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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Compartmentalization and Time-Lapse Geochemical
Reservoir Surveillance of the Horn Mountain Oil
Field, Deep-Water Gulf of Mexico
By
Oil is produced at the Horn Mountain field (Gulf of Mexico, Mississippi Canyon blocks 126 and 127) from two middle Miocene reservoirs (M and J Sands). Reservoir facies are characterized as sand-filled channels and associated overbank deposits and are positioned in combination structural-stratigraphic traps. Prior to initial production, several barriers and baffles were identified in both reservoirs by integrating geological, geophysical, petrophysical, pressure, PVT and geochemical data and petroleum- filling history. A Compartmentalization Risk Matrix was developed to facilitate and visualize the integrated evaluation of compartmentalization.
During production, reservoir surveillance is a vital task aimed at
understanding how petroleum is produced from a reservoir. In
addition to traditional surveillance technologies, we applied
time-lapse geochemistry (TLG) to visualize the petroleum sweep
by monitoring changes in
fluid
composition and fingerprints
across reservoirs. For this technology, appraisal and preproduction
fluid
samples are first analyzed to map
fluid
types across a
static reservoir. Then, a surveillance program in which
fluid
samples
are taken from producing wells at regular time intervals is
designed and executed. The production samples are geochemically
“fingerprinted” and compared with preproduction fluids
from the same well and surrounding wells. At Horn Mountain,
interpretation of geochemical data allowed us to infer oil movement
across the M Sand and helped to reevaluate reservoir
models and reduce risks in managing reservoir performance. In
the J Sand, an untapped compartment was identified, and an
additional producer was justified for future
drilling
. TLG results
are consistent with and complementary to other surveillance
data available to date. Our study demonstrates that TLG is a safe
and cost-effective technology that reduces uncertainties associated
with other reservoir surveillance methods and appears to be a
valuable technique for reservoir management.
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