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CALL FOR PAPERS


Submission Deadline: 15 April 2014
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Conference Organiser:

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WELCOME FROM THE CONFERENCE CHAIRMAN

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEMBERS


Ali Khalifa Al Shamsi (Conference Chairman), ADNOC Fareed Abdulla (Programme Co-Chairman), ADCO Rafi Bagndjian (Programme Co-Chairman), Shell

Ahmad Saqer Al Suwaidi, ADMA-OPCO Dear Industry Colleagues, It gives me great pleasure to announce the 17th edition of the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference (ADIPEC) which will take place 1013 November 2014 at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre (ADNEC). This year marks a signicant milestone for ADIPEC as the event also celebrates 30 years of service to the oil and gas industry. The theme for ADIPEC 2014 has been specially chosen with this in mind, Challenges and Opportunities for the Next 30 Years. The broad based theme gives ample scope for in-depth discussion between industry professionals as we seek to advance technical expertise, share knowledge and develop innovative solutions to current and future challenges. The programme committee for ADIPEC 2014, with Fareed Abdulla, ADCO as chairman has proposed comprehensive topics including: E&P geoscience; unconventional resources; field development; drilling and completion technology; projects, engineering and management; operational excellence; HSE; gas technology; people and talents. I would encourage you all to review the detailed topics and themes listed here and submit your paper proposals so that you can be part of this exciting event in its landmark 30th year. The members of the programme committee will rate and select papers based on the quality of the technical information while taking into account the regional and international diversity of the content. ADIPEC continues to be a valuable opportunity for all oil and gas professionals to contribute to the progress of our industry and a better future for our communities. The inspiring conference programme and extensive exhibition feature several new initiatives and promise to engage and benet all participants. We look forward to your active participation in ADIPEC 2014. Sincerely, Ali Khalifa Al Shamsi ADIPEC 2014 Conference Chairman Strategy & Coordination Director, ADNOC Omar S. Al Suwaidi, ADNOC Nabil Al Alawi, AlMansoori Khaled Nouh, Baker Hughes Abdulkarim Al Mazmi, BP Li Yueqiang, CNPC Morten Mauritzen, ExxonMobil Abdulaziz Al Ameri, GASCO Abed Ezzelregal, Gulf of Suez Petroleum Company (GUPCO) Guy Tennant, Halliburton Nozomi Fujita, JODCO Chongsuk Yoon, KADOC Hosnia S. Hashim, KUFPEC Bader Al Lamki, Masdar Takeshi Hokari, Mitsui & Co. Musabbeh Al Kaabi, Mubadala Petroleum Abdalla Saeed Al-Suwaidi, NDC Aqeel Madhi, NPCC Sudhir Vasudeva, ONGC Stephen Lloyd, Oxy Jose Pereira, Partex Abla Al Reyami, PDO Marwan Chedid, Petrofac Hussein Fouad El Ghazzawy, Schlumberger Andrew Vaughan, Shell Neri Askland, Statoil Ismail Tag, The Petroleum Institute Hatem Nuseibeh, Total James Williams, Weatherford Martin Bremeier, Wintershall Ray Mitro, ZADCO Christopher Hudson, DMG representative

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TECHNICAL PROGRAMME SUB-COMMITTEE MEMBERS


E&P GEOSCIENCE
Rick Singleton (Co-Chairperson) Bab Gas Development Project Maria Teresa Ribeiro (Co-Chairperson) Partex Manhal Sirat, ADCO Faaeza Al Katheeri, ADNOC Mahmoud (Mudi) Ibrahim, Baker Hughes Thomas Gundacker, BP Klaus Mueller, ExxonMobil Hidenori Obara, INPEX/JODCO Francia Galea Alvarez, KOC James Efstathiou, Mubadala Petroleum Harald Granser, OMV Ismail Haggag, Schlumberger Raghu Ramamoorthy, Schlumberger Barbara Lak, Shell Dominique Pourtoy, Total Piet van der Hem, Wintershall Henry Ewart Edwards, ZADCO

UNCONVENTIONAL RESOURCES & FIELD DEVELOPMENT


Tayba Al Hashemi (Co-Chairperson) ADNOC Christiaan van der Harst (Co-Chairperson) Shell Mariam Al Baloushi, ADCO Mustapha Adli, ADNOC Graham Walker, BP Sean Whitehead, Halliburton Masayuki Kaneko, INPEX/JODCO Tadashi Hashimura, INPEX/JODCO Frederick Riddiford, Mubadala Petroleum Jose Lozano, Partex Kassem Ghorayeb, Schlumberger Lars Helge Flolo, Statoil Salar Babajan, Statoil Hemanta Sarma, The Petroleum Institute Philippe Retail, Total Yaqoob Al Saadi, Wintershall Mohamed Abdulla Al Marzouqi, ZADCO

PROJECTS ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENT


Mashal Al Kindi (Co-Chairperson) ADCO Gerard Frey (Co-Chairperson) Wintershall Srinivansan N. Rao, ADMA-OPCO Abdullah Al Shaiba, ADNOC Firas Kaddoura, BP Nasser Saif Al Busaeedi, GASCO Shinya Konno, INPEX/JODCO Waleed Al-Shuaib, Kuwait Oil Company Christopher McDonald, Petrofac Wael El Deftar, Schlumberger Gerard Davis, Shell Jean Franois Aldebert, Total Faris Ali Khoori, ZADCO

DRILLING AND COMPLETION TECHNOLOGY


Faisal Al-Hosani (Co-Chairperson) ADCO Jean Baptiste Faget (Co-Chairperson) Total Gehad Mahmoud, ADCO Ahmed Al Neaimi, ADMA-OPCO Ghada Basioni, Ain Shams University Ulrich Hahne, Baker Hughes Suhail Nabi, ExxonMobil Basil Al Ramahi, Halliburton Hitoshi Matsubuchi, INPEX/JODCO Adel Shaaya, Mubadala Petroleum Femi Adewumi, Schlumberger Tim Day, Schlumberger Pascal Aviengne, Shell Roy Marker, Statoil Andreas Rosener, Wintershall Hamad Saleh Al Junaibi, ZADCO

OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE & HSE


Mathew Kirkman (Co-Chairperson) ADMA-OPCO Damir Sofo (Co-Chairperson) Statoil Houssam Al Din Sabry, ADGAS Brian Wood, BP Mohammed Al Nakhi, BP Kevin Gerald, GASCO Muhammad Jamil, GASCO Saleh Al Maskari, GASCO Shayma Al Mazrouei, GASCO Muther Al Rahmani, International Tubular Services Brent Pasula, Petrofac Roger Smith, Petrofac Rimna Rasheed, RAY International Allan Grieve, Shell Ahmed Jabour, Total Elie Daher, United Safety International Nawzad Khurshid, Wintershall Ahmed Musallam Al Busaeedi, ZADCO

GAS TECHNOLOGY
Mohamed Al Matroushi (Co-Chairperson) GASCO Frdric Febvre (Co-Chairperson) Total Renaud Cadous, GASCO Suhail Akram, Linde Achim Zajc, Metreg Technologies Geoff Nesbitt, Petrofac Pepijn Schipper, Shell

PEOPLE AND TALENTS


Anand RV (Co-Chairperson) BP Mohamed Aref (Co-Chairperson) Weatherford Khawla Abdulla Al Mentheri, ADMA-OPCO Abdul Aziz Al Messabi, GASCO Michael Shultz, Petrofac Hakan Gurses, Schlumberger Helle Bach, Shell Abdallah Berrouk, The Petroleum Institute

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TECHNICAL CATEGORIES FOR PAPER PROPOSALS


E&P Geoscience
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Direct Hydrocarbon Indicators (DHI) in Gas Reservoirs, Case Studies Seismic Inversion in Modelling Gas Reservoir What are the Most Effective, Latest Technologies Available? An Examination of the Latest Designs Supported with Relevant Case Histories A Comparison of Geologies and Unconventional Gas Resource Plays in the Middle East: Understand Opportunities and Engineering Challenges Presented by Each Sour Gas Imposed Challenges in Downhole Sampling and Fluid Analysis Understanding the Essentials of Environmental Legislation Across the Region Challenges and Solutions in Prekhuff Reservoir Characterisation Environmental Impact of Multi-Stage Fracturing and Stimulation Across the Region Advances in Regional Geology (Sequence and BioStratigraphy, Basin, and Structural Modelling, etc.) New Exploration Plays (Subtle Traps, Deep Plays, Field Satellite Extensions) Advances in Seismic Processing and Acquisition, Including Minimisation of Environmental Impacts Innovation and Technologies for Seismic Interpretation Non-Seismic Technologies (Gravity, Magnetics) Rock Physics and Geomechanics Advances in Formation Evaluation and Advances in Petrophysics Advances in Reservoir Characterisation (SCAL, RRT, Core Integration, PNM, Digital Rock Physics) Faults and Fracture Characterisation, Analysis/ Modelling New Approaches in Geologic and Reservoir Modelling Case Studies: Integration/Update of Static and Dynamic Modelling and Learning from Production Experience Case Studies: Real-Time Formation Evaluation (Geosteering, Well Placement, Logging Tool Selection) Case Studies: Exploration Examples of New Technology Application Case Studies: The Role of Geoscience in EOR and CCS Making Better Decisions: Role of Geoscience in Uncertainty Assessment and Risk Management G&G Work Environment of the Future-Knowledge/ Data Management and Collaboration R&D: Geoscience Technology Development and Deployment Application for BHS Seismic in Mitigating Drilling Risk in Exploration Plays

Unconventional Resources
28. Unconventional Resource Assessment: Methods to Estimate Volumes in Place and Ultimate Recovery 29. Seismic Techniques for Unconventionals 30. HSE Considerations for Unconventionals 31. Optimised Infrastructure and Logistics in Support of Unconventionals 32. Unconventional Resources (Tight Reservoirs, Shale Gas and Oil) 33. The development of UG Exploration and Production in Region (i.e. Saudi Arabia) 34. Hydraulic Fracturing and Produced Water 35. Horizontal Drilling Efciencies for Shale Gas 36. Gas Development: Acid Gas, Tight Gas, Non-HC Gas, Shale Gas, Coal Bed Methane 37. Oil Development: Shale Oil, Heavy Oil, Tight Oil, Transition Zones 38. New and Emerging Technologies in Sour Gas Production 39. Challenges of Managing Sour Gas Reservoirs 40. Unconventional Gas: An Opportunity for the Middle East?

6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.

59. Optimising Development PlansReserves and Economics Basis 60. Managing Field Development Risks and Uncertainties 61. Integrated Surface and Subsurface Development 62. Advances in Water Flooding Management (Capturing Learnings from Mature Reservoirs) 63. Achieving Exceptional RecoveryCase Studies 64. Getting the Most from Reservoir Surveillance, Well Testing, Production Measurement 65. Maximising ProductionDowntime Management and Well Utilisation 66. Reservoir Modelling, Simulation, and History Matching 67. Fluid Characterisation, SCAL, and Fluid-Rock Interaction 68. EOR with Gas Injection (CO2, N2 HC, acid gas) 69. Capturing CCS Opportunities for EOR 70. Advances in Chemical Flooding, Smart Water Injection 71. IOR Using Smart Wells, Advanced Reservoir Characterisation

Field Development
41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50.

Drilling and Completion Challenges of Field Development Plan for Reservoirs Technology
72. Well Intervention Advances: Innovation in W/L, Coil, Rig, Rigless, Snubbing 73. Best Practices in Well Delivery; From Concept to Production 74. New Protocols and Technology in Well Control 75. Step Change in Drilling Efciency 76. Extended Reach Technology and Beyond MRC 77. Real Value of Real-Time Drilling Operations 78. Advances in Drilling Bit Technology and Deployment 79. Optimisation of Scheduling and Rig Moves 80. Drilling Beyond the Limit 81. Rig and Equipment Integrity ManagementBest Practices 82. Minimising Impact of Drilling Operations (Sensitive AreasUrban, Environment, Social) 83. Managing Wellbore Stability in Challenging Environments (Reactive Shale, Salt, High Pressure, Low Pressure) 84. Advances in Deep Water Drilling Technology 85. Challenges in Deep Sour Gas Drilling and Testing 86. Advances in Drilling Fluid and Cementing Technology 87. Optimum Clustering and Pad Drilling 88. Managed Pressure Drilling Technology 89. Advances in Multistage Fracturing and Stimulation 90. Intelligent Completions: Design, Implementation, and Performance 91. Well Testing Challenges (Heavy Oil, High Pressure, Sour Gas) 92. Latest Well Integrity Management 93. Fostering Rig Safety Culture 94. Drilling Waste Management 95. Zero Discharge Drilling Technology 96. Advancements in Rig Equipment Designs

21.

22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27.

51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58.

Under Depletion Mode Challenges of Field Development Plan for Reservoirs Under Recycle Mode Recycling Guidelines in Gas Condensate Reservoirs Impact of Nitrogen Injection in Oil and Gas Reservoirs Improve the Condensate Recovery for Gas Rich Reservoirs Challenging Developments: Gas Reservoirs With Oil Rim Challenging Developments: Oil Rims, Marginal Fields, Complex Reservoirs Reserves and Economics Basis in Development Plan Projects Managing Field Development Risks and Uncertainties Integrated Asset Modelling for Oil and Gas Reservoirs: Coupling Surface Facilities with Simulation Models Technology Practices and Advances to Address Environmental Issues Latest Innovations for Effective and Viable Gas Production in Tough Conditions Challenges of Gas Injection and Production/Process Optimisation New Technologies and Research and Development Advanced Drilling Techniques to Develop Gas Resources Nitrogen, CO2 Injection for Reservoir Pressure Maintenance and Enhanced Oil Recovery Maximising Value from Mature Fields Revitalisation, Redevelopment, and End of Field Life Planning Maximising Recovery with Advanced Well Architecture

TECHNICAL CATEGORIES FOR PAPER PROPOSALS


Projects Engineering and Management
97. Challenges Related to Production of Sour Gas from HP/HT Reservoirs 98. Producing from HP/HT Tight Gas: Challenges and Lessons Learnt 99. Engineering, Procurement, Construction, Management: Strategies for Successful Project Execution 100. Engineering Design for Optimum Energy Conservation (Efcient Energy Use and Reduced Reliance on Conventional Sources) 101. Challenges of Gas and Oil Mega-Projects: Resource, People, Management, Delivery, and Cost Perspectives 102. Mitigating Challenges during Commissioning and Start-Up of Gas and Oil Projects 103. Realising Strategic/Economic Benets of Standardisation 104. Formulation and Composition of Effective Project Teams 105. Browneld Project Challenges, Interfaces, Risks, and Mitigations 106. Process Safety: Inherent Design Culture 107. Achieving Peak HSE Performance: From Construction to Commissioning Gas and Oil Projects 108. Using the Latest Technology to Improve Facility Performance During Life Cycle 109. Realising Opportunities of Smart Field Technology/ Automation 110. Case Studies of New Developments (Articial Island, Sour Gas Fields) 124. Smaller-Scale LNG developments 125. FLNG Recent Developments and Applications 126. Challenges and Solutions for IT Data Security in Gas and Oil facilities 127. Energy Optimising Through Advanced Process Controls 128. Hydrogen Sulphide Detection and Measurement 129. Managing Process Safety Throughout the Asset Life Cycle 130. Best Practices for Managing Air Quality and Emission 131. Integrating Sustainability into Management Practices 132. Advances in Metering/Well Testing Technologies 133. Benets and Challenges of Automation 134. Innovative Solutions to Overcome Production Constraints (Oil, Gas, and Produced Water Handling) 135. Realising a Step-Change in Operating Costs 136. Solutions for Black Power Formation in Gas Pipelines 137. Effective Planning for Integrated Maintenance and Operation 138. Best Practices in Turnaround and Shutdown Management 139. Advances in Maintenance Strategies 140. Best Practices in Equipment Strategy (Rotating/ Static Equipment) 141. Achieving Best in Class Maintenance Performance 142. Advances in Service Quality Systems and Practices 143. Measuring Maintenance as a Leading Indicator in NPT reduction 144. Managing Process Safety Through Effective Integrity Management 145. Best Practices in Integrity Management of Safety Critical Systems 146. Integrity Inspection: Latest Development, Effective Measurement, and Reporting 147. Managing Challenges with Asset Life Extension: New Risks, Changing Standards, and Codes 148. Integrity Opportunities and Challenges in a Digital World 149. Best Practices in Pipeline Management: Design, Inspection, Remnant Life Assessment, and Repair/ Replacement 150. Management of Change: People, Operations, Equipment 151. Managing Risk in Simultaneous Operations, Drilling, Projects and Maintenance (SIMOPS) 157. Managing the Road Safety Risks 158. Managing Contractors and Subcontractors HSE 159. Non Accidental Deaths (NAD) Reduction 160. Business Continuity and Crises Management 161. Accident Prevention and Lessons Learnt in Safety (Onshore and Offshore) 162. Best Practices in Gas Flaring and Emission Reduction 163. Minimising Gas Flaring During Well Testing 164. Integrating Asset Integrity and HSE Management 165. Regional Environmental Legislation: The Challenge of Providing Sufcient Water for Cost Effective Multi Stage Fracking Jobs 166. Human Factors in HSE Performance 167. Promoting Safety Culture: Change in Mindset 168. Major Accidents Prevention and Lessons Learnt 169. Best Practices in Emergency Planning and Crisis Management 170. Effective Concepts for Occupational Health Management 171. New Approaches for Environmental Impact Assessment and Management

Gas Technology
172. Recent Developments in Gas Processing 173. LPG, Chemical Gas, CNG, and LNG Production Challenges 174. Preventing Gas Hydrates Formation 175. Carbon Capture and Storage TechnologyCan CO2 be Overcome Positively? 176. Recent Developments in Gas to Liquid (GTL) Conversion 177. Advances in Gas Sweetening and Dehydration 178. Efcient Utilisation of Energy In Gas Processing 179. Sour Gas Filtration and Separation 180. Improvements and Advances in Sour Gas Processing 181. Recent Developments in Compressing Natural Gas 182. Assuring Long Term Reliability of Dry Gas Seal in Gas Compressor 183. Improving Compressors/Drivers Availability 184. Application of Aero-Derivatives GT as a Natural Gas Compressor Driver 185. Design Improvement: Compressor and Turbine Bearings 186. Latest Trends in Machinery Health Monitoring 187. Advances in Centrifugal Gas Compressors 188. Subsea Gas Compression to Boost Gas and Condensate Recovery

Operational Excellence
111. Providing the Telecoms and IT Infrastructure to Support Smart Brown Fields 112. Managing and Merging the Increasing Quantities of Ofine and Real-Time Data 113. Providing Remote Access and Collaboration Capabilities, without Compromising on Security 114. Collaborative Working to Reach Smarter, Faster Decisions 115. Automation of Routine Workows, with Exception Based Reporting 116. Examples of Fully Automated, Closed-Loop Control in Production Operations 117. Intelligent Diagnostics, to Predict Events and Take Action before they Occur 118. E&P Data Excellence 119. Innovations in Shipping and Containment Technology 120. LNG as Commercial Fuel Onshore for Natural Gas Vehicles and Technical Challenges 121. LNG as Fuel for the Commercial and Transport Shipping Sectors 122. Storing, Delivering, and Handling LNG for Marine Fuel 123. Bunkering and Storage Facilities

People and Talents


189. National Model System 190. GCC Deployment and Career Counselling Framework for High School Leavers 191. Use of Technology for Recruitment Cycle 192. Automation of HR Business 193. Minimise Attrition and Increase Employees Satisfaction 194. Attracting, Developing, and Retaining Talents to Meet Future Drilling Challenges 195. Training, Crewing, and Manpower

HSE
152. Managing the Asset Integrity Risks Associated with CO2, H2S, and High BWS (Wells and Facilities) 153. Managing Biodiversity While Operating in Sensitive Environment 154. Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)/ Sustainability 155. Minimising Environmental Footprint 156. Carbon Trading and Air Emission Management

Call for Paper Guidelines


Technical and poster presentations for the conference will be selected from paper proposals submitted to the conference programme committee. The committee will consider all abstracts submitted by the deadline of 15 April 2014.

Early submission is particularly important to ensure that the committee members have ample time to review the paper proposals. Late paper proposals will not be accepted. Authors are strongly encouraged to submit their paper proposals electronically at www.adipec.com before 15 April 2014.

Commercialism
Enter a title that is concise, yet descriptive of the primary content and application of the proposed paper. SPE has a stated policy against use of commercial trade names, company names, or language that is commercial in tone in the paper title, text, or slides. Using such terms will result in careful scrutiny by the programme committee in evaluating paper proposals and the presence of commercialism in the paper or poster may result in it being withdrawn from the conference programme.

Abstract Content
A proper review of your abstract requires that it contains adequate information on which to make a judgement. Written in English and containing 300 words, paper proposals should include the following:  Description: Summarise the scope and nature of the work upon which an accepted paper will be based (e.g. field data, lab data, original analysis, or computer work). If the paper is a review paper, carefully state the extent of the coverage.  Applications: Describe the possible applications of the information provided in the paper or poster.  Results and Conclusions: Summarise the results and major conclusions to be presented in the paper/poster and state specific conclusions of the work and how these differ from previous work on the same subject. State whether new information will be revealed and whether data from field, lab, or computer work will be included.  Technical Contributions: Describe the significance of the subject matter in the abstract by listing up to three technical contributions or additions to the technical knowledge base of the petroleum industry.

Guidelines for Accepted Paper Proposals


1.  Your paper proposal could be accepted for presentation in a technical or poster session. 2.  Authors of accepted paper proposals will be notified by May 2014. 3.  Authors whose abstracts are accepted will be required to provide a manuscript for inclusion in the conference proceedings. SPE operates a no paper, no podium policy whereby if a manuscript with the associated forms is not received by the due date, it will be withdrawn from the programme and not allowed to be presented. 4.  Detailed instructions on the preparation of manuscripts and presentations will be sent to the corresponding author of each accepted paper. 5.  SPE assumes no obligation for expenses by authors for travel, lodging, food, or other incidental expenses. 6.  Accepted authors will be offered a discounted full conference registration fee.

Technical Categories
Use the topics included in this leaflet to indicate the topic that best describes your paper proposal. A primary choice is required; however, a secondary choice is optional. Paper proposals are evaluated on the basis of the information supplied on the paper proposal form in accordance with the following criteria: 1.  The proposed paper or poster must contribute to petroleum technology or be of immediate interest to the oil and gas industry, and should contain significant new knowledge or experience in the oil and gas industry. 2.  Data in the paper proposal must be technically correct. 3.  The proposed paper or poster may present information about equipment and tools to be used in exploration and production. Such paper proposals must show the definite applications and limitations of such equipment and should avoid undue commercialism and extensive use of trade names. 4.  The substance of the proposed paper or poster must not have been published previously in trade journals or in other professional or technical journals. Prior to paper proposal submission, management clearance must be obtained. Any issues concerning clearance should be outlined when the paper proposal is submitted.

Copyright
All authors of papers or posters presented at the conference will be required to complete and submit a copyright release form to the Society of Petroleum Engineers or submit the copyright exemption form where applicable.

Submittal
1.  Obtain necessary clearance on the proposed paper from your management. 2.  Completed paper proposal must be received by 15 April 2014. Submit your paper proposal online at www.adipec.com. It is critical that all information requested on the form be provided in full and in the order requested. An agreement to present a paper at this SPE conference carries an obligation to participate in the event. Manuscripts will be required. Authors whose paper proposals are accepted will be expected to provide a manuscript for inclusion in the meeting Proceedings. Authors who do not submit a manuscript and the associated forms by the due date will be withdrawn from the programme and not allowed to present.

DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION: 15 APRIL 2014

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How to Submit Paper Proposals


a)  RecommendedOnline at www.adipec.com. Select Call for Papers tab. b)  Send an email including complete author and paper information outlined below and attach your abstract as a Word document. Send to dubprog@spe.org. Note that the paper proposals must not exceed 300 words and you must indicate at least one primary category to which the paper belongs.

PAPER PROPOSAL FORM

If the paper is selected for the programme, the information submitted on this form will be published in the registration brochure. Please type or carefully print the following information. SPE will communicate with the corresponding author on all occasions. List authors in the order they should be listed in the programme. Tick box to indicate corresponding author. In order for authors names to appear in the conference brochures, all contact information must be completed. PAPER TITLE __________________________________________________________________________ AUTHOR 1 q Corresponding author q SPE Member (Member number: ____________________ ) Date of Birth _______________

First Name_________________________________________________ Last Name__________________________________________ Organisation/Company __________________________________________________________________________________________ Mailing Address________________________________________________________________________________________________ City ______________________________________________________ State/Province ______________________________________ Zip/Postal Code _____________________________________________ Country____________________________________________ Telephone__________________________________________________ Fax________________________________________________ Email____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ AUTHOR 2 q Corresponding author q SPE Member (Member number: ____________________ ) Date of Birth _______________

First Name_________________________________________________ Last Name__________________________________________ Organisation/Company __________________________________________________________________________________________ Mailing Address________________________________________________________________________________________________ City ______________________________________________________ State/Province ______________________________________ Zip/Postal Code _____________________________________________ Country____________________________________________ Telephone__________________________________________________ Fax________________________________________________ Email________________________________________________________________________________________________________ AUTHOR 3 q Corresponding author q SPE Member (Member number: ____________________ ) Date of Birth _______________

First Name_________________________________________________ Last Name__________________________________________ Organisation/Company __________________________________________________________________________________________ Mailing Address________________________________________________________________________________________________ City ______________________________________________________ State/Province ______________________________________ Zip/Postal Code _____________________________________________ Country____________________________________________ Telephone__________________________________________________ Fax________________________________________________ Email________________________________________________________________________________________________________
If there are additional authors, please list their names and contact details on a separate page. In order for authors names to appear in the conference brochures, all contact information must be completed. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Is this material being submitted elsewhere? Has this been previously published or presented? Yes q No q Yes q No q

If yes, please indicate place/date________________ SPE number assigned ______________ Will your company allow you to present and/or publish all of the information described in your paper proposal? Yes q No q Please indicate which Technical Categories this paper applies to (e.g. 2, 5, 9, etc.): 1st Choice __________ 2nd Choice __________ Please indicate keyword for OnePetro quick search____________________ IMPORTANTNo uncoded paper proposals will be acceptedplease indicate at least one choice (see Technical Categories page) This paper proposal should be considered for: q  Technical Presentation q Knowledge Sharing ePoster Presentation/Alternate* q Either

*Knowledge Sharing ePoster presentation may be considered as an alternate in a relevant technical session in the event of a withdrawal of a scheduled paper.

ATTACH MAXIMUM 300 WORD PAPER PROPOSAL TO THIS FORM. PAPER PROPOSAL DEADLINE: 15 APRIL 2014.

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