Hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - Significance, challenges, and recommendations

Upstream gas supply planning and allocation contains 3 cycles namely long term (20 years - end of life of a field) mid-term (up to 1 year) and short term (72 hours). Since the upstream assets are owned/operated by different companies under various production sharing contracts, each of the operating...

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Main Authors: Challa, P., Sahith, S.J.K., Rao, K.V., Pedapati, S.R.
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Published: Pipeline Simulation Interest Group (PSIG) 2019
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85083953930&partnerID=40&md5=42f4956f3f38b96a3ffdb2894dcb1ccc
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/23635/
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spelling my.utp.eprints.236352021-08-19T08:08:42Z Hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - Significance, challenges, and recommendations Challa, P. Sahith, S.J.K. Rao, K.V. Pedapati, S.R. Upstream gas supply planning and allocation contains 3 cycles namely long term (20 years - end of life of a field) mid-term (up to 1 year) and short term (72 hours). Since the upstream assets are owned/operated by different companies under various production sharing contracts, each of the operating companies prefer to maximize their production and recover the investment costs at the earliest. A regulator acts as a custodian to ensure that all stakeholder's entitlements are protected. The custodian relies on economic and hydraulic modelling to analyse the production plateau's shared by various operating companies together with the demand profiles for viability. The commercial planning team of the custodian works closely with flow assurance engineers before confirming the production numbers as the planners are unaware of any capacity constraints in the physical network for flow. In the short term, an integrated network operator breaks the long term demand numbers and controls the network for seamless delivery of gas from upstream to LNG plants (mostly). The purpose of the paper is to highlight the challenges faced by planners and engineers during the planning cycles and to make appropriate recommendations. © Copyright 2019, PSIG, Inc. Pipeline Simulation Interest Group (PSIG) 2019 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85083953930&partnerID=40&md5=42f4956f3f38b96a3ffdb2894dcb1ccc Challa, P. and Sahith, S.J.K. and Rao, K.V. and Pedapati, S.R. (2019) Hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - Significance, challenges, and recommendations. In: UNSPECIFIED. http://eprints.utp.edu.my/23635/
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
building UTP Resource Centre
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Petronas
content_source UTP Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utp.edu.my/
description Upstream gas supply planning and allocation contains 3 cycles namely long term (20 years - end of life of a field) mid-term (up to 1 year) and short term (72 hours). Since the upstream assets are owned/operated by different companies under various production sharing contracts, each of the operating companies prefer to maximize their production and recover the investment costs at the earliest. A regulator acts as a custodian to ensure that all stakeholder's entitlements are protected. The custodian relies on economic and hydraulic modelling to analyse the production plateau's shared by various operating companies together with the demand profiles for viability. The commercial planning team of the custodian works closely with flow assurance engineers before confirming the production numbers as the planners are unaware of any capacity constraints in the physical network for flow. In the short term, an integrated network operator breaks the long term demand numbers and controls the network for seamless delivery of gas from upstream to LNG plants (mostly). The purpose of the paper is to highlight the challenges faced by planners and engineers during the planning cycles and to make appropriate recommendations. © Copyright 2019, PSIG, Inc.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Challa, P.
Sahith, S.J.K.
Rao, K.V.
Pedapati, S.R.
spellingShingle Challa, P.
Sahith, S.J.K.
Rao, K.V.
Pedapati, S.R.
Hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - Significance, challenges, and recommendations
author_facet Challa, P.
Sahith, S.J.K.
Rao, K.V.
Pedapati, S.R.
author_sort Challa, P.
title Hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - Significance, challenges, and recommendations
title_short Hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - Significance, challenges, and recommendations
title_full Hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - Significance, challenges, and recommendations
title_fullStr Hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - Significance, challenges, and recommendations
title_full_unstemmed Hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - Significance, challenges, and recommendations
title_sort hydraulic modeling for upstream gas production planning and allocation - significance, challenges, and recommendations
publisher Pipeline Simulation Interest Group (PSIG)
publishDate 2019
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85083953930&partnerID=40&md5=42f4956f3f38b96a3ffdb2894dcb1ccc
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/23635/
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