AAPG Hedberg Conference
Vail, Colorado
April 24-29, 2005
1 Rakhit Petroleum Consulting Ltd., Calgary, AB, Canada
2 Dept. Pet. & Chem. Engineering, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
Underpressured, normally pressured and overpressured Tight Gas Systems such as the Alberta Deep Basin, the Greater Green River Basin in southwestern Wyoming and the shallow Milk River gas
reservoir
in southern Alberta have common aspects. These are: low permeability (0.1 md to 0.1
ΦD), tall gas columns, variable but usually low water production and a “
reservoir
” in which gas is the continuous fluid on a regional scale. Investigation of these common factors, using a theoretical and practical approach lead to the development of a four stage model to explain the evolution of these tight gas systems. The four stages are: Genesis, Transition, Steady State and Imbibition (Figure 1a, 1b, 1c, 1d, respectively). In the initial stage, Genesis, the extent of water drainage from the
reservoir
by buoyant gas movement determines the amount of water production. As gas becomes the continuous phase, the gas column may not yet be tall enough to have pushed enough water from the rocks to reduce the water saturation to a level that would give water free gas production. In the later Transition and Steady State stages, gas has become the continuous phase on a regional scale and enough water has been drained from the
system
such that the seals to the
system
are no longer effective and gas continually leaks from the
reservoir
. The tall gas columns that are characteristic of the Transition and Steady State stages then become underpressured. As gas continues to migrate through the
system
and leak to the regional aquifer, the “
reservoir
” is further dried-out, by vapor extraction. Water production from the underpressured Steady State systems is usually low and generally limited to water of condensation. However, in areas where drainage has not been effective (by-passed aquifers), water production can and does occur. These wet areas are restricted in extent. The last stage, Imbibition, occurs at some time after peak gas production when much of the gas has migrated from the
system
and the reservoirs are at the lowest pressures. In this last stage, water is very slowly re-introduced into the Tight Gas
System
through the reservoirs with the lowest permeability. The gas-charged
system
is then very slowly returned from whence it came, to an aquitard. It is possible to observe the first three stages in the Alberta Deep Basin (Figure 2a), and the Green River Basin (Figure 2b). The last stage has not yet been documented in the field but, from a theoretical point of view, it should exist, and it has been observed in the laboratory.
A capillary model was developed in the laboratory to demonstrate the properties and confirm the developmental stages of the Tight Gas
System
. Experimentation showed that all four developmental stages could be reproduced and occurred as a continuum. The amount of water left in the
system
was governed by the extent of drainage before the
system
begins to leak and become underpressured. The higher gas pressures, relative to normal hydrostatic conditions, were shown to be the result of the pressure difference, due to capillarity, between the gas column
and the aquifer. The higher pressures could also be a result of aquifer compression due to the rate of gas influx exceeding water drainage. Subnormal gas pressures developed by continued gas leakage from the
system
, beginning at the time when the gas column became tall enough to exceed the capillarity of the upper capillary tube “seal”. Also, it was necessary to reduce the influx of gas to the
system
and restrict the water entry to flow only through the lower capillary tube so that mass entering the
system
was less than the mass of gas that leaked from the
system
. Only then could underpressuring occur. Since capillary tubes were used to study the Tight Gas
System
model, the effects of relative permeability, that were theorized to occur in the early stages of development, could not be verified at this point.
In any tight gas
system
, it is necessary to identify the developmental stages in order to effectively develop and explore for further reserves.
Figure 1. Four-stage model: evolution of tight gas systems.
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