SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 12,
Number 1,
February 2009,
pp. 104-115
Summary
Sarawak Shell Berhad has a number of offshore gas fields that produce from
the Luconia carbonate formation, which can exhibit high-compressibility
pore-collapse deformation. Recent accelerated subsidence has been observed at
several of these fields, which extrapolates to final subsidence values well
above previous estimates. This paper describes a geomechanical study involving
core work to determine if the Luconia formation compressibility is sensitive to
brine flow from the rising aquifer and a 3D geomechanical finite-element model
developed to predict future subsidence and lateral movements for the F23
platform.
Compaction tests were performed on the Luconia core from three different gas
fields. Tests on twin plugs were conducted—one plug undergoing a standard
uniaxial zero-lateral-strain compaction test, while its twin has several pore
volumes of simulated-formation brine flowed through it (at virgin in-situ
stress conditions) before the compaction loading. Four sets of compaction tests
on twin plugs were completed. The higher-porosity samples showed characteristic
pore-collapse behavior consistent with previous measurements on Luconia mouldic
limestone core. No sensitivity to brine flow was observed. In-situ compaction
logs in the field also do not show increased compressibility in sections
flooded by the rising gas-water contact (GWC). The geomechanical model uses a
relatively simple structural model comprised of four layers—two overburden
formations, the Luconia carbonate and one underburden formation. A nonlinear
deformation model for the Luconia formation captures the accelerating
pore-collapse response observed in the core and in-situ compaction
measurements. The model is calibrated to GPS-measured platform subsidence and
is consistent with measured core- and field-compaction properties. The results
predict that platform subsidence rates with depletion would level off, with a
maximum subsidence of 18.5 ft +/– 1 ft at an abandonment pressure of 300 psi.
Platform subsidence in the two years following the work continues to follow the
predicted values.
This work illustrates the importance of integrated geomechanical core
testing, field-monitoring measurements, and modeling to accurately predict
compaction and subsidence effects in highly compacting environments.
© 2009. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
16 July 2007
- Meeting paper published:
30 October 2007
- Revised manuscript received:
16 May 2008
- Manuscript approved:
17 June 2008
- Published online:
2 March 2009
- Version of record:
26 February 2009