Join leading experts for in-depth discussions.
Discovering and Commercializing Unconventional Reservoir Plays Larger and More Prolific than the Permian Basin and Marcellus Shale – The Promise of International Unconventionals
Denise Benoit
Chemist, Geothermal Fluid Design Manager, XGS Energy
Moderator
Greg Leveille
Chief Executive Officer, Tidal Wave Technologies
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Doug Valleau
President – Strategia Innovation and Technology Advisors, LLC
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Today, unconventional reservoirs in the Permian Basin produce more than five million barrels of oil per day, while the Marcellus Shale delivers over twenty-five billion cubic feet of natural gas. These production volumes are so large that it is difficult to imagine bigger plays ever being discovered. Yet, as this talk will demonstrate, the history of our industry suggests that much larger and more prolific unconventional plays will almost certainly be found and developed outside the United States.
Larger hydrocarbon accumulations. Sweeter sweet spots. Thicker pay sections. In theory, international unconventional opportunities should represent an explorer’s dream scenario. In practice however, unconventional exploration outside the United States has struggled to gain traction except in a few countries because of numerous mostly above-ground challenges.
This however is about to change since unconventional reservoir technologies have evolved to a point that deployment of the latest technological capabilities can economically overcome nearly all above ground challenges, especially when used to develop reservoirs as good or better than the best Tier 1 unconventional acreage in the United States.
Now is therefore the time for international unconventionals to fulfill their promise. The time when acreage in the most prolific sweet spots will be captured. The time when plays larger than the Permian Basin and Marcellus Shale will be discovered and commercialized. A time when explorers’ dreams will become reality.
Attend this talk to learn more about the promise of international unconventionals and join the discussion during the Q&A period if you have insights to share.
Evolving Issues in Produced Water Management in Texas
Susan Nash
Director, Innovation and Emerging Science & Technology, AAPG
Moderator
Danny Kingham
PG, Principal Hydrogeologist, GSI Environmental Inc.
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Produced water management has become an increasingly important regulatory and environmental issue in Texas oil and gas operations. Rising production volumes have expanded reliance on Underground Injection Control (UIC) Class II disposal wells, drawing greater attention to well integrity, subsurface fluid migration, and induced seismicity risks. At the same time, advances in recycling, beneficial reuse, and emerging critical mineral extraction technologies are reshaping how produced water is managed, introducing new legal, regulatory, and contractual considerations for operators, landowners, and regulators across the state.
From Wells to Workflows: Agentic AI as the Next Operating Partner
Denise Benoit
Chemist, Geothermal Fluid Design Manager, XGS Energy
Moderator
Akash Sharma
Vice President of Product Management – AI Product Portfolio, Enverus
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The energy industry is beginning to use a new class of systems often described as agentic AI. These systems are designed to handle multi-step technical work, check assumptions, apply domain rules, and coordinate information across different datasets. The goal is not to replace engineering or land expertise, but to provide a reliable digital partner that can reduce manual effort and support faster, more consistent decisions. This session explains how these agent-style systems can support a wide range of upstream and midstream workflows. Examples include early screening of opportunities, interpretation of operational context, generation of structured technical summaries, and coordination of reservoir or commercial evaluations. These are only a few of the areas where operators are experimenting with this approach.
The talk focuses on practical design principles rather than hype. Topics include how to structure agent workflows, how to connect them with proprietary and physics-based models, and how to build controls that keep output traceable and defensible. Attendees will gain a clear, realistic view of how agentic systems can improve performance, safety, and decision quality in daily operations.