About This Item
- Full text of this item is not available.
- Abstract PDFAbstract PDF(no subscription required)
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Reservoir Modeling and Production Characteristics of the Cusiana Field,
Llanos Foothills, Eastern Colombia
By
1University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
2BP Exploration Colombia Ltd.
3BP Exploration Research, Sunbury, UK
The Cusiana Field (BP, Ecopetrol, Total, and Triton) is one of the few giant oil discoveries of the 1990s. The field is located on the eastern edge of the Eastern Cordillera of the Andean mountain chain and at the western limit of the Llanos Basin, eastern Colombia. The structural configuration of Cusiana is a large (25 x 5 kms) hanging-wall anticline on a leading thrust structure of the Eastern Cordillera. Drilling depths to the reservoirs range from 12,000 to over 15,000 feet. Appraisal, development, and implementation of production facilities have been executed at a rapid pace despite many operational and environmental constraints posed by the deep burial of the reservoirs in an active thrust belt and the relatively remote location of the field. Over the past 18 months, average daily production has been close to 180,00 bopd, and by mid-1997 new facilities and pipeline upgrades will allow peak production exceeding 300,000 bopd. It is expected that primary drilling will be concluded by yearend 1998 at close to 640-acre spacing.
Effective reservoir management in an environment
of high single well and high
field-wide production rates is now one of
the biggest challenges to the continued success
of the Cusiana Field. This presentation
examines the sedimentological and
stratigraphic fabrics of the Cusiana reservoirs
and compares the evolving geological
understanding of the reservoirs to dynamic
data and full field modeling results.
A focus on the key lessons learned during
the past three to fours years and the changing
nature of geological
uncertainties
during
appraisal and early production will be
a key component of the Cusiana story presented.
The Cusiana stratigraphy comprises three
reservoirs that range from late Cretaceous
(Santonian Campanian) to early Tertiary
(earliest Oligocene) in age. The Eocene
Mirador Formation is the principal reservoir
containing >60% of the
reserves
and
is currently providing nearly all of the Cusiana production. Stratigraphic evaluation
of the Mirador Formation has recognized
sandy incised valley fill deposits as
the key reservoir components. The interpretation
of incised valleys is based on an
extensive core data set and biostratigraphic
analyses. Valleys comprise 50% of the
Mirador stratigraphy and contribute the
bulk of a moderately high net-to-gross ratio
of 60%. Average porosity in the deeply
buried Mirador Formation is only 8% but
remains effective because of the nearly
pure-quartz nature of the sandstones. Reservoir
pressure data prior to and after the
onset of production have all indicated that
valley sandstones are well connected across
the Cusiana Field. However, dynamic data
have also indicated that the Mirador reservoir
comprises two major compartments,
and that single incised valleys behave as
strongly layered systems. Both of these features
of the reservoir owe their origin to
textural characteristics of the incised valley
sandstones that are stratigraphic in nature.
Reservoir layers for the static full field model are constrained by the sequence stratigraphic interpretation of each reservoir. In the Mirador reservoir, this deterministic approach allows the general connectivity of valley sandstones to be strongly controlled in the modeling process and also makes the most of the valuable vertical data provided by the wells. Stochastic techniques, allied to empirical field data and analog information, are used to model reservoir parameters such as sandstone body widths and orientations that are incompletely understood. Results from upscaled static descriptions in the dynamic simulator are providing valuable insights into the prediction of the sizes and orientation of sandstone bodies and are being used iteratively to better understand the reservoir geology.
End_of_Record - Last_Page 11---------------