Borehole Microseismic, Completion and Production Data Analysis to Determine Future Wellbore Placement, Spacing and Vertical Connectivity, Eagle Ford Shale, South Texas

Author(s):  
Hemali Patel ◽  
John Johanning ◽  
Michael Fry
2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bingxiang Xu ◽  
Manouchehr Haghighi ◽  
Dennis A. Cooke ◽  
XiangFang Li

2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. SC125-SC150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ursula Hammes ◽  
Ray Eastwood ◽  
Guin McDaid ◽  
Emilian Vankov ◽  
S. Amin Gherabati ◽  
...  

A comprehensive regional investigation of the Eagle Ford Shale linking productivity to porosity-thickness (PHIH), lithology ([Formula: see text]), pore volume (PHIT), organic matter (TOC), and water-saturation ([Formula: see text]) variations has not been presented to date. Therefore, isopach maps across the Eagle Ford Shale play west of the San Marcos Arch were constructed using thickness and log-calculated attributes such as TOC, [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], and porosity to identify sweet spots and spatial distribution of these geologic characteristics that influence productivity in shale plays. The Upper Cretaceous Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas is an organic-rich, calcareous mudrock deposited during a second-order transgression of global sea level on a carbonate-dominated shelf updip from the older Sligo and Edwards (Stuart City) reef margins. Lithology and organic-matter deposition were controlled by fluvial input from the Woodbine delta in the northeast, upwelling along the Cretaceous shelf edge, and volcanic and clastic input from distant Laramide events to the north and west. Local oxygen minimum events along the South Texas margin contributed to the preservation of this organic-rich source rock related to the Cenomanian/Turonian global organic anoxic event (OAE2). Paleogeographic and deep-seated tectonic elements controlled the variations of lithology, amount and distribution of organic matter, and facies that have a profound impact on production quality. Petrophysical modeling was conducted to calculate total organic carbon, water saturation, lithology, and porosity of the Eagle Ford Group. Thickness maps, as well as PHIH maps, show multiple sweet spots across the study area. Components of the database were used as variables in kriging, and multivariate statistical analyses evaluated the impact of these variables on productivity. For example, TOC and clay volume ([Formula: see text]) show an inverse relationship that is related to production. Mapping petrophysical parameters across a play serves as a tool to predict geologic drivers of productivity across the Eagle Ford taking the geologic heterogeneity into account.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Basel Alotaibi ◽  
David Schechter ◽  
Robert A. Wattenbarger

Abstract In previous works and published literature, production forecast and production decline of unconventional reservoirs were done on a single-well basis. The main objective of previous works was to estimate the ultimate recovery of wells or to forecast the decline of wells in order to estimate how many years a well could produce and what the abandonment rate was. Other studies targeted production data analysis to evaluate the completion (hydraulic fracturing) of shale wells. The purpose of this work is to generate field-wide production forecast of the Eagle Ford Shale (EFS). In this paper, we considered oil production of the EFS only. More than 6 thousand oil wells were put online in the EFS basin between 2008 and December 2013. The method started by generating type curves of producing wells to understand their performance. Based on the type curves, a program was prepared to forecast the oil production of EFS based on different drilling schedules; moreover drilling requirements can be calculated based on the desired production rate. In addition, analysis of daily production data from the basin was performed. Moreover, single-well simulations were done to compare results with the analyzed data. Findings of this study depended on the proposed drilling and developing scenario of EFS. The field showed potential of producing high oil production rate for a long period of time. The presented forecasted case gave and indications of the expected field-wide rate that can be witnessed in the near future in EFS. The method generated by this study is useful for predicting the performance of various unconventional reservoirs for both oil and gas. It can be used as a quick-look tool that can help if numerical reservoir simulations of the whole basin are not yet prepared. In conclusion, this tool can be used to prepare an optimized drilling schedule to reach the required rate of the whole basin.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guolei Han ◽  
◽  
M. Clara Castro ◽  
Toti Larson ◽  
Jean-Philippe Nicot ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mamadou Diakhate ◽  
Ayman Gazawi ◽  
Robert David Barree ◽  
Manuel Cossio ◽  
Beau Tinnin ◽  
...  

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