Reducing Drilling Risk through
Improved
Seismic
Imaging, Utilizing New Single-Sensor Acquisition Technology
By
Mohammed Badri1, Morten Svendsen1, Mark Egan1
(1) WesternGeco, N/A, Egypt
Conventional 3D
seismic
techniques have through the last two decades shown
significant improvements in reservoir delineation and mapping structural
features leading to an increased efficiency of hydrocarbon exploration. However,
new reservoir challenges in various environments such as the Gulf of Suez,
Western Desert and offshore Nile Delta require a vastly improved
seismic
technology that would result in increasing success rate and reduce drilling
risks.
Seismic
imaging has not only revealed the subsurface in exploration but also
has become an effective tool for reservoir management to map detailed, complex
reservoir features like thin-bed, and fault
resolution
, fluid saturation and
lithology discrimination. This would require preservation of
seismic
true
amplitude, high
resolution
sampling, and data processing analysis tools.
This paper will address the geophysical challenges in Egypt and demonstrate
how the new
seismic
single sensor technology can resolve them. Examples from
well known fields in the Gulf of Mexico and North Sea will be presented, where
new
seismic
technology has been applied to significantly improve the
seismic
resolution
, amplitude accuracy and imaging quality of the reservoirs.
In the case studies performed, the data acquisition was performed using a new
revolutionary
seismic
system. This system overcomes the current limitations of
the existing
seismic
technology. The new technology has the capacity to receive
and record
seismic
data from each individual
seismic
receiver and performs
Digital Group Forming (DGF) that addresses source and receiver perturbations
along the recorded acquisition pattern.
We believe that single sensor
seismic
technology would significantly improve
reservoir definition resulting in a reduced drilling risk and increasing
exploration and development success rates in Egypt.