Use of Seismic Attributes and Acoustic Impedance in 3D Reservoir Modelling:
An Example from a Mature GOS
Carbonate
Field (Ras Fanar)
By
Richard D. Vaughan1, Alaa Atef1, Nader El-Outefi1
(1) German Oil & Gas Egypt - GEOGE, Cairo, Egypt
Discovered in April 1978, Ras Fanar Field in the Gulf of Suez of Egypt has
produced approximately 91 MM STB oil, from Middle Miocene coralline algal
carbonates which are informally known as the “Nullipore
Facies
” and to a lesser
extent the South Gharib Formation. The field lies some 2 Km offshore east of Ras
Gharib and produces from a NW-SE trending structural trap bounded by a major
fault system to the SW and tilted to the NE. The depositional setting of the
reservoir comprises a narrow 4-5 Km wide
carbonate
ramp which extends eastwards
from Ras Gharib Field to Ras Fanar Field. In previous interpretations the
carbonate
Nullipore
Facies
was interpreted as eroded and subsequently on-lapped
by South Gharib sediments along a single unconformity. The current geological
model allows for both lateral and vertical
facies
transitions between the
Nullipore carbonates and South Gharib evaporitic-siliciclastic-
carbonate
units.
Several phases of upward-shoaling deposition and erosion are evident. Periods of
erosion coincide with high porosity layers within the reservoir resulting from
karstification and solution collapse brecciation. Diagenetic overprinting of the
original
facies
was intense therefore a petrophysical-based modelling procedure
was adopted.
This paper presents a simple but effective 3D reservoir modelling workflow
which used absolute acoustic impedance (AI) data and its relationship to
effective porosity as a deterministic 3D modelling parameter (“porosity-
facies
”)
rather than the more traditional
facies
based approach. Implicit in the
modelling workflow was the assumption that the 3D distribution of the resulting
“porosity-
facies
” could be interpreted using a geological model which conformed
to a “modern” sequenced-based approach to reservoir zonation and the
model-derived vertical and horizontal “porosity-
facies
” trends were reflected in
the actual evaporitic-
carbonate
facies
transitions seen in the Gulf of Suez
today, as well as nearby outcrop analogues.