Synergizing Crosswell Seismic and Electromagnetic Techniques for Enhancing Reservoir Characterization
Type
ArticleKAUST Department
Computational Transport Phenomena LabEarth Fluid Modeling and Prediction Group
Earth Science and Engineering Program
Physical Science and Engineering (PSE) Division
Date
2016-06-15Online Publication Date
2016-06-15Print Publication Date
2016-06-01Permanent link to this record
http://hdl.handle.net/10754/592889
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Increasing complexity of hydrocarbon projects and the request for higher recovery rates have driven the oil-and-gas industry to look for a more-detailed understanding of the subsurface formation to optimize recovery of oil and profitability. Despite the significant successes of geophysical techniques in determining changes within the reservoir, the benefits from individually mapping the information are limited. Although seismic techniques have been the main approach for imaging the subsurface, the weak density contrast between water and oil has made electromagnetic (EM) technology an attractive complement to improve fluid distinction, especially for high-saline water. This crosswell technology assumes greater importance for obtaining higher-resolution images of the interwell regions to more accurately characterize the reservoir and track fluid-front developments. In this study, an ensemble-Kalman-based history-matching framework is proposed for directly incorporating crosswell time-lapse seismic and EM data into the history-matching process. The direct incorporation of the time-lapse seismic and EM data into the history-matching process exploits the complementarity of these data to enhance subsurface characterization, to incorporate interwell information, and to avoid biases that may be incurred from separate inversions of the geophysical data for attributes. An extensive analysis with 2D and realistic 3D reservoirs illustrates the robustness and enhanced forecastability of critical reservoir variables. The 2D reservoir provides a better understanding of the connection between fluid discrimination and enhanced history matches, and the 3D reservoir demonstrates its applicability to a realistic reservoir. History-matching enhancements (in terms of reduction in the history-matching error) when incorporating both seismic and EM data averaged approximately 50% for the 2D case, and approximately 30% for the 3D case, and permeability estimates were approximately 25% better compared with a standard history matching with only production data.Citation
Synergizing Crosswell Seismic and Electromagnetic Techniques for Enhancing Reservoir Characterization 2015 SPE JournalPublisher
Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)Journal
SPE JournalAdditional Links
http://www.onepetro.org/doi/10.2118/174559-PAae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.2118/174559-PA