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Advanced Reservoir
Characterization
Integrated
characterization of heterogeneous reservoirs is proving to be a fertile
source of new reserves in mature oil and gas provinces around the world.
Field re-exploration strategies such as resource-targeted infill drilling
and field extension wells, together with strategic recompletions and
waterflood optimization strategies, the designs and locations of which
are based on sophisticated reservoir characterization studies, are now
the preferred approach to the revitalization of mature fields. These
approaches have captured almost two thirds of the 40 billion barrels
of oil that have been added to the US reserve base over the past 20
years.

Projects completed domestically and internationally
by ARC Group personnel have demonstrated that production optimization
approaches are best deployed within the context of a well-characterized
reservoir framework. Integration of geological, seismic, petrophysical,
and production engineering data into a quantified description of reservoir
architecture and rock property structure, in which the residency of
the remaining hydrocarbons has been identified and quantified, facilitates
high-confidence, extended development of reservoirs. An added benefit
being realized from reservoir characterization studies is that the volume
of reserves added per new well drilled in Texas has increased by 40
percent in the first half of this decade – a direct result of the deployment
of advanced characterization technologies. This success has been achieved
through the use of 3-D seismic data volumes for better characterization
of the structural framework of mature fields and for targeting of depositional
axes for strategic infill drilling. In the international arena, our
projects have accomplished daily production increases of 5 to as much
as 10 fold daily production in fields that have historically been classified
as being marginal or depleted.
Reservoir compartmentalization is a function
of facies architecture. Facies are the fundamental building blocks of
reservoirs and, as such, either foster or hinder reservoir drainage,
impart heterogeneity to the reservoir, and provide the flow units through
which the reservoir drains. In ARC Group’s experience, most reservoirs
are inefficiently drained because the complexity of facies architecture
is invariably under-appreciated in field development and in the deployment
of conventional recovery strategies. Reservoirs in which the greatest
reserve growth will be attained are those with a high degree of internal
heterogeneity, substantial volumes of untapped or bypassed hydrocarbons,
and importantly, those with the most accurate reservoir descriptions.
ARC Group’s approach to the advanced characterization of reservoirs
is to rigorously establish the stratigraphic and structural framework
of the reservoir system through the use of well log correlations and
seismic characterization. All engineering information is then processed
within, and integrated into, this high-resolution architectural framework.
ARC Group’s staff have conducted integrated
reservoir characterization studies on a wide variety of reservoir types
ranging from fluvial to submarine fan reservoir systems. Deltaic reservoirs
provide an excellent example of the impact of reservoir architecture
on hydrocarbon recovery. These contrasting reservoir types display a
wide variety in internal architectures and consequently, recovery efficiencies.
In Texas, conventional primary and secondary recoveries in deltaic reservoirs
vary greatly from 80 percent to less than 20 percent of the oil in place.
This decline in recovery efficiency coincides with increasingly complex
internal architectures. The lowest recoveries of all deltaic reservoir
types are those of the tide-modified deltaic reservoirs such as those
of the Eocene Misoa C Sands of Lake Maracaibo in Venezuela, where average
recoveries are less than 20 percent. Our studies in Lake Maracaibo have
shown that the two principal reservoir facies of tide-modified deltaic
reservoirs, estuarine distributary channels and tidal sand ridges, have
sand-body dimensions smaller than existing well spacing in many fields
in the Maracaibo Basin resulting in inefficient waterfloods and low
primary recovery.
Despite prolific production from these
reservoirs, vast volumes of oil still remain to be recovered. Facies
changes, channel-on-channel contacts, and permeability anisotropy all
contribute to poor areal and vertical sweep efficiencies in fluvial-dominated
and wave-modified deltaic reservoirs. The residency of the remaining
mobile oil, defined through integrated reservoir characterization, is
in uncontacted compartments and poorly swept or bypassed facies. These
depositionally complex reservoirs respond readily to advanced recovery
strategies such as targeted infill drilling, waterflood optimization,
and strategic recompletions.
Opportunity:
Realizing Reserve Growth in Complex Reservoirs
ARC’s
approach to integrated characterization of heterogeneous reservoirs
follows a three step process that (i) establishes the stratigraphic
and structural framework of the component reservoirs of the field, (ii)
establishes fluid character, location and flow characteristics, and
(iii) identifies the residency, and quantifies the magnitude, of the
remaining oil or gas. Steps one and two are iterative, and step three
becomes the basis for designing a portfolio of advanced recovery opportunities
in the field being characterized. This three-step path can be referred
to as the static model. ARC Group also offers reservoir simulation
based on the results of the static model to provide a dynamic-model
analysis of production response to proposed recovery strategies.

ARC Group’s advanced reservoir characterization
teams typically include a reservoir geologist that functions as the
team leader, a seismic interpreter, a well log analyst and well-completions
specialist, a production engineer, and a database manager. The production
optimization teams can be expanded, as appropriate, to include reservoir
visualization specialists, and reservoir simulation engineers. Our teams
have worked on diverse reservoir characterization projects with great
success around the world. Typical projects include locating 72 horizontal
wells in the Orinoco heavy oil belt of Venezuela, production optimization
studies of light oil reservoirs in Lake Maracaibo, targeted infill drilling
for gas reserve growth in the Cooper Basin of Australia and the Burgos
Basin of Mexico, and numerous studies of conventional oil and gas reserve
growth potential in the Gulf Coast and Permian Basins of Texas. The
product of ARC’s reservoir characterization projects are multi-year
extended development plans based on a portfolio of field redevelopment
opportunities that have maps of uncontacted and bypassed oil and gas
resources as their foundation.
ARC Group’s extensive experience in integrated
reservoir characterization shows that this advanced approach to reservoir
management is proving to be a low cost, low risk approach to fostering
reserve growth in mature, and often ‘marginal’, fields. The volumes
of incremental oil (and increasingly, natural gas) that will ultimately
be recovered are functions of the style of heterogeneity of the reservoir
system, the magnitude of the unrecovered mobile oil (and natural gas)
and the effectiveness of the deployment of advanced characterization
and recovery technologies. Recent experience in the US where two-thirds
of all reserves added came from existing fields, and in Texas, where
we have seen a 40 percent increase in the reserves added on a per well
basis confirms that integrated reservoir characterization is a proven
technology for breathing new life into old fields.
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