超平衡钻井从勘探/评价井到油田开发计划的影响

M. Mohammadlou, M. G. Reppert, Roxane Del Negro, George Jones
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在井规划过程中,钻井人员和岩石物理学家有不同的主要目标。岩石物理学家的目标是获取关键井数据,但这可能会增加操作风险。钻井人员专注于优化井设计,这可能导致数据质量下降。在极端情况下,井设计对岩石物理数据的影响可能导致错误的井后结果,从而影响整个价值链的评估和油田开发决策。在本文中,我们介绍了挪威海上侏罗统同裂谷油藏的案例研究,该油藏的井设计对储层特征有显著影响。为了证明过平衡钻井对测井和岩心数据的影响,对三口井(勘探井、评价井和地质导井)进行了比较。讨论了储层质量评价、体积估计的意义,以及静态地质模型和动态储层模拟中引入的误差。该案例研究强调了优化井设计对岩石物理数据收集的重要性,并展示了创造价值的潜力。最初在探井和评价井中都进行了大量的数据收集,包括全套随钻测井(LWD)、电缆测井、流体取样和大量取心。由于该地区存在储层超压的风险,这两口井的钻井液密度都相当不平衡。随后,对测井数据进行了校正,以排除明显的泥浆过滤侵入,并对岩心测量进行了校准,指导解释。根据两口井的结果建立了地质和储层模型,并进行了相应的开发井规划。对岩心材料的彻底调查表明,过平衡钻井也可能对岩心性能产生重大不利影响。这对储层的影响是如此之大,以至于在油田开发钻井之前,公司做出了一项战略决策,在初始勘探井附近钻一口地质导井。这口井是在最初勘探阶段的6年后钻探的,过平衡明显降低。获得了包括一个岩心在内的大量井数据。为了比较三口井相的储层性质,回收的岩心至关重要。岩心的结果显示出明显不同的岩石质量特征,特别是在储层质量谱的高端。岩心研究的结果证实了最初的假设,即过平衡钻井严重影响了岩心的性质和测井曲线。研究得出的结论是,与地质导测前的估计相比,更新的储层模型属性将显著增加原位体积。该研究表明,井的设计会对岩石物理测量产生不利影响,这些数据中的错误会影响地质和储层模型,导致油田开发计划不理想,从而降低了重要的价值。这个例子提供了一个案例研究,可用于改进井设计,使岩石物理学家和钻井人员都能参与到相同的价值创造结果中来。未来的工作将包括进一步的实验室研究,研究高过平衡钻井对岩心的影响,以及岩心完整性受损的可能“根本原因”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
THE IMPACT OF OVERBALANCED DRILLING FROM EXPLORATION/APPRAISAL WELLS TO FIELD DEVELOPMENT PLAN
During well planning, drillers and petrophysicists have different principle objectives. The petrophysicist’s aim is to acquire critical well data, but this can lead to increased operational risk. The driller is focused on optimizing the well design, which can result in compromised data quality. In extreme cases, the impact of well design on petrophysical data can lead to erroneous post-well results that impact the entire value-chain assessment and decision making toward field development. In this paper, we present a case study from a syn-rift, Upper Jurassic reservoir in the Norwegian Sea where well design significantly impacted reservoir characterization. Three wells (exploration, appraisal, and geopilot) are compared in order to demonstrate the impact of overbalanced drilling on well data from both logs and core. Implications for reservoir quality assessment, volume estimates, and the errors introduced into both a static geomodel and dynamic reservoir simulation are discussed. This case study highlights the importance of optimizing well design for petrophysical data collection and demonstrates the potential for value creation. Extensive data collection was initially carried out in both exploration and appraisal wells, including full sets of logging while drilling (LWD), wireline logging, fluid sampling, and extensive coring. Both wells were drilled with considerable overbalanced mud weights due to the risk of overpressured reservoirs in the region. The log data was subsequently corrected for significant mud-filtration invasion, with calibration to core measurements guiding the interpretation. Geological and reservoir models were built based on results from the two wells, and development wells were planned accordingly. A thorough investigation of core material raised suspicion that there could also be a significant adverse effect of core properties resulting from overbalanced drilling. The implications were so significant for the reservoir volume that a strategic decision was made to drill a geopilot well close to the initial exploration well, prior to field development drilling. The well was drilled six years after the initial exploration phase with considerably lower overbalance. Extensive well data, including one core, were acquired. The recovered core was crucial in order to compare the reservoir properties for comparable facies between all three wells. The results from the core demonstrate distinctly different rock quality characteristics, especially at the high end of the reservoir quality spectrum. Results of the core study confirmed the initial hypothesis that overbalanced drilling had significantly impacted the properties of the core as well as the well logs. The study concluded that the updated reservoir model properties would significantly increase the in-place volumes compared to the pre-geopilot estimate. This study shows how well design adversely affected petrophysical measurements and how errors in these data compromised geological and reservoir models, leading to a suboptimal field development plan that eroded significant value. This example provides a case study that can be used to improve the well design so that petrophysicists and drillers can both be part of the same value creation result. Future work will include further laboratory investigations on the effects of high overbalanced drilling on core and possible “root causes” for compromised core integrity.
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