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SPE October Meeting

Date: October 19th
Time: 1830 (Presentation starts 1900)
Place: Scandic Stavanger City


The presentation is free of charge and open to everyone. Registration is only required for the following dinner. Cancellations must be made before the registration deadline and are subject to a small fee.



Interpretation of Permanent Well Monitoring Data to Improve Characterization of a Giant Oil Field

by Hans Walker, NOV

Abstract:

The Johan Sverdrup field located on the Norwegian Continental Shelf (NCS) started its production in October 2019. The field is considered as a pivotal development in the view of sustainable long-term production and developments on the NCS as well as creating jobs and revenue. The field is operated with advanced well and reservoir surveillance systems including Permanent Downhole Gauges (PDG), Multi-Phase Flow-Meters (MPFM) and seismic Permanent Reservoir Monitoring (PRM). This provides an exceptional basis for reservoir characterization and permanent monitoring.

This study focuses on reservoir characterization to improve evaluations of sand permeability-thickness and fault transmissibility. Permanent monitoring of the reservoir with PDG / MPFM has provided an excellent basis for applying different methods of Pressure Transient Analysis (PTA) including analysis of well interference and time-lapse PTA. Interpretation of pressure transient data is today based on both analytical and numerical reservoir simulations (fit-for-purpose models). In this study, such models of the Johan Sverdrup reservoir regions have been assembled, using geological and PVT data, results of seismic interpretations and laboratory experiments. Uncertainties in these data were used to guide and frame the scope of the study.

The interference analysis has confirmed communication between the wells located in the same and different reservoir regions, thus revealing hydraulic communication through faults. Sensitivities using segment reservoir simulations of the interference tests with different number of wells have shown the importance of including all the active wells, otherwise the interpretation may give biased results. The estimates for sand permeability-thickness as well as fault leakage obtained from the interference analysis were further applied in simulations of the production history using the fit-for-purpose reservoir models.

The production history contains many pressure transients associated with both flowing and shut-in periods. Time-lapse PTA was focused on extraction and history matching of these pressure transients. The simulations have provided reasonable match of the production history and the time-lapse pressure transients including derivatives. This has confirmed the results of the interference analysis for permeability-thickness and fault leakage used as input for these simulations. Well interference is also the dominating factor driving the pressure transient responses. Drainage area around the wells is quickly established for groups of the wells analyzed due to the extreme permeability of the reservoir. It was possible to match many transient responses with segment models, however mismatch for some wells can be explained by the disregard of wells outside the segments, especially injectors. At the same time, it is a useful indication of communication between the regions. The study has improved reservoir characterization of the Johan Sverdrup field, also contributing to field implementation of combined PTA methods.

 

Biography:

Hans Christian has a master's degree in petroleum technology from University of Stavanger with a specialization in natural gas technology with some reservoir background. He is currently working at NOV as an offshore operations engineer for wired drill pipe. In his professional career he has mainly worked with analyzing subsurface data, and data analytics. The content of this paper stems from further work of his master thesis he wrote with Lundin Energy Norway.

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