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PS3-D Exploration
for Remaining
Oil
Using Historical Production Data
Yun Ling1, Xuri Huang2, Desheng Sun1, Jun Gao1, and Jixiang Lin1
Search and Discovery Article #40399 (2009)
Posted April 10, 2009
* Adapted from oral presentation at AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Cape Town, South Africa, October 26-29, 2008.
1BGP, CNPC, Zhuozhou, China (mailto:[email protected])
2Golden Eagle Int'l, Inc., Beijing, China
3D and 4D (or time-lapse) seismics are techniques commonly used
for exploration and reservoir exploitation. Increasingly, time-lapse seismic
is becoming a more popular tool for reservoir development and management.
However, its application is constrained by reservoir conditions, production
mechanisms and seismic data repeatability. The technique of 3D exploration
for remaining
oil
with historical production data (3.5D) uses high quality
3D seismic data, acquired after a certain period of reservoir production,
and integrates it with historical production data to provide information
for reservoir dynamics, such as the identification of additional resources
and the delineation of remaining
oil
. In integrating the 3D seismic with
historical production data, the 3D seismic data are time-stamped and then
related to the reservoir dynamics. This enables 3D seismic data to represent
reservoir dynamics in time. The method is applied to an onshore field
in Western China. The result shows that the 3.5D seismic approach can
identify reservoir potentials and remaining
oil
.
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Back
in the late 30s, 3D wave propagation was investigated based on
multiple 2D lines in different directions and wave propagation
geometries (
Background of Geology and Seismic
Geology background: The field is on a monoclinal structure that forms a lithological trap for the reservoir, with depths between 3230-3480 m and sand thicknesses ranging from 3 to 5 m. The field has been in production since 1991, with water cut around 60% at present.
Seismic acquisition and processing: The 3D survey conducted in the field is located in the northwest margin of the Jungar basin. The surface is mainly covered with sand dunes of 3-20 m in height and some farmland on the eastern side. The main parameters of the survey geometry are as follows: Spread, 12 lines x 10 shots; Fold, 60; Bin size, 12.5 m x 12.5 m. The processing workflow includes amplitude preservation, source/receiver statistical deconvolution, velocity picking, statics, and NMO+DMO+poststack migration. Compared with the processing workflow of the conventional time-lapse seismic (Ross et al., 1996), this workflow does not need to focus on the elimination of non-repeatable noise from both acquisition and processing. This indicates that a 3.5D seismic application could be more practical compared to time-lapse seismics, possibly reducing the financial risk of the entire process.
Reservoir Structure and Depositional Study
Figure 1a is a seismic section across the reservoir, which is flattened at the bottom of the Jurassic. From this section we can see that the deposition before the Jurassic has an erosional period of exposure, with volcanic activity in the deeper formation. The Jurassic formation contacts its underlying formation as an angular unconformity. Above the unconformity, the Jurassic formation starts to subside in the southern part.
This leads to a paleotopography with a high in northwest, and a low in the southeast (see Figure 1b). Sedimentary deposition starts in the early Jurassic (J1b). This period has three sub-cycles of deposition as marked in Figure 1b by the deep to light yellowish colors for the three superimposed sedimentary units. The sediment source is from the northwest. After this period, the southeast continues to subside and leads to the formation of the mid-Jurassic deposition (J2x). J2x has two sub-cycles of deposition that form two superimposed sedimentary units, with the source in the northwest. In the late Jurassic (J3q) there are two sub-cycles of deposition (see Figure 1b marked with deep or light color) that are thicker in the southeast than in the northwest. In the seismic sections, a foreset reflection can be observed clearly in the northwest. This indicates that the sediments are from the northwest.
Figure 1c
shows the present
structure from the seismic data. From Figure
1c
and the above structural evolution discussion, we conclude,
that with a good cap
Based on the structural and depositional evolution study, the seismic waveform clustering attribute is generated as shown in Figure 2 . The mid-to-light blue colored region indicates a region of alluvial deposition. An uplift (the white line in Figure 2) separates it from the adjacent depositional region. These two zones form two major depositional regions. From the depositional analysis, the J3q formation mainly forms onlap traps. On the other hand, the J1b and J2x formations mainly form unconformity traps.
Historical Production Data Study
Obviously,
the preceding structural and depositional discussion, which is
based only on high quality 3D seismic data, cannot characterize
reservoir dynamics. The key to 3.5D seismic is to further characterize
the reservoir using dynamic data such as historical production
data. Figure 3
is the spatial evolution
of cumulative
Interpretation of 3D with Historical Production Data
Based
on the interpretation of 3D seismic data and of the dynamic data, Figure 5a
shows the combined result of overlaying
the dynamic data with 3D seismic amplitudes. As shown in Figure 5a
, the low water producers are located in
regions where the seismic amplitudes are high, and the high water
producers are located in low amplitude regions in 2006. This indicates
a high
Based
on a case study, a technique of 3D exploration for remaining
Dahm, C.G. and R.J. Graebner, 1982, Field development with three-dimensional seismic methods in the Gulf of Thailand-A case history: Geophysics, V. 47/2, p. 149-176.
Lumley, D.E., 2001, Time-lapse seismic reservoir monitoring: Geophysics, V. 66/1, p. 50-53.
Nur,
A, C. Tosaya, and D.V. Thanh, 1984, Seismic monitoring of thermal
enhanced
Robert
J.G. and J.F. Terrance, 1987, Three-dimensional seismic monitoring
of an enhanced
Ross, C.P, G.B. Cunningham, and D.P. Weber, 1996, Inside the cross-equalization black box: The Leading Edge, v. 15, p. 1233-1240.
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