Grand Ballroom
| Opening Address: | H.E. Dr. Piyasvasti Amranand, Minister of Energy,
Thailand Guest-of-Honour H.E. Dr. Mohammed H. Al-Rumhy, Minister of Oil and Gas, Oman |
| Welcoming Address: | Maroot Mrigadat, Conference General Chairman; and President, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
| Address by SPE Officer: | Eve Sprunt, 2006 SPE President |
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
| Session Chairpersons: | Phil Rae, InTuition Energy Assocs. Ash Stanley, Halliburton Energy Services Mohamed Radzuan Yusof, PETRONAS |
| Session Moderator: | Emmanuel Garland, Head of HSE Regulations Division, TOTAL E&P |
| Plenary Speakers: |
Brian J. Burke, General Manager, Operations Services,
Chevron E&P Thailand Ltd. |
Grand Ballroom II
The rapid development of the oil and gas industry as represented by a large number of new rigs being build for the world market will enhance the awareness of the responsibility of each company to secure and safeguard the health of its employees. Occupational health measures must be implemented at all stages of the developing and production processes, both for the already established and for the new enterprises. To encounter these demands, it will be of great importance to have a management system in place as well as a system of indicators of exposure to identify the work-related and the occupational illnesses. An important part of this work will be to continuously improve the elimination of work hazards in the work environment.
Another aspect of the occupational illnesses monitoring and identification is the reporting of such conditions to the Company medical staff, the authorities in some countries and the company HR in order to create the necessary confidence, knowledge and follow-up of each individual case. The environment to avoid the sense of potential discrimination and job insecurity due to Occupational Illness must be created and ensured.
This session will provide the opportunity to discuss the importance of occupational illness identification, investigation and reporting in the oil and gas industry. Issues and challenges that affect these, and potential solutions, will also be examined.
| Session Chairpersons: | Christian Cappelen Smith, Seadrill Management AS Abu Hassan Samad, ExxonMobil E&P Malaysia Inc. |
||||||||
| Panellists: |
Edward Hall, Occupational Health, Consultant, International SO Somkiat Siriratanapruk, Occupational Disease, Disease Control Department, Ministry of Public Health, Thailand |
Concorde 1 & 2
| Session Chairpersons: | Abdul Ghafar Maulana, PETRONAS Ian Sealy, Schlumberger |
| SPE | |
| 108870 | Integrating Environment as a Core Business Value: Perspective
on Corporate Social Responsibility R.A. Avila, Chevron Corp. |
| 108622 | Indigenous Peoples and Oil Companies ‑ Respecting the
Differences G.E. Guldin, Cross‑Cultural Consulting Service; M.S. Bergman, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development |
| 108880 | Corporate Social Responsibility of PTT Exploration and Production
Plc. Thai Rice College Project A. Vorradhama‑Pinich and C. Charuvastr, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
| Alternate | |
| 108874 | The Business of Environmental Performance M.A. Serwinowski and J.M. Marshall, MetaVu Business Consulting |
Concorde 4 & 5
| Session Chairpersons: | Safdar Nensey, BP Pakistan E&P Inc. Ash Stanley, Halliburton Energy Services |
| SPE | |
| 108662 | The Viability of Ultrasonic Detector for Hydrocarbon Gas Leak
Detection M. Kornbech and G. Neethling, Gassonic A/S; T. Namto, P. Brown and M. Rickard, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
| 98590 | Group Risk Assessment and Conversation of Experience
(GRACE) B. Gjellestad, Acona Group AS; and A. Hide, BP plc |
| 108907 | The Safety Benefits of Remote Operations Centres M. Hanson, Hu‑Tech; K.A. Lang and K. Cannon, INTEQ; and B.D. De Hoedt, Baker Hughes |
| 108628 | Technology Application and Impact on Personnel Exposure Reduction
in Casing Running Activity W.P. Schneider and S.J. Beyk, Tesco Corp. |
| Alternate | |
| 108887 | Development of Site Entry Protocol for HNS Spill
Response C.Y. Koh and F. Tan, Oil Spill Response and East Asia Response Limited |
Platinum I
| Session Chairpersons: | Surya Kumar, Shell Asia Pacific Alison Martin, BP plc |
| SPE | |
| 108547 | Expatriate Health and Welfare: The Hidden Costs of Getting It
Wrong R. Cox, IPIECA; and A. Jeremijenko, Woodside Energy Ltd |
| 108267 | Guidance on Human Factors Integration for Oil & Gas
Projects G.D. Reeves, BP plc; and I. Hamilton, Human Engineering Ltd. |
| 108862 | Psychosocial Risk Management at Statoil ASA S. Hinna, Statoil ASA |
| Alternate | |
| 108646 | Management of Sickness Absence and Return to Work J. Luby, Saudi Aramco |
Grand Ballroom I
The session will deal with how contractor performance can be improved through mentoring, understanding of common goals and principles. Can performance improvements are achieved if more realistic expectations and better performance measurement are used instead of the conventional KPIs? Should better performers be rewarded? Can we look beyond numbers?
| Session Chairpersons: | Saiee B. Julaihi, PETRONAS Mohammad Hiruan Mansor, BJ Services Co. Don Smith, Intl Assn. of Oil & Gas Producers Ash Stanley, Halliburton Energy Services |
| Panellists: |
Phillipe Armand, President and General Manager, TOTAL E&P Indonesié Carl Veley, Director, vPSI Group LLC David Xu , General Manager, Shen Zhen Job Safety Solutions Ltd. |
Concorde 1 & 2
| Session Chairpersons: | Lee Tzee Wan, PETRONAS Archie Smith, Oil Spill Response Ltd. |
| SPE | |
| 108872 | Development and Conservation Biodiversity Monitoring within the
Camisea Gas Project, Peru S.G. Martinez, Pluspetrol E&P S.A.; and G. Soave, La Plata U. |
| 108784 | Strategy for Managing Environmental Liabilities in an Onshore Oil
Field D.G. Austin, PT. Chevron Pacific Indonesia |
| 108913 | The Northeast Caspian Sea: Oil Developments in a Sensitive
Environment A. Kaltayev, UMA Engineering |
| Alternates | |
| 108876 | Pipeline Stream Crossings ‑ International Industry Best Practices
for Russia/CIS J.G. Aronson and V. Raykin AATA Intl. Inc. |
| 108867 | Decommissioning Challenges in Thailand |
| W.A. Khan, Chevron Thailand E&P Ltd; W. Thungsuntonkhun, Department of Mineral Fuels, Ministry of Energy, Thailand |
Concorde 4 & 5
| Session Chairpersons: | Peter Brown, PTT Exploration and Production Plc Safdar Nensey, BP Pakistan E&P Inc. |
| SPE | |
| 108866 | Operationalising HSE Cases in Asia Pacific D. Peake and Y. Sahari, Shell |
| 108619 | The CFD Approach for the Risk Analysis of a Blow‑Out
Event L. Borello, Eni ‑ E&P Division; M. Bonuccelli and G. Morale Tea Sistemi |
| 107367 | Technical Integrity Assurance of Unmanned Wellhead Platforms for
Safe Well SIMOPS S.W. Ciaraldi, S. Utama, N.S. Dewi, R. Sulistyorini and M.S. Lubis, BP Indonesia |
| 108882 | Developing an EHS Assurance Program in Delivering and Maintaining a
Safer Facility for the PHU HORM Field Development ‑ Case Study S. Chia, Sherpa Consulting Pty. Ltd.; J. Smith, Hess Oil & Gas Sdn. Bhd.; and P. Promchotikul, Amerada Hess (Thailand) Ltd. |
| Alternate | |
| 108900 | Managing Major Incident Risk By Integrity Management M. Idan, Saudi Aramco |
Platinum I
| Session Chairpersons: | Christian Cappelen Smith, Seadrill Management AS Alison Martin, BP plc |
| SPE | |
| 108575 | Workstation Assessment Checklist ‑ A Comparison of the Results from 3 Operating Units V. Lo, Brunei Shell Petroleum Co. Sdn. Bhd. |
| 108472 | Health Requirements in Contracts N. Haris, Brunei Shell Petroleum Co. Sdn. Bhd. |
| 108552 | Planning for an Ageing Workforce E. Shammas, Statoil ASA |
| Alternate | |
| 108514 | Occupational Exposure Hazards Related to the Use of Drilling Fluids
Presented with Remedial Risk Management Guidelines R.W. James and T. Schei,, ConocoPhillips Norge; A. Nistov, Statoil; B.D. Chambers, BP; S.J. Hoskin, M‑I SWACO; N. Leblond, TOTAL Fluides; C. Smulders, Shell Intl. BV.; M. Sopko, Nexen Inc.; D.A. Tuck, Halliburton Energy Services; and R. Vatta, SAIPEM |
Grand Ballroom I
This session will feature a description of the health systems within Asia Pacific countries. Infrastructure, successes and challenges will be detailed. The potential impact of the different infrastructures on oil and gas businesses and projects and how these businesses and projects can impact local health services and the community, will also be discussed. It is intended that the subsequent panel discussion will explore challenges and opportunities presented by the presence of oil and gas industry within a country.
| Session Chairpersons: | James Allen, Chevron Corp. Dhun Damrongsak, International SOS Gary Krieger, Newfields Inc. |
| Panellists: |
Chatree Daungnet, Member of Board of Directors, Bangkok
Hospital |
Concorde 3
| Session Chairperson: | Anne O’Neal, Chevron |
| Speakers: |
Rosli Boni, General Manager, PSC Management & Business
Services, Petroleum Management Unit, PETRONAS |
Concorde 1 & 2
| Session Chairpersons: | Stephen Marinello, Halliburton Co. Anthony McCoy, FIDES Integrated Drilling and Engineering |
| 108873 | Application of the Systematic Technique for the Characterisation of
Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (NORM) at Bongkot Offshore Field and
Songkhla Petroleum Development Support Base K. Limbanyen and T. Soponkanabhorn, PTT Exploration and Production Plc.; D. Chanyotha, and D. Chankow; Chulalongkorn U.; P. Krobbuaban, Department of Mineral Fuels, Ministry of Energy, Thailand |
| 108893 | Produced Water Management Alternatives for an Environmentally
Responsible Operator A. Sahni, Chevron Corp. |
| 108875 | Metal Recovery From Spent Mercury and H2S Absorbents L. Pornsakulsak and T. Soponkanabhorn, PTT Exploration and Production |
| Alternate | |
| 108653 | Assessment of Fate and Ecological Risk of Synthetic Paraffin Based
Drilling Mud Discharges Offshore Sarawak and Sabah Malaysia P.B. Dorn, Shell Health Services; I. Rhodes, D. Wong, W.F. Farmayan, E. Hinojosa, S. Stewart, Shell Global Solutions; K. Hii, S. Hj‑Kip and W. Alex, Sarawak Shell Bhd. |
Concorde 4 & 5
| Session Chairpersons: | Saiee B. Julaihi, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd. Mohammad Hiruan Mansor, BJ Services Co. |
| SPE | |
| 108683 | Utilising Drama Based Training to Behavioural Change in
Safety J.L. Teakle and Z. Hart, Chevron Australia Pty. Ltd. |
| 108522 | What To Do When People Deliberately Violate Safety
Rules C.D. Veley, vPSI Group LLC |
| 108888 | Building a Sustainable Proactive Intervention Culture among
workforce ‑ I Care For Your Safety: The Journey by Shell EP in Asia
Pacific R. Koh, Shell E&P Co.; K. Hii, Sarawak Shell Bhd. |
| 108640 | Integration of Hearts & Mind Concept and Enforcement of Traffic
Rules for Accident Reduction on Our Roads A. Igbuku, Shell Egypt BV |
| 108922 | PTT Exploration and Production Plc.'s Drive Toward Behaviour Based
Safety (BBS) Improvement S. Pipitsangchand and P. Brown, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
| Alternate | |
| 108636 | Incident and Injury Free Program (IIF) at CUEL
Limited E. Olarikded, CUEL Ltd. |
Platinum 1
| Session Chairpersons: | Tom Knode, Halliburton Energy Services Richard Taylor, M‑I SWACO (Thailand) Co. Ltd |
| SPE | |
| 108766 | Working Together in a Contract Environment Towards Sustained
Improvement in HSE Performance S.B. Julaihi, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd. |
| 108879 | Managing Contractor HSE in Shell E&P N. Suntai, Sarawak Shell Bhd.; and K. Bala, Shell E&P Asia Pacific |
| 108920 | Contractor Forum (Improve Client/Contractor Relationship for Better Safety Performance) P. Charusalaipong and S. Pholphairojn PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
| Alternate | |
| 108921 | Marine Subcontractor Safety Improvement P. Charusalaipong and T. Yimkijboriharn, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
Grand Ballroom I
| Session Chairpersons: | Peter Brown, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. Elizabeth Harstad, DNV Safdar Nensey, BP Pakistan |
| Plenary Speakers: |
Michael Broadribb, Director of Process Safety, BP plc Liam M. Mallon, Chairman, ExxonMobil Subsidiaries in Malaysia |
Grand Ballroom I
There is no human activity that does not have an environmental impact. We even exhale gases with global warming potential. In recent years, our industry has made stunning advances in the technology with which it drills, evaluates and produces the wells we drill.
However, while it is true that environmental awareness has grown, we still remain reactive to government legislation rather than proactive when it comes to reducing the impact of our operations. This can have very costly implications as can be seen, for example, in the European North Sea where the fate of piles of oily cuttings on the sea bed, generated and discharged in full compliance with existing legislation, is still to be resolved. Here, in South East Asia, we need to learn from the experience gained in other parts of the world, most importantly as regards to waste management and disposal.
While a number of national governments, notably in Kazakhstan and offshore Sakhalin Island, have banned the discharge of all drilling wastes, even those generated with Water Based Mud, the industry still regularly discharges enormous quantities of drilling waste into the marine environment. Onshore operations when permitted, regularly bury the drilling waste, sometimes on location, sometimes in central facilities. The environmental hierarchy of controls indicates that final disposal should be the last resort for our wastes, not the default solution.
A little careful planning in terms of the fluids and constituents we use to drill our wells, should allow us to find uses for the waste we cannot avoid generating. Organic based fluids, OBM in other words, can be bio-degraded and transformed into soil enrichment agents. Wastes generated with WBM have the potential to be used as construction material. The same levels of innovation and ‘out-of-the-box’ thinking that have generated the step changes in drilling and evaluation performance, are now required to allow us to find constructive uses for the wastes we generate.
This session will discuss the use of material that would traditionally be viewed as troublesome waste as a potential source of revenue or as a cost-saving benefit.
| Session Chairpersons: | John Aronson, AATA Intl. Inc. Anthony McCoy, FIDES Integrated Drilling and Engineering |
| Panellists: |
Zara Khatib, Manager, EPM Technology Marketing, Shell E&P Intl. Prisdapant Pojanapreecha, Regional VP, Thai Offshore Asset Division, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. Lee Solsbery, ERM Practise Leader, Energy and Climate Change, Environmental Resources Management Bent Svensson, Program Manager, Oil, Gas, Mining and Chemicals Department, World Bank Group |
Concorde 1 & 2
| Session Chairpersons: | Dominique Grepinet, TOTAL E&P Myanmar Mohamed Radzuan Yusof, PETRONAS |
| SPE | |
| 108883 | Transboundary Oil Spill Management In The Gulf of Thailand:
Industry Participation On Response Arrangements Between Cambodia, Thailand
& Vietnam J. Guevarra, Oil Spill Response Ltd. |
| 108671 | Dispersants Onshore? The Use of Surface Cleaners as Part of an Effective Spill Response R.J. Bly, Oil Spill Response Ltd. |
| 108536 | The Evaluation of Oil Spill Contency Plans and Oil Spill Response
Readiness E. Owens, Polaris Applied Sciences, Inc. |
| 108863 | Management of Inland Spills: Soil and Groundwater
Remediation O. Shtepenko, Oil Spill Response Ltd. /East Asia Response Ltd. |
| Alternate | |
| 108394 | Best Practise Approach to the Development of Oil Spill Contingency
Plan Suites S. Blackburn, Oil Spill Response Ltd. |
Concorde 4 & 5
| Session Chairpersons: | Morris Kho, PETRONAS Carl D. Veley, vPSI Group LLC |
| SPE | |
| 108948 | Land Transport Safety Management Practice of Crude Evacuation,
Greater S1 Assets, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. V. Dhitavara and L. Pasutanavin, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
| 108514 | Occupational Exposure Hazards Related To The Use Of Drilling Fluids
Presented With Remedial Risk Management Guidelines R.W. James and T. Schei,, ConocoPhillips Norge; A. Nistov, Statoil; B.D. Chambers, BP; S.J. Hoskin, M‑I SWACO; N. Leblond, TOTAL Fluides; C. Smulders, Shell Intl. BV.; M. Sopko, Nexen Inc.; D.A. Tuck, Halliburton Energy Services; and R. Vatta, SAIPEM |
| 108186 | Pipeline Risk Assessment: High Consequences Areas O.J. Martinez, Husky Oil Ltd. |
| 108904 | Use of a Computer Simulation to Assess Hazard and Risk Perception |
| K. Breitspecher and K.A. Lang, INTEQ; and T.S. McGrath, Natl. Offshore Petroleum Safety Authority | |
| 108853 | Risk Assessment (Hazard Management) Process is a Continual Process
Not a One Off M.S. McDermott, BP plc |
| Alternate | |
| 108849 | The Application of Risk Management Techniques for Controlled
Pressured Drilling in Asia Pacific D. Xu, Weatherford Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd. |
Platinum I
| Session Chairpersons: | Eva Ljosland, Norsk Hydro Production A/S John Luby, Saudi Aramco |
| SPE | |
| 108497 | Competence Based Training.... Is Attendance No Longer
Enough? D.J. Whitren, Oil Spill Response Ltd./East Asia Response Ltd. |
| 108553 | Utilising e ‑ Medicine In Remote Locations F. Mika, SAIPEM; V. Nicosia, Eni Agip SpA; and S. De Sanctis, Snamprogetti |
| 108504 | Training Techniques for Responders ‑ Critical Thinking or
Algorithmic M. Smith, Oil Spill Response Ltd./East Asia Response Ltd. |
| 108645 | E‑Learning : A Complimentary Approach for Employee's Health
Education P. Guibert, International SOS |
| 108549 | The Saudi Aramco Diabetes Register E.A. Al Jahdaly, Saudi Aramco |
| Alternates | |
| 108864 | Development of a Postgraduate Qualification Course in Telemedicine
and Telepharmacy for Physicians in Offshore Oil and Gas Industry F. Mika, SAIPEM; S. De Sanctis, Snamprogetti; and V. Nicosia, Eni Agip SpA |
| 108932 | Safety Training for Workforce via e‑Learning C. Wheeler and P. Charusalaipong, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
Concorde 3
| Session Chairpersons: | Muhamad Najib, TOTAL E&P Indonesié Luck Pasutanavin, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
| SPE | |
| 108523 | Spreadsheet Simulators That Demonstrate How Statistics Can Lie
About Safety Performance C.D. Veley, vPSI Group LLC |
| 108609 | The Safety Piston I.L. Rezende, Petrobras |
| 108635 | Integrated Quality, Occupational Health, Safety & Environment
Management System in ONGC ‑ A Pursuit for Excellence B.K. Roy, Oil & Natural Gas Corp. Ltd. |
Concorde 4 & 5
This panel session will cover aspects of Risk Assessment, Integrated HSSE, Corporate Social Responsibility, Security, ISPS Code, Cultural Aspects of Safety & Security and Piracy.
| Session Chairpersons: | Prapon Charusalaipong, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. Al Robb, ExxonMobil |
||||||
| Session Moderator: | Dean Morgan, Asia Pacific Regional Security Manager, KBR, Inc. | ||||||
| Panellists: |
James Dale, Director, Corporate Security, Halliburton Energy
Services |
Grand Ballroom I
| Session Chairpersons: | Mohamed Radzuan Yusof, PETRONAS Iain Sealy, Schlumberger |
| Session Moderator: | Emmanuel Garland, Head of HSE Regulations Division, TOTAL E&P |
| Panellists: |
John Campbell, Technical Director, OGP Sajali Hj. Kip, Head of Environment & SD, Asia Pacific , Sarawak Shell Bhd. Krairit Nilkuha, Director General, Department of Mineral
Fuels, Ministry of Energy, Thailand |
Concorde 1 & 2
| Session Chairpersons: | Phil Rae, InTuition Energy Assocs. Teerapon Sopankanabhorn, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
| SPE | |
| 108908 | Environmental Due Diligence for International Finance of Major Oil
and Gas Projects J. Jeter, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development |
| 98585 | Oil and Gas Industry Guidance on Voluntary Sustainability
Reporting S. Depraz, IPIECA; and A. O’ Neal, Chevron Corp. |
| 108570 | Setting Group Minimum Environmental Standards ‑ An NOC Approach to
Managing the Environment T. W. Lee and R. Zainal Abidin, PETRONAS |
| Alternates | |
| 108783 | Total Project Management in Oil and Gas Industry: Improving
Eco‑Efficiency with Modern Techniques E.A. Sholarin, Curtin U. of Technology |
| 108869 | Petroleum Industry Guidelines for Emission Reductions from Carbon
Capture and Storage L. Warren, IPIECA |
Platinum 1
| Session Chairpersons: | Vimol Nakornchai, PTT Exploration and Production Plc Abu Hassan Samad, ExxonMobil E&P Malaysia Inc. |
| SPE | |
| 108545 | Corporate Personal Health Management A. Mohamad Banon, PETRONAS Carigali Sdn. Bhd. |
| 108639 | A Report on the Healthy Lifestyle Initiative at Brunei Shell
Petroleum Company Sdn. Bhd., Negara Brunei Darussalam J.T. Kwong, Brunei Shell Petroleum Co. Sdn. Bhd. |
| 108852 | HIV/AIDS ‑ A Company Perspective A. Khantong, Chevron Thailand E&P Ltd. |
| 108554 | Health Management in O&G industry ‑ A Contractor's Point of
View F. Mika and M. Consentino, SAIPEM; S. De Sanctis, Snamprogetti; and V. Nicosia, Eni Agip SpA |
| Alternate | |
| 108476 | Learnings from Implementing the Occupational Hygiene Program in
Chevron Thailand S. Rungruang, Chevron Thailand E&P Ltd. |
Grand Ballroom I
| Session Chairpersons: | Dhun Damrongsak, International SOS Surya Kumar, Shell Asia Pacific Alison Martin, BP plc |
| SPE | |
| 108551 | Occupational Health Aspects of Emergency Preparedness and
Response Stephen Jones, ExxonMobil Corp. |
| 108548 | H5N1: Contingency Planning and Developing Country
Infrastructure Andrew Jeremijenko, Woodside Energy Ltd. |
| 108580 | Development of Globally Accepted Standards for Emergency Medical
Response Systems Kevin Luppen, Occupational Health Department, BP plc |
| 108652 | The Statoil EMergency MAnagement Tool: EMMA Aud Nistov, Medical Director, Statoil |
Grand Ballroom I
| Chairperson | Lyn Arscott, Consultant |
Following the plenary session on Wednesday, 12 September, the 2007 APHSSEC will officially close with a session that will briefly highlight the 3-day conference and exhibition. Lyn Arscott will present results of a recent survey relating to the HSE improvements over the past ten (10) years.
The poster session will be held adjacent to the exhibition hall at the InterContinental Bangkok Hotel. Posters will be on display during the conference and presented at 1530-1600 hours on Monday, 10 September. Conference delegates are encouraged to attend the Poster Session presentation. The presentation will allow delegates to meet the poster authors in an informal and interactive environment, to discuss issues on health, safety, environment and social management.
| HEALTH | ||
| 108476 | Learnings from Implementing the Occupational Hygiene Program in
Chevron Thailand S. Rungruang, Chevron Thailand E&P Ltd. |
|
| 108514 | Occupational Exposure Hazards Related to the Use of Drilling Fluids
Presented with Remedial Risk Management Guidelines R.W. James and T. Schei,, ConocoPhillips Norge; A. Nistov, Statoil; B.D. Chambers, BP; S.J. Hoskin, M‑I SWACO; N. Leblond, TOTAL Fluides; C. Smulders, Shell Intl. BV.; M. Sopko, Nexen Inc.; D.A. Tuck, Halliburton Energy Services; and R. Vatta, SAIPEM |
|
| 108646 | Management of Sickness Absence and Return to Work J. Luby, Saudi Aramco |
|
| 108849 | The Application of Risk Management Techniques for Controlled Pressured
Drilling in Asia Pacific D. Xu, Weatherford Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd.J. Luby, Saudi Aramco |
|
| 108864 | Development of a Postgraduate Qualification Course in Telemedicine
and Telepharmacy for Physicians in Offshore Oil and Gas Industry F. Mika, SAIPEM; S. De Sanctis, Snamprogetti; and V. Nicosia, Eni Agip SpA |
|
| 108895 | Community Malaria Control Within a Petroleum Project Impact Area in
Papua New Guinea R. Hutton, Oil Search Limited |
|
| SAFETY & SECURITY | ||
| 108636 | Incident and Injury Free Program (IIF) at CUEL
Limited E. Olarikded, CUEL Ltd. |
|
| 108849 | The Application of Risk Management Techniques for Controlled
Pressured Drilling in Asia Pacific D. Xu, Weatherford Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd. |
|
| 108887 | Development of Site Entry Protocol for HNS Spill
Response C.Y. Koh, Oil Spill Response Ltd. and F. Tan, East Asia Response Pte. Ltd. |
|
| 108900 | Managing Major Incident Risk By Integrity Management M. Idan, Saudi Aramco |
|
| 108921 | Marine Subcontractor Safety Improvement P. Charusalaipong and T. Yimkijboriharn, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
|
| 108932 | Safety Training for Workforce via e‑Learning C. Wheeler and P. Charusalaipong, PTT Exploration and Production Plc. |
|
| ENVIRONMENT | ||
| 108394 | Best Practise Approach to the Development of Oil Spill Contingency
Plan Suites S. Blackburn, Oil Spill Response Ltd. |
|
| 108653 | Assessment of Fate and Ecological Risk of Synthetic Paraffin Based
Drilling Mud Discharges Offshore Sarawak and Sabah Malaysia P.B. Dorn, Shell Health Services; I. Rhodes, D. Wong, W.F. Farmayan, E. Hinojosa, S. Stewart, Shell Global Solutions; K. Hii, S. Hj‑Kip and W. Alex, Sarawak Shell Bhd. |
|
| 108783 | Total Project Management in Oil and Gas Industry: Improving
Eco‑Efficiency with Modern Techniques E.A. Sholarin, Curtin U. of Technology |
|
| 108867 | Decommissioning Challenges in Thailand W.A. Khan, Chevron Thailand E&P Ltd; W. Thungsuntonkhun, Department of Mineral Fuels, Ministry of Energy, Thailand |
|
| 108869 | Petroleum Industry Guidelines for Emission Reductions from Carbon
Capture and Storage L. Warren, IPIECA |
|
| 108874 | The Business of Environmental Performance M.A. Serwinowski and J.M. Marshall, MetaVu Business Consulting |
|
| 108876 | Pipeline Stream Crossings ‑ International Industry Best Practices
for Russia/CIS J.G. Aronson and V. Raykin AATA Intl. Inc. |
|
Grand Ballroom II
The Young Professionals Workshop is designed for young professionals in the oil and gas industry under the age of 35 years with less than 10 years industry experience in any technical discipline. Industry executives and young professionals will have the opportunity to engage in discussions about the future directions for young professionals in the oil and gas industry, and to address issues of importance to them.
Speakers include:
For further information, please contact the Workshop Coordinator Susama Pipitsangchand, Tel: 66.2537.4273; Fax: 66.2936.2678; E-mail: susama@pttep.com, or Zoe Scott, SPE Member Services Coordinator, Tel: 60.3.2288.1233; Fax: 60.3.2282.1220; E-mail: zscott@spe.org.
Grand Ballroom II
The Education Day is an initiative to introduce students to the discipline of petroleum engineering, and the industry in general. 25-30 high school students with keen interest in science who may consider majoring in Petroleum and related engineering programmes when they enter university, will be invited to attend each day.
Industry professionals will be invited to share their experience with students and deliver talks on topics of general interest and relevance to the industry. The students will be given free access to the exhibition area. They will be able to see first hand the high end technology used by engineers and the sophisticated software available for solving many engineering problems. It is hoped that they will leave the conference with a better understanding of what petroleum engineers do and their role in the broader community, especially in the health, safety and environmental areas. Equally important, they will also become aware that a petroleum engineering career is full of challenges, teamwork and responsibilities.
For further information, please contact the Education Day Coordinator
Nuntakarn Poolsiri, Tel: 66.2537.4080/4000; Fax: 66.2537.4982; E-mail:
nuntakarnp@pttep.com, or Zoe Scott, SPE Member Services Coordinator, Tel:
60.3.2288.1233; Fax: 60.3.2282.1220; E-mail: zscott@spe.org.
Concorde 3
The Environmental, Social and Health Risk and Impact Management Process
(e-SHRIMP) has been developed by the International Association of Oil & Gas
Producers (OGP). It delivers additional value in Oil and Gas projects through
enhanced quality, consistency and industry alignment. It builds on good
practice and shared learning of a number of OGP member companies and presents a
lifecycle environmental assessment and management approach which is aligned
with project design. This enables not only OGP members but other smaller and
national oil and gas companies to benefit from the broader industry experience,
to deliver oil and gas projects where design and planning are consistently
fully-integrated with the Environmental, Social and Health sensitivity and risk
appraisal and management process.
e-SHRIMP offers a flexible approach to assess and manage ESH impacts in all
activities throughout the full project development lifecycle, through to
operations and site abandonment. The process is built on early identification
and appraisal of key sensitivities and offers the potential to inform the
internal decision-making process for project approval and sanction.
Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) and impact management are
only fully effective when closely integrated into project design and
planning.
The presentation of the e-SHRIMP tool will introduce he audience an important tool for management of projects right across the life cycle of a development.