AAPG Hedberg Conference
Vail, Colorado
April 24-29, 2005
Tight
Gas
Sandstones: 25 Years of Searching for “The Answer”
U. S. Geological Survey, Reston, VA 20192
Exploring for
tight
gas
sandstone reservoirs is much more than looking for a bright spot on 3D seismic or random drilling in a
gas
-charged basin. It is commonly a complex endeavor intertwined with acreage position, lease obligations,
gas
sales contracts, strategy for market share, access to pipelines, reservoir and line pressure, proven reserves, daily rates, decline curves, produced water management, structural position, sedimentary context and content, hydraulic frac’ing, Kv-Kh, matrix cement and porosity, grain size, and petrophysical recognition and characterization. The world of science (and business) implies that most problems can be overcome, if one works hard enough and has enough resources to apply. Exploring for, and effectively managing
tight
gas
sandstone reservoirs is a challenge of balancing many elements along a narrow pathway to profitability. It also requires a clear, simple, and correct geologic model upon which exploration and funding strategies can be built. Developing the geologic model requires an understanding of the complete nature of many types of low permeability reservoirs.
Over the past twenty-five years, a number of different
tight
gas
sandstone reservoirs have been brought into the nation’s productive natural
gas
inventory. These include reservoirs of many different ages, in many different basinal settings. Reservoir discovery and management efforts with select fields in the Silurian Tuscarora, Pennsylvanian Pottsville and Jackfork, Jurassic Cotton Valley, Cretaceous Frontier and Almond, and Eocene Wilcox sandstones will be reviewed, compared, and contrasted. In these case studies, the scope and scale of
tight
gas
sandstone challenges can be illustrated.
Copyright ©2005. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All Rights Reserved.