Abstract: Lessons from Middle East Carbonate Reservoir Characterization with New Technology Integration
NURMI, ROY, Schlumberger International Coord., Houston, TX
Carbonate reservoir
characterization continues to improve with advances in technology and synergistic
techniques. Reservoir features previous undetected were found to have major
impact on field performance. The combination of
borehole
imagery from horizontal
wells with 3-D and 4-D seismic has revealed the presence of unsuspected
reservoir faulting and fracturing in many Middle East reservoirs. Geotesting
of the open faults shown them to be the cause of early water production.
Equally important cause of early water production is the presence of unsuspected
thin high-permeability layers defined by nuclear magnetic resonance, or
NMR, integrated with
borehole
imagery.
Both imagery and NMR together
are revealing pore sizes and size distributions to better define effective
porosity, even with a n abundance of micropores present. It also has been
possible to better evaluate complex reservoir facies through the integration
of NMR and
borehole
electrical imagery with other logs and/or core. This
assessment included thin porosity layers, heterogeneous patchy or convoluted
mixtures, complex Tertiary and Cretaceous karst fills, and vuggy and fractured
facies in many formations. NMR defines pore size distributions, whereas
electrical imagery reveals the pore sizes of megapores and nature of surrounding
matrix including decimeter-scale porosity distributions. This approach
reveals some thin, lower porosity layers to be the most permeable, while
very high porosity layers have been comprised totally of micropores forming
unsuspected porous barriers or baffles. Importantly, zones with very highwater
saturation were correctly predicted to flow oil without water in Middle
Eastern Arab and Thamama reservoirs, as well Paleozoic and Tertiary reservoirs
elsewhere.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90946©1997 AAPG Rocky Mountain Section Meeting, Denver, Colorado