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Reservoir Engineering: Techniques for Oil Well Production Optimization
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- Certificate of completion
Why enroll
Is this course for you?
You should take this if
- You work in Oil & Gas
- You're a Mechanical / Onshore Pipeline professional
- You have 3+ years of hands-on experience in this field
- You prefer self-paced learning you can revisit
You should skip if
- You're new to this field with no prior experience
- You need a different specialisation outside Mechanical
- You need live interaction with an instructor
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The course is readily available, allowing learners to start and complete it at their own pace.
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What learners say about this course
Coming into this course, I had some prior exposure to the subject from pipeline integrity work and offshore tiebacks. The material went deeper than expected on CO₂ corrosion and H₂S sour service, especially how water chemistry and partial pressure swing the dominant mechanism. The discussion on pitting versus general wall loss lined up well with what’s typically seen in carbon steel flowlines, but it was useful to see the electrochemical side spelled out rather than just relying on rules of thumb. One challenge was keeping all the mitigation options straight at a system level. In the field, cathodic protection, coatings, and chemical inhibition are often treated independently, while the course tried to show how they interact. That took a bit of mental rewiring, particularly for mixed-metal systems where galvanic corrosion shows up as an edge case during brownfield modifications. The sections on corrosion monitoring were practical. Comparing corrosion coupons with ultrasonic testing helped clarify when each makes sense, and why relying on a single data source can be misleading. A concrete takeaway is being more deliberate about aligning inspection intervals with actual corrosion rates instead of fixed schedules. That’s closer to best practice than what still happens on many assets. I can see this being useful in long-term project work.
Coming into this course, I had some prior exposure to the subject from pipeline integrity and production operations, so the bar was fairly high. The sections on CO₂ corrosion and H₂S sour service stood out, especially how localized pitting and stress corrosion cracking can behave very differently than the textbook uniform loss we often assume in early design. That aligned well with what’s seen in aging flowlines versus new builds. One challenge was keeping track of how many variables interact at once—water chemistry, temperature, and flow regime—when evaluating corrosion risk. In the field, those inputs are rarely clean or stable, and the course didn’t shy away from that reality. The discussion on cathodic protection limitations in complex facilities, compared to how CP is sometimes over-trusted in industry, was useful and a bit overdue. A practical takeaway was tying inspection data like UT readings and corrosion coupons back into material selection and inhibitor strategy, instead of treating monitoring as a box-checking exercise. The edge cases around mixed metallurgy and galvanic effects were particularly relevant at the system level, where small decisions ripple into long-term reliability and safety. Overall, it felt grounded in real engineering practice.
Coming into this course, I had some prior exposure to the subject through day‑to‑day production support, but a lot of it was fragmented. The modules on nodal analysis and artificial lift selection helped connect the dots, especially when comparing ESP performance versus gas lift under changing water cut. Flow assurance topics like pressure losses and liquid loading were also more relevant than expected, since those issues show up quietly in mature wells. One challenge was keeping up with the data-driven optimization sections. Working through production data and interpreting trends took more time than planned, and it exposed a gap in how I normally rely on surface rates without digging deeper into inflow performance. Still, pushing through that was worth it. A practical takeaway was learning a structured workflow to diagnose underperforming wells before jumping to workovers. That approach was applied almost immediately on a current field project to justify a choke change instead of an expensive lift modification. The course felt grounded in real operating constraints rather than theory-only discussions. I can see this being useful in long-term project work.
Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course, given the mix of intermediate and advanced topics. Coming from day‑to‑day production support, the biggest gap was tying nodal analysis to actual field decisions instead of just theory. The sections on inflow performance relationships and tubing outflow were especially useful, and the discussion around artificial lift selection (ESP vs. gas lift) reflected problems seen on mature oil wells. One challenge was keeping up with the data-driven parts, particularly when reconciling well test data with real-time production data that doesn’t always line up cleanly. That’s a common headache in oil and gas operations, so it felt realistic rather than academic. Flow assurance topics like liquid loading and pressure losses in multiphase flow also connected well with issues encountered during rate optimization projects. A practical takeaway was a clear workflow for running nodal analysis to justify changes in choke size or pump operating points, instead of relying on trial and error. Parts of this were applied directly to a current field with rising water cut and declining rates. Overall, it felt grounded in real engineering practice.