FULL
FIELD
RESERVOIR DESCRIPTION AND NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF AURORA OIL
RESERVOIR, NORTH SLOPE OF ALASKA
COPEN, James D., PANDA, Manmath Nath, CARHART, Steve R., and YOUNG, James P., Petrotechnical Resources Alaska, Anchorage, AK 99510, [email protected]
The Aurora reservoir is a satellite of the giant Prudhoe Bay
Field
. The
field
currently produces ~9,000 bopd from lower shoreface sands of the Cretaceous
Kuparuk River Formation. Production started in 1999. Integrated geological,
geophysical
petrophysical
and reservoir engineering studies were recently
completed for Aurora. The studies used seismic, core, log, fluid property, well
test, and production data from appraisal and development
wells
for reservoir
analysis
, building a full
field
geocellular model, and simulating reservoir
performance.
The subsurface challenges involve building a representative reservoir model on a fine scale to represent a very heterogeneous system. Complex stratigraphy, severe faulting and reservoir compartmentalization, variable fluid contacts, and significant variation in pay thickness and mineralogy make reservoir modeling very challenging. These challenges were overcome by: 1. using a fine scale grid (250' X 250' X 1~2') to model the large number of faults (throws range from 10' to 250'), 2. representing each flow unit as a zone, and 3. using hybrid modeling techniques (object and pixel based) to capture the heterogeneity of each zone. The model is calibrated using the short Aurora production history and then used to develop an optimal reservoir management strategy including tertiary recovery optimization and flood pattern conformance.
This paper discusses the challenges of selecting suitable modeling
methodologies, of matching the limited production history, and conducting
production optimization forecasts for the geologically complex Aurora
Field
on
Alaska's North Slope.