--> A Novel Approach to Productivity Prediction of Carbonate Gas Reservoirs From Electrical Image Logs
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AAPG ACE 2018

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A Novel Approach to Productivity Prediction of Carbonate Gas Reservoirs From Previous HitElectricalNext Hit Image Logs

Abstract

The production rate data and Previous HitelectricalNext Hit image logs from 23 wells were used to set up an artificial neural network (ANN) model for the productivity prediction of carbonate gas reservoirs. The inputs of the ANN model are the attributes of weathering dissolution vugs, including connectedness, surface proportion, size, and thickness of vug zones. The ANN model was used to predict the gas production rates in two new wells. The predicted gas production rates separately are 70x104 m3/d and 200x104 m3/d, and the actual gas production rates are 101.97x104 m3/d and 182x104 m3/d. The approach provided satisfactory results.

Poor regression relationship between conventional openhole logs and production rate motivates maximizing the use of Previous HitelectricalNext Hit image logs that provide details of the pore space of the reservoirs. Core observation and core laboratory analysis indicate that the pore space of the reservoirs mainly consists of vugs and fractures. Most of the fractures are weathered fractures with high angle, which are well-developed almost everywhere. The horizontal well trajectories perpendicular to northwest-southeast direction cut through more fractures, while the horizontal well trajectories parallel to northwest-southeast direction drill through fewer fractures.

Exactly identifying and quantifying the pore space of vugs is critical to the productivity prediction of the reservoirs. Normally, it is very difficult to use openhole logs to identify vugs. However, high-resolution Previous HitelectricalNext Hit image logs are sensitive to the different types of vugs. With the help of the advanced processing techniques of the Previous HitelectricalNext Hit images, it is possible to extract quantitative measures of important reservoir parameters from the Previous HitelectricalNext Hit image logs. The connectedness of vugs serves as the permeability index, the surface area of vugs serves as the porosity index. The Previous HitelectricalNext Hit image logs are thus used to delineate heterogeneous porosity and permeability of the carbonate gas reservoirs.

The case study demonstrates the quantification of the pore space of vugs from Previous HitelectricalTop image logs and the productivity prediction of the reservoirs by the ANN model and presents the relationship between well trajectory and natural fractures. In addition, the case study indicates that neural network is a good solution for the establishment of the complex multivariable relationships between the attributes of vugs and gas production rates, which is used for productivity prediction of the reservoirs.