The Rio Muni
Basin
: An Emerging
Deepwater Hydrocarbon
Province
By
Kenny Goh1, Paul Dailly1, Phil Lowry1, Gene Monson1
(1) Amerada Hess Corporation, Dallas, TX
The Rio Muni
basin
underlies the continental shelf of the West African
republic of Equatorial Guinea, located between Gabon and Cameroon. The
basin
is
situated above a section dominated by a northeast-southwest trending oceanic
fracture zone and its continental extension. This fracture zone constitutes the
boundary between the Equatorial Atlantic margin and the West African salt
basin
.
Despite its location between the prolific hydrocarbon provinces of the Niger
delta to the north and the Gabon coastal
basin
to the south, the Rio Muni
basin
has been overlooked by the industry for much of the last decade. Previous wells
have proved a viable source rock, but no accumulations. Triton Energy licensed
Block F & G in 1997 and drilled the Ceiba 1 discovery well in 1999, proving a
new hydrocarbon
system
in the deep water, Late Cretaceous post rift sequence.
Deformation by Santonian-Coniacian transpression caused uplift of the shelfal
area and deposition of a thick. Slope fan sequence. Contemporaneous salt
deformation of rafted deposits and the development of a base of slope
compressional belt area also evident. The resultant turbidite sequences form the
reservoirs in the Ceiba field. First oil from the Ceiba field was achieved in
record time of 14 months. The field has been on production for over a year now
and over 20 MMBO have been produced to date. Subsequent exploration drilling
focussed by AVO studies has led to the discovery of five new fields in the
current
play
fairway. Future exploration will continue to evaluate the large
untested areas of the block.