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Black Widow. Deepwater Project. PC Based Reservoir Analysis System Allows Quick Decision on E&P Well Plans for Black Widow Prospect. J.L. Buchwalter Gemini Solutions, Inc. T.M. Campbell Mariner Energy, Inc. AKNOWLEDGEMENT. PGS/Diamond Geophysical Service Corporation. OUTLINE.
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Black Widow Deepwater Project PC Based Reservoir Analysis System Allows Quick Decision on E&P Well Plans for Black Widow Prospect J.L. Buchwalter Gemini Solutions, Inc. T.M. Campbell Mariner Energy, Inc.
AKNOWLEDGEMENT PGS/Diamond Geophysical Service Corporation
OUTLINE • INTRODUCTION • CASE STUDY • Exploration Well Sidetrack • DRILLING RESULTS • PRODUCTION • CONCLUSIONS
When Can Reservoir Simulation Be Applied to Maximize Value ? • Prevailing Idea in Petroleum Industry • Once you understand the reservoir in detail • GIGO • Calculate accurate reserves and production profiles • Problem: • Often too late to optimize drilling and development decisions • The Hidden Truth • Study before you understand the reservoir in detail • Impact exploration drilling and development • maximize the economics
Central GOM EW 966 Water Depth of 1853 ft Participants Mariner Energy 69% (Operator) Devon Energy 31% Ultimate Reserves 11 MMBOE History Discovered Apr 1998 Sanctioned Jan 2000 Production Oct 2000 Peak Rate Oct 2001 11,000 Bpd 9 MMcfpd Key Facts
FIELD SUMMARY • Small oil discovery in 1998 • Ewing Bank area of the OCS Central Gulf region. • Located approximately 3 miles east of Morpeth. • Developed via a single well subsea tie-back to the Morpeth TLP in EW 921. • First oil occurred in October 2000.
OUTLINE • INTRODUCTION • CASE STUDY • Exploration Well Sidetrack • DRILLING RESULTS • PRODUCTION • CONCLUSIONS
High Cost Of Simulation (in the past) • Unix workstations and the Unix-based software • Unix system support personnel required • Need for experts in geological and flow modeling
Offshore Exploration Well • Net Pay Lower Than Expected • Other Uncertain Variables • Sidetrack or Abandon ?
Time Constraints • Floating Rig - US $125,000 / day • Time 4:00 p.m. • Answer Needed by 12:00 noon the Next Day
Work Flow • Received Data at 6:30 p.m. • Engineer 1 - Reviewed data • Engineer 2 - Built single well model • - Determined sensitivity to rock • and fluid properties • Engineer 3 - Digitized and grided maps • -Calculated volumetrics • - Exported grids to simulator
RESERVOIR DESCRIPTION OF BASAL NEBRASKAN SAND • Early Pleistocene age • Lower Slope environment • Ponded submarine fan complex sands • Oil hydrocarbons • Defined by direct hydrocarbon indicators (amplitude anomaly) using 1996 Diamond Geophysical 3-D seismic volume. • Accumulation trapped by fault, structural closure and minor stratigraphy. • Excellent porosity, perm and low clay content.
Water Saturation Contour Map at Initial Conditions
Water Saturation Cross-section at Initial Conditions
Model Building A full-field flow model, including wells, faults and an aquifer was developed in four (4) hours.
Study Results • 4 case ran between 6 and 10 PM • 7 additional what ifs ran next morning, varied: • geology • rock properties • All sidetrack drilling cases were economic
OUTLINE • INTRODUCTION • CASE STUDY • Exploration Well Sidetrack • DRILLING RESULTS • PRODUCTION • CONCLUSIONS
EW 966 #1 ST1 Log Section Basal Nebraskan Sand Penetration
EW 966 #1 ST1 Processed Log Basal Nebraskan Sand
Black Widow N-S Seismic Line N S ST1 OH
DISCOVERY WELL SUMMARYBASAL NEBRASKAN SAND • MEI EW 966 #1 ST1 drilled May ‘98 • Encountered 56 NFP • 32 percent porosity • 13 percent water saturation • LKO - 11,495 ft TVDSS • Assumed OWC – 12,000 ft (HCI)
OUTLINE • INTRODUCTION • CASE STUDY • Exploration Well Sidetrack • DRILLING RESULTS • PRODUCTION • CONCLUSIONS
PRODUCTION STATISTICS • First Production Oct 28, 2000. • Initial BHP 8774 psi – SITP 5591 psi • Peak Rate 10,500 Bpd, 8.8 MMcfpd • Oct 27, 2001 • Through Jun 16, 2002 • Producing 5440 Bopd, 4.6 MMcfpd • Cum 4398 MBo, 3.64 Bcf. • SIBHP 6420 psi - SITP 3067 psi
OUTLINE • INTRODUCTION • CASE STUDY • Exploration Well Sidetrack • DRILLING RESULTS • PRODUCTION • CONCLUSIONS
CONCLUSIONS A PC-based characterization and simulation system exists that allows for modeling of exploration wells while the rig is on-site.
CONCLUSIONS PC-based characterization and simulation in conjunction with the appropriate user interface allows geoscientists and engineers to model reservoirs on a routine real-time basis.
CONCLUSIONS Simulation should be an everyday tool that is used in applications as diverse as exploration well evaluations and full field studies.
CONCLUSIONS The cost of PC-based simulation is low due to the lower costs of hardware, software and support. Manpower costs are significantly lowered due to a powerful interface that reduces both the time to complete a study and the need for expensive simulation experts.