You are on page 1of 5

Drilling automation: Is resistance futile?

| Drilling Contractor

About

Subscribe

Media Kit

Contact

Departments

Features

News

Videos

DC Archive

CATEGORIZED | 2011, Automation, CurrentFeatures, Features, Innovating While Drilling, July/August, Videos

Recent News
06 July 2011 Nabors modular Rig 702 is Papua New Guinea-bound for ExxonMobil Nabors International unveiled its new modular Rig 702, the first of two headed for Papua New Guinea (PNG) for a 900-day contract with options for... 06 July 2011 Maersk Drilling orders two ultradeepwater drillships Maersk Drilling has ordered the construction of two ultra-deepwater drillships at Samsung Heavy Industries in South Korea for delivery in... 06 July 2011 Songa Offshore to provide Statoil with 2 category D rigs Statoil has awarded the contract for the construction of two new drilling rigs for use on the Norwegian Continental Shelf (NCS) to Songa Offshore... 06 July 2011 Asia Offshore Drilling orders new KFELS B Class jackup Asia Offshore Drilling (AOD) has exercised the first of two options to build a KFELS B Class jackup rig worth US$184 million with Keppel FELS... 06 July 2011 UK Parliament report backs shale gas, hydraulic fracturing The UK House of Commons Energy and Climate Change Committee has put its support behind shale gas and hydraulic fracturing in a report looking... Read more news

Drilling automation: Is resistance futile?


Posted on 06 July 2011

Share This

[Translate]

Apache automation advisor believes barriers are few and time is ripe, but operators must drive businessmodel change By Linda Hsieh, managing editor Automation: Say the word the right way with the right group of people in drilling circles, and it can almost come off as an obscenity. Drilling is an art, they say, with too many unpredictabilities. How can it be entrusted in the hands of a bunch of machines, computers and algorithms? Whether drilling is an art is arguable, but whats undeniable is that we live in an age where computers, not pilots, safely fly airplanes carrying millions of passengers around the world each year. Is it really absurd to suggest that one day we may be able to automate the drilling process so that different pieces of rig equipment not only talk to each other, but to all the different pieces of downhole equipment, sharing and feeding each other real-time well data and information in a continuous loop that optimizes itself? If you ask Jim Rogers, automation advisor, worldwide drilling for Apache Corp, the answer is no, its not absurd. In fact, hes wondering why were not doing it already. As an automation professional certified by the International Society of Automation with more than two decades of experience implementing automation solutions in industries such as chemical, oil and gas, utility, power generation and general processing, Mr Rogers has seen the challenges that our industry is facing many times over. To him, were not that different; we just perceive ourselves to be different. And most of the barriers we think are insurmountable can either be easily overcome or arent even there, he says. Skeptical? Many in the industry are. But seeing is believing, and thats Jim Rogers, Apache why innovative oil companies such as Apache are funding demonstration projects to prove that true automated drilling can be achieved with todays technologies. Before Apache, Mr Rogers spent six years with Shell, where he designed and implemented automation controls and worked on projects demonstrating the capability of remote directional drilling systems. Now at Apache, he is working on further demonstration projects where a SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) system has been installed on a rig to coordinate the functions and controls of the different pieces of equipment, and algorithms are being run to make decisions that a driller would normally make. The team plans to drill continuously for the rest of this year and likely into next year, currently with one rig and perhaps adding a second rig in the fall. Mr Rogers recently spoke with Drilling Contractor about the future of drilling automation, the perceived and actual barriers, why automation is necessary and the coming and perhaps painful business model change associated with the transition. Drilling Contractor (DC): Is the drilling industry really so different from other industries that we cant take proven automation technologies and apply them here safely and efficiently? Rogers: Thats a common perception, but its not true. Drilling is different, but I still say you can define it. And if you

FEATURED VIDEOS
Guest editorial: Who broke this? The fine art of finger-pointing when a rig fails Drilling automation: Is resistance futile? Minimizing uncertainty: Geosteering advances keep wellbores in sweet spot

Popular

Recent Comments

Features

IADC Exemplary Service Award presented to Shells Ramalho

http://www.drillingcontractor.org/drilling-automation-is-resistance-futile-9913[7/19/2011 8:49:23 AM]

Drilling automation: Is resistance futile? | Drilling Contractor can define it and measure it, you can control it. You can apply techniques from other industries to solve your challenges. DC: So how is drilling different? Rogers: In a refinery, in an automobile manufacturing plant, or in a chemical plant, you have one owner. Suppliers bring their equipment in and it stays there, and nothing changes after that. You have a known process that gets repeated on the same equipment. Drillings not that way. In drilling, you have people coming and going. You have equipment suppliers delivering their equipment on this well, but on the next well it might be someone different. Thats true, but thats not a technical barrier. Its a cultural barrier. There are cultural barriers and emotional barriers. There are no technical barriers. You can add and remove equipment and still automate it. Each well might be in a different lithology, and the reservoir might be different, but thats OK because we know how to drill in those reservoirs. With the wells that are being drilled today, you cant convince me that there are brandnew problems that nobody has ever seen before in drilling through a layer of rock. Every layer of rock were drilling through, weve already drilled through before, and the problems were seeing are the same problems weve seen before. All industries have unique problems. Sure, some of drillings challenges and issues are a little bit different, but many of them are common to other industries. Dont focus on the different ones, focus on the common ones and lets make some progress. DC: What specific automation technologies can we implement in our industry now that have already been proven in other industries? Rogers: Supervisory control. The drilling industry is comparable to where automobile manufacturing was in the early 1980s. General Motors was looking around their manufacturing plant and saw what they called islands of automation. You had a worker in his work cell with his equipment. Materials would come into his cell, he would work on them, and he would send the materials out. And they would get bottlenecks of flow of materials through their factory because this worker worked in complete isolation of everybody else. Just like you have in well construction. This was a problem for GM because they couldnt make their operations more efficient. They saw a need to connect these islands of automation. To do that, they started defining standards for communication protocols and equipment. These standards would then allow the systems and the work flows to be connected together. Then you could start doing resource planning using automation and standards and communications. DC: Getting all the various pieces of drilling surface and downhole equipment to talk to one another doesnt sound like an easy task. Rogers: Thats another common perception, and its an awareness issue. Its not hard to get the equipment to talk together. When we did a demonstration project in Canada in 2009 (with Shell), the well delivery team held a meeting with the drilling contractor and service providers. Everybody advised me that my plans of trying to hook this equipment together would be really hard and their experience was it would take somewhere between four to six months to try to get it working and get the bugs worked out and get it stable. We did it in two and a half days. This is hard if you want to start from a blank sheet of paper, but I used commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) products. Commercial off-theshelf products are there, and theyre cheap. Within a couple of days, we had umanned MWD talking to our control system, we had the rig talking to the control system, and we had the mud pumps talking to the control system. None of this is hard. People just need to be shown how to do it, and thats where these demonstration projects come in. Thats what we were doing at Shell, and thats what were doing at Apache. DC: What are you trying to achieve with the current demo project at Apache?

IADC issues new safety alerts Be heard: Write to Congress to protest drilling ban Kuwait, Oman boost Middle East drilling activity with deep drilling, steam flood projects GOM doomed as E&P Dead Sea under Americanization proposals Case studies: High-density elastic cements applied to solve HPHT challenges in South Texas Advances in high-performance drilling fluids enhance wellbore strength, help curb loss Risk mitigation pushing boundaries in frontier areas To boost drillstring life, hardbanding reapplication specs could be more critical than initial specs Reliable expandable connections: Exclusive video

Apache is using a Huisman LOC 400 rig for a drilling automation demonstration project in the Permian Basin where a supervisory control and data acquisition system has been installed to coordinate the functions and controls of different equipment and algorithms are being

Rogers: Right now we have one rig drilling in the Permian Basin in used to make decisions that a West Texas, and we want to expand upon what was done with the driller would normally make. early projects with Shell. Those early projects focused on directional control. Now we want to take the bigger-picture view and look at all the components of well making and integrate all the components, not just the drilling, but pipe handling, cementing, fracking operations, and even well planning. The idea is to integrate the work flows, from the time you plan the well and drill the well on paper, to the time you actually drill the well and complete the well. All those activities should be an integrated work flow.

http://www.drillingcontractor.org/drilling-automation-is-resistance-futile-9913[7/19/2011 8:49:23 AM]

Drilling automation: Is resistance futile? | Drilling Contractor Weve hooked up the different pieces of equipment together into a common aggregator, and were collecting all the data sources and putting them into a single spot. Now we have enough information to start sending control responses back to those pieces of equipment. Essentially we coordinate the operations of the equipment and the work flows. Mud pumps are coordinated with the top drive, which is coordinated with the drawworks, which is coordinated with the pipe handling, which is coordinated with the downhole RSS directional steering and MWD and LWD. We hook all these systems together and have coordinated control. Normally what controls all of this is the driller. We now have a computer do that instead of the driller. DC: Some in the industry would have strong objections to having a computer be in control instead of the driller. How do you respond to claims that drilling is an art that needs human analysis? Rogers: Drilling is a procedure, and procedures can be described. How did drillers learn to drill? They were put in a chair, and somebody told them to do this or dont do this. They call it an art, but its more a learning or an experience. A driller, over time, learns how to drill. He learns what the issues are and how to react to them. But each new driller has to re-learn that same stuff over and over. When a driller sees overpull increase and he knows the pipe might get stuck because the hole isnt clean and he needs to stop drilling and clean the hole, thats something he recognizes based on his experience. If he can recognize it and respond to it, then a program can be taught to do the same thing. You have drillers coming in with each new generation re-learning the same things that the generation before them already learned. We are not finding brand-new problems that nobodys ever seen before. Were finding brand-new drillers that havent seen old problems before. All we have to do is capture those learnings. Thats the process narrative. In process industries, they capture the best learnings of the best operators and put that into their computer automation programs. Theyve done that successfully for years. We can do that too. DC: You mentioned that the industry doesnt have to start from scratch if we want to achieve this kind of automation. What kinds of automation technologies are out there and available for our use? Rogers: Its not just technologies; there are standards. There are hundreds of standards on everything from instrumentation to process safety to human factors engineering to equipment specifications. In communications, there are standard communications protocols that equipment can use to communicate to pass data. Its already done. We just have to use them. But when you ask people in the drilling industry about standards, theyre not really aware of them because they havent been adopted or put into practice. Its just a matter of awareness, adoption and implementation. DC: So if this is all possible on a technical level, on the flip side, is there really a business case for doing all this? Rogers: Yes. The easy oil is diminishing, which means the cost of extracting hydrocarbons is going up. We have to find ways to reduce that cost, and we have to find step-change ways of doing that. Were not looking for just incremental changes. Instead of 16 days on a well, lets go to 10 days or even less. You cant do that with incremental changes. You have to do something fundamentally different, and that is going to cause a business-model change. There is no way around it. People have to do things differently than theyre doing it now. DC: But the business model is different for operators and for drilling contractors and service providers. Rogers: Its very different. The business model is mostly driven by the operator. For contractors and service companies, their business model has traditionally been centered around a dayrate service. They dont have much of a motivation to change, but they will have to.

On Apaches demo project in West Texas, which is using a Huisman LOC 400 rig, equipment and work flows have been coordinated, and different pieces of

equipment have been hooked together I compare this to what happened in the process automation into a common aggregator to collect data industry in the 1990s. Companies that made control systems sources into a single spot. used to do the circuit board design, circuit board manufacturing and made their own entirely proprietary systems. But when the personal computer and workstation industry became commoditized in the 1990s, in order to become competitive, control systems makers started incorporating Hewlett Packards, Dells and Gateways into their product lines. That caused a business-model change. Everybody started looking alike because every control system maker was using some off-the-shelf computer.

http://www.drillingcontractor.org/drilling-automation-is-resistance-futile-9913[7/19/2011 8:49:23 AM]

Drilling automation: Is resistance futile? | Drilling Contractor To differentiate themselves, they concluded that it came down to their knowledge of their customers business and understanding of his issues. Therefore, people became very important. Their process knowledge became very important because that gave them better products to solve the problems, so they became partners with their customer base. The value-add came in problem-solving rather than commodity products. The point of the story is that they had to go through a business transformation if they wanted to stay in business. It was painful, but it was a necessary pain. It was a business change that was thrust upon them, but if you approached it with the right attitude, it was an opportunity to grow the business. Thats what I see is what will have to happen in the drilling industry. Service providers and drilling contractors will have to adjust their business model. How they view it will determine how successful they will be. There were companies in the process control industry that struggled against this change, and they saw double-digit market shares go down to single digits. I see that coming in this industry too. You have the early adopters, and you have those who are resisting change. Market shares will shift depending on who is going to be innovative and find ways to adapt to the business-model change and whos not. DC: It seems like it is going to be up to the operators to drive this business-model change, rather than the drilling contractors or service providers. Rogers: Definitely. The operator should take the lead role in bringing change to the way we do things because ultimately the operator is responsible for what gets done on the lease. However, it has to be in a partnership with the suppliers. You need suppliers that will work with you in finding this innovation and finding these step-changes. The key is you have to be willing to try something different, and theres resistance to that. Its a cultural barrier. People dont want the risk of trying something new, especially a drilling contractor or service company. They dont want the risk because theyre judged on a dayrate and not causing a problem, which means theyre very conservative. They believe that if they take a conservative approach that they wont have problems, so thats what theyll do everytime. DC: Based on your experience with other industries, do you see a much higher resistance to risk in the drilling industry compared with other businesses thats hindering our adoption of automation technologies? Rogers: Absolutely not. None of this is really new. Its not surprising. Ive seen this happen in a number of different industries and Ive seen different industries go through their challenges and go through their business-model changes. Theyve done it, and now its drillings turn. DC editor and publisher Mike Killalea talks to Jim Rogers, automation advisor, worldwide drilling for Apache, about the challenges of realizing true drilling automation.

Share This

Leave a Reply
Name (required)

Email (will not be published) (required)

Website

http://www.drillingcontractor.org/drilling-automation-is-resistance-futile-9913[7/19/2011 8:49:23 AM]

Drilling automation: Is resistance futile? | Drilling Contractor

CAPTCHA Code *
Submit Comment

2011 International Association of Drilling Contractors

All Rights Reserved | Terms & Conditions

http://www.drillingcontractor.org/drilling-automation-is-resistance-futile-9913[7/19/2011 8:49:23 AM]

You might also like