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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 47, No. 5, January 2005. Pages 21-21.

Abstract: Deepwater Reservoir Learnings from the Zafiro Field, Equatorial Guinea

By

John Ardill1, Rick Jensen1, Michael Whitsett1, Bret Dixon1, Stan Evans1, Tim Garfield2, Rick Beaubouef2, and Anthony Sprague1
1 ExxonMobil Production Company, Houston, Texas, USA
2 ExxonMobil Exploration Company, Houston, Texas, USA

Deepwater reservoirs continue to provide many new technical challenges for hydrocarbon development and production, where complex environments of deposition and reservoir architectures must be understood to ensure optimal resource development and hydrocarbon recovery.

Recent technology advances including higher resolution 4D seismic data coupled with the application of sequence stratigraphic concepts in deepwater reservoir settings has resulted in breakthrough improvement in the understanding of deepwater reservoirs. In the Zafiro Field, such technology-driven learnings have provided a greatly improved understanding of deepwater slope channel systems that can be applied as a production analogue.

The Zafiro Field, Equatorial Guinea, was discovered in 1995 and is composed of stacked Pliocene deepwater slope channel deposits that record large-scale clastic input into the Gulf of Guinea following partial collapse of the paleo-Niger delta. High-resolution 3D and 4D seismic datasets are calibrated by over 70 well penetrations, with >3500 ft of conventional core and 8 years of production data. In this paper we explore the linkage between physical stratigraphy, environments of deposition, reservoir architecture and resulting production performance found in the deepwater slope channel systems of the Zafiro Field. The Pliocene canyon fill is organized into three compensationally stacked fining-upward successions (composite sequences) that each of which show a succession from traction-dominated to suspension-dominated deposits. Each fining-upward succession contains a predictable stacking pattern from confined, sinuous, amalgamated to semi-amalgamated channel systems to weakly confined, highly sinuous, non-amalgamated and leveed channel systems.

A detailed stratigraphic understanding of such slope channel systems is critical to successfully explore, develop and produce these resources.

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