Requirements For Real-Time Production Operations and Production-Critical Real-Time Data
Requirements For Real-Time Production Operations and Production-Critical Real-Time Data
Requirements For Real-Time Production Operations and Production-Critical Real-Time Data
DEP 32.01.40.31-Gen.
February 2014
ECCN EAR99
This document contains information that is classified as EAR99 and, as a consequence, can neither be exported nor re-exported to any country which is under an
embargo of the U.S. government pursuant to Part 746 of the Export Administration Regulations (15 C.F.R. Part 746) nor can be made available to any national of such
country. In addition, the information in this document cannot be exported nor re-exported to an end-user or for an end-use that is prohibited by Part 744 of the Export
Administration Regulations (15 C.F.R. Part 744).
ECCN EAR99 DEP 32.01.40.31-Gen.
February 2014
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PREFACE
DEP (Design and Engineering Practice) publications reflect the views, at the time of publication, of Shell Global Solutions
International B.V. (Shell GSI) and, in some cases, of other Shell Companies.
These views are based on the experience acquired during involvement with the design, construction, operation and
maintenance of processing units and facilities. Where deemed appropriate DEPs are based on, or reference international,
regional, national and industry standards.
The objective is to set the standard for good design and engineering practice to be applied by Shell companies in oil and
gas production, oil refining, gas handling, gasification, chemical processing, or any other such facility, and thereby to help
achieve maximum technical and economic benefit from standardization.
The information set forth in these publications is provided to Shell companies for their consideration and decision to
implement. This is of particular importance where DEPs may not cover every requirement or diversity of condition at each
locality. The system of DEPs is expected to be sufficiently flexible to allow individual Operating Units to adapt the
information set forth in DEPs to their own environment and requirements.
When Contractors or Manufacturers/Suppliers use DEPs, they shall be solely responsible for such use, including the
quality of their work and the attainment of the required design and engineering standards. In particular, for those
requirements not specifically covered, the Principal will typically expect them to follow those design and engineering
practices that will achieve at least the same level of integrity as reflected in the DEPs. If in doubt, the Contractor or
Manufacturer/Supplier shall, without detracting from his own responsibility, consult the Principal.
The right to obtain and to use DEPs is restricted, and is typically granted by Shell GSI (and in some cases by other Shell
Companies) under a Service Agreement or a License Agreement. This right is granted primarily to Shell companies and
other companies receiving technical advice and services from Shell GSI or another Shell Company. Consequently, three
categories of users of DEPs can be distinguished:
1) Operating Units having a Service Agreement with Shell GSI or another Shell Company. The use of DEPs by these
Operating Units is subject in all respects to the terms and conditions of the relevant Service Agreement.
2) Other parties who are authorised to use DEPs subject to appropriate contractual arrangements (whether as part of
a Service Agreement or otherwise).
3) Contractors/subcontractors and Manufacturers/Suppliers under a contract with users referred to under 1) or 2)
which requires that tenders for projects, materials supplied or - generally - work performed on behalf of the said
users comply with the relevant standards.
Subject to any particular terms and conditions as may be set forth in specific agreements with users, Shell GSI disclaims
any liability of whatsoever nature for any damage (including injury or death) suffered by any company or person
whomsoever as a result of or in connection with the use, application or implementation of any DEP, combination of DEPs
or any part thereof, even if it is wholly or partly caused by negligence on the part of Shell GSI or other Shell Company. The
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All administrative queries should be directed to the DEP Administrator in Shell GSI.
ECCN EAR99 DEP 32.01.40.31-Gen.
February 2014
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................ 4
1.1 SCOPE........................................................................................................................ 4
1.2 DISTRIBUTION, INTENDED USE AND REGULATORY CONSIDERATIONS ......... 4
1.3 DEFINITIONS ............................................................................................................. 4
1.4 CROSS-REFERENCES ............................................................................................. 7
1.5 SUMMARY OF MAIN CHANGES ............................................................................... 7
1.6 COMMENTS ON THIS DEP ....................................................................................... 8
2. REQUIREMENTS AND GUIDELINES FOR PRODUCTION RTO
CAPABILITIES ........................................................................................................... 9
2.1 BACKGROUND .......................................................................................................... 9
2.2 SCOPE AND CONTEXT............................................................................................. 9
2.3 REQUIREMENTS FOR SYSTEMS SUPPORTING RTO CAPABILTIES ................ 10
2.4 REQUIREMENT FOR SUSTAINABLE RTO CAPABILITIES ................................... 16
3. PRODUCTION CRITICAL REAL TIME DATA ........................................................ 18
3.1 BACKGROUND ........................................................................................................ 18
3.2 SCOPE AND CONTEXT........................................................................................... 18
3.3 RTO DATA CRITICALITY RANKING ....................................................................... 18
4. REFERENCES ......................................................................................................... 21
APPENDICES
APPENDIX 1 BASIC GENERIC DATA CHECKING ............................................................. 22
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1. INTRODUCTION
1.1 SCOPE
This DEP specifies requirements and gives recommendations for the setting up of the
technology infrastructure to support Upstream Production Real Time Operations (RTO) and
the acquisition and quality assurance of related real-time production data.
This DEP is intended for use by those involved in the designing, deploying, and upgrading
systems for the support of Upstream Production RTO. This DEP identifies generic
functionality, standards and best practices, whilst allowing for differences in history,
business requirements or local legislation that may require different implementations from
one project to another.
This DEP provides:
• Specification of the key functionalities required and key supporting elements of the
infrastructure to be put in place to support Real Time Operations.
• Together with Standard Form DEP 59.01.10.80-Gen. a minimum set of criticality-
ranked real-time data crucial to executing key RTO processes.
This is a revision of the DEP of the same number dated February 2012; see (1.5) for an
overview of the main changes.
1.3 DEFINITIONS
1.3.1 General definitions
The Contractor is the party which carries out all or part of the design, engineering,
procurement, construction, commissioning or management of a project or operation of a
facility. The Principal may undertake all or part of the duties of the Contractor.
The Manufacturer/Supplier is the party which manufactures or supplies equipment and
services to perform the duties specified by the Contractor.
The Principal is the party which initiates the project and ultimately pays for it. The Principal
may also include an agent or consultant authorized to act for, and on behalf of, the
Principal.
The word shall indicates a requirement.
The word should indicates a recommendation.
ECCN EAR99 DEP 32.01.40.31-Gen.
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Term Definition
Alarm The notification type used to notify operators of the exceedance of a
Critical Limit or Standard Limit. Refer to DEP 32.80.10.14-Gen. for related
definitions.
Alert The notification type used to notify operators and/or operations support
personnel of the exceedance of a target limit or other event that is not a
Critical or Standard Limit. Refer to DEP 32.80.10.14-Gen. for related
definitions.
Critical Limit Critical Limit: The value at which the operator has a last opportunity to
or Standard diagnose a situation and respond in order to correct the process and
Limit prevent the consequences in a timely manner. Standard Limit: The limit,
when exceeded for longer than the allowable time in exceedance, where
sustained or recurring short-term operations will begin to cause
cumulative degradation of equipment integrity or reliability, or other
cumulative effects that could lead to reduction of production.
The Shell The Shell PCD Technical Reference Model is set out in
PCD DEP 32.01.20.12-Gen., Appendix 1. The model divides the process data
Technical acquisition architecture into a number of distinct levels as follows:
Reference • Level 5: The public Internet, Global Communications
Model
• Level 4: The Shell GI Office Domain Network.
• Level 3: Process Control Network or Process Information Network,
Optimizing Control.
• Level 2: Includes functions involved in monitoring and controlling
the physical process. Distributed Control System, Real Time
Operations Human Interface / Primary Operator Interface.
• Level 1: Process Connected Sub Systems and I/O. Continuous
Controllers.
• Level 0: Field Devices
Office The Office Domain (OD) includes all devices, nodes, systems and
Domain (OD) networks required to provide a standardised enterprise-wide Information
Technology environment, hence Levels 4 and 5 in the standard model.
The Shell Office Domain is standardised on GI and this DEP assumes
that GI is fully implemented.
Term Definition
Production Production critical data and documents are those which, when of good
Critical Data quality (accurate, consistent, accessible, available on time), can be used
in key business processes at Levels 3 to 5 to improve the overall value
derived from an asset, and when of poor quality (inaccurate, inconsistent,
inaccessible or unavailable on time) may adversely affect the
performance of the business processes. Safety and environmental data,
while being critical in their own right, are out of scope of this DEP.
Process Data System for the storage, archiving and retrieval of a broad range of
Historian process data.
Production The Production Enterprise Architecture provides the Information
Enterprise Technology (IT) / Information Management (IM) framework to allow
Architecture efficient delivery of information to support Production Engineering
workflows. This architecture defines RTO IT requirements for Levels 4
and 5 of the General Process Management and Control System Model.
Several platform / service layers are defined, including:
1. Data Sources
2. Application Components
3. Integration Platform comprising Application Services and Data
Services
4. Presentation Services
Production The purpose of Production Real Time Operations is to enable ‘just-in-time’
Real Time local/remote monitoring and collaboration, optimisation and control of
Operations product flows within the Integrated Production System operating
(RTO) envelope. RTO refers to activities related to the management of oil and
gas production based on real time data and with actions to be taken in the
hours to days-time frame.
1.3.3 Abbreviations
Term Definition
CWE Collaborative Work Environment
DACA Data Acquisition and Control Architecture
DCAF Group Discipline Controls and Assurance Framework (DCAF).
This framework standardises Quality Control (QC) and Quality Assurance
(QA) across all disciplines, in all Opportunity Realisation Process phases
applicable to major Greenfield and Brownfield projects.
DCS Distributed Control System.
For the purposes of this DEP, the abbreviation “DCS” is used
interchangeably with other Process Control Domain data acquisition and
control systems such as Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs),
Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) systems.
DQ Data Quality
EBS Exception Based Surveillance
EDW Engineering Data Warehouse
ERP Enterprise Resource Planning
ESP Electric Submersible Pump
IPM Integrated Production Modelling - a suite of modelling tools.
IPSM Integrated Production System Model
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Term Definition
IT Information Technology
KPI Key Performance Indicator
PCP Progressive Cavity Pump
PEFS Process Engineering Flow Scheme
PI Plant Information, an application by OSIsoft.
POCC Production Operations Collaborative Centres
PSO Production System Optimisation
P&ID Process and Instrumentation Diagram
QC Quality Control/Check
SAP The Primary Shell ERP System
SCADA Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition
SOP Standard Operating Procedure
WRFM Wells, Reservoir and Facilities Management
1.4 CROSS-REFERENCES
Where cross-references to other parts of this DEP are made, the referenced section or
clause number is shown in brackets ( ). Other documents referenced by this DEP are listed
in (4).
Section/Clause Change
1.3.2 Definitions for alarm, alert and critical limit added
1.3.3 Abbreviations for DCAF and WRFM added
2.2.1 Levels updated
2.2.1/5 CWE text added
2.3.1 Text updated (para 2,4)
2.3.2 Text updated (para 1; para 7 point 1,2 and 5)
2.3.3 Text updated
2.3.7 Added last paragraph
2.3.9 Text updated
2.4.2 Text updated
3.1 Text updated
3.2 Section updated
3.3.1 Section updated
3.3.2 Section updated
3.3.3 Section added
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Feedback that has been registered in the DEP Feedback System by using one of the above
options will be reviewed by the DEP Custodian for potential improvements to the DEP.
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2.1 BACKGROUND
The purpose of Production RTO is to enable ‘just-in-time’ local and remote monitoring,
collaboration, optimisation and control of product flows within the Integrated Production
System operating envelope.
RTO requires, as a minimum, the automated acquisition of production data for monitoring in
real time the overall production process from a remotely located Production Office, and a
means of communicating timely instructions to field operations.
DEP 59.01.10.80-Gen. shall be captured and stored in the Process Data Historian,
reference (3.3). Data identified at LOW overall criticality should also be captured and
stored in the Process Data Historian unless there are significant communications and data
management issues. The Process Data Historian shall receive its data in real time from
various Level 2 and Level 3 systems. The DCS and other systems in the PCD may have
their own separate native data historians for operator graphics and trends. These will not
be further discussed within this DEP and all references to Process Data Historians will refer
to long term Process Data Historian.
A mirrored dual long term Process Data Historian configuration, with one Historian in
Level 3 and another in Level 4 is the default standard and should be implemented. The
data in the Historians shall be synchronized. The dual Process Data Historian configuration
is shown in DEP 32.01.20.12-Gen., Appendix 2.
Due to its central role in support of RTO, the design of the Process Data Historian system
shall be subject to business continuity/disaster recovery analysis. Process Data Historian
outage impact categorization shall be conducted, target Recovery Time Objectives and
Recovery Point Objections defined, and the systems designed accordingly. Process Data
Historian collectives may be part of the final design.
The Process Data Historian, residing in the PCD, interfaces to the L2 or L3 Process Control
Domain data providers via the Process Control Network. The design and implementation of
the Process Data Historian - L2 or L3 Process Control Data Sources link are critical for
RTO and shall be subject to availability, redundancy and data-throughput considerations
under supervision from the Principal’s Process Data Historian focal point.
The Process Data Historian shall also be able to receive and archive real time and
historical process data from various applications in Levels 3 and 4. For example, virtual
metering/instrument estimates of production rates or tank levels may be stored in the
Process Data Historian.
While data presentation is not its prime function, the Process Data Historian shall support at
least one user interface to allow users in the OD to view both real time and historical data
trends. The Process Data Historian shall support data transfer interfaces to other
applications, including downloads of process data into Microsoft Excel®.
For the overall system transmitting process data from the field to the OD, archiving and
performance requirements include, as a minimum:
1. The Process Data Historian shall continuously scan process data samples from the
field at 1 minute intervals or less. Real time data changes should appear in the
Process Data Historian user interface within 2 scan intervals of actual process data
change in the field. The Principal should be consulted to identify if any events are to
be logged at higher scan rates and with high resolution time stamping. In assets
with significant geographical spread and large numbers of wells, such as
Unconventional Gas or Oil assets, the foregoing Process Data Historian
requirements may be relaxed with Principal’s explicit approval to scanning of data
points at 15 minute intervals.
2. The Process Data Historian may have time compression and resolution settings to
allow reduction of transmission bandwidth and storage capacity requirements. The
party responsible for the configuration of the time compression and resolution shall
propose settings for approval by Principal’s RTO representative. The settings
(resolution, time window size) shall be adjustable for individual signals.
3. The Process Data Historian shall have availability in excess of 99.9 %.
4. The performance of the Process Data Historian in making data available to the Office
Domain shall be part of the Commissioning Testing of a facility. Performance of the
Process Data Historian and its interfaces shall be demonstrated to and approved by
Principal’s RTO representative.
5. The historian needs to have the ability to store all measured data values for at least
five years without additional processing. Verify time frame with local data retention
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policy.
Slow response times affect the user experience significantly. Once the client application or
portal is initiated, values or time trends from the Process Data Historian should be
presented typically less than 5 seconds after activation of the request.
It is acceptable for especially large sets of data to be presented after longer delays, on
Principal approval. For example, one year of data for five process variables should be
presented within 30 seconds. The response times of the presentation layer shall be
specified as part of the system design, tested and demonstrated to the Principal for
acceptance in all cases.
Formal production reporting requirements are based on the Hydrocarbon Production
Information System, and are excluded from scope of this DEP.
2.3.4 Well testing support
Regular data on individual well production rates is an integral part of the license to operate
of an asset, and a significant pre-requisite to meaningful Upstream Production RTO and
well and reservoir management.
For assets with well testing facilities, a means shall be provided for the efficient automated
acquisition of oil, water and gas production rates from the well testing facilities into an OD
Well Test Storage and Validation framework. The framework should provide a means for
the following:
1. Recording well test data, as a minimum, the identifier of the well on test, the
estimated steady state well flow rates from the well test streams and other relevant
process data, such as tubing head pressure and production choke settings.
2. Allowance for exclusion of parts of the test when the recorded flows and pressures
are in transient state due to purging. This may be implemented by use of flow
computers in the field at Level 1 or 2, or be part of the well testing system at the PCD
or OD level.
3. Manual input of suitable parameters, such as sample water cut, fluid density or
composition data or orifice plate sizes. This may be implemented by use of flow
computers in the field at Level 1 or 2, or be part of the well testing system at the
PCD or OD level.
4. Allowing manual validation of each complete Well Test data set, and on validation,
transmission of the well test data to the Hydrocarbon Production Information System.
The user and time of the validation of well tests is to be logged.
5. All manual input or over-writes of input parameters or well test results shall be
logged.
6. (Optionally) As part of the validation process, alerting the user of a well test which is
potentially invalid, for example due to an inadequate test period.
The means for the transfer of validated well test data from the Well Test Storage and
Validation Framework to the Hydrocarbon Production Information System shall be subject
to approval from the Principal’s Hydrocarbon Allocation authority.
2.3.5 Daily and continuous well production estimation and reconciliation
The tracking of overall oil, water and gas production flows across a production gathering
network is central to management of production, and of the wells and facilities.
The design of the production network shall incorporate metering to allow real time
estimates of all main single phase and multiphase production flow streams across the
network. The allocation and metering design of an asset shall include this required support
for RTO and Well, Reservoir and Facilities Management.
Well production volumes shall be estimated at least on a daily basis even if individual wells
do not have dedicated multiphase flow meters.
A means should be provided of automatically detecting and recording well “closed in” and
“in production” status. Simple estimates of daily well-by-well production may then be
ECCN EAR99 DEP 32.01.40.31-Gen.
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generated by multiplying well potentials from well test data in the Hydrocarbon Production
Information System by fraction of the day the well is in production.
The Upstream Smart Fields standard for well production estimation is to estimate or
measure individual well multiphase production continuously in real time. In such cases,
either multiphase meters or wet gas meters or virtual flow metering shall be provided as
part of the design to support RTO capability.
If a Virtual Metering System is the design choice for the estimation of well rates in real time,
the virtual metering system shall:
• Provide real time estimates of well production rates, at least at intervals of
15 minutes or less, with 1 minute intervals preferred. The estimates should be
based on use of real time data with subsurface or surface well or well flow line
models that relate the real time data to the production rates to be estimated.
• Have a transparent means of generating and updating the underlying models for
estimating real time well production rates. The models used may be constructed
from well test data correlations or from first principles models. Models of both types
shall be calibrated using well test data, at intervals consistent with the Asset
minimum standard for acquiring validated well tests.
• Allow the flagging of out-of-date or out-of-calibration models or well operation
beyond the usable range of the models.
• Have means for detecting and alerting if the underlying real time data used is not
suitable for estimating real time well production rates. The conditions to be detected
should include drop outs, flat-lines, and extreme values beyond sensible possibility.
Regardless of the means of estimating daily well production, the system providing well
estimates shall be provided with a means of comparing the sum of the individual well oil,
water and gas estimates to the total commingled metered oil, water and gas measurements
from nearest downstream meter. A reconciliation factor defined as below shall be computed
and any deviation significantly from 1.0 shall be flagged to activate a review of the well
estimates.
injected phases such as well test data, well flowline pressure drops, gas and water
injection rates, etc.
• Enable the acquisition of production system capacities, model-based operating
envelopes or curves from models for comparing expected versus actual well and
facilities performance in real time.
• Optionally, provide set point guidance, on demand or on a schedule, for the
management of production flows, based on model predictions or optimization.
The model management environments shall include means for controlling the revision
status of models, and making transparent the validity or update status of models.
The models used for Production RTO shall be managed by relevant model management
environments.
2.3.9 Optimization and management of remote and advisory set points
A central Production RTO requirement is the capability to initiate the remote start and stop
of pumps or wells, and the ramping up and down of production. The requirements for
remote adjustments of production volumes shall be addressed upfront as part of the
Production RTO design.
In particular, for geographically widely distributed land assets with pumped wells, means
shall be provided for the remote start and stop of pumps or wells from a central control
facility.
Manual remote adjustment to production levels may be achieved via direct access to
applications within the PCD, or by logging into the PCD from an OD environment, and
thereafter manually changing set points in PCD applications, or by cascading instructions
manually into the Process Central Control Room or the Operators via radio or other
communications links for the settings to be manually changed. While this functionality is
part of DEP 32.01.20.12-Gen., Section 16, the functionality to log into the PCD from an OD
environment for the management of individual wells shall be authorized by Principal with
appropriate risk assessment, and only for the start / stop of previously enabled pumps or for
changing well settings within preset bounds (e.g., frequency of ESP Variable Speed
Drives).
If required by the particular operational strategy, a Real Time Optimizer shall be provided to
support real time automated scheduling and optimization requirements. The requirement for
a Real Time Optimiser shall be driven by the incremental business value from optimisation
in real time, compared to optimisation on an ad hoc basis or optimization on longer time
scales, e.g., monthly. As such systems are not common as yet, requirements for the Real
time Optimizer are provided in the Informative part of this DEP.
approach for newcomer induction (introduction, training, coaching); and coaching by the
Process Champions.
2.4.2 Maintaining level 0, 1, 2 support for RTO, data quality
RTO capability is fully dependent on the proper functioning of Levels 0, 1 and 2 process
measurement, data acquisition and control systems. RTO requirements for Levels 0, 1 and
2 shall be fully defined and implemented during the design stage.
At the Operational phase, a work process shall be put in place to cascade data integrity and
acquisition issues from the RTO users to the Operations, Instrumentation and Controls
personnel in the field for their efficient resolution. RTO Data Criticality should be translated
in line with Maintenance and Integrity work-stream guidelines so that the maintenance jobs
are accordingly scheduled / prioritized using Corrective Maintenance Prioritization Tool
(CMPT). Level 0 instrumentation and related equipment maintenance strategy and tasks
(including calibrations) should be captured in the asset maintenance management system
and compliance should be tracked as part of overall asset integrity KPI.
2.4.3 Maintaining applications for RTO
As part of the design for sustainable RTO, the applications and systems for supporting RTO
shall be provided with:
1. A framework for IT support which efficiently manages and maintains hardware,
applications as well as interface issues, and to manage the underlying data quality.
2. A framework for the Group support for the central management of applications,
including for periodic upgrades of software and for addressing bugs or requests for
enhancements.
3. A means for testing the interfaces between the applications, to ensure continued
functionality and performance when any of the linked applications is upgraded.
4. A test environment for the pre-deployment testing of application upgrades, and for
the testing of configuration changes.
5. A business super-user who will focus on the production operations or engineering
use of the applications or integrated solutions.
6. Clear interfaces to the discipline owners and Group central specialist support of the
various models and systems, ranging from Production Technology, Production
Programming, Hydrocarbon Allocation focal points to the Process Engineering, and
Process Automation Control and Optimization disciplines.
2.4.4 Business ownership and focus on business value
Business Owners shall be established for each Production RTO solution. The Business
Owners should be responsible for the sustainability and continuous Improvement of
Production RTO capabilities. The Business Owner should establish and monitor business
and technical KPIs.
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3.1 BACKGROUND
The focus of this DEP section is the identification of online data critical to the Production
RTO process and its management. Given limits on budgets and maintenance resources,
identification of data criticality levels establishes the relative importance of real-time data
points so that critical data and their associated source instrumentation are put in place as
part of the overall asset design, and thereafter, appropriately prioritized for maintenance
and management.
HIGH The data is essential for at least one of the processes considered
and the loss of the data point may result in the potential loss of
greater than 100 kUSD or 2500 barrels of oil equivalent production
per month, or equivalent in loss optimization opportunity.
MEDIUM The data is essential for at least one of the processes considered.
LOW The data is not essential for the processes considered, but will
assist in a detailed analysis.
The data points provided should be regarded as a starter set for the Asset RT Data
Criticality Ranking, providing minimum requirements. For assets with special requirements,
more data points will need to be added or the indicated criticalities will have to be adjusted
to reflect the specific requirements.
The data point listing is provided for the following wells and facilities groups:
1. All well types, including naturally flowing oil and gas wells, gas lifted wells, ESP
wells, rod-driven PCP wells, beam pumped wells and injection wells (water and gas).
2. Well Testing Facilities
3. Oil Production, Storage and Export Facilities
4. Gas Production and Export Facilities.
For specialized systems such as Rotating and Reciprocating Equipment and Heaters,
more detailed requirements for process data to be monitored are set out in the specific
equipment DEPs, for example, DEP 31.29.00.11-Gen. for Rotating and Reciprocating
Equipment.
The following comments apply to the Wells Sheet in DEP 59.01.10.80-Gen.
1. This sheet does not specify whether the following data is required or not to be included
as part of the design:
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4. REFERENCES
In this DEP, reference is made to the following publications:
NOTES: 1. Unless specifically designated by date, the latest edition of each publication shall be used,
together with any amendments/supplements/revisions thereto.
2. The DEPs and most referenced external standards are available to Shell staff on the SWW (Shell
Wide Web) at http://sww.shell.com/standards/.
SHELL STANDARDS
DEP feedback form DEP 00.00.05.80-Gen.
Condition monitoring of rotating equipment DEP 31.29.00.11-Gen.
Process Control Domain - Enterprise industrial automation DEP 32.01.20.12-Gen.
information technology and security
Instrument symbols and identification on process engineering flow DEP 32.10.03.10-Gen.
schemes
DCS basic application standards DEP 32.30.20.15-Gen.
Baselayer control applications DEP 32.30.20.16-Gen.
Instruments for measurement and control DEP 32.31.00.32-Gen.
Instrumented Protective Functions (IPF) DEP 32.80.10.10-Gen.
Alarm management DEP 32.80.10.14-Gen.
Standard form (spreadsheet) for data criticality assessment DEP 59.01.10.80-Gen.
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