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Abstract

P. Boult and J. Kaldi, eds., 2005, Evaluating fault and cap rock seals: AAPG Hedberg Series, no. 2, p. 109-123.

DOI:10.1306/1060759H23164

Copyright copy2005 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.

The Influence of Stress Regimes on Hydrocarbon Leakage

Hege M. Nordgaringrd Bolarings, Previous HitChristianNext Hit Previous HitHermanrudTop, Gunn M. G. Teige

Statoil ASA, Rotvoll, Trondheim, Norway

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Statoil for the permission to publish this chapter. We also thank P. A. Bjoslashrkum, R. Hillis, P. Boult, and D. Dewhurst for constructive comments to earlier versions of this manuscript. Elin Storsten is thanked for graphical support, and S. Clark is thanked for his improvements to the English text.

ABSTRACT

Hydrocarbon leakage through faults and fractures commonly limits in-place hydrocarbon reserves. Faulting and fracturing are controlled by effective stress changes, and such changes may therefore alter hydrocarbon column heights. The predictive power of stress history analyses in seal evaluation depends on how accurately the stress history and relationships between effective stress changes and hydrocarbon leakage can be determined.

Stress history and hydrocarbon occurrence were examined in four different overpressured provinces of offshore Norway in the search for such relationships. These provinces have experienced different geological histories and variable amounts of hydrocarbon leakage. Because all these areas received fairly recent hydrocarbon charge, the work focused on the identification of recent geological events that may subsequently have influenced recent stress history, including the present-day stresses. Areas of recent structuring were found to be characterized by more extensive hydrocarbon leakage than areas with less such structuring. This increased frequency of hydrocarbon leakage was interpreted to be the result of shear failure at the trap crests, induced by the combined effects of elevated pore pressures, stress anisotropy, and recent stress changes.

These results suggest that identification of recent stress changes based on the geological history of the study area could aid the prediction of hydrocarbon occurrence. It is inferred that stress history analyses can also reduce the uncertainty involved in seal analyses elsewhere.

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