![]() Integral to these improvements are recent advances in software capability to handle dipmeter and image log data. In 2012 BSP embarked on a Borehole Image (BHI) pilot improvement project consisting of some 54 wells, covering a wide range of dipmeter and image tools, with the objective to define data management standards and interpretation workflows aimed at effectively rescuing and ultimately ensuring full integration of this data. As a consequence the potential value of the dipmeter and image logs has remained unrealized. This is largely due to dipmeter and image tools having suffered a lag-time between tool evolution and effective data storage and archiving systems. The current reality is that both raw and processed data are generally not readily available in a format usable by either petrophysicists or geologists. BSP is perhaps one of the few E&P companies that has a significant amount of dipmeter and image data, more than 500 wells, exceeding 7000km, backdating to the early days of dipmeter tools, covering a wide range of historical recording mechanisms, computing platforms and principal databases. ![]() ![]() Brunei Shell Petroleum (BSP) is no exception to this, as concluded from a review of these data in 2011. ![]() Historically in our industry, dipmeter and image log data, have generally bypassed the data management processes necessary to safeguard these data for future use. ![]()
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