Across MENA, pricing reflects fuel subsidies, local content requirements and the maturity of the in-country service market. This page sets out indicative reservoir analogue study cost bands in MENA and the engineering decisions that move the bill up or down.
A reservoir analogue study compares a target field with structurally, depositionally and fluid-similar producing fields worldwide to de-risk development, recovery factor and EOR decisions — especially when subsurface data on the target field is sparse. Cost varies significantly across MENA, driven by reservoir complexity, the local service-company spread and the engineering rigor applied during design.
KEMISIM Analogue Study Software lets reservoir teams query a structured global analogue database, run similarity scoring on key reservoir descriptors, and export a defensible analogue set in a single workflow. For asset teams in MENA, engineering rigor is the single biggest lever on total reservoir analogue study cost — usually larger than vendor selection.
Indicative price band in MENA: USD 30k–250k per study (USD). The main cost drivers are below; KEMISIM's engineering workflow targets the items most easily over-specified.
Indicative range is USD 30k–250k per study (USD), depending on well type, scope and the local service spread.
Engineering design choices — chemistry, volume, schedule and diversion — usually move total cost more than vendor selection.
Yes. KEMISIM can build an independent physics-based reference design that asset teams use to evaluate incoming vendor proposals.
Pricing tracks rig and pumping spread availability across MENA. Engineering-led design protects budgets against short-term service-market inflation.
A KEMISIM engineer will walk you through the workflow on data that looks like yours — no slides, no generic decks.