Students
Tuition Fee
Not Available
Start Date
2026-09-01
Medium of studying
Not Available
Duration
Not Available
Details
Program Details
Degree
Masters
Major
Petroleum Engineering | Geology
Area of study
Engineering | Natural Science
Course Language
English
Intakes
Program start dateApplication deadline
2025-09-01-
2026-09-01-
2027-09-01-
About Program

Program Overview


Program Overview

The Master's Degree in Earth and Planetary Sciences, Environment, offers a specialized course in Fractured Reservoirs. This program is part of the IDIL - Earth and Water Under Global Change (AWARE) - EARTH, with a specific focus on the study of naturally fractured reservoirs.


Level of Education

  • Master's degree

ECTS

  • 2 credits

Training Structure

  • Faculty of Science

Time of Year

  • Autumn

Description

The program provides an in-depth analysis of naturally fractured reservoirs (NFR) in different geological contexts, including various rock types, burial, diagenesis, exhumation, folding, fault damage, cooling, and mineralogical change. It also covers anthropogenic induced fracturing systems, applications to shale plays, cap rocks, and storage sites. The integration of this knowledge into the exploration and exploitation of fractured reservoirs is a key component, along with the concept and workflow for editing discrete fracture networks (DFNs).


Objectives

  • Understand the classification, mechanisms, and contexts leading to the formation of fractured reservoirs.
  • Understand the scaling laws associated with these fractured systems and integrate this data into reservoir evaluation.

Teaching Hours

  • Fractured reservoir - Lecture: 8 a.m.
  • Fractured reservoir - Tutorial: 8 a.m.

Mandatory Prerequisites

  • Tectonics
  • Rock mechanics

Knowledge Assessment

  • Continuous assessment.

Additional Information

  • Head of Education: Gregory BALLAS

Research Areas

The program focuses on the Earth and Planetary Sciences, with a specific emphasis on the environment and the study of fractured reservoirs in various geological contexts.


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