Petroleum Geoscience and Engineering at Imperial College
This 2-day meeting was held in September 2013 to celebrate 100 years of petroleum-related science and engineering education at Imperial College. With a list of distinguished speakers, the meeting aimed to mark this landmark achievement by looking forward to the next 100 years, with emphasis on discussing key future drivers and related energy supply issues. The meeting was wide-ranging, with presentations covering global energy trends, future geoscience and engineering technologies, unconventional hydrocarbon resources, carbon sequestration and climate change.
The meeting was jointly convened by Imperial College London and by the Geological Society of London, supported by the American Association of Petroleum Geologists, the Society of Petroleum Engineers, the Petroleum Exploration Society of Great Britain and the European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers.
Download the Presentations:
- Welcome - Howard Johnson, Imperial College
- Opening Address - Richard Hardman CBE, Past President of the Geological Society
- Energy Trends In the 21st Century - Lord Oxburgh
- Beyond 2013: Clean Energy and its Future Role in the Energy Mix - Lord Browne
- 21st Century Global Energy Mix - Scott Tinker, Bureau of Economic Geology, UT Austin
- Technology for a Sustainable Energy Future - Ed Daniels, Shell
- Celebrating 100 Years of Petroleum Education at Imperial College - Mike Ala, Imperial College & Dominion Energy
- Future Trends in Global Oil and Gas Exploration - Mike Daly, BP
- Unlocking Arctic Resources – New Realities and Long-Term Perspective Tony Doré, Statoil
- Future Geoscience Technologies for Unlocking Hard Resources - Bruce Levell, Shell
- Future Trends in Reservoir Management - Dominique Marion Total
- Technology Trends & Needs In Enhanced Oil Recovery - Xu Dong Jing, Shell
- Pore Systems & Future Trends In Reservoir Simulation - Martin Blunt, Imperial College
- Smart Fields: Model-Based Control and Optimization of Subsurface Flow - Jan Dirk Jansen, TU Delft
- Novel Production Methods & Maximising Recovery of Non-Conventional Hydrocarbons - Geoff Maitland, Imperial College
- Developments In Long-Term Sustainable Energy - Nigel Brandon, Imperial College
- Unconventional Gas: Global Impact So Far, Challenges and Future Potential - Tristan Aspray, ExxonMobil
- Perspectives on Future Development of Shale Gas In NW Europe - Dick Selley, Imperial College
- Recent & Future Trends In Mudrocks - Joe Cartwright, Oxford University
- Drilling back in the future – Past stability of the East Antarctic ice sheet - Tina van de Flierdt, Imperial College
- Challenged by Carbon: The Oil Industry and Climate Change - Bryan Lovell, Past President of the Geological Society
- Closing Remarks - Lidia Lonergan, Imperial College