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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
West Texas Geological Society
Abstract
Abstract: How an Independant Operator Can Integrate Engineering, Geophysics, and Geology in a
Reservoir
Study
: Grayburg/San Andres of Foster and South Cowden Fields, Ector County, Texas
Abstract
A cooperative two phase
study
of the Grayburg/San Andres
reservoir
is being conducted in association with the United States Department of Energy’s (DOE) Class II (Shallow Shelf Carbonate Reservoirs) Oil Program. The project is cost shared by Laguna Petroleum Corporation (operator) and the DOE. This
study
’s purpose is to preserve access to existing well bores by identifying additional reserves.
The potential for enhanced oil recovery in this 66 year-old Foster and South Cowden fields is being evaluated by a technical team integrating subsurface geology, 3-D seismic data, and
reservoir
engineering, and by using state-of-the-art software on both a PC and a high-performance computer workstation. A
reservoir
model was developed with subsurface control from wire line logs, core, and seismic attribute maps to extract
reservoir
properties in the inter-well bore space. Production allocation, completion history, and
reservoir
simulation
were integrated with the
reservoir
model.
The results of the integrated effort are identification of infill drilling and workover locations, and the design of a more effective waterflood. Results of the
reservoir
simulation
indicate: 1) the upper Grayburg flood has been ineffectual, 2) significant potential remains
study
-wide in the lower Grayburg, and in limited areas in the upper Grayburg and San Andres; and 3) the highly porous (12-14%) San Andres is a poor waterflood candidate because of low permeabilities, although it does contain significant additional primary reserves.
Workovers and new wells drilled based on the
reservoir
simulation
model have, to date, led to the discovery of significant additional reserves in unswept zones. The
simulation
model also indicates that without this
study
, all wells in the
study
area would have been abandoned in ten (10) years. The
study
also demonstrates that this type of
study
, previously the domain of major oil companies, can be successfully and cost effectively undertaken by small independent operators.
Acknowledgments and Associated Footnotes
We would like to acknowledge James J. Reeves and Hoxie W. Smith for conceiving and managing the DOE
study
and for being responsible for the geophysical
study
. Since April 1996, William C. Robinson has been responsible for reprocessing and reinterpreting the seismic data and for the geophysical
study
. Also since that date, Robert C. Trentham has been responsible for project management.
1 Robert C. Trentham: Muskoka Consultants, Midland, Texas
2 William C. Robinson: Seismic Decisions, Midland, Texas
3 Richard E. Weinbrandt: Consultant, Midland, Texas
© 2024 West Texas Geological Society