Field Development Optimization and Production Enhancement
Using Worldwide Geological Analogs
By Shaoqing Sun, Jack Allan, Shengyu Wu, José I. Guzmán
Geological reservoir analogs have been successfully incorporated
during field appraisal to optimize development plans and to select the best strategy for maximizing recovery
efficiency. Analogs may also be used in evaluating equity investments and for improvement of producing assets by
benchmarking.
We have employed field analogs to determine that the most important controls on
the recovery factor of carbonate reservoirs are fluid type and reservoir characteristics. Reservoir performance
and recovery efficiency differ fundamentally among gas/condensate, organic buildup, conventional carbonate,
fractured/karstic carbonate, and heavy/viscous oil reservoirs. In fractured carbonate reservoirs, the fluid
and rock properties and the reservoir management strategy impact the recovery factor for different fractured
reservoir types. Two examples demonstrate the successful application of geologic analogs in field development.
One company used analogs of high porosity and low-permeability chalky limestone reservoirs from the Middle East,
North Sea, USA and Canada to evaluate the commercial viability of a 20 BBO field in Iran where three non-economic
appraisal wells had been drilled, and to identify the optimal field development options. Another company
incorporated the analysis of 56 analog fields and their key parameters in developing five new offshore
deep-water gas/condensate discoveries in Africa. Hypothetical cases include the use of analogs in
benchmarking for fractured reservoirs, for management of a water-flooded sandstone oil reservoir with
water-cut in excess of 80%, and to evaluate the potential of horizontal drilling to a water-drive reservoir
with a thin oil rim.
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