--> ABSTRACT: The Critical Element in Coal Bed Methane – Permeability, by Tedesco, Steven, Trent Green; #90026 (2004)
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Tedesco, Steven1, Trent Green2 
(1) Atoka Coal Labs, Englewood, CO 
(2) Pinnacle Technologies, Englewood, CO

ABSTRACT: The Critical Element in Coal Bed Methane – Previous HitPermeabilityNext Hit

The majority of literature and exploration programs focus on gas content and thickness of coals as a prerequisite to determine the viability of any basin for coal bed methane. Many of the coal basins developed in the 1980s and 1990s had a combination of Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit and gas contents that allowed them to overcome in general any reservoir limitations and thus be successful. In recent years basins that were considered less perspective in the past, such as Arkoma, Alberta, Cherokee, Piceance, Forest City and Illinois have become increasing the focus of exploration and development. While the gas contents in these basins have varied, the greatest stumbling block for their development has been finding completion and drilling methods that enhance or connect what is generally considered low Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit reservoirs. The use of horizontal drilling has overcome to some degree the low Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit reservoir characteristics of coals in the Arkoma and parts of the Appalachian basins. However, in other basins low gas contents prohibit the use of these directional methods. Therefore, measuring Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit in these basins is critical to determine the potential area of drainage for a wellbore and ultimate resource recovery. Previous HitPermeabilityNext Hit can be measured during the exploration phase of any program via injection fall off tests. This type of test allows for a measure of relative Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit and reservoir boundaries. This paper will present several examples how Previous HitpermeabilityTop is measured and what it implies for the viability of various coal seams as an economic resource in certain basins.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90026©2004 AAPG Annual Meeting, Dallas, Texas, April 18-21, 2004.