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PSWest Athabasca Grand Rapids
Formation
– A New SAGD Play*
M.E. Connelly1 and Laurie M. Weston Bellman1
Search and Discovery Article #10282 (2010)
Posted November 30, 2010
*Adapted from oral presentation at AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, September 12-15, 2010
1Laricina Energy Ltd. & L.M. Weston Bellman (Oil Sands Imaging) ([email protected]), ([email protected])
The majority of Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) development to date has been concentrated in the Cretaceous McMurray
Formation
in the Eastern Athabasca fairway of the oil sands deposits of northeastern Alberta, Canada. More recently, operators have identified projects with considerable resource located in shoreface sands of the younger Cretaceous Grand Rapids
Formation
further west in the Wabasca area (Figure 1).
The Grand Rapids
Formation
comprises the upper part of the regressive Upper Manville Group (Cant et al., 1997) and consists of multiple thick sandstones hosting 54.5 billion barrels (8678 x 106 m3) of bitumen in place (ERCB, 2009). The uppermost Grand Rapids sand is the largest of the three identified deposits with 33.2 billion barrels (5274 x 106 m3) in place (EUB, 1996). Much of the bitumen resource is underlain by a thin bottom
water
leg of varying thickness (Peterson et al., 2008).
The complex estuarine depositional environment in which the McMurray sands were deposited resulted in heterogeneous and complex reservoirs. In contrast, the upper Grand Rapids sand is interpreted to have been deposited in a regional marine shoreface setting. Its unique features – broad deposition, clean sand with homogeneous and continuous reservoir pay – increase the predictability and consistency of the reservoir. Laricina Energy Ltd. (Laricina) holds a total of 63 sections (the Germain lease) in the fairway with an estimated 2.5 billion barrels (0.4 x 106 m3) of bitumen in place. Laricina has filed applications for regulatory approval of a commercial demonstration project capable of producing 5000 bbl/day utilizing a variant of SAGD technology which is based on steam and solvents (Figure 2).
In conventional SAGD reservoirs, the horizontal production and injection well pairs are typically placed within the bitumen zone. However, based on laboratory and new simulation studies, Laricina has determined that bitumen recovery in a reservoir with thin associated basal
water
can be maximized by placing the producer at the base of porosity within the basal
water
zone (Peterson et al., 2008 and Peterson et al., 2009). The key aspects and concerns in the SAGD development of the Grand Rapids bitumen resource include clearly identifying the porosity base, the bitumen-
water
contact and any impedance to vertical permeability. To address these issues, a detailed 3D reservoir characterization was required. This presentation will describe the process of integrating core, log and 3D seismic data in the Germain lease to produce a volume of deterministically derived lithology and fluids within the reservoir.
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The upper Grand Rapids sand has been a focus of recent drilling and seismic acquisition by Laricina in the Germain lease (T84 R22 W4). Wireline logs and core photos of a type well from the lease is shown in Figure 3. Unlike typical McMurray reservoirs, the upper Grand Rapids sand is homogenous with very rare muddy interbeds. However, the reservoir parameters are similar to the McMurray with bitumen thickness ranging from 10 to 25 meters, average porosity of 34%, bitumen saturations ranging between 65 and 75% and permeability ranging between 1 and 5 Darcy.
Due to the simple nature of this reservoir, a fairly simple set of facies descriptions were established and identified from core. The facies identified were bitumen sand, wet sand, shaley sand, sandy shale, shale and dense or cemented sands. The wet sand facies occurs at the base of the upper Grand Rapids sand, at the base of the bitumen sand interval. Typically, the shale facies are only found above the bitumen sand and below the basal
The core facies interpretations were then integrated with the wireline log data for the 3D reservoir characterization analysis. Wireline logs directly (or indirectly) measure P-wave velocity, S-wave velocity and
The seismic process involves the use of AVO (amplitude vs offset) analysis to separate the compressional (P-wave) and shear (S-wave) components of the seismic data. The resulting components are used to calculate the physical rock properties through inversion and multiattribute analysis (Russell et al., 1997). When these attributes are classified based on the log and core analysis, the result is a seismic volume transformed to a detailed lithological characterization of the reservoir within the zone of interest. Figure 6 is an example portion of a line through the 3D classified by this method. Gamma ray logs are shown at the two wells intersecting this profile.
The resulting 3D visualization of the lithology and fluid distribution clearly identifies the porosity base of the sand and the bitumen-
Integration of core, log and seismic data allow for greater understanding of even simple reservoirs like the Grand Rapids. Identifying the presence and location of barriers to vertical permeability, the base of porosity and bottom
We would like to thank the management at Laricina Energy Ltd. for allowing us to release this information.
Cant, D.J. and B. Abrahamson, 1997, Regional stratigraphy, sedimentology, and petroleum geology of the Grand Rapids
EUB Report ST96-38, 1996, Crude Bitumen Reserves Atlas, May.
ERCB Report ST98-2009, Alberta’s Energy Reserves 2008 and Supply/Demand Outlook 2009-2018
Goodway, W., T. Chen, and J. Downton, 1997, Improved AVO fluid detection and lithology discrimination using Lame petrophysical parameters; “Lambda*rho”, “mu*rho” and “lambda/mu fluid stack”, from P and S inversions, 67th Annual International Meeting, SEG Expanded Abstracts, p. 183-186.
Peterson, J.A., M.E. Connelly, and N.R. Edmunds, 2008, Bitumen Production Potential from the Wabasca Grand Rapids
Peterson, J.A., D.T. Riva, M.E. Connelly, S.C. Solankiand, and N.R. Edmunds, 2009, Conducting SAGD in Shoreface Oil Sands with Associated Basal
Russell, B., D. Hampson, J. Schuelke, and J. Quirein, 1997, Multi-attribute Seismic Analysis, The Leading Edge, October, p. 1439.
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