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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Oil
and Natural
Gas
in the Deepwater Gulf of Mexico
By
Originally presented at the 1998 Hedberg (AAPG) Research Conference at Galveston, TX
Book/CD-ROM Title:
Edited by
oil
province where most free
(non-associated) natural
gas
accumulations contain a significant amount of bacterial
methane. The physical and chemical properties of crude
oil
, condensate, and natural
gas
strongly influence the inherent value of these
oil
and
gas
reserves, and also play a
significant role in determining the costs of developing commercial deposits and
successfully operating expensive production and transportation systems. Because key
engineering and economic parameters of crude
oil
and natural
gas
pools vary widely across
the continental slope of Louisiana and Texas, E&P staff must understand the nature and
origin of these variations in order to properly assess the risks and uncertainty of
conducting deepwater operations that are very sensitive to the intrinsic properties of HC
fluids. Integrating standard reservoir engineering data available in PVT reports with
conventional geochemical data yields useful insights into subsurface processes that
subsequently can be used to reduce these risks and uncertainties.
The gravity (Fig.1) and the
gas
-to-
oil
ratio (GOR; Fig.2)
of deepwater oils range widely. Other important properties of these crudes, such as their
organic acid and asphaltene contents, also exhibit considerable variability. A host of
geological processes - including the type of kerogen and the thermal maturity of the
organic matter in deeply-buried source rocks, and the amount and kind of secondary
transformation and mixing events occurring in petroleum reservoirs - control key
parameters of crude oils and gases. For example,
oil
pools residing in cool, shallow
(<9000 ft below mud line) reservoirs commonly are hybrid mixtures of residual
biodegraded petroleum and a later charge of much lighter, unaltered
oil
or wet
gas
.
Unfortunately, the geological complexity of vertical and lateral migration and mixing
processes makes it difficult to accurately predict crucial
oil
or
gas
properties. For
example, two-fold changes in GOR are known to occur between some vertically-stacked lobes
of
oil
sand within individual pay zones. Additional risks include the presence of very
sour (>3 wt% sulfur) conventional
oil
and non-biodegraded tarry petroleum that has been
encountered at a few widely-separated locations.
Distinct
oil
provinces are readily identified across the
deepwater Gulf of Mexico. Sweet
oil
that contains <1 wt% sulfur is found in the gassy
Viosca Knoll and East Breaks lease areas. The carbon isotopic composition of the methane
dissolved in or associated with the Viosca Knoll oils demonstrates that the natural
gas
there largely has a thermal origin. These sweet
oil
pools commonly are saturated under
reservoir conditions. Sour
oil
pools that are found in the western Mississippi Canyon,
Green Canyon, and Garden Banks lease areas, in contrast, typically are significantly
undersaturated under reservoir conditions (commonly by 5,000-10,000 psi). These
undersaturated sour oils furthermore generally contain a significant amount of dissolved
bacterial methane (typically 25-50% by volume). Thus, most sour oils in the deepwater Gulf
of Mexico apparently have inherently low "thermal"
gas
-to-
oil
ratios (GORs). The
GOR of many sour
oil
pools reflects the relative mix between highly-undersaturated crude
and a distinct charge of bacterial methane. Conversely, some natural
gas
pools that
consist largely of bacterial methane yield significant amounts of condensate that probably
represents dissolved crude
oil
.
Figure 1.
Oil
Quality in the Deepwater Gulf of Mexico.
Figure 2.
Natural
Gas
Content of Crude
Oil
in the Deepwater Gulf of Mexico.
