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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract

 


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 26, No. 9, May 1984. Pages 2-2.

Abstract: Application of Integrated Reservoir Analysis to Design of a Waterflood Project in Miocene LL3 Field, Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela

By

Arnold H. Bouma

Integrated Reservoir Analysis is a procedure in which interpreted stratigraphic and facies frameworks are combined with structural maps. The result is a three-dimensional interpretation of the thickness, shape, lateral external and internal distribution of porosity and permeability in individual reservoir units. The principal steps of the procedure are: (1) planning, (2) data gathering, (3) determination of the stratigraphic framework, (4) determination of the facies framework, (5) structural analysis, (6) data manipulation, and (7) mapping.

The stratigraphic framework is developed by combining pattern correlation techniques with knowledge about the influence of specific facies on stratigraphic patterns. A network of cross sections are designed utilizing correlation "grain" and/or depositional strike. Correlations on these sections develop a framework of horizons which ideally will isolate, in a stratigraphic envelope, individual reservoir units resulting from a unique depositional episode.

The facies framework results from environmental facies analysis and the use of electric log facies. The proper identification of reservoir facies is required for the mapping of reservoir geometry and the determination of the internal distribution of porosity and permeability. Facies-biased contouring techniques and the lateral extension of facies relationships along cross sections were used in the planning and design of a waterflood project by Lagoven, S.A., in fluvial-deltaic clastics of the Miocene La Rose Formation in the LL3 field, Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela. Important clastic reservoir facies recognized in cores were (1) stream-mouth-bar, (2) distributary-channel-fill, and (3) fluvial-point-bar deposits. These environmental facies often occurred in various combinations in deltaic lobes and displayed the electric log shape of the deltaic couplet. Characteristic electric log shapes of specific reservoir facies were an essential part of the study.

The pilot waterflood was designed to inject into stream-mouth-bar facies and withdraw from centrally located distributary-channel-fill deposits with their better porosity and permeability. Critical to the design and subsequent performance of the waterflood project were (1 )the distribution of porosity within the various reservoir facies, and (2) the occurrence, attitude, and lateral distribution of clay laminations in lower stream-mouth-bar facies which was particularly critical to waterflood treatment. The amount of masking was determined by calculations from facies geometry. After one year's operations, radioactive tracers indicate that the flood is operating as designed - only at a reduced rate - probably as a result of the clay laminations.

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