Geomechanical
Fracture
Modelling
Helps Renew Development of the Coevorden Zechstein Tight-Gas Reservoir
By
Taco den Bezemer1, Karen Foster1, Solenn Bettembourg2, Stephen Bourne2
(1) Nederlandse Aardolie Maatschappij B.V, Assen, Netherlands (2) Shell International E&P B.V, Rijswijk, Netherlands
The Coevorden Zechstein gas field consists of a large number of poorly
connected, tilted fault blocks and the reservoir is interpreted to have been
deposited in carbonate slope/deep water environment. Production from the
Coevorden Zechstein wells has been highly variable and where good productivity
occurs, it is attributed to the presence of
fracture
networks.
To predict the distribution of
fracture
networks, Poly3D, a deterministic
geomechanical
fracture
modelling tool using boundary-element techniques, was
chosen. This model computes the stress field related to slip on seismically
visible faults based on estimates of the regional stress tensor. The main
assumptions of the model - fracturing is related to strike-slip or normal
faulting and the rock is isotropic, homogenous and linear elastic - seem
reasonable for our setting in that no correlation has been found between folding
(curvature) and fracturing, nor has a relationship between dolomitisation and
fracturing been found. Additionaly, lithological variation across the field
seems small given its depositional setting, and no strong diagenetic
heterogeneity has been observed. Using the stress tensor distribution,
calculated using Poly3D, brittle failure
analysis
was carried out to produce
failure maps indicating possible areas of connected
fracture
systems. These
failure maps in turn were used to fill the dual-permeability grid of Shell’s
dynamic reservoir simulator.
History matching revealed that 70% of the wells can be matched using a
specific set of brittle
fracture
parameters and
fracture
and matrix
permeability. An attempt to history match the production behaviour using a
random distribution of dual permeability or a much simpler model of fracturing
failed. Similarly, no previous subsurface model has been able to withstand
testing against dynamic data. Based upon this, the Poly3D methodology is
facilitating further development of the Zechstein gas fields.