Prediction of Reservoir Quality & Deliverability of the Tight Barik Formation in Khazzan Field, Oman

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khalil Ali Al Rashdi ◽  
Martin Wells ◽  
Nigel Clark

Abstract The giant Khazzan gas field, located in onshore Oman, has been under development since 2013 and in production since 2017. The field is currently producing 1 billion cubic feet of gas per day from the Cambro-Ordovician Barik Formation. The 80-metre-thick paralic reservoir is 4.5 kilometers deep and has undergone complex stages of diagenesis, hydrocarbon charge and structural regime changes. Reservoir quality (RQ) is typically classed as tight (average porosity 6 porosity unit, average permeability 1 Milidarcy) but locally exceeds expectations given the burial history reaching up to 12 pu and 100 Milidarcy. This RQ variability and complexity makes reservoir deliverability (RD) a key uncertainty impacting the field development scheme and ultimately the projected economics. This study aims to create and test hypotheses of RQ and RD controls to reduce uncertainty in production and increase reservoir development efficiency. In order to better understand the key controls on reservoir quality, an extensive set of core, petrophysical log analysis and production data were integrated with field-wide seismic and outcrop data to update the Barik stratigraphic, structural and depositional frameworks. Extensive analytical techniques, including reservoir quality modelling, petrographic analysis, X-ray diffraction, mercury injection capillary pressure and minipermeameter data were also integrated. Quartz cementation and compaction are the principal degrading controls on reservoir quality. The controls on quartz cementation are complex and variably inter-related, although in general it is ductile content, proximity to mudstone and feldspar content that are the best predictors of porosity and permeability when convolved. Minipermeameter data confirms that distance to mudstone, or sandstone thickness, is an important control on reservoir quality. Using normalized gamma ray log data, total and mean individual sandstone thickness were calculated for every Barik well in Khazzan and compared to well dynamic behavior which demonstrated a positive correlation. Areas with high mean individual sandstone thickness and total sandstone thickness frequently equate with relatively high IP30s (average well production at 1100 psi well head pressure for 30 days). In contrast, areas with high total sandstone thickness, but low mean individual sandstone thickness may only have moderate IP30s as those sandstones may be more quartz cemented. Reservoir deliverability risk maps based on total and mean individual sandstone thickness and IP30 were constructed. These maps give insight into regions of poor and good gas deliverability and have identified areas that may be untested or undeveloped that may have potential upside. The resultant reservoir deliverability understanding of the Barik formation is consistent with depositional environment, diagenetic understanding and well performance. It is a good example of integrating diverse static and dynamic data to improve reservoir understanding and has direct business impact.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuan Liu ◽  
Bin Li ◽  
Hongjie Zhang ◽  
Fan Yang ◽  
Guan Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract The economics of tight gas fields highly depend on the consistency between expected production and the actual well performance. A mismatch between the reservoir quality and the well production often leads to a review of the individual well. However, such mismatch may vary from case to case, and it is hard to perform a field-level analysis based on individual well reviews. We introduce a new method based on data mining to assist the field-level diagnosis. LX gas field is located the in eastern Ordos basin. Compared to the main gas field in the center of the basin, LX field is less predictable in well performance. This predictability issue hinders field development in LX field because the field economics are substantially jeopardized by the inconsistency between the reservoir quality and the production performance. The traditional workflow to understand this issue at the field level is to review the details of a large number of individual wells in the area. This is typically an intense task, and too much detail from multiple disciplines may hide the true pattern of the field behavior. To resolve this issue, we applied data mining in our field development diagnosis workflow. Our new workflow in LX area started with the existing field datasheet, including logging summaries, completion treatment reports, and flowback testing datasheets. With the data extracted from these different sources, we visualized the consolidated information in various plots and graphs based on regression analysis, which revealed the relation between flowback ratio and the production, the flowback rate consistency from the different service suppliers, and the impact of water productions. The data mining approach helped to generate new understandings in LX gas field. With the in-depth analysis of the flowback data together with reservoir properties and operation parameters, the key problems in the field were identified for further development optimization, and the field economics can be significantly improved. The diagnosis method can be easily adapted and applied to any field with similar problems, and data mining can be useful for almost all large-scale field development optimizations.


2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-47
Author(s):  
Qingsha Zhou ◽  
Kun Huang ◽  
Yongchun Zhou

Background: The western Sichuan gas field belongs to the low-permeability, tight gas reservoirs, which are characterized by rapid decline in initial production of single-well production, short periods of stable production, and long periods of late-stage, low-pressure, low-yield production. Objective: It is necessary to continue pursuing the optimization of transportation processes. Method: This paper describes research on mixed transportation based on simplified measurements with liquid-based technology and the simulation of multiphase processes using the PIPEPHASE multiphase flow simulation software to determine boundary values for the liquid carrying process. Conclusion: The simulation produced several different recommendations for the production and maximum multiphase distance along with difference in elevation. Field tests were then conducted to determine the suitability of mixed transportation in western Sichuan, so as to ensure smooth progress with fluid metering, optimize the gathering process in order to achieve stable and efficient gas production, and improve the economic benefits of gas field development.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. P. Putra

The Globigerina Limestone (GL) is the main reservoir of the seven gas fields that will be developed in the Madura Strait Block. The GL is a heterogeneous and unique clastic carbonate. However, the understanding of reservoir rock type of this reservoir are quite limited. Rock type definition in heterogeneous GL is very important aspect for reservoir modeling and will influences field development strategy. Rock type analysis in this study is using integration of core data, wireline logs and formation test data. Rock type determination applies porosity and permeability relationship approach from core data, which related to pore size distribution, lithofacies, and diagenesis. The analysis resulted eight rock types in the Globigerina Limestone reservoir. Result suggests that rock type definition is strongly influenced by lithofacies, which is dominated by packstone and wackestone - packstone. The diagenetic process in the deep burial environment causes decreasing of reservoir quality. Then the diagenesis process turns to be shallower in marine phreatic zone and causes dissolution which increasing the reservoir quality. Moreover, the analysis of rock type properties consist of clay volume, porosity, permeability, and water saturation. The good quality of a rock type will have the higher the porosity and permeability. The dominant rock type in this study area is RT4, which is identical to packstone lithofasies that has 0.40 v/v porosity and 5.2 mD as average permeability. The packstone litofacies could be found in RT 5, 6, 7, even 8 due to the increased of secondary porosity. It could also be found at a lower RT which is caused by intensive cementation.


1991 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 469-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. D. Heinrich

AbstractThe Ravenspurn South Gas Field is located in the Sole Pit Basin of the Southern North Sea in UKCS Block 42/30, extending into Blocks 42/29 and 43/26. The gas is trapped in sandstones of the Permian Lower Leman Sandstone Formation, which was deposited by aeolian and fluvial processes in a desert environment. Reservoir quality is poor, and variations are mostly facies-controlled. The best reservoir quality occurs in aeolian sands wth porosities of up to 23% and permeabilities up to 90 md. The trap is a NW-SE-striking faulted anticline: top seal is provided by the Silverpit Shales directly overlying the reservoir, and by Zechstein halites. Field development began early in 1988 and first gas was delivered in October 1989. Production is in tandem with the Cleeton Field, about 5 miles southwest of Ravenspurn South, as the Villages project. Initial reserves are 700 BCF and field life is expected to be 20 years.


2021 ◽  
Vol 873 (1) ◽  
pp. 012020
Author(s):  
T B Nainggolan ◽  
M P Adhar ◽  
I Setiadi

Abstract Barakan Sub-basin is assessed as potential basin for hydrocarbon reserves in the eastern region of Indonesia because it is adjacent to Masela block giant gas field. Reservoir rocks in this sub-basin are sandstones from Middle Jurassic (Lower Flamengo Formation) until Oligocene (Adi member Formation). Main sandstone reservoir rocks are knowingly studied to have good porosity in Upper Flamengo, Kopae, Ekmai and Adi member Formations. But, there is no significant study to determine sandstone reservoir distribution that have good porosity quality. Therefore, an integrated method of inversion and rock physics study are needed to determine sandstone reservoir quality. This study uses 2D marine seismic post-stack time migration and 2 wells namely Barakan-1 and Koba-1 wells. Sensitivity analysis with cross-plot of gamma ray log versus acoustic impedance values range of 20-60 API and 9000-42000 (ft/s)*(g/cc) shows a strong correlation of good porosity sandstone to low impedance in Ekmai Formation of both wells. Model based of post-stack inversion reveals sandstone distribution in Ekmai Formation of both wells. Time structure maps of top and bottom horizons in Ekmai Formation indicates Barakan-1 well within anticline height structure and Koba-1 well are deposited in a middle of sub-littoral environment.


1975 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 103
Author(s):  
S. B. Devine ◽  
H. W. Sears

The aim of the experiment was to test the method of prospecting for petroleum by soil geochemical analysis of hydrocarbons and, in particular, its possible application in the Cooper Basin. Some 379 samples were taken in traverses across the Della Gas Field and a nearby, undrilled anticlinal structure. The samples were taken from a depth of 5 m at a spacing of 5 per mile (approximately 1 every 300 m). Hydrocarbons were extracted with 2N HCI and analysed by gas chromatography. Some modifications to the published analytical techniques had to be made to overcome the prbblem of traces of organic compounds present in local waters and reagents.Arithmetic mean values analysed for the Della Gas Field were: acid soluble material, 8.62 per cent; ethane, 1.33 ppm; propane, 0.77 ppm; butane, 0.62 ppm; pentane, 0.84 ppm. In plots of, firstly, the sum of ethane, propane, butane and pentane and secondly that sum normalized to the amount of acid soluble material, anomalous areas containing only a few sample points occur above and near the Della Field, and the undrilled structure.There is only low statistical correlation between the amount of acid soluble material and the hydrocarbon content of the soils. The hydrocarbon content of the soils may possibly be associated with diagenetic gypsum and calcite and possibly smectite (?mixed layer clay) but the evidence is inconclusive. The soil hydrocarbon content shows some tendency to correlate with the finer grain sizes. The anomalies appear to bear no relation to the vegetation. A radiometric survey with a gamma ray spectrometer showed little variation of values and no relation to the geochemistry nor the outline of the Della Gas Field.The experiment has shown that significant variations in hydrocarbon content of the soils can be analysed in the Cooper Basin and apparent anomalous zones can be outlined. The anomalous zones may be related to the Della Gas Field.


Clay Minerals ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Ramm

AbstractClose relationships are demonstrated between reservoir quality, lithofacies, provenance and burial history in the Jurassic Brent and Viking Groups in the Norwegian North Sea. Porosity and permeability are strongly and systematically related to the initial texture and composition of the sandstones. Porosity variations are related to the amount of compaction, which is more severe in matrix-rich than in clean facies, and quartz cementation, which is most important in clean facies. Permeability variations are related to porosity and facies-controlled variations in grain size, and abundance and texture of intergranular fines. Illitization of early diagenetic kaolins require K, which is derived mainly from dissolution of K-feldspar. Sediments were sourced from K-feldspar- poor provenances during the maximum progradation of the Brent Group, and sandstones deposited at this time are less exposed to illitization and have better permeability at deep burial than reservoir sandstones that initially contained more K-feldspar.


2001 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-102
Author(s):  
F.J. Hollman

AbstractIn contrast to oil field development, gas field development requires tight integration of subsurface, surface and economic issues due to the difficulty of storing surplus produced gas and the large effect of the back-pressures in a surface network on the individual well performance. As a major gas supplier the Shell Group, and in particular NAM, has extensive experience in this field.The gas production from onshore fields in the North Friesland area is a recent NAM development. A 10 million cubic meter per day LTS gas treatment installation located near the village of Anjum came on stream in 1997. Production initially started from 3 wells in 2 fields to deliver gas to the Gasunie grid at Grijpskerk. The total area comprises 10 fields and 4 remaining prospects and is planned to be fully developed by the year 2001, using wet gas pipelines to route the production to either the Anjum LTS installation or the Grijpskerk SilicaGel installation.The Rotliegend reservoirs in this part of the Netherlands are very heterogeneous and require a more detailed subsurface simulation than feasible with the standard NAM tool for gas field development (GENREM). In addition, the area is close to the Waddenzee and based on extensive ecological research, NAM uses a stringent, self-imposed ecological constraint, whilst evaluating the development plans for this area. Detailed subsidence studies have been run using subsidence-modeling tools, which run under a software user-interface called FrontEnd, an in-house development by the Shell Group. Also running under this interface is an application for gas field development called Gas Field Planning Tool (GFPT). GFPT combines a detailed subsurface simulator with a surface simulator using a development planning module, which handles economic and operational aspects of the integrated model. Lastly, the interface gives access to a powerful command language and a mathematical toolbox, which can be used to define almost any missing functionality.Making use of the flexibility offered by the FrontEnd interface and with help from available expertise in RTS (Shell Rijswijk), an integrated GFPT model was built, which not only incorporates operational and economic constraints, but also does optimization and subsidence analysis. The model is used to evaluate all development options and scenarios for this area in a consistent manner. Therefore, all proposed development plans are optimized within all applied constraints whether they are related to surface, subsurface, economic, or environmental aspects.Production history and well performance are very close to those predicted by these detailed models, which will allow accurate prediction of future field performance and subsidence.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Wang ◽  
Yifan Dong ◽  
Shengfang Yang ◽  
Joel Rignol ◽  
Qiang Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Unlike many unconventional resources that demonstrate a high level of heterogeneity, conventional tight gas formations often perform consistently according to reservoir quality and the applied completion technology. Technical review over a long period may reveal the proper correlation between reservoir quality, completion technology, and well performance. For many parts of the world where conventional tight gas resources still dominate, the learnings from a review can be adapted to improve the performance of reservoirs with similar features. South Sulige Operating Company (SSOC), a joint venture between PetroChina and Total, has been operating in the Ordos basin for tight gas since 2011. The reservoir is known to have low porosity, low permeability, and low reservoir pressure, and requires multistage completion and fracturing to achieve economic production. Over the last 8 years, there has been a clear technical evolution in South Sulige field, as a better understanding of the reservoir, improvement of the completion deployment, optimized fracturing design, and upgraded flowback strategy have led to the continuous improvement of results in this field. Pad drilling of deviated boreholes, multistage completions with sliding sleeve systems, hybrid gel-fracturing, and immediate flowback practices, gradually proved to be the most effective way to deliver the reservoir's potential. Using the absolute open-flow (AOF) during testing phase for comparative assessment from South Sulige field, we can see that in 2012 this number was 126 thousand std m3/d in 2012, and by 2018 this number had increased to 304 thousand std m3/d, representing a 143% incremental increase. Thus, technical evolution has been proved to bring production improvement over time. Currently, South Sulige field not only outperforms offset blocks but also remains the top performer among the fields in the Ordos basin. The drilling and completion practices from SSOC may be well suited to similar reservoirs and fields in the future.


2020 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 217-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Offer

AbstractThe abandoned Juliet gas field is a small, highly compartmentalized, accumulation situated south and east of the Amethyst Gas Field. It was discovered in 2008 by well 47/14b-10 and flowed first gas on 5 January 2014. The field consists of at least two culminations within a very low-relief east–west-orientated fault-bounded anticline. The reservoir comprises aeolian sandstones of the Permian, Rotliegend Group, Leman Sandstone Formation. Reservoir quality varies from good to moderate, with a high production rate achieved from horizontal wells.Seismic time-to-depth conversion is affected by Quaternary seabed channels, chalk burial history and a rapid thickening in the Basalanhydrit Formation located over the east of the field, associated with the edge of the Zechstein Basin.Gas-in-place at pre-development was expected to be 105 bcf, with reserves of 67 bcf. The field was developed using two horizontal wells and a subsea tie-back to the Pickerill Field, 22 km to the east. Since development, the field appears to be more compartmentalized than initially expected.


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