All major releases, enhancements, and what they mean for your simulations.
Webinar Events – Eastern Hemisphere: 24 Feb | 09:00 UTC | Western Hemisphere: 26 Feb | 16:00 UTC
We are innovators combining science and technology with deep industry expertise to solve complex subsurface and surface challenges. Learn more about the technology behind the our solutions.
CMG has a rich history of bringing industry-first solutions to the market. Our expertise encompasses a broad spectrum of energy workflows and our technology can help energy companies navigate this complex landscape.
Our CMG 4.0 Strategy, announced in 2022, is a multi-faceted transformation strategy focused on growth, profitability, and acquisitions.
Stock quotes are 15-minute delayed
We are a global software and consulting company that combines science and technology with deep industry expertise to solve complex subsurface and surface challenges for the new energy industry around the world.
We’ve created a wealth of educational assets to advance your industry and technical capabilities.

View Available Training Courses
For over a decade, unconventional wells were seen as one-shot deals: frac it, flow it, and move on. But now, operators are asking: What if the story doesn’t end at primary recovery? Enter unconventional EOR, the next chapter of shale optimization.
The math is compelling. Most shale wells recover less than 10% of the oil in place. That means 90% remains, trapped in nanodarcy pores. And unlike conventional reservoirs, you can’t just waterflood your way to higher recovery, at least not without risking geomechanical damage or lost injectants.
EOR in shale demands smarter strategies: gas huff-n-puff, miscible injection, and even nanofluid surfactants. The goal is not sweeping displacement, but pressure maintenance and rock-fluid interaction at the microfracture scale.
Take the Permian Basin, where several operators have piloted huff-and-puff with natural gas or rich NGL slugs. In one project, soaking a depleted well with gas increased oil production 30x over baseline for a period. In the Eagle Ford, an operator reported EOR projects with rates of return rivalling primary drilling, but only when done early, before the rock loses responsiveness.
The unconventional wisdom here is clear: model EOR before you abandon a well.
Simulation: Make EOR Predictable, Not Experimental: EOR in shale is complex because timing, injectant selection, and reservoir response all vary by location. That’s where simulation presents an answer. The users can model:
Before investing in custom completions, simulation can predict uplift, identify prime candidates, and help you design the most cost-effective program.
Simulation is the bridge from trial-and-error to confident rollout.
Written by Rahul Jain
February 2026