SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 13,
Number 5,
October 2010,
pp. 812-822
Summary
A knowledge of net pay is important for the volumetric estimation of
hydrocarbon resources, a practice that underpins the value of the petroleum
industry. Yet, there is no universal definition of net pay, there is no general
acceptance of its role in integrated reservoir studies, there is no recognized
method for evaluating it, and there are disparate views on how to make use of
it. Partly for these reasons, net-to-gross pay constitutes a major source of
uncertainty in volumetric reserves estimates, second only to gross rock volume.
With the aim of improving this unsatisfactory state of affairs, I chart a
critical path of net-pay understanding and application to dispel some of the
unhelpful myths that abound within the industry and replace them with a
defensible rationale to guide the quantification of net pay (thickness).
Central to this process is the identification of net-pay cutoffs, themselves
the subject of much controversy over the years. The approach is data-driven, in
that it uses what we know, and also fit-for-purpose, in that it takes account
of reservoir conditions. The outcome is a sounder basis for incorporating net
pay into volumetric estimates of ultimate recovery and thence hydrocarbon
resources.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
29 May 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
14 May 2010
- Manuscript approved:
6 June 2010
- Published online:
12 October 2010
- Version of record:
27 October 2010