For decades, operators acquired block-scale or sub-basin scale seismic surveys to develop fields and explore for satellites. This nearsighted view on the geological system was challenged when TGS had the idea that the bigger picture, outside the block, could inform our comprehension of the context of the petroleum system at play. Larger-scale acquisition improved understanding – what if we zoomed out even further?
In 2001, TGS launched the North Sea MegaSurvey, a seamless merge of all available vintage 2D and 3D datasets, based on full-stack, publicly available seismic data sourced from the UK Department of Trade and Industry, and with the support of two dominant operators on the UKCS. The oil companies agreed to share their older, previously unreleased, seismic data in return for a copy of the entire MegaSurvey. TGS held the right to license the merged and improved datasets to the industry and, when sales reached a certain level, the partners received a share of the profits. The North Sea MegaSurvey reinvented the way the industry looks at exploration in this mature basin and revealed the Central North Sea in a new light.
A new concept was born: the MegaSurvey. These are fully scalable datasets with a big-picture, basin-wide geological perspective that also permit a narrower focus on field-scale opportunities within the regional framework.