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Geological Controls and Variability in Pore Pressure in the Deep-Water
Gulf
of
Mexico
*
By
Michael A. Smith1
Search and Discovery Article # 10029 (2002)
*Adapted for online presentation from article of the same title by the same author published in AAPG Memoir 76 (August, 2002), Pressure Regimes in Sedimentary Basins and Their Prediction, A. R. Huffman and G. L. Bowers, eds., p. 107-113. This publication may be purchased from AAPG Bookstore (http://bookstore.aapg.org).
1Minerals Management Service, New Orleans, Louisiana ([email protected]).
Abstract
In most areas of
the world, pressure-related drilling problems are the leading cause for
abandoning a deep-water well or else requiring expensive remedial changes in the
drilling and casing programs to reach its targeted reservoir depths. This
chapter discusses geological controls and trends in the onset of geopressure in
the deep-water
Gulf
of
Mexico
, shallow water flow from overpressured sands in
the top-hole section, and other pressure-related problems unique to deep water.
Pore-pressure prediction has become a subject of intense current interest with
several joint industry projects and predictive models now available for
government and company participation.
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uOverpressured sands in ultradeep water
uOverpressured sands in ultradeep water
uOverpressured sands in ultradeep water
uOverpressured sands in ultradeep water
uOverpressured sands in ultradeep water
uOverpressured sands in ultradeep water
uOverpressured sands in ultradeep water
uOverpressured sands in ultradeep water
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Figure Captions
Click here for sequence of Figure 2 and Figure 3.
Click here for sequence of Figure 2 and Figure 3.
Introduction
As exploration moves into deeper water in the
In this article, we look at the occurrence of geopressure in about 100
wells in deep water from Viosca Knoll to Alaminos Canyon, most of them
drilled in more than 2000 ft (610 m) of water during the last five
years. We also analyze shallow water-flow encounters and trends in these
areas. As exploratory drilling begins in previously untested geological
trends in ultradeep water, new technology and equipment will be needed
to control unique pressure-related drilling problems encountered in the
exploration and development of
Pore-Pressure Gradients
Minerals Management Service (MMS) geological reviews of exploration and
development plans and applications for permit to drill on
We analyzed predicted and actual pore pressures, sedimentation rates,
and formation temperatures in the deep-water
Except for the northeastern corner of Mississippi Canyon, the thermal gradient in the eastern study area is lower than that of deep-water areas to the west, generally about 1.05oF/100 ft (0.58oC/30.5 m). The thermal gradient falls from an average of 1.25oF/100 ft (0.69oC/30.5 m) in East Breaks to about 1.0oF/100 ft (0.555oC/30.5 m) in Garden Banks, and in Green Canyon the temperature gradient appears to decrease from 1.3 to 0.8oF/100 ft (from 0.72 to 0.44oC/30.5 m) to the southeast with greater water depths. These observations suggest that lower thermal gradients may correspond to a deeper top of geopressure.
Salt domes and ridges that form the boundaries of salt-withdrawal minibasins cause increased pore pressure in the surrounding sediment. This fact results in anomalously high pore pressures in wells drilled on the flanks of a salt dome relative to wells drilled through equivalent strata toward the center of the basin. Pore-pressure ramps or steep increases also occur adjacent to salt masses, and some deep-water exploratory wells have had to be abandoned during attempts to drill through overpressured fractured shale associated with a salt diapir before the reservoir interval was reached. Below tabular salt sheets, formations can be overpressured because of an effective seal, and in some subsalt wells a pressure kick has been encountered in the rubble zone below salt. In general, however, the top of subsalt geopressure occurs at greater depths and deeper in the stratigraphic section than in wells without salt.
Shallow Water-Flow Sands
Water flow from an overpressured shallow aquifer occurring above the
first pressure-containing casing string can significantly impact
drilling and cementing practices in addition to the setting depth and
number of shallow casing points. This shallow subsurface geohazard may
even cause an operator to change a surface location or lose a well.
Shallow water-flow sands were deposited as continental slope/fan
sequences during upper Pleistocene progradation, the building out of
prodelta sandy zones. Since 1984, shallow water-flow occurrences have
been reported in about 70
salt sills that are 1000 to 10,000 ft (305-3048 m) below the sea floor
in some areas. This fact may suggest that communication with the deeper
stratigraphic section contributes to abnormal pressures in shallow sands
or that the salt forms a positive sea floor topographic feature,
preventing sediment loading that might contribute to the generation of
overpressures. The integration of high-resolution multichannel and
reprocessed conventional two-dimensional (2-D) and three-dimensional
(3-D) seismic data for the top-hole section, further refined by seismic
facies analysis, can identify sand bodies with moderate or high shallow
water-flow potential. In assessing shallow water-flow risk, information
from surrounding wells and shallow borehole tests also provides
important data for drilling program design. The MMS Notice to Lessees
and Operators (NTL) on shallow hazards requirements for the
Mitigating approaches that have been used in the drilling of shallow water-flow areas include measurement while drilling (MWD) logging plus an annular pressure measurement while drilling (PWD) tool, monitoring and confirming shallow water-flow occurrences with remotely operated vehicles (ROV), and drilling the shallow section as a pilot hole. Additional casing strings and quick-setting foam cements, borehole tests to 1500 to 5000 ft (457-1524 m) bml before development drilling, and other geophysical and engineering techniques that are currently under development have also been employed. The loss of integrity plus buckling or collapse of shallow casing strings in development wells has caused serious economic loss in several cases. Establishing a database of known shallow water-flow occurrences and the most effective methods for controlling them will greatly advance the partnership between the MMS and offshore operators in containing this critical deep-water hazard (Smith, 1999).
Overpressured Sands in Ultradeep Water
In low-margin deep-water drilling areas with abruptly increasing pore pressures and weak fracture gradients, extra casing strings are needed to maintain control in the shallower part of the well. A conventional single-gradient mud system and marine riser maintain bottom-hole pressure with a single mud density from the rig to the bottom of the well, which may require extra casing strings to prevent weaker formations from fracturing. In addition, loop currents or other strong deep-water currents might limit drilling at times because of high riser loads. With a dual-gradient system, however, mud is diverted to separate riser return lines with the effect of replacing the mud from the drilling riser with seawater and referencing pressure gradients relative to the sea floor (Smith and Gault, 2002). The larger hole size maintained at total depth with this technology also allows more completion and production options for deep-water reservoirs.
The northern
In the centroid concept, pore pressure in a reservoir sand at the crest
of a high-relief overpressured structure can exceed pore pressure in the
bounding shale. Deep-water areas with extensive shallow faulting are
particularly vulnerable to low-margin drilling conditions that require
extra casing strings. The top of a large, high-relief fold or anticlinal
structure at various depths in an exploratory well may contain fluid
pressures that approach the fracture gradient in adjacent shale (Traugott,
1997). The mud log from a 1996 ultradeep-water well (Figure 4) provides
an
Conclusions
Many of the serious and costly drilling problems in deep water are
related to the pore-pressure/fracture gradient relationship. Other
pressure-related hazards, such as shallow water flow, require better
predrill identification and quantification of overpressured problem
sands. In many
References Cited
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Acknowledgments
This
project was initiated as a result of excellent presentations at the 1998
American Association of Drilling Engineers Industry Forum on Pressure
Regimes in Sedimentary Basins and their Prediction. Preliminary results
were presented at the 1998 MMS Information Transfer Meeting and the 1999
AAPG International Conference in Birmingham, England. I thank two
anonymous reviewers and, particularly, James C. Niemann for their
insightful comments, which greatly improved this chapter. Some of the
ideas presented here were clarified by discussions with Jim Bridges,
Matt Czerniak, Nader Dutta, Pete Harrison, Alan Huffman, Bob Peterson,
Paul Post, and Selim Shaker. Finally, I am grateful to the MMS |
