Understanding Depositional System, Reservoir Quality and Distribution in South Sumatera Basin Development Field Using Integrated Well Data

Author(s):  
J. Mamesah
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamer Moussa ◽  
Hassan Dehghanpour ◽  
Melanie Popp

ABSTRACT The industry is facing significant challenges due to the recent downturn in oil prices, particularly for the development of tight reservoirs. It is more critical than ever to 1) identify the sweet spots with less uncertainty and 2) optimize the completion-design parameters. The overall objective of this study is to quantify and compare the effects of reservoir quality and completion intensity on well productivity. We developed a supervised fuzzy clustering (SFC) algorithm to rank reservoir quality and completion intensity, and analyze their relative impacts on wells' productivity. We collected reservoir properties and completion-design parameters of 1,784 horizontal oil and gas wells completed in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin. Then, we used SFC to classify 1) reservoir quality represented by porosity, hydrocarbon saturation, net pay thickness and initial reservoir pressure; and 2) completion-design intensity represented by proppant concentration, number of stages and injected water volume per stage. Finally, we investigated the relative impacts of reservoir quality and completion intensity on wells' productivity in terms of first year cumulative barrel of oil equivalent (BOE). The results show that in low-quality reservoirs, wells' productivity follows reservoir quality. However, in high-quality reservoirs, the role of completion-design becomes significant, and the productivity can be deterred by inefficient completion design. The results suggest that in low-quality reservoirs, the productivity can be enhanced with less intense completion design, while in high-quality reservoirs, a more intense completion significantly enhances the productivity. Keywords Reservoir quality; completion intensity; supervised fuzzy clustering, approximate reasoning,tight reservoirs development


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammadhossein Mohammadlou ◽  
◽  
Matthew Guy Reppert ◽  
Roxane Del Negro ◽  
George Jones ◽  
...  

During well planning, drillers and petrophysicists have different principle objectives. The petrophysicist’s aim is to acquire critical well data, but this can lead to increased operational risk. The driller is focused on optimizing the well design, which can result in compromised data quality. In extreme cases, the impact of well design on petrophysical data can lead to erroneous post-well results that impact the entire value-chain assessment and decision making toward field development. In this paper, we present a case study from a syn-rift, Upper Jurassic reservoir in the Norwegian Sea where well design significantly impacted reservoir characterization. Three wells (exploration, appraisal, and geopilot) are compared in order to demonstrate the impact of overbalanced drilling on well data from both logs and core. Implications for reservoir quality assessment, volume estimates, and the errors introduced into both a static geomodel and dynamic reservoir simulation are discussed. This case study highlights the importance of optimizing well design for petrophysical data collection and demonstrates the potential for value creation. Extensive data collection was initially carried out in both exploration and appraisal wells, including full sets of logging while drilling (LWD), wireline logging, fluid sampling, and extensive coring. Both wells were drilled with considerable overbalanced mud weights due to the risk of overpressured reservoirs in the region. The log data was subsequently corrected for significant mud-filtration invasion, with calibration to core measurements guiding the interpretation. Geological and reservoir models were built based on results from the two wells, and development wells were planned accordingly. A thorough investigation of core material raised suspicion that there could also be a significant adverse effect of core properties resulting from overbalanced drilling. The implications were so significant for the reservoir volume that a strategic decision was made to drill a geopilot well close to the initial exploration well, prior to field development drilling. The well was drilled six years after the initial exploration phase with considerably lower overbalance. Extensive well data, including one core, were acquired. The recovered core was crucial in order to compare the reservoir properties for comparable facies between all three wells. The results from the core demonstrate distinctly different rock quality characteristics, especially at the high end of the reservoir quality spectrum. Results of the core study confirmed the initial hypothesis that overbalanced drilling had significantly impacted the properties of the core as well as the well logs. The study concluded that the updated reservoir model properties would significantly increase the in-place volumes compared to the pre-geopilot estimate. This study shows how well design adversely affected petrophysical measurements and how errors in these data compromised geological and reservoir models, leading to a suboptimal field development plan that eroded significant value. This example provides a case study that can be used to improve the well design so that petrophysicists and drillers can both be part of the same value creation result. Future work will include further laboratory investigations on the effects of high overbalanced drilling on core and possible “root causes” for compromised core integrity.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahmud Ebeid ◽  
Humberto Parra ◽  
Dipankar Ghosh ◽  
Jeonggil Kang ◽  
Kwangwon Seo

Abstract This study has been done on Late Cretaceous tight clastic reservoir located south west of Abu Dhabi city with the border with Saudi Arabia. The field was discovered in the 1960s and a few wells were drilled subsequently. The Tuwyail clastic reservoir is characterized as tight with average permeability below 1 mD. The trap is identified as structural trap as north south anticline with gentle dip in both sides. Total of six wells were drilled targeting Tuwyail reservoir which part is of Wasia group. However, assessing potential of this accumulation poses a great challenge not only in terms of understanding of the depositional system which still unknown before but also in terms of quality of the legacy data like well data that impact the modeling studies. The aim of this paper is to provide an insight on integrated workflows for assessing the different uncertainties on clastic systems with limited data, focused on the most important sensitivities parameters impacting the oil in place, like reservoir proportions, free water level [FWL] and lateral distributions of the sedimentary elements within the area of interest which playing a big rules in future developing of the field. Before moving to full field development a full uncertainty and sensitivity analyses were conducted for the Tuwayil reservoir to find the highly uncertain parameters that impacting the future development of the reservoir, in the same time the main challenges is the limited data with low quality as the wells had been drilled in 60s with limited technology at that time and the core data were left in a bad conditions since the filed was left behind.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. T383-T408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francisco J. Bataller ◽  
Neil McDougall ◽  
Andrea Moscariello

Ancient glacial sediments form major hydrocarbon plays in several parts of the world; most notably, North Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East. We have described a methodology for reconstructing broad-scale paleogeographies in just such a depositional system, using an extensive subsurface data set from the uppermost Ordovician glacial sediments of the Murzuq Basin of southwest Libya. Our workflow begins with the analysis of a large, high-quality 3D seismic data set, to understand the frequency content. Subsequently, optimum frequency bands are extracted, after applying spectral decomposition, and then recombined into an R (red) G (green) B (blue) blended cube. This volume is then treated as an image within which paleomorphological features can be distinguished and compared with modern glacial analogs. Mapping at different depths (time slices) of these features is then tied, by integration with core and image-log sedimentology, to specific depositional environments defined within the framework of a facies scheme developed using the well data and published outcrop studies. These depositional environments are extrapolated into areas with little or no well data using the spectral decomposition as a framework, always taking into account the significant difference in vertical resolution between the seismic data set and core-scale descriptions. The result of this methodology is a set of calibrated maps, at three different time depths (two-way time travel), indicating paleogeographic reconstructions of the glacial depositional environments in the study area and the evolution through time (at different depths/time slices 2D + 1) of these glacial settings.


2003 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 515
Author(s):  
S.A. Barclay ◽  
K. Liu ◽  
D. Holland

Two shallow diamond drill holes (Subu–1 and Subu–2) continuously cored in August and September 2001 by InterOil Australia represent the first sub-surface penetrations of reservoir quality sandstones in the Eastern Papuan Basin of Papua New Guinea. These wells intersected two sedimentologically distinct thick quartz sandstones (>100 m). The upper sandstone unit is Campanian in age and is correlated with the Pale Sandstone, whereas the lower sandstone is of Turonian age and has not been reported previously, and is tentatively named as the Subu Sandstone in this paper.The core has been the subject of detailed reservoir quality and diagenetic study as part of a multi-disciplinary study conducted by CSIRO Petroleum. The results of the reservoir quality portion of this study form the basis of this report and demonstrate the following:There are two distinct depositional systems present with a lower sandy slope apron and basin floor fan system (Subu Sandstone) and a younger upper shoreface-shallow marine depositional system (Pale Sandstone).While the porosity and permeability data for subsurface samples (5 to 16% and 0.1 to 1000mD) are lower than previously reported by Boult and Carman (1990) for surface samples both the sandstone units demonstrate thick, good reservoir quality reservoir capable of holding significant volumes of hydrocarbons.Bitumen is present in the pore space through out the sandstones in both wells. The presence of biodegraded hydrocarbons demonstrates that liquid hydrocarbons have been generated in the basin and have either migrated through the Subu and Pale sandstone or have been reservoired in them.Associated with the bitumen is pyrite precipitated as an in-situ by-product of shallow biodegradation of the parent liquid hydrocarbon as indicated by sulphur isotope analysis.Diagenetic effects include compaction (the dominant control on reservoir quality), minor quartz cementation, minor secondary porosity generation, and in thin zones localised carbonate cementation.Despite their very different depositional settings and age difference the thin section petrology of the Pale and Subu sandstones are very similar. The subtle difference between them is textural (grain size, sorting) and detrital clay content. The Subu Sandstone is typically finer grained, displays a higher degree of sorting and has a higher detrital clay content than the Pale Sandstone.The character of these sandstones may have as much to do with provenance as with depositional environment and may indicate a separate quartz-rich depositional system sourcing sediment from the Australian craton independent of the Fly Platform Toro/Imburu systems.


2012 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 683 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matt Dixon ◽  
Roger Morgan ◽  
Jeffery Goodall ◽  
Martine Van Den Berg

Palynostratigraphic correlations within the Triassic fluvio-deltaic upper Mungaroo Formation (M. crenulatus and upper S. speciosus zones) of the Carnarvon Basin have proven to be difficult. Although two reliable pollen extinction datums have long been established in the uppermost 200 m of the formation, correlations within the sector below (up to 1,500 m) have had to rely on broad algael and pollen acmes, with variable results. A revised palynostratigraphic scheme is presented in this extended abstract, which has been largely in use within Shell and Morgan-Goodall Palaeo Associates since mid/late 2010, and which has not been previously published in detail. For consistency, the subzone names remain the same as those in previous use; however, crucially, a framework for their reliable identification in more recently-analysed wells is provided by several Morgan gradational sub-types of key pollen species (viz. of Cycadopites stonei, Ephedripites macistriatus and Samaropollenites speciosus). Within this robust framework that is based on top-ranges, base-ranges and rapid switches in the ratios of gradational and related morphotypes, numerous thin marine incursions and regional to sub-regional swampy phases are evidenced. Lateral and vertical relationships between marine incursions and swampy phases are sometimes apparent, and clustering of a few of the above pollen events at these levels hints at condensation. The revised framework has been successfully used in the high-resolution, regional-stratigraphic interpretation of both seismic and well data and is contributing to an increasing understanding of the variability of the Upper Mungaroo depositional system in the Greater Carnarvon Basin.


2003 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 467-482 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Guscott ◽  
Ken Russell ◽  
Andrew Thickpenny ◽  
Robert Poddubiuk

AbstractThe Scott Field straddles Blocks 15/21 and 15/22 on the southern flanks of the Witch Ground Graben in the Outer Moray Firth Basin, UKCS. The oil field is developed in the highly productive Upper Jurassic Humber Group sandstones of Oxfordian to Kimmeridgian age. The field was discovered in 1983, sanctioned in 1990, and produced first oil in 1993.The field structure, effectively a large southwards tilted fault block, is compartmentalized into a series of four main pressure isolated fault blocks by mid to late Jurassic faulting. The Kimmeridge Clay Formation provides both the top seal and the source of the trapped hydrocarbons. Fluid contact, overpressure and compositional trends suggest that the trap was filled primarily from the north. Some trap-defining faults were already active during the deposition of the reservoir intervals. Well data indicate that the development of accommodation space was technically controlled during this period, with subsidence occurring more rapidly in the western areas of the field.The Scott Field reservoir consists of two major sand packages, the Scott Sandstone Member and the Piper Sandstone Member, bounded above and below by marine flooding surfaces. The late Oxfordian Scott Sandstone Member consists of a westwards prograding marine shoreface sandstone overlain by aggradational and retrogradational back-barrier deposits. Above this, the Mid Shale is a regionally extensive flooding event separating the Scott Sandstone Member from the overlying Piper Sandstone Member. The early Kimmeridgian Piper Sandstone Member consists of stacked mass flow sandstones, overlain by a shoreface/back-barrier system. Lateral facies changes and thickness variations significantly affect reservoir distribution in both Scott and Piper intervals.The best reservoir quality occurs within the coarsest grained, highest energy facies, particularly the shoreface and proximal washover deposits. At the crest of the field, 10400 ft TVDss, multi-Darcy permeabilities and porosities of 20% are common. However, reservoir quality declines progressively downflank due to increased quartz cementation and compaction.The Scott Field currently produces from 23 wells supported by 20 water injectors. Current modelling is aimed at targeting bypassed oil to increase ultimate recovery. The field has presently produced 300 MMSTB of oil from forecast reserves of 440 MMSTB with an estimated ultimate recovery factor of c. 46%.


Author(s):  
Mohammadhossein Mohammadlou ◽  
◽  
Matthew Guy Reppert ◽  
Roxane Del Negro ◽  
George Jones ◽  
...  

During well planning, drillers and petrophysicists have different principle objectives. The petrophysicist’s aim is to acquire critical well data, but this can lead to increased operational risk. The driller is focused on optimizing the well design, which can result in compromised data quality. In extreme cases, the impact of well design on petrophysical data can lead to erroneous post-well results that impact the entire value-chain assessment and decision making toward field development. This paper presents a case study from an Upper Jurassic reservoir in the Norwegian Sea where well design significantly impacted reservoir characterization. Three wells (exploration, appraisal, and geopilot) are compared to demonstrate the impact of overbalanced drilling on both log and core data. Implications for reservoir quality assessment and volume estimates are discussed. Extensive data collection was initially carried out in both exploration and appraisal wells, including full sets of logging while drilling (LWD), wireline logging, fluid sampling, and extensive coring. Both wells were drilled with considerable overbalanced mud weights due to the risk of overpressured reservoirs in the region. The log data were subsequently corrected for significant mud-filtration and fines invasion, with calibration to core measurements guiding the interpretation. A thorough investigation of core material raised suspicion that there could also be significant adverse effects on core properties resulting from overbalanced drilling. The implications were so significant for the reservoir volume that a strategic decision was made to drill a geopilot well close to the initial exploration well prior to field development drilling. The well was drilled 6 years after the initial exploration phase with considerably lower overbalance. Extensive well data, including one core, were acquired. The recovered core was crucial in order to compare the reservoir properties for comparable facies between all three wells. The results from the core demonstrate distinctly different rock quality characteristics, especially at the high end of the reservoir quality spectrum. Results of the core study confirmed the initial hypothesis that overbalanced drilling had significantly impacted the properties of the core and well logs. This study shows how well design adversely affected petrophysical measurements and how errors in these data compromised geological and reservoir models, leading to a suboptimal field development plan that eroded significant value. This example provides a case study that can be used to improve well designs so that petrophysicists and drillers can both be part of the same value creation result.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam Kirby ◽  
Francisco Javier Hernández-Molina ◽  
Sara Rodrigues

AbstractContourite features are increasingly identified in seismic data, but the mechanisms controlling their evolution remain poorly understood. Using 2D multichannel reflection seismic and well data, this study describes large Oligocene- to middle Miocene-aged sedimentary bodies that show prominent lateral migration along the base of the Argentine slope. These form part of a contourite depositional system with four morphological elements: a plastered drift, a contourite channel, an asymmetric mounded drift, and an erosive surface. The features appear within four seismic units (SU1–SU4) bounded by discontinuities. Their sedimentary stacking patterns indicate three evolutionary stages: an onset stage (I) (~ 34–25 Ma), a growth stage (II) (~ 25–14 Ma), and (III) a burial stage (< 14 Ma). The system reveals that lateral migration of large sedimentary bodies is not only confined to shallow or littoral marine environments and demonstrates how bottom currents and secondary oceanographic processes influence contourite morphologies. Two cores of a single water mass, in this case, the Antarctic Bottom Water and its upper interface, may drive upslope migration of asymmetric mounded drifts. Seismic images also show evidence of recirculating bottom currents which have modulated the system’s evolution. Elucidation of these novel processes will enhance basin analysis and palaeoceanographic reconstructions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. T467-T476 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos Jesus ◽  
Maria Olho Azul ◽  
Wagner Moreira Lupinacci ◽  
Leandro Machado

Carbonate mounds, as described herein, often present seismic characteristics such as low amplitude and a high density of faults and fractures, which can easily be oversampled and blur other rock features in simple geobody extraction processes. We have developed a workflow for combining geometric attributes and hybrid spectral decomposition (HSD) to efficiently identify good-quality reservoirs in carbonate mounds within the complex environment of the Brazilian presalt zone. To better identify these reservoirs within the seismic volume of carbonate mounds, we divide our methodology into four stages: seismic data acquisition and processing overview, preconditioning of seismic data using structural-oriented filtering and imaging enhancement, calculation of seismic attributes, and classification of seismic facies. Although coherence and curvature attributes are often used to identify high-density fault and fracture zones, representing one of the most important features of carbonate mounds, HSD is necessary to discriminate low-amplitude carbonate mounds (good reservoir quality) from low-amplitude clay zones (nonreservoir). Finally, we use a multiattribute facies classification to generate a geologically significant outcome and to guide a final geobody extraction that is calibrated by well data and that can be used as a spatial indicator of the distribution of good reservoir quality for static modeling.


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