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GC
3-D
Seismic
and Underground Gas Storage*
By
Jack Meyer1
Search and Discovery Article #40070 (2003)
*Adapted for online presentation from the Geophysical Corner column in AAPG
Explorer, April, 2001, entitled “
3-D
Helps See Through the Mist: Precision is
Now the Norm for Pool Development,” or “Will
My Gas Be There When I Want It?”,
and prepared by the author. Appreciation is expressed to the author, to R. Randy
Ray, Chairman of the AAPG Geophysical Integration Committee, and to Larry
Nation, AAPG Communications Director, for their support of this online version.
1Gas Storage Development Department, NW Natural, Portland, OR ([email protected])
General Comment
The storage field geologist, while worrying about such things as spill points and thief zones, is primarily concerned with “location, location, location.” Is the pool where it is supposed to be? Do the leases cover it and all possible escape routes? Can I get a well into the reservoir where it needs to be?
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Mist Storage FacilityThe recent expansion of the
Mist Storage Facility in northwest Oregon demonstrated that a
well-designed Mist Gas FieldThe Mist Gas Field is located about 60 miles northwest of Portland, Ore., in the Coast Range Mountains near the town of Mist. The field is structurally very complex and consists of individual gas pools located in discrete fault blocks that range in size from 20 acres to 120 acres. The productive interval, Clark and Wilson Sandstone of the upper Eocene Cowlitz Formation, is found at depths ranging from 1,200-2,700 feet. The marine deltaic reservoir sandstone is highly porous and permeable and has AVO characteristics similar to a class 3 gas sand of Rutherford and Williams (Geophysics, 1989). The gas shows as a strong bright reflector because of increased amplitude with offset. Gas Storage
An accurate reservoir model is a prerequisite
to successful gas storage development. In the Mist Gas Field, 2-D
From the mid-1990s on, the deregulated gas market has placed prime value on deliverability. A high volume horizontal well, which can replace several vertical wells, is the “new” tool that enables the Mist Storage Field to respond to the changing market. This fundamental shift in field operation requires that the geologic mapping be accurate enough to ensure that a horizontal well encounters the reservoir and stays inside it, as well as being detailed enough to guide and constrain reservoir modeling.
There is also a more critical reason for a
crystal clear image of a storage reservoir; product security. There is a
history in the storage industry of stored gas migrating to places out of
control of the operator. Large “buffer” areas generally surround a
storage field. An accurate geologic structure map of the reservoir is
paramount. At Mist, this meant acquiring Specifications, Definition, and Design
The shallow depth of the reservoir, high
frequency content of the 2-D
Figure 1 is the subsea structure map of the top of the reservoir
sand derived from the
The accuracy of fault location and throw
provided by the
Figure 2 is a vertical
The depth to the gas-water contact is a
critical piece of Figure 3 is a cross section through a depleted pool that illustrates the dynamic nature of the aquifer. During primary production, water encroached into the reservoir several tens of feet and defined a “new” gas-water contact. While the water invaded the reservoir from the bottom up, the “new” gas-water contact is not necessarily flat across the entire reservoir. At Mist, variations resulting from changes in internal stratigraphy or faulting may be of a magnitude that would affect the performance of a horizontal well.
Figure 4 is the 2-D
Figure 5 is a parallel line from the The resistivity and neutron density logs of Mist storage pool development wells (Figure 6) clearly identify the “new” gas-water contact (in most instances, the encroached zone is also identifiable on the neutron density log). The sonic log, however, continues to respond to the original gas-water contact. The residual low gas saturation associated with the original gas-water contact is still an acoustic contrast, but the change in density as a result of water encroachment has decreased the reflectivity. At the “new” gas-water contact, there is a density contrast but only a small acoustic response. In addition, there has been an increase in the bulk density of the highly porous reservoir rock as it compacted in response to pressure reduction.
The physical changes within and to the
reservoir may be combining to mask both the “new” and the “old”
gas-water contacts. (See Jack, 1998, for discussion of rock physics and
4-D Summary
In summary, the application of References
Jack, Ian, 1997, Time-Lapse
Rutherford, S.R., and R.H. Williams, 1989, Amplitude-versus-offset variations in gas sands: Geophysics, v. 54, p. 680-688. |
