Salomon Dominique Edimo Kingue | Engineering | Research Excellence Award

Mr. Salomon Dominique Edimo Kingue | Engineering | Research Excellence Award

State University of Campinas | Brazil

Mr. Salomon Dominique Edimo Kingue is a reservoir engineer and researcher specializing in enhanced oil recovery (EOR), reservoir simulation, and sustainable subsurface energy strategies. His expertise centers on FAWAG/WAG processes, CO₂ storage modeling, and integrated reservoir–production optimization for complex carbonate systems, particularly within Brazilian pre-salt environments. He is highly skilled in using CMG (IMEX, STARS, GEM, CMOST), Petrel, Python, and advanced analytical tools to investigate flow behavior, improve recovery efficiency, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. His research spans numerical simulation of EOR mechanisms, uncertainty analysis, carbon capture and storage (CCS), fractured-vuggy reservoir upscaling, and evaluation of production potential in hydrocarbon basins. He has co-authored studies on underground LPG storage and reservoir performance prediction, and contributed to interdisciplinary projects involving major industry partners. His work also extends to geological interpretation, multidisciplinary collaboration, and scientific communication through symposiums, poster sessions, and peer-reviewed publications. Salomon combines strong analytical reasoning with leadership, teamwork, and effective communication, reflecting his commitment to innovation-driven reservoir management and the advancement of low-carbon energy solutions.

Profile: Orcid

Featured Publications

Kingue, S. D. E., Akinmuda, O. B., Kuiekem, D., & Djitchouang, G. L. (2025). Assessing the production potential of Niger Delta reservoirs under uncertainty using numerical simulation tools. Petroleum Science and Technology.

Kuiekem, D., Kingue, S. D. E., Boroh, W., Noupa, R. K., Matateyou, J., & Ngounouno, I. (2025). Simulation study of underground LPG storage in a depleted conceptual oil reservoir. Petro Chem Indus Intern, 8(2), 1–14.