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J O S E P H G. R I C H A R D S O N
1923–2007
Elected in 1988
“For pioneering studies of oil recovery by water flooding and water imbibition,
and for development of broadly applicable reservoir engineering technology.”
BY MICHAEL PRATS
JOSEPH G. RICHARDSON, founder of J. Richardson
Consultants, Inc., a gentle man of integrity, courage, and
purpose and one of the most prestigious reservoir engineers on
the international scene, passed away peacefully at his home in
Houston on November 18, 2007, at the age of 84.
Joe was born in Gulf, Texas, on October 28, 1923, to Jane
Allsup and David Richardson. At the time, Gulf, which is on
the Intracoastal Canal, was a company town operated by the
Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, with a population of 1,500 at its
peak circa 1930; the number dwindled to a few hundred
inhabitants when the nearby sulphur supply was exhausted. A
new company town, Newgulf, was then established some 40
miles inland, and Joe attended high school in nearby Boling.
Although Joe had his sights set on Rice University, he bowed
to his father’s wishes and entered Texas A&M University.
However, his studies were interrupted by his induction into
the U.S. Army in 1943. His army training included electronics
school at both Harvard and Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT), radar school at Eastern Signal Corps Training
Center, Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, and antiaircraft artillery
school at Camp Davis, North Carolina. Joe served as a radar
maintenance and repair officer, Harbor Defenses of Balboa,
221
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222 MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
Canal Zone. During his service he attained the rank of first
lieutenant; he received an honorable discharge in 1946. He then
resumed his education, receiving a Bachelor of Science degree
in chemical engineering from Texas A&M 1947 and a Master
of Science degree in chemical engineering from MIT in 1948.
After graduation, Joe began his career with Humble Oil &
Refining Company; he remained with the company until he
retired in 1986 when the company was known as Exxon. His
pioneering studies on the effect of reservoir and fluid properties
and flooding rate on oil recovery led him to conclude that these
factors would also have a significant impact on the engineering
of water floods in large reservoirs.
By the early 1960s, Joe was an industry-recognized expert in
reservoir engineering. Eventually, he was asked to manage
study groups and provide advice on the relevant aspects of
operating the Exxon’s most important oil and gas reservoirs.
In this capacity, he presented the company’s position in
technical and business discussions with his counterparts in
competitor and national oil companies and at meetings around
the world. He was especially effective at interacting with U.S.
governmental agencies, competitor oil companies, and
representatives of national oil companies and associated
government entities. Within Exxon, he was well regarded and
appreciated for his valuable advice on the technical management
of major assets and his ability to interact both with domestic
and international partners.
Domestically, Joe was especially valued for his sustained
efforts on the Prudhoe Bay oil field—his reservoir analyses from
soon after discovery (1968) to his testimony before the famous
Prudhoe Bay Arbitration Panel (1983–1985), which was
convened when the owners could not agree on equity involving
10 billion barrels of oil and 27 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.
Joe played a very large part in the Prudhoe Bay arbitration. As
chief witness for Exxon on key reservoir issues, he underwent
a grueling experience, not only because of the length of the
testimony but also because of the cross-examination that
followed. Recognition from Exxon included the Award of
Excellence as Outstanding Lecturer for the Advanced Reservoir
Engineering School which he received four times (in 1973, 1975,
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JOSEPH G. RICHARDSON 223
1977, and 1980). After 38 years, Joe retired from Exxon
Production Research (EPR) Company in 1986 as senior
engineering scientist, the highest position on EPR’s professional
ladder.
Following retirement, Joe was president of J. Richardson
Consultants, Inc., and a founder and partner of Richardson,
Sangree & Sneider, both Houston-based consulting companies.
He was a licensed professional engineer in Texas.
Joe was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in
1988 “for pioneering studies of oil recovery by water flooding
and water imbibition, and for development of broadly applicable
reservoir engineering technology.” Unfortunately, by that time
in his life, he was not very mobile. I remember well how he
struggled up the steps to the podium with the help of his cane
during the induction ceremony, his face flushed with physical
effort. That event epitomizes two qualities of his character—
tenacity and true grit. Joe had been partially paralyzed since
1968, long before the Prudhoe Bay arbitration, and his
perseverance and determination to excel professionally and
remain mobile and of good cheer was an inspiration to many.
Joe also belonged to the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)
and the American Petroleum Institute (API), but the SPE is the
organization to which he was committed and which he loved.
Before his retirement from Exxon, Joe chaired many SPE
committees, most of them dealing with publications, culminating
in his election as SPE’s first senior technical editor (from 1976
to 1979), responsible for the peer review of papers published
in the two SPE journals. His commentary columns on the
contents of the Journal of Petroleum Technology were typical
Joe—terse and to the point.
Joe also served on many other committees, chairing one on
awards. He was a member of the SPE Board of Directors from
1980 to 1982. He received the Lester C. Uren Award from SPE
in 1977, the DeGolyer Distinguished Service Medal in 1978, and
the Legion of Honor Award in 1988. SPE named him a
Distinguished Member in 1983 and an SPE Honorary Member
in 1987. In 1988, he was named an Honorary Member of The
American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum
Engineers (AIME).
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224 MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
In my estimation, Joe’s most far-reaching and significant
publications were “Differences in Behavior of Fresh and Aged
East Texas Woodbine Cores” (1955), “A Laboratory Investigation
of the Effect of Rate on Recovery of Oil by Water Flooding”
(1957), and “Theory and Application of Imbibition Phenomena
in Recovery of Oil” (1959), all published by SPE. These three
papers laid the foundation for understanding how oil recovery
from water floods in large reservoirs is impacted by interactions
of reservoir and fluid properties and flooding rate. These early,
related publications established Joe as a world-class expert in
reservoir engineering.
Joe is survived by his wife of 36 years, Patricia Richardson,
sons Joseph G. Richardson, Jr., Jonathan R. Richardson, Joel G.
Richardson, daughter Janet G. Richardson, and brothers William
H. Richardson and Charles W. Richardson (wife JoAnn).
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