Analysis of time-lapse seismic and production data for reservoir model classification and assessment
ARTIGO
Inglês
Agradecimentos: We thank our colleagues at the UWA Centre for Energy Geoscience for discussions and insights that contributed toward the findings in this article. We acknowledge Dr Guilherme Avansi for his comments and assistance with the UNISIM-I reservoir model and fluid-flow data. We acknowledge...
Agradecimentos: We thank our colleagues at the UWA Centre for Energy Geoscience for discussions and insights that contributed toward the findings in this article. We acknowledge Dr Guilherme Avansi for his comments and assistance with the UNISIM-I reservoir model and fluid-flow data. We acknowledge Capes Foundation, the ASEG Research Foundation and the UWA:RM Consortium Sponsors for partial financial support of this research
The heterogeneous distribution of reservoir properties is one of the most important uncertainties in static and dynamic reservoir modelling. Petrophysical properties are usually interpolated within reservoir models from sparse well-log data, which can lead to highly uncertain estimates at inter-well...
The heterogeneous distribution of reservoir properties is one of the most important uncertainties in static and dynamic reservoir modelling. Petrophysical properties are usually interpolated within reservoir models from sparse well-log data, which can lead to highly uncertain estimates at inter-well locations that directly affect the reliability of fluid-flow model predictions of reservoir behaviour. To address this issue, one approach is to build an ensemble of equiprobable models that combine different geostatistical realisations of reservoir properties that ideally span the range of potential outcomes. While this process captures the impact of reservoir property distributions on the model response, a major challenge is classifying the subset of models in the ensemble best representing reservoir fluid-flow behaviour. Time-lapse seismic attributes are useful for reducing such uncertainties, since they image fluid-movement trends that provide insights regarding fault locations and distribution of reservoir properties, such as permeability and porosity. Accordingly, we introduce a methodology combining 4D seismic amplitude attributes and reservoir production data to classify fluid-flow models. This classification is based on applying thresholds for independent seismic and production objective functions. We develop and apply a new formulation of local dissimilarity maps to quantify differences between observed and modelled 4D seismic amplitudes. We test our methodology on the benchmark case UNISIM-I developed from observations from the Namorado Field, Campos Basin, Brazil. By comparing injection and production rates in relation to 4D seismic amplitude trends within each region, we identify nine models out of an ensemble of 100 that are judged optimal via the required seismic and production objective function thresholds. Thus, we obtain an improved quantitative evaluation of the impact of reservoir production on the 4D seismic signal. Combining seismic and production data offers interpretation scenarios that automatically identify realistic fluid-flow models that would be helpful for updating reservoir properties
COORDENAÇÃO DE APERFEIÇOAMENTO DE PESSOAL DE NÍVEL SUPERIOR - CAPES
Aberto
Analysis of time-lapse seismic and production data for reservoir model classification and assessment
Analysis of time-lapse seismic and production data for reservoir model classification and assessment
Fontes
Journal of geophysics and engineering Vol. 15, no. 4 (Aug., 2018), p. 1561-1587 |