Flare Solutions has secured a multi-year contract with TotalEnergies E&P UK to manage and enhance its legacy well content while supporting North Sea Transition Authority regulatory requirements for reporting information to the UK National Data Repository.
Project scope
Under the agreement, Flare will search, review and prepare TotalEnergies’ UK legacy well data for use by its operating business and for formal reporting to the NSTA. By combining Flare’s MiNDR technology with specialist consulting expertise, the project aims to reduce manual effort, lower costs and streamline the compliance process.
How Flare MiNDR supports regulatory delivery
MiNDR is designed to simplify the growing complexity of regulatory information through automation, intelligent workflows and advanced discovery tools. Key features include:
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Automated compliance workflows that validate content against NSTA requirements for NDR submissions
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Clear and actionable steps that translate detailed regulatory obligations into manageable tasks
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Scalable discovery tools, including semantic search and contextual tagging, to access critical well information across disparate legacy datasets
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Dynamic dashboards that provide real time visibility of reporting status and project progress
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A flexible architecture that adapts to changes in regulatory frameworks
Supporting digital transformation
Flare Solutions says the project aligns with its broader vision of helping the sector build more efficient digital ecosystems where compliance and information discovery work together. By improving data integrity and accessibility, Flare aims to strengthen the quality of information stored within the NDR and support long term value for the industry.
Glenn Mansfield, Director at Flare Solutions, said the company is pleased to support TotalEnergies with both its consulting services and the MiNDR platform. He noted that meeting NSTA requirements remains an important challenge for the sector and that MiNDR has been developed to simplify and accelerate this work while reducing cost. He added that high quality, well structured data in the NDR will benefit regulators, operators and future generations.
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