--> Geophysics: The Potential and Limits for Reservoir Description and Monitoring, by R. J. Graebner; #90986 (1994).
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Abstract: Previous HitGeophysicsNext Hit: The Potential and Limits for Reservoir Description and Monitoring

Robert J. Graebner

Use of Previous HitgeophysicsTop, particularly 3-D seismic measurements, as an essential element for reservoir description has come into prominence in the last decade. This had been driven by the shift from exploration to exploitation in many parts of the world. This occurrence is particularly widespread in the United States where most of the new reserves are generated by infill and extension drilling based on the detailed knowledge of the reservoir characteristics.

Tracking the movement of fluid saturations is a logical extension of the geophysical technology being applied to reservoir description. Several successful thermal drive reservoir monitoring projects have been reported in the literature. Because of the large number of reservoirs under gas injection or waterflood, there is a strong economic incentive to extend the application of the monitoring technology to these drive mechanisms. A few such projects have been published, some with mixed results.

Examples from the United States, where accurate descriptions of the compartmentalization of the reservoir is the key factor, and from the North Sea, where monitoring of the fluid fronts is a major economic issue, show that substantial progress has been made in analyzing and understanding complex reservoirs. A critical factor is the linkage and integration of all the geological, geophysical, and engineering information across the various technologies in a form which makes it readily to those who are analyzing it.

Examples show that feasibility studies which evaluate the sensitivity of seismic, petrophysical, and engineering parameters can be useful in estimating the reliability of surface seismic methods for tracking the movement of fluid fronts during the production of a reservoir.

As the dense spatial coverage provided by 3-D seismic measurements become better integrated with other information technologies, the potential range of conditions in which reservoirs can be successfully described and monitored will expand, even with today's technology. Currently, there are perhaps two major limiting factors. One is the cost of 3-D, three component, surface seismic measurements, a technology essential for estimating lithology and fracture orientations. The other is the degree to which seismic amplitudes can be reliably transformed into lithology and porosity attributes.

Significant progress continues to be made in steadily reducing these barriers, and the expectations are that geophysical methods will become a larger part of a rapidly growing reservoir management industry.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90986©1994 AAPG Annual Convention, Denver, Colorado, June 12-15, 1994