Upstream oil and gas software covers everything from the reservoir to the lease battery. The problem is that most “upstream software” lists are written for reservoir engineers at majors using AVEVA, Schlumberger, or S&P Global Petra. An independent operator with 60 stripper wells in Osage County has almost nothing to do with that software stack. This page cuts through the confusion and names the upstream tools that actually fit independent operations.
Upstream is not one category. It is five or six categories stacked on top of each other. Knowing which layer you operate in decides which software you need, and most independents live in only two or three of the layers.
The Five Layers of Upstream Software
Upstream software spans the full lifecycle from exploration to production. Each layer serves a different job and a different buyer.
| Layer | What it does | Who actually uses it |
|---|---|---|
| Exploration and seismic | 3D seismic interpretation, structural modeling, prospect evaluation. Tools like SLB Petrel, Kingdom, and IHS Kingdom. | Exploration companies and majors with in-house geoscience teams. |
| Reservoir modeling | Simulation, history matching, material balance, well test analysis. Tools like CMG, Eclipse, Tempest. | Reservoir engineers at operators with 100+ wells and dedicated engineering staff. |
| Drilling and completion | Drilling programs, bit optimization, completion design, frac modeling. | Drilling engineers and completion teams at unconventional operators. |
| Production operations | Daily production capture, allocation, downtime tracking, field workflow. Tools like GreaseBook, Scout FDC, FieldCap, WellEz. | Every operator with producing wells. This is where independents live. |
| Reserves and economics | Decline curve analysis, reserves reports, acquisition economics, SEC filings. Tools like OFM, ComboCurve, Val Nav, PHDWin. | Reserves engineers and anyone presenting economic cases to lenders. |
If you run an independent operation with wells that are already drilled and producing, four of those five layers are someone else’s job. You are operating in production operations and occasionally reserves and economics. The rest is academic for your day-to-day.
Production Operations Is the Real Upstream Problem for Independents
When an independent operator says “we need upstream software,” what they almost always mean is: we need to stop running the daily production report on paper or in Excel, and we need the back office to see what is happening in the field sooner than three weeks after the fact.
That is production operations. Specifically, field data capture plus reporting. A pumper gauges a tank, records oil sold on a run ticket, and flags anything unusual. The software gets that data off the pumper’s clipboard and into the office by the end of the day, not by the end of the month.
GreaseBook exists for this exact job. Pumpers open the app on a phone at the wellsite, record oil, gas, and water volumes, note downtime, and attach a photo of the run ticket. Sync happens the minute cell signal returns. Operators are on track for a 6% pump-to-net improvement in six weeks once leases migrate off paper gauge sheets. Training a pumper takes under 10 minutes.
If the core upstream problem on your leases is “we don’t know what our wells did yesterday,” a mobile-first production app solves it. Enterprise reservoir simulation does not.
What Most Upstream Software Lists Get Wrong for Independents
Standard upstream software lists over-index on four things that do not apply to 90 percent of independents.
Reservoir simulation. If your wells have been online for a decade and you are not drilling new laterals, you do not need CMG or Eclipse. Decline curves on historical production are all you need, and a much simpler tool like OFM or ComboCurve handles that for a fraction of the cost.
3D seismic interpretation. If you acquired your leases a decade ago and are holding them by production, you do not need seismic software. You need to keep the wells pumping and the numbers clean.
Drilling program software. If you are running one-off workovers and the occasional recompletion, you do not need Landmark drilling suite licenses. A spreadsheet and a good drilling consultant cover it.
Enterprise integration platforms. Quorum, P2 (now Enverus), and SAP oil-and-gas suites are financial-planning platforms priced for 500+ well operators with dedicated IT. If you are running QuickBooks and a production app, you are better served than most shops that bought those platforms and use 12 percent of them.
What You Actually Need If You Run an Independent Upstream Operation
For operators running 10 to 500 wells, the real upstream stack is short.
- A production capture app that your pumpers will actually use. Mobile-first, offline-capable, trains in under 10 minutes. GreaseBook is the common answer here.
- A production accounting platform if you have outside working interest partners or royalty owners. WolfePak, PakAccounting, and OGSYS fit most independent shops. If you are solo ownership, QuickBooks plus a good CPA is enough.
- A reserves tool if you are presenting economics to a lender or evaluating acquisitions. OFM, ComboCurve, and PHDWin are the serious options.
- Regulatory reporting feeds (Texas RRC, Oklahoma OCC, New Mexico OCD) that pull from your production data. Your production software should generate these without re-keying.
That is the whole stack for most independents. Anything past that is a layer built for a different kind of operator.
Who This Page Is Not For
This page is not for reservoir engineers at majors, geoscience teams, or drilling engineers shopping Petrel, CMG, or Eclipse. It is not for operators running 1,000+ unconventional horizontals who need full SCADA and industrial-grade simulation. It is not for midstream or pipeline operators. If you are in one of those buckets, the upstream vendor list on Gartner or S&P Global is built for you, and this page will waste your time.
This page is for independent operators running 5 to 500 mostly-conventional wells who need to know which upstream tools actually matter.
Related Pages
- Pillar: oil and gas software: the complete guide for independent operators.
- Production-specific: best oil and gas production software.
- Vendor shortlist: oil and gas software companies.
- Reserves and economics: OFM software.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is OFM software used for?
OFM (Oil Field Manager, an SLB product) is a reserves and economics tool used for decline curve analysis, type curves, and reserve reports. It is the long-time industry standard for operators with 50+ wells or anyone presenting reserves to a lender. For smaller operations, lighter-weight alternatives like ComboCurve cover the same workflow at lower cost.
What skills are needed for upstream work?
Upstream roles break into three skill families: geoscience and reservoir engineering (seismic, simulation, reserves), drilling and completion engineering, and production operations (field supervision, pumper routing, gauge reading, regulatory reporting). Independent operators almost always need production operations people first. The engineering and geoscience roles usually live at the engineering firm you hire on contract.
What is the best upstream software for small operators?
For operators under 100 wells, the stack that works is a mobile production capture app (GreaseBook or equivalent), QuickBooks or WolfePak for books, and OFM or ComboCurve for reserves work. Anything more than that tends to create more overhead than it saves.
Ready for a Shorter Upstream Stack?
If the “upstream software” conversation on your leases is really a production-data conversation, take the 60-second quiz. You get a straight answer based on your well count, your team, and how you run the leases today.
Two minutes. No sales call, no pushy follow-up.
If GreaseBook lands and the fit turns out wrong inside year one, the 200% money-back guarantee refunds you twice the contract price. That is how confident we are in the pumper-adoption bar.
P.S. This page is not for reservoir engineers looking for simulation tools or midstream operators. No hard feelings. If you are still deciding, the quiz gives you a straight answer in the time it takes to refill your coffee.