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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: The Future of 4-D Reservoir Monitoring: Advances in
Technology for Large Oil and Gas Fields
By
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
Getting more oil out of old fields is the payout
of 4-D seismic reservoir monitoring. 4-
D combines the analysis of seismic
acoustic changes occurring over
time
with
other borehole and surface measurements.
4-D analysis has the ability to track
time
-dependent
changes such as pressure
changes and production histories. The
result is a coupled model of oil and gas
drainage and a more accurate simulation of
future production.
Evaluating the Subsurface over
Time
Using
Time
-Lapse Seismic
The tools and techniques required to interpret
past acoustic changes that have
occurred in oil and gas fields perform two
essential tasks: 1) normalization of the seismic
images between snapshots taken at different
times, using different equipment and
different geometries of acquisition and then
processed differently at the computer center,
and 2) interpretation of the similarities
and differences in the acoustic signature of
oil, gas, and water in the reservoir as they
change over
time
.
More than twenty oil and gas fields from (fig. 1, 2) the Gulf of Mexico and the North Sea are the proving ground for new 4-D technology developments. These fields provide contrasts in acoustic response and seismic signal-to-noise, often between reservoirs within the same field, that point to important lessons for the planning of future 4-D reservoir monitoring projects. Conclusions to date are 1) pressure history often affects seismic responses as significantly as oil/gas/water mix changes and 2) volumetric "region-growing" is a method to scan multiple 3-D data sets for changes at a fast enough computational rate to satisfy engineers in charge of production. Region-growing is a signal analysis technique developed for the detection of differences in MRIs, CAT and PET scans, and in anti-submarine warfare. Region-growing is also very useful for the isolation of 4-D seismic differences that are meaningful in reservoirs.
Better understanding of the
pattern of drainage to the surface
will allow for better planning
and execution of recovery
programs in the future. Four-D
provides the "killer app" for
impedance inversions, which
are the most likely seismic
attributes that can detect
change over
time
in reservoirs.
As we get better at 4-D monitoring,
more original oil-in-place will be extracted from producing
reservoirs.
The 4-D Seismic Reservoir Simulation Loop
Seismic inversions will be routinely used
on
time
-lapse seismic data sets to produce
impedance differences. These become
geostatistical reservoir characterizations
and reservoir simulator data to quantify
the variations in fluid saturations with
time
. New 3-D finite element models will
be developed to compute synthetic seismic
responses to differences detected by
the real observations. Seismic-to-petrophysical
iterations are added to the simulation
loop. The continual updating of the
loop forms a planning tool for predicting
new drilling targets for recovery of
bypassed oil and gas. Repeated looping of
information leads to planning the
time
,
spacing, types of receivers and borehole
arrays that will be needed to successfully
monitor the oil and gas fields of the
future.
Figure 1. Production from a Gulf of Mexico well drilled after 4-D evaluation.
Figure 2. The field has added reserves after drilling wells based on 4-D.
End_of_Record - Last_Page 8---------------
Cover photo. 3-D graphic illustration courtesy Roger Anderson, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, New York.