discipline. Beyond this programme-level requirement there are no pre-requisites for this module.Overview
This course will cover:
1. Play analysis, including creation of layered maps, use of GIS and GIS derived software, play led exploration methods, shared versus local risk, graphical presentaiton of complex data (5days.
2. Prospect analysis, including the generation of prospects from seismic data, closure, spill points and trap geometry, (2Days)
3. Gross rock volumetric quantification from seismic and the property mapping to facilitate full volumetric analysis (porosity, net to gross, water saturation, recovery factor, formation volume factor (2Days)
4. Risk and uncertainty, including probabilistic verus deterministic models, Monte Carol tools, cumulative probability curves, creaming curve analysis (1day)
5. Portfolio optimisation, including play and prosect ranking, petroleum economics, and sharing risk through equity and an appreciation of commerical issues (2days)Structure
Teaching will be in an intensive short-course format in five blocks spread through the summer:
Block 1 will be a five-day course on play analysis (Topic 1, above)
Block 2 will be a two-day short course on propect analysis (Topic 2, above)
Block 3 will be a two-day course on volumetrics (Topic 3, above)
Block 4 will be one-day course on risk and uncetainty (Topic 4, above)
Block 5 will be a two-day course on portfolio optimisation (Topic 5, above)
Within each block, teaching will involve lectures, tutorials, stuctured discussion groups, laboratory-syle exercises, and group work. Total contact hous will be 96.Assessment
The course will be assessed entirely by continuous assessment (CA). There will be one formative assessment per day of teaching and one summative piece of CA for each of the five main elements of the course.
Summarise, the main North Sea Play Types and rank their relative historical production and remianing hydrocarbon potential (20%)
Creat a farm-out document that summarises a prosect in your portfolio (20%)
Complete volumetric estimates for your prospect for inclusion in the farm-out document (20%)
Rank your propects by P50 reserves, then re-rank once weighted by geological risk (20%)
Make a recommendation to management how your portfolio could be optimised (20%) - GL5905 - 'Size of the Prize' Group Exploration Exercise
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Stuart Archer
Pre-requisites
x
Overview
x
Structure
Assessment
x
- GL5906 - INTERNATIONAL FIELD TRIP
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- Credit Points
- 10
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Stuart Archer
Pre-requisites
60 credits from the Hydrocarbon Exploration Programme
Co-requisites
The course can only be taken as part of the Hydrocarbon Exploration programme, or by permission of the Head of Geosciences
Overview
Field trip will be led by Professor Ron Steel (University of Aberdeen and University of Texas at Austin)
The location is Wyoming in the US and will involve travel to Denver, ColoradoStructure
Field work during the days (8 hours) and subsurface data used as lab work in the evenings (3 hours)
Assessment
Hand in field note books to be assessed for the accuracy and clarity of; geographic location, date and time, geological descriptions and interpretations, sketch maps, sections and sedimentary logs. The field note books will be orally discussed with supervisors/mentors to demonstrate sound geological understanding of exploration concepts and the importance of data acquisition in the field. (10%)
All assessment will be carried out in the field. the course co-ordinator is responsible for ensuring that the materials required to run the exercises are available