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Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The Petroleum and Geothermal Energy Resources (Resource Management and Administration) Regulations 2013

Stuart Webster A and Sandip Patel A
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Government of Western Australia Department of Mines and Petroleum

The APPEA Journal 54(1) 373-376 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ13038
Published: 2014

Abstract

These Regulations have been proposed under the Petroleum and Geothermal Energy Resources Act 1967 to replace the existing Schedule of Onshore Petroleum Exploration and Production Requirements 1991 (Amended 21 May 2010).

The Department of Mines and Petroleum (DMP) is the agency that administers the regulations on behalf of the Minister and keeps the Minister informed of petroleum or geothermal energy resource activities. A draft was released on 5 April 2014 for public comment. The precise form and language of the proposed Regulations may change after public consultation, but the intent of the regulations will remain the same.

The regulations will provide the framework for administration and compliance for petroleum field developments, geothermal energy projects, well construction and data submission and release. Activities are expected to be carried out in accordance with good oilfield practice and be compatible with the optimum long-term recovery of petroleum or geothermal energy. The Resource Management and Administration Regulations (RMA) have moved from a prescriptive type of regime to an objectives-based risk management regime requiring operators to manage their operations ensuring world’s leading practice and a fit-for-purpose design.

It is expected that operators will apply the relevant standards appropriate for their activities. It is understood also that technology will change and that standards might be changed to embrace the new technology. It is this factor that makes objectives-based regulation more apt than prescription-based regulation. Another factor is that prescription is unlikely to cover every possible circumstance that might occur.

The focus is on a whole-of-life approach to exploration and development, from an initial exploration process, through any well interventions all the way to final decommissioning. This includes requiring titleholders to consider what maintenance and monitoring programs will be in place throughout the life of wells and to be ready for eventual decommissioning.

The DMP has a continuous improvement process which involves monitoring developments in regulation worldwide. Published papers on drilling, completion, hydraulic stimulation, cementing and production on both conventional reservoirs and also shale and tight sands have been, and continue to be, researched to ensure that the regulations cover all aspects of petroleum and geothermal resource development.

Stuart Webster has a BSc in Geology from the University of WA (1975). He started in the E&P industry in 1979 and worked in field operations dealing with drilling fluids until April 2012. He has worked onshore and offshore in Australia, New Zealand, southeast Asia and the Middle East. Stuart spent five years living and working in southeast Asia and then commuted from Perth, Western Australia. In early 2012 he joined the Department of Mines and Petroleum in the Resource Branch Compliance Team which assesses and monitors drilling activities with regard to well Integrity.

stuart.webster@dmp.wa.gov.au

Sandip Patel has been a petroleum drilling engineer in the Department of Mines and Petroleum, WA, since 2012. In this role he is responsible for assessments and monitors drilling activities with particular regard to well integrity. Following graduation with a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering from Amravati University, India, and a Master of Science degree in petroleum engineering from the University of New South Wales, he was introduced to the oil and gas industry in 2007, working on a mud logging crew in the North West Shelf and Cooper Basin. He has more than five years' field experience dealing with mud logging and drilling operations until June 2012.