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Tasour Field, Republic of Yemen Block 32: Case History of a Decade of Learning*
By
James Bambrick1, Ross Clarkson1, Halvor Jahre2, Sven Erik Lie2
Search and Discovery Article @20020 (2004)
*Adapted
from
“extended abstract” for
presentation at the AAPG International Conference, Barcelona, Spain, September
21-24, 2003.
1TransGlobe Energy Corporation, Calgary, AB ([email protected])
2DNO-ASA, Oslo, Norway
Introduction
The Block 32
development area is located in the Hadramaut region, south-central Yemen,
adjacent to the prolific Nexen/Occidental Masila fields which contain total
reserves of more than one billion barrels (Figure 1).
Block 32 was awarded to Clyde Petroleum in 1992 and had a succession of partners
over the next 10 years. The Tasour-1 discovery was made in late 1997, following
over 1500 km of 2D seismic and 5 dry holes. The area is characterized by a
highly dissected dendritic drainage pattern of jebels (plateaus) and intervening
wadis (valleys) superimposed upon gently dipping block-faulted
Jurassic/Cretaceous/Tertiary sediments of the Say'un-Masila basin. The area
presents unique operational challenges typified by 300-m vertical limestone
cliffs and temperatures of up to 60oC. Lower Cretaceous Qishn
sandstones form the principal reservoir with porosities up to 23 % and
permeabilities up to 2-3 darcies. The oil (29o API) is sourced
principally
from
the underlying Jurassic Madbi shales and collected in a simple
faulted trap, characterized by isopach/isochron thinning which is indicative of
early structuring. Sealing thickness of approx. 135 m requires a bounding fault
displacement of less than 60 msec. to avoid breaching the trap. This paper
illustrates the unique problems encountered in understanding the Tasour field
(primarily structural) and the solutions achieved after a decade of
trial-and-error learning.
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Regional Setting and GeologyThere are three major NW-SE trending sedimentary basins in central Yemen, two of which are very prolific petroleum provinces (Figure 1). The westernmost Marib/Shabwa basin, principally filled by pre/syn/post-rift Jurassic - Lower Cretaceous carbonates, clastics, and evaporitic sequences, is characterized by complex salt tectonics and listric faulting. The central Say'un-Masila basin, principally filled by Middle-Upper Cretaceous open-marine carbonate/clastic sequences, is characterized by flat-lying (post-rift thermal sag) strata and simple extensional block faulting. The younger Jeza basin is dominated by Upper Cretaceous-Tertiary sediments with no commercial hydrocarbons discovered yet. These basins are separated by the Mukulla and Fartaq highs, respectively, and are bounded to the north by the Hadramaut arch.
Block 32 sits on the northern edge of the Say'un-Masila basin to the
south of the Hadramaut arch. Upper Jurassic/Lower Cretaceous pre- and
syn-rift sequences include basal Kohlan clastics, shed Although the Qishn Formation accounts for the majority of the oil reservoirs found to date, important sub-Saar prospects are found in the Sayun-Masila Basin, including debris/turbidite fans, grainstone shoals, basal sandstones/syn-rift breccias and fractured basement (Oil & Gas Journal, 2001). Although no hydrocarbons have been found to date in these reservoirs in Block 32, they are still prospective.
It was also found in the early 1990's that surface UER Formation
structures usually mirror the underlying productive Qishn Formation
structures (Glazebrook, personal communication). At first glance, this
would seem somewhat contrary to the isopach thinning prerequisite as
structures without thinning are recent (post-
Seismic Acquisition/Processing Problems and Solutions
The rugged
Early acquisition parameters were also quite simple, relying on short
shot-and-receiver group intervals to build fold. Some areas defied
acquisition of good data even with few jebel-wadi crossings. The nature
of this acquisition noise was eventually identified and successfully
addressed. Complex shot-receiver patterns were developed specifically to
attenuate high-amplitude reverberation
Early on, it was found that refraction static corrections could not be
made because only lines in the wadis had any identifiable first breaks.
Without refraction statics, the DEM derived elevation/static model is
central to the ultimate usefulness of the seismic data. Static models
with up to five layers have been attempted, but two layers are now found
to be adequate. Incorporation of the 2002 SPOT5 satellite-derived UER/DEM
structure model has added significantly to proper elevation static
corrections, especially in older data where field-mapped geologic
profiles were not acquired. The UER Formation has a uniform thickness
and its base corresponds to the base of the elevation/static model. The
DEM, coupled with the overall improvement in processing technology and
innovative new techniques, has extended the upper frequency limit
Initial mapping of the Tasour field indicated a fault-bounded anticlinal
structure. It was not until the crooked line binning issues were
re-examined that the concept of fault-shadow effects were
considered. Fault shadows are typically manifested as anomalous time
pull-down of seismic events below the fault plane. This effect can be
removed to a large degree by prestack depth
Reservoir/Production Issues
The Qishn reservoirs throughout the area usually out-produce initial
reserve estimates. Primary recoveries can exceed 50% due to exceptional
reservoir properties and an active water drive. Porosity typically
averages 22% and permeabilities range
SummaryThe Tasour area presents unique exploration/development challenges that have been met over the past 10 years by successful trial and error. Seismic acquisition has now reached the point where very good quality 2D data can be expected with careful field procedures. The Tasour field continues to grow in size with each additional well and is now approximated at 21 MMBO recoverable (38 MMBO in place). Several new prospects have been delineated with the current evolved methodology. Resolution of the fault shadow issue has significantly enhanced the pool size. Earlier interpretation as a faulted anticlinal structure has been replaced with a more typical rotated fault-block interpretation without significant rollover into the fault, as shown in Figure 3.
ReferencesCsato, I., et.al., 2001, New views of the subsurface play concepts of oil exploration in Yemen: Oil & Gas Journal, v.99, no. 23, p.36-47. Fagin, Stuart, 1996, The fault shadow problem: Its nature and elimination: The Leading Edge, p.1005-1014. Glazebrook, Kate, 2003, Personal communication on the Nexen development of the satellite based UER structure mapping/deep correlation method. Harris, Richard, Cooper, Mark, and Shook, Ian, 2003, Focusing oil and gas exploration in Eastern Yemen by using satellite images and elevation data alongside conventional 2D seismic: Recorder (CSEG), v. 28, no. 2, p.30-34. Mills, S.J., 1992, Oil discoveries in the Hadramaut: How CanadianOxy scored in Yemen: Oil & Gas Journal, v.90, n.10.
Nickoloff, Tom, and Manatt, Jim, 1997, Small advances
yield big improvements in seismic images Putnam, Peter E., Kendall, George, and Winter, David A., 1997, Estuarine deposits of the Upper Qishn Formation (Lower Cretaceous), Masila Region, Yemen: AAPG Bulletin, v. 81, no. 8, p. 1306-1329. Oil & Gas Journal, 2001, Yemen's oil production climbing, potential great (in: Middle East Update): Oil & Gas Journal, v.99, no.10, p.82- 84.
Thomson, Ian,
2002, Prospects |
