Abstract

A joint AAPG–Society of Petroleum Engineers–Society of Exploration Geophysicists Hedberg Research Conference was held in Saint-Cyr sur Mer, France, on July 8 to 13, 2012, to review current research and explore future research directions related to improved production from carbonate reservoirs. Eighty-seven scientists from academia and industry (split roughly equally) attended for five days. A primary objective for the conference was to explore novel connections among different disciplines (primarily within geoscience and reservoir engineering) as a way to define new research opportunities. Research areas represented included carbonate sedimentology and stratigraphy, structural geology, geomechanics, hydrology, reactive transport modeling, seismic imaging (including four-dimensional seismic, tomography, and seismic forward modeling), geologic modeling and forward modeling of geologic processes, petrophysics, statistical methods, numerical methods for simulation, reservoir engineering, pore-scale processes, in-situ flow experiments (e.g., x-ray computed tomography), visualization, and methods for data interaction. The conference was organized into four thematic sessions on the first two days (fundamentals, measurement and detection of flow on laboratory to field scales, uncertainty and prediction, and novel modeling and simulation techniques); a field trip on the third day was preceded by a dedicated poster session that introduced the geology of the area, whereas the ice breaker featured guest lectures on innovation and complex adaptive leadership, as well as a panel discussion. Given the challenge of cross-disciplinary communication, delegates were encouraged to adopt a beginner's mind, challenging the status quo and exploring basic questions that the establishment might have overlooked. Stepping back and slowing down to promote effective conversations among different disciplines was emphasized upfront. Several delegates noted that technical jargon was a significant barrier to novel thinking in the way that it impeded effective communication among disciplines during the meeting. Cross-disciplinary interactions were encouraged by several further mechanisms, representing a shift from more common Hedberg Conference formats. Overall, the …

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