The activities of the modern oil and gas complex require extensive use of geospatial information and geographic information systems (GIS), which enable solving various tasks ranging from project work and environmental monitoring to property and territory management of enterprises. Specialists argue that up to 80% of information related to production activities has spatial distribution, underscoring the importance of geospatial information, primarily sourced from satellite imagery.

In the oil and gas industry, GIS and satellite imagery can be applied to address numerous tasks, such as:

  • Selecting optimal corridors for pipeline construction;
  • Displaying the status of construction projects and prioritizing them;
  • Analyzing strategies for maintenance work and budget allocation;
  • Collaborative mapping and analysis;
  • Monitoring and collecting statistical data on the operation of oil and gas facilities;
  • Assessing the condition of oil and gas facilities;
  • Locating accidents and affected areas;
  • Identifying hazardous areas;
  • Selecting optimal routes for maintenance crews and many more;
  • Geology and geophysics, mineral exploration;
  • Pipeline design and laying;
  • Solving network communication tasks;
  • Asset and territory management, equipment and pipeline condition monitoring;
  • Environmental aspects (oil spill monitoring, damage assessment, modeling, etc.);
  • Management tasks, planning.

image

Figure 1. Example of GIS for calculating oil product delivery routes

he base for implementation of the mentioned GIS-technologies is a highly accurate geodetic base, as well as maps (plans), the scale of which allows to highlight and solve all engineering tasks. Usually it is a map (plan) at a scale of 1:500 - 1:5000. Creation of such maps requires considerable expenses, which, as the available practice shows, are fully justified in case of multipurpose GIS use.

Space images are used already at the stage of studying geological structure and prospects of oil and gas bearing capacity of sedimentary basins; they are used for complex analysis of all available remote sensing, landscape and geological-geophysical data. To study geological objects on space images, they are transformed and mounted, color compositions are created, filtering, automatic classification, lineament analysis (lineament extraction in visual and automatic mode, construction of rose-diagrams and lineament density schemes).

Once the prediction is made, a survey program is developed, the basis of which is an accurate base map. Space imagery and GIS enable the creation of digital base maps using vectorization of paper maps, field geodesy and satellite positioning systems (GPS). The user can build base maps with the latest well data, seismic data, at any scale, for any area, with any level of detail.

It is envisaged to process information in the form of digital electronic maps and space images of the area along the pipeline routes, to integrate geographic information with existing data in the unified automated management system.

Developed GIS-technologies should include a mechanism of constant updating of spatial and semantic data on the basis of the latest satellite technologies of object location and high-resolution aerospace imagery. On the basis of satellite navigation and GIS-technologies a monitoring system should be formed, the information from which can be accumulated, processed, stored and delivered to end users when solving the tasks of capital construction, repair and modernization of heat power facilities, assessing their condition, management and safety.

Spacecrafts — sources of satellite imagery as of January 1, 2011

The urgent need for satellite imagery has led to the emergence over the past decade of a whole constellation of spacecraft providing imagery with unprecedented resolution. The GeoEye-1 spacecraft has already been launched, providing a resolution of 0.41 meters and the highest accuracy of image geolocation of 3 meters without ground control. Such capabilities are perfectly suited for the oil and gas industry in solving many tasks.

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Risunok 2. GeoEye-1 Image, Khanty-Mansiysk

If the first commercial high-resolution spacecraft (1 meter and better) were developed by American companies, since 2006 other countries have also joined in launching high-resolution spacecraft: Israel (Eros-B), Russia (Resurs-DK), Korea (Kompsat-2), and India (Cartosat-2). However, maintaining technological superiority, US companies launched the GeoEye-1, WorldView-1, WorldView-2, WorldView-3, and WorldView-4 spacecraft with resolutions of 0.3-0.5 meters.

The main parameters of existing high and medium resolution optical-electronic spacecraft are given in Table 1, where spacecraft are listed in order of increasing resolution.


Table 1. Parameters of high-resolution optoelectronic satellites

Launch parameters

spacecraft

Parameters of the optoelectronic camera

Output parameters

space images

Name

Country

Start Date

H,

kn

Type

f,

m

d,

cm

p,

 mkm

Resolution, m

Capture,

kn

PAN

MS

GeoEye-1

USA

08.10.08

684

GIS

13,3

110

8

0,41

1,64

15,2

WorldView-2

USA

08.10.09

770

WV110

13,3

110

8

0,46

1,8

16,4

WorldView-1

USA

18.09.07

496

WV60

8,8

60

8

0,5

-

16,4

QuickBird-2

USA

18.10.01

450

BHRS60

8,8

60

12

0,6

2,4

16,5

EROS-B

Israel

01.03.06

500

PIC-2

5,0

50

7

0,7

-

7

Cartosat-2

India

10.01.07

637

PAN

5,6

70

7

0.8

-

9,6

Cartosat-2A

India

28.04.08

635

PAN

5,6

70

7

0.8

-

9,6

IKONOS-2

USA

24.09.99

681

OSA

10,0

70

12

1,0

4.0

11

OrbView-3

USA

26.06.03

470

OHRIS

3,0

45

6

1,0

4,0

8

Ресурс-ДК1

Russia

15.06.06

361-604

Геокон-1

4,0

50

9

1,0

3,0

28,3

KOMPSAT-2

Korea

28.07.06

685

MSC

х

х

х

1,0

4,0

15

EROS-А

Israel

05.12.00

480

PIC

3,45

30

7

1,8

-

14

Formosat-2

Taiwan

21.05.04

891

RSI

2,9

60

8

2,0

8,0

24

Cartosat-1

Italy

05.05.05

618

PAN-A,F

2,0

45

7

2,5

-

30

SPOT-5

France

04.05.02

822

HRG

HRS

1,08

0,58

х

х

6,5

6,5

2,5; 5

10

10; 20

-

60

60

ALOS

Japan

24.01.06

692

PRISM

ANVIR-2

2,0

0,8

30

24

7

7

2,5

-

-

10

35

70

IRS-1С

IRS-1D

India

India

28.12.95

29.09.97

817

PAN

LISS-3

5,8

-

-

23,5

70

140

ResourceSat-1

India

17.10.03

817

LISS-4

LISS-3

5,8

-

23,5

23,5

70

140

RapidEye

Germany

29.08.08

634

REIS

0,6

14

12

-

6,5

78

SPOT-2

France

22.01.90

822

HRV

10

20

60

SPOT-4

France

24.03.98

822

HRVIR

10

20

60

Medium-resolution space systems are used to address environmental monitoring tasks, including monitoring pollution in areas of hydrocarbon extraction and transportation. This type of product is also used in hydrocarbon exploration for compiling geological, geomorphological, structural, and structural-geomorphological maps, providing material to reveal the deep structure of the territory.

image

Risunok 3. Terra ASTER Image, Vyngapurovskoye Field

An important feature of the years 2007-2010 is the increase in the number of launches of spacecraft with high-resolution radars. Radar images with resolutions up to 1 meter are comparable in quality to high-resolution optical images, but unlike optical equipment, synthetic aperture radars (SAR) conduct imaging regardless of weather conditions and illumination in the target area. Sometimes, customers have to wait from a week to a month for the results of optical imaging of objects in the central part of Russia. Radar systems allow fulfilling imaging requests within several days after ordering.

Radar images complement images obtained in the visible and infrared ranges, increasing the amount of information and its reliability. With radar satellite systems achieving the same spatial resolution as visible range systems, the capabilities of remote sensing from space are significantly enhanced.


Table 2. Characteristics of radar satellites

Name

County

Launch date

Resolution, m

Range

Capture, km

TerraSAR-X

Germany

15.06.07

1.0

X

10×5

COSMO-Skymed-1

Italy

08.06.07

1.0

X

10

COSMO-Skymed-2

Italy

09.12.07

1.0

X

10

COSMO-Skymed-3

Italy

24.10.08

1.0

X

10

COSMO-Skymed-4

Italy

06.11.10

1.0

X

10

Tandem-X


Germany

21.06.10

1.0

X

10×5

Radarsat-2

Canada

14.09.07

3.0

X

25

RISAT

India

20.04.09

3.0

С

10

ALOS/PALSAR

Japan

24.01.06

7.0

L

40

Radarsat-1

Canada

04.11.95

8.0

C

25

ERS-2

EKA

21.04.95

26

C

100

ENVISAT

EKA

01.03.02

29

C

56

 

On June 15, 2007 a civilian satellite TerraSAR-X was launched, which provides radar imaging with a resolution of 1 m, and in 2007-2010 a number of other foreign radar systems with such resolution were launched. In 2010, the Tandem-X satellite was launched for a group flight together with the TerraSAR-X satellite for operational interferometric imaging with high accuracy and creation of a global DEM with a point-to-point spacing of 10 meters and height accuracy of 5 meters. 

image

Figure 4: Example image from TerraSAR-X, SpotLight mode, Iraq

Radar images are an extremely convenient and efficient source of detailed, accurate and comprehensive terrain information - much more powerful, rapid, reliable and cost-effective than, for example, the use of space stereo pairs or aerial photographs.

Specialized interferometric imaging technologies can detect minor ground movements, which can be used to monitor pipeline conditions, detect illegal taps into oil and gas pipelines, and assess seismic hazards.

Examples of projects implemented by Innother Company based on the use of space images for oil and gas industry as of January 01, 2011

Provision of space images for the Bovanenkovo gas field facilities

Bovanenkovo oil and gas condensate field - The largest field on the Yamal Peninsula in Russia. Bovanenkovo is located on the Yamal Peninsula, 40 kilometers off the coast of the Kara Sea, the lower reaches of the Se-Yakha, Mordy-Yakha and Nadu-Yakha rivers. The field's reserves are estimated at 4.9 trillion cubic meters of gas; its design capacity is 115 billion cubic meters of gas per year.

To transport gas from the Bovanenkovskoye field, a multi-line gas transportation system is planned to be constructed linking the Yamal Peninsula and the central regions of Russia. The gas pipeline route will be over 2,400 km long, including the new Bovanenkovo - Ukhta gas transportation corridor with a length of about 1,100 km and the Ukhta - Torzhok gas pipeline with a length of 1,300 km.


image

Figure 5: Bovanenkovo - Ukhta and Ukhta - Torzhok gas pipelines

Innoter provided space imagery of three objects of the Bovanenkovo field in 2010:

  • A section of the Obskaya-Bovanenkovo railroad line;

  • the Bovanenkovo-Ukhta gas trunkline;

  • ice landfast ice in the area of the gas pipeline string outlet on the eastern and western shores of the Baidaratskaya Bay.

Information provision with remote sensing data from QuickBird, IKONOS, EROS-B and ALOS PRISM satellites for the section of the Obskaya-Bovanenkovo railroad line.

The railroad is located in Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Priuralsky and Yamalsky districts, section km 2 - km 336. The survey object is characterized by the conditions of the Far North, development of permafrost soils and geocryological processes, widespread swamps and marshy areas, lack of developed infrastructure. The object is located within the subarctic continental arcto-tundra and typical tundra. The favorable period for obtaining space imagery begins on June 15 and ends on September 1. The unfavorable period is 9.5 months per year.

Space images for the area were searched according to digital files (shp-files) provided by the Customer. The shp-file represented the axis of the railway line, on the basis of which a 3 km wide corridor was plotted. Geometric resolution of space photography data is not worse than 2.5 meters in panchromatic range.
Criteria for selection of digital information:

presence of cloud cover - not more than 20%;
relevance of the imagery - the date of the imagery is not later than 2004;

angle of inclination from nadir - not more than 30%.

The search was performed among the following space images: GeoEye-1,WorldView-1, QuickBird, Ikonos, OrbView-3, Kompsat-2, EROS-A, EROS-B, ALOS PRISM.

QuickBird, Ikonos, EROS-B and ALOS PRISM archive images were selected for the area of the railroad line route in accordance with the selection criteria. All works were performed within the terms specified in the contract. The Customer was provided with remote sensing data of the Earth surface taking into account the requirements to the supplied data via FTP protocol, as well as copies on physical media.

Ordering of a new GeoEye-1 satellite imagery of the Bovanenkovo-Ukhta gas trunkline;

Survey parameters:

  • new imagery from GeoEye-1 satellite, 0.5 meters, color version;

  • order urgency level - standard, Geo processing level;

  • maximum cloudiness: 15%;

  • format - geotiff, digitization - 11 bits

  • UTM projection, zone 39-42, ellipsoid WGS84;

  • total survey area: 6765 square kilometers, object length - 1353 square kilometers;

  • data collection period from June 15 to August 15, 2010.

image

Figure 6. Scheme of the new survey coverage of the Bovanenkovo - Ukhta gas pipeline

Complex meteorological, climatic and geographical conditions of the region (short daylight period, high cloudiness, small snowless period) forced to extend the actual survey period from May 25 to the end of September. Constant monitoring of weather conditions made it possible to obtain less cloudy, snowless images and deliver them to the customer.

It was organized step-by-step both via ftp and copies on disk, ensuring a constant workload of the customer's production forces.

Provision of stereo pair data from IKONOS satellite on the landfast ice in the area of the gas pipeline string outlet on the eastern and western shores of the Baidaratskaya Bay
The purpose of the work was to order, process and provide stereo pair of data from Ikonos satellite necessary for determining morphological characteristics of the landfast ice in the area of the gas pipeline string outlet on the eastern and western shores of Baidaratskaya Bay.

Requirements to the composition of the provided data:
  • high spatial resolution imagery from GeoEye-1 / Ikonos satellites;
  • product type - GeoStereo;
  • channel - Panchromatic;
  • RGB-image reduced to panchromatic channel is additionally provided;
  • digital elevation model, georeferenced to terrain reference points;
  • GeoTIFF data format.

The TOR requirements to the quality of provided data were as follows: georeferencing accuracy should not be worse than 2 image elements (pixels), cloudiness not more than 20%, unified coordinate system, UMT zone 39 projection on WGS84 ellipsoid.

The survey was to be carried out before June 10, i.e. before ice melting. It was necessary to have time to obtain, process and provide information meeting the above requirements.

image

Figure 7. Baidaratskaya Bay, image from IKONOS satellite; Date of acquisition: April 21, 2010.

Creation of 1:5 000 scale orthophotomaps of the gas pipeline route area in Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug using GeoEye-1 space images.

The purpose of the work is to create orthophotomaps of 1:5000 scale for the area of the gas pipeline route in Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug based on the ordered space images. The route of the linear part of the gas pipeline from the shore of the Gulf of Ob near Cape Parusny to the gas compressor station of the Yamburg GCF is about 90 km long and 10 km wide. The object is located within the subarctic continental arcto-tundra and typical tundra. The favorable period for ordering a new space survey begins on June 15 and ends on September 1.


Orthophotomaps of 1:5000 scale can be produced only on the basis of space images obtained by the best modern satellites. That is why GeoEye-1 satellite was chosen for the survey. The order parameters of the new GeoEye-1 space imagery were selected as follows:
  • GeoEye-1" images, color, 0.5 m resolution;
  • processing level: Geo product;
  • total area: 861 sq. km;
  • object coordinates: the object is represented as a shp-file;
  • maximum allowable percentage of cloudiness - 15%;
  • product format - GeoTIFF, bit rate - 11 Bit;
  • data collection period - from July 15, 2009 to September 15, 2009.

image

Figure 8. Scheme of GeoEye-1 space images ordering on the gas pipeline route


Analysis of all GeoEye-1 imagery produced during the survey period showed that there were 42 instrument activations. However, due to complicated meteorological conditions some of the images were not suitable for processing due to cloud cover. Cloud cover variation in all 42 images ranged from 0% to 97%. From these images, only those areas were selected that had the maximum allowable cloud cover percentage of 15%. Only those areas that were suitable for processing were cut out of the cloud images. The diagram below shows the final configuration of the selected GeoEye-1 images. The coverage area was 576 square kilometers.


The transformation was performed using rational polynomial functions, the accuracy of which is declared to be 3-5 meters. To eliminate systematic errors a number of reference points were defined on vector fragments provided by the customer. Transformation was performed in UTM projection, 43 zone on WGS-84 ellipsoid. Accordingly, coordinates of vector fragments points, represented in SK-42 coordinate system, were converted to UTM projection. 


The accuracy of image orientation provided by additional reference points meets the specified requirements. A mosaic of four specified areas was created from orthorectified images. Final slicing of fragments was performed in accordance with the arrangement of 1:25000 scale maps.

image

Figure 9. Example of orthophotomap

Output data are presented in GeoTiff and Erdas IMG formats. Dynamic range is 16 per channel. To reduce the size of images they were additionally divided into 2 parts.

M 1:25,000 mapping of the Urengoy-Surgut condensate pipeline facility

The purpose of this work is to create and update digital terrain models (DTM) of scale 1:25000 in the corridor of the Urengoy-Surgut condensate pipeline route for further creation of thematic maps, documents and materials required for the development of project documentation.


Special construction conditions: conditions of the Far North, development of permafrost soils and geocryological processes, widespread bogs and swampy areas, lack of developed infrastructure. In the Terms of Reference for the work performance it was established that geometric resolution of space photography data should be not worse than 2.5 meters in panchromatic range. Quick Bird, SPOT-5 and ALOS PRISM space imagery systems were selected to fulfill this task.

image

Figure 10. QuickBird image, acquisition date 07.12.2008


Creation of the DEM was carried out on the basis of space imagery materials with the resolution providing updating of cartographic materials of 1:25000 scale available (as of May 2008) in the archives of organizations supplying remote sensing data.


The relief was constructed from geo-referenced raster maps of 1:25000 scale. After that, a digital elevation matrix (DEM) was created on the basis of the constructed terrain relief. Each photo was transformed according to the elements of external orientation using the corresponding catalog of coordinates of reference points and DEM.


The obtained fragments were merged into a single raster space. Creation of image mosaics from space imagery materials was performed in strict compliance with the requirements of guiding documents. With the help of DEM, as a result of transforming the mosaic of images from space imagery materials, corrections were introduced and relief errors were eliminated.


Desk-based interpretation of the obtained image mosaic was performed. On the basis of the obtained data, vectorization of objects was performed in MapInfo 8.0 software environment, with the formation of 29 thematic layers. The attribute tables for the layers were also filled in.

image

Figure 11. Example of a digital terrain model (DTM) at a scale of 1:25,000.


After the DEM formation was completed, the cameral control of the obtained model was carried out with elimination of detected errors and necessary revision.

Compilation of space map atlas of underground gas storages of the Russian Federation

Monitoring of the condition of underground gas storages of the Russian Federation is one of the most important tasks of the oil and gas complex, which should be solved by space means. For this purpose the atlas of space maps of underground gas storages of the Russian Federation was compiled. The company Innoter took part in this work.

Archival space images of high spatial resolution from 0.5 to 5 m were searched for in the area of mining allotments of the following Russian UGS facilities: Shchelkovskoye, Kaluga, Kasimovskoye, Uvyazovskoye, Sovkhoznoye, Nevskoye, Leningradskoye, Krasnodar, Kushchevskoye, Punginskoye, Karashurskoye.


The search was carried out among the following space images: WorldView-1 (50 cm); QuickBird (70 cm); Ikonos (1m); OrbView-3 (1m); Kompsat-2 (1m); ALOS (2.5 m); SPOT-5 (2.5 m).

The criteria for selecting digital information were as follows:


  • selection of the most recent by date and the best image quality;

  • presence of cloud cover - no more than 10%;

  • relevance of the survey - date of the survey no later than 2004;

  • angle of deviation from nadir - not more than 30°.

Available non-geopositioned cartographic materials on UGS facilities of the Russian Federation on paper or in electronic form (in *jpg, *cdr, *ppt, *doc formats) were digitized using MapEdit and ArcGIS software. The classes of objects stipulated by the Technical Assignment were digitized. Then on the high-resolution optical space images previously found in the archive some reference objects, present on the original cartographic materials, were recognized. After identification of several such reference objects on space images, georeferencing of source cartographic materials and vector layers digitized from them was performed. As a result, situational space maps were obtained, which represent a background substrate of high-resolution space images with vector layers of the objects stipulated by the Technical Assignment (wells, plumes, reservoirs, hydraulic fracturing and compressor stations, contours of the mining allotment).

At the next stage, the spatial location of each specific object on the space map was clarified by visual interpretation. The location of gas pipelines (plumes and collectors) could not always be determined by visual interpretation of space images and, in such cases, a comparative analysis of different available materials was performed. In some cases consultations of the Customer's specialists were required to clarify the location of specific objects. 


The cartographic information systematized in this way was integrated into a geoinformation system. The resulting database of geopositioned spatial data became the basis for producing output cartographic products.

image

Figure 12. Situation space map of the Shchelkovsky UGSF


The resulting situation space maps of Russian UGS facilities were further analyzed for the presence of restrictions on their use in terms of state and commercial secrets. The authors' conclusions are as follows: the situation space maps of Russian UGS facilities were created on the basis of space images obtained from foreign spacecrafts: Quickbird and WorldView (USA), ALOS (Japan), SPOT (France), and, therefore, they are not secret, and, according to the authors, they do not represent commercial secrets. The final decision on the confidentiality and secrecy regimes of the Russian UGS situation space maps is made by the Customer (OAO Gazprom).


Concerning this project it should be noted that it is expedient to continue the work on creation of UGS space maps. Since the total number of UGS facilities in Russia is 28, while 11 have been worked out. The reason is the crisis of 2008-2009.

Ground-space monitoring of ecological and geodynamic processes

December 13, 2010 at a meeting of the Security Council, Russian President Medvedev D.A. stated the need to create a system: "ground-space monitoring of environmental and geodynamic processes, especially in areas of development of large and unique fields. Lineament analysis can be one of the means to solve this problem.

image

Figure 13. Rose-diagrams of lineament extents in the Pribrezhno-Novotitarovsky license area

The results of studies of spatial and temporal interrelations of natural and anthropogenic processes at oil and gas fields were used as a basis for the development of the method of lineament analysis of oilfield structures accident rate. This method is based on the results of structural interpretation of space images and structural-geomorphologic studies. Comparative assessment of histograms of accident rate distribution by elements of lineament-block structures in these fields allows to assume the existence of dependence of accident rate distribution dynamics on the lineament rank and its dimensionality.


The established regularities together with the developed technological scheme of geoinformation support determine new possibilities of rational design of monitoring systems for oil and gas complex objects.

Innoter has experience in system space-geodynamic computer modeling work on the example of the Pribrezhno-Novotitarovsky license area for surveying support of geological exploration works in 2003. The conclusions obtained in this work were used to build a three-dimensional model of the work area and to develop recommendations on the location of the reference surveying and geodetic network.

Planning of geodetic works at linear and long-distance facilities

The use of space images in the design of line-extended facilities (oil and gas pipelines, condensate pipelines and related structures) in the Far North and Siberia allows to significantly reduce money and labor costs for preparation and execution of geodetic works.


High resolution space images make it possible to plan the points of geodetic networks, location of bases, quantity of fuel, supplies and other production resources, to make planning and altitude justification. Partially geodetic works can be replaced by cameral interpretation of images, eliminating the need for pickets during geodetic surveying.

Conclusion

Innother has all the necessary technical and technological means to solve a wide range of tasks in the field of geospatial data acquisition and processing. The accumulated experience can be effectively applied to meet the needs of organizations working in the field of design, construction and operation of oil and gas complex facilities with up-to-date, reliable and accurate geospatial information.