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AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
Sui Main Limestone: Regional geology and the analysis of original pressures of a closed-system reservoir in central Pakistan
Nusrat K. Siddiqui
Pakistan Petroleum Limited, 3rd Floor P. I. D. C. House, Dr. Ziauddin Ahmed Road, Karachi 75530, Pakistan; email: [email protected]
AUTHORS
Nusrat Kamal Siddiqui joined Pakistan Petroleum Limited in February 1981 and is presently designated as senior manager of exploration. He obtained his B.Sc. (hons.) and M.Sc. degrees in 1969 from the Geology Department, Punjab University, Lahore, Pakistan, specializing in petroleum and structural geology. In 1979–1980, he completed a postgraduate diploma course related to photogeology and remote sensing, with emphasis on hydrogeology from International Training Center, Netherlands. Nusrat has over 33 years of diversified experience in engineering geology for working on earth fill dams (1970–1975), hydrogeology with the Ministry of Agriculture, Government of Libya (1975–1979), and hydrocarbon exploration (1980 to present). His interests involve log evaluation, field studies/geological modeling of reservoirs, field geology, remote-sensing applications, and prospect generation. He has published papers on petroleum exploration, field development, and remote-sensing applications to petroleum geology and flood control. He is an active member of AAPG, Pakistan Institute of Petroleum, and a founding member of the Pakistan Association of Petroleum Geoscientists (PAPG, an affiliate of AAPG). He was the chairman of the Technical Program Committee for the PAPG-Society of Petroleum Engineers Annual Technical Conference (ATC) and Oil Show 2002 and the chairman and organizer of ATC and Oil Show 2003, October 3–5, 2003, both held in Islamabad, Pakistan.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The management of Pakistan Petroleum Limited allowed the release of the data and permitted me to publish this paper. M. R. Khan assisted me in the generation of the three-dimensional model for the Sui Main/Dunghan carbonate ramp some 18 years back when I was a novice in the use of computers. M. Sajid Abid was able to convince the then management of Pakistan Petroleum Limited to core the entire Sui Main reservoir in the 36th well of the Sui field, which was in an advanced stage of production. I acknowledge his initiative, which has enabled me to designate a subsurface type section for this prolific gas reservoir, and hence, it is now possible to formalize the name Sui Main Limestone as a formation. Omair Fayyaz, Tahir Mahmood Syed and Irfan Latif Khan helped in the preparation of computer-generated figures and, in the process, taught me the use of several graphic software programs. The assistance and perseverance of AAPG's R. Erickson during the final preparation/formatting of the paper was of great help and is hereby acknowledged. Aslam Ansari retrieved the draft of final text from my corrupted floppy. All of the above are acknowledged for their share of work and readily available help.
Oil and Gas Development Company Limited, Hunt, Mari Gas Company Limited, Tullow Pakistan (Developments), Union Texas (now BP), OMV Pakistan, and Eni Pakistan kindly allowed the use of the data related to their exploratory wells.
ABSTRACT
The lower Eocene (Ypresian) Sui Main Limestone (Sui Main) is the most prolific gas reservoir in Pakistan south of latitude 29N. It does not outcrop anywhere in Pakistan. In the Kirthar Range, southern Pakistan, and Punjab platform, the Sui Main's chronostratigraphic equivalent is the Laki Formation, which is a nonreservoir facies. To date, only gas has been encountered in Sui Main, which has recoverable reserves of more than 20 tcf in the 14 discovered fields.
The paper describes the subsurface geological setting of Sui Main in a regional context. Facies distribution, based on the study of cores and electric logs, is discussed to establish the depositional environments. On the basis of surface geology and evidence from wells, the limits of Sui Main, as a reservoir, have been delineated. It is a regional lenticular development of porous limestone that is probably isolated on all sides by shales or poor reservoir facies and structural barriers. A subsurface type section of the Sui Main Limestone is designated.
To support this geological assumption, a comparative study of original reservoir pressures from different fields and formations has been conducted. It indicates that the Sui Main is an isolated reservoir and not in communication with the surface. On this basis, I conclude that the Sui Main is a closed-system reservoir, having a huge common aquifer system with all the known and unknown hydrocarbon fields perched at different hydrostatic levels. Being a closed-system reservoir, the gas pools are expected to experience weak aquifer support during the producing life of the fields. This phenomenon has so far been observed in fields that are in a mature stage of production like Sui field.
The area of the common aquifer, the reservoir-quality rock volume, and the cumulative voidage (pore space) that could be present in Sui Main and could contain hydrocarbons and water have also been computed and delineated.
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