--> Reservoir Characterisation of Deep-Water Clastics - A Multi-Disciplinary Approach, Offshore Nigeria - A Case Study, by Abhilasha Mohit, Philip Ringrose, Stephen David Johnson, Kjetil Nordahl, Steven Morris, and Eirik Vik; #90037(2005)

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Reservoir Characterisation of Deep-Water Clastics - A Multi-Disciplinary Approach, Offshore Nigeria - A Case Study

Abhilasha Mohit1, Philip Ringrose2, Stephen David Johnson3, Kjetil Nordahl3, Steven Morris3, and Eirik Vik4
1 STATOIL, Trondheim, Norway
2 Statoil R & D, 7005 Trondheim, Norway
3 STATOIL, 7005 Trondheim, Norway
4 Statoil, Trondheim, Norway

Detailed reservoir characterisation of deepwater siliciclastics is fundamental in building a robust framework for appraisal/development scenarios. A multi-disciplinary perspective is applied by integrating information from seismic data, well logs (including OBMI/CMR), core/plug data, DST data and field analogue data to characterise complex reservoirs, offshore deepwater Nigeria. 3-D reservoir models form the building blocks to predict reservoir architecture and flow performance. These static and dynamic reservoir models are then used for planning appraisal and development wells.