已发表: 08/10/2020
已发表: 08/10/2020
Prior to COVID-19 pandemic, our directional drilling experts comprised more than 5,000 people operating on hundreds of rigs daily. Many commuted either domestically or internationally to wellsites (or work). The pandemic disrupted this travel-intensive workflow with worldwide travel bans, quarantine requirements, and shelter-in-place orders—instantly breaking global supply chains and personnel logistics. Consequently, the standard operating model quickly ceased to function, and staffing wellsites with crew and engineers became difficult or even impossible in some locations.
Schlumberger was deploying Performance Live service in a phased approach prior to the onset of COVID-19. At the start of 2020, nearly 50% of global rigs across 84 countries operated with some level of service implementation. In fact, up to 250 engineers were already trained to deliver Performance Live services and in one of 18 centers ready to meet the challenge. Hence, Schlumberger proposed fully implementing the model for many customers.
Performance Live service decouples analytical and manual tasks and enables the former to be conducted anywhere in the world through robust and advanced connectivity and software. This reduces wellsite crew sizes and enables performing the most analytical tasks from an office environment. While a fully manned rig can have engineer crews of more than 10 people, a wellsite using Performance Live service operates near autonomously with crews of 2 or less, depending on the deployed technology.
Schlumberger expanded worldwide use of Performance Live services by 25%, and by July of 2020 the service covered nearly 65% of global operations. During a single month of the pandemic, Performance Live service engineers covered more than 10,000 shifts—avoiding travel to wellsites by more than 600 people.
Operators engage with Performance Live digitally connected service to enable continuing operations as the global pandemic persists. These jobs span all geographies and operating environments from ultradeepwater to artic platforms, and jungle land rigs to swamp barges, and everything in-between. One operator in Thailand implemented this service in four rigs to continuously reduce the wellsite footprint by 50% for directional drilling operations. Results were not only about crew reduction but also higher levels of performance by improving ROP 15% while drilling more than 1,200 ft per day.