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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
2003. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.
An integrated, quantitative approach to assessing
fault
-
seal
risk




Richard M. Jones,1 Richard R. Hillis2
1Woodside Energy, 1 Adelaide Terrace, Perth, Western Australia, 6000, Australia; email: richard.joneswoodside.com.au
2National Centre for Petroleum Geology and Geophysics, Australian Petroleum Cooperative Research Centre, University of Adelaide, South Australia 5005, Australia; email: rhillisncpgg.adelaide.edu.au
AUTHORS
Richard joined Woodside in September 2000 and is currently working in the Trap and Pressure Team, New Ventures. He graduated with a joint B.Sc. degree (with honors) in geology and economics from Keele University (1992) and a Ph.D. from Keele University (1996). He has worked extensively in the area of fault
and top
seal
evaluation and has been involved with seals research programs in Europe, the United States, and Australia. Current interests include structural modeling,
seal
evaluation, wellbore stability, and Liverpool FC. Richard is a member of AAPG, PESA, and PESGB.
Richard holds the State of South Australia Chair in Petroleum Reservoir Properties/Petrophysics at the National Centre for Petroleum Geology and Geophysics (NCPGG), Adelaide University. He graduated with a B.Sc. degree (with honors) from Imperial College (London, 1985), and a Ph.D. from the University of Edinburgh (1989). After seven years at Adelaide University's Department of Geology and Geophysics, Richard joined the NCPGG in 1999. His main research interests are in petroleum geomechanics and sedimentary basin tectonics. He has published approximately 50 papers and has consulted to many Australian and international oil companies in these topics. Richard is a member of AAPG, American Geophysical Union, Australian Society of Exploration Geophysicists, European Association of Geoscientists and Engineers, Geological Society of America, Geological Society (London), Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia, Society of Exploration Geophysicists, and Society of Petroleum Engineers.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors are extremely grateful to colleagues at the National Centre for Petroleum Geology and Geophysics, Adelaide, Woodside Energy, and Shell for manuscript discussions. Russell Davies, Rob Knipe, Gavin Lewis, Frank Krieger, and James MacKay are thanked for providing constructive and focused reviews that improved earlier versions of the manuscript. The fault
-
seal
risk web as presented herein has evolved from a risk-web concept presented by former colleagues of the first author at Rock Deformation Research, University of Leeds. The integrated
fault
-
seal
risking procedure detailed in this paper forms part of the propriety APCRC Seals Consortium. The consortium members Woodside Energy, BHP Billiton, JNOC, Origin Energy, ChevronTexaco, Exxon-Mobil, Globex Energy, Santos, Anadarko Petroleum Corporation, and OMV are thanked for their permission to publish.
ABSTRACT
Fault
sealing is one of the key factors controlling hydrocarbon accumulations and trap volumetrics and can be a significant influence on reservoir performance
during
production
.
Fault
seal
is, therefore, a major exploration and
production
uncertainty. We introduce a systematic framework in which the geologic risk of faults trapping hydrocarbons may be assessed.
A fault
may
seal
if deformation processes have created a membrane
seal
, or if it juxtaposes sealing rocks against reservoir rocks, and the
fault
has not been reactivated subsequent to hydrocarbons charging the trap. It follows from this statement that the integrated probability of
fault
seal
can be expressed as {1 − [(1 − a)(1 − b)]}
(1 − c), where a, b, and c are the probabilities of deformation process sealing, juxtaposition sealing, and of the
fault
being reactivated subsequent to charge, respectively. This relationship provides an assessment of
fault
-
seal
risk that integrates results from the critical parameters of
fault
-
seal
analysis that can be incorporated into standard exploration procedures for estimating the probability for geologic success. The integrated probability of
fault
seal
for each prospect can be visualized using the
fault
-
seal
risk web, which allows rapid comparison of success and failure cases through construction of prospect risk web profiles.
The impact of uncertainty (U) and the value of information (VOI) for each aspect of fault
sealing on the overall
fault
-
seal
risk may be determined via the construction of data webs and the relation U = [1 − {(
nw) / n}]
100, where nw is the value given to each data web parameter and n is the number of data web components. For example, the data web components required to assess
fault
reactivation risk are the orientation and magnitude of the in-situ principal stresses, pore pressure,
fault
architecture, and the geomechanical properties of the
fault
.
Risking of the Apollo prospect, Dampier subbasin, North West shelf, Australia is presented as a worked example. Fault
-
seal
risking for the Apollo prospect has been conducted on 10- and 100-ft oil columns to allow integration with volumetric probabilistic statements. The critical parameter for
fault
-
seal
risking at the Apollo prospect is the ability of disaggregation zone faults (low shale gouge ratio
fault
gouge) to support increasingly large hydrocarbon columns. Evaluation of the individual components for Apollo
fault
sealing indicates a = 0.3 (10-ft column) and a = 0.1 (100-ft column), b = 0.2, and c = 0.1. The overall probability of the Apollo trap-bounding
fault
sealing a 10-ft oil column is 0.4 or 40% (
seal
condition moderately unlikely). The likelihood that the
fault
seals oil columns greater than 100 ft is 0.3 (
seal
condition unlikely). Data web error margins for the Apollo prospect are 20% (juxtaposition uncertainty), 26% (
fault
-rock process uncertainty), and 27% (
fault
reactivation uncertainty). Recalculating each parameter by its uncertainty, for a 10-ft oil column, the upper value of integrated
fault
-
seal
risk is 0.5 (
seal
condition intermediate), and the lower value is 0.3 (
seal
condition unlikely). The upper value of integrated
fault
-
seal
risk for a 100-ft oil column is 0.3 (
seal
condition unlikely), and the lower value is 0.2 (
seal
condition very unlikely). The variation in the Apollo final risk calculation reflects the lack of prospect-specific data. The greatest VOI benefit for Apollo
fault
-
seal
prospectivity is sedimentary architecture data.
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