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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Using Seismic Attributes to Predict
Reservoir Properties-Potential Risks
By
Kalkulations, Inc.
Advances in software for generating seismic attributes and the growing emphasis on production geophysics have led to the widespread use of seismic attributes as predictors of reservoir properties. Often, we can show-using seismic modeling or from rock physics-a physically justifiable relationship between a seismic attribute and the reservoir property of interest. When this is true, we can reduce greatly the uncertainty of interwell predictions of reservoir properties.
The first critically important step in the use of seismic
attributes is to accurately
tie
the
well
and seismic data-both
vertically and aerially. Successful application then relies on identifying
a seismic attribute that is significantly correlated with the
reservoir property being modeled. If found, the dense seismic
data can be used to guide the interpolation between sparse
well
data using geostatistical, regression, or neural network techniques.
The purpose of this process is to estimate volumes of
petroleum in place or to make reservoir management decisions
such as the location and number of wells, depletion strategy, or
gas and water injection operations.
All of the prediction methods-regression, geostatistics,
and neural networks-require the interpreter to make inferences
from a small number of wells to a larger population assumed to
be represented by that sample. Inference should not be based
solely on an empirical relationship between a seismic attribute
and reservoir property derived from the small sample. This study
quantifies the probability of observing spuriously high correlations
between the
well
and seismic data; that is, the probability
of observing a significant sample correlation when the seismic
attributes are actually uncorrelated with the reservoir property.
If the correlation is indeed spurious and the seismic attribute is
used as a predictor, not only will the estimated reservoir property
be biased, but its error variance will be underestimated. This can
lead to highly confident, but very inaccurate, predictions and,
ultimately, to poor reservoir management decisions.
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