SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 14, Number 1, February 2011, pp. 25-34

SPE-142819-PA

The Challenges for Carbonate Petrophysics in Petroleum Resource Estimation

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DOI  More information 10.2118/142819-PA http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/142819-PA

Citation

  • Bust, V.K., Oletu, J.U., and Worthington, P.F. 2011. The Challenges for Carbonate Petrophysics in Petroleum Resource Estimation. SPE Res Eval & Eng  14 (1): 25-34. SPE-142819-PA. doi: 10.2118/142819-PA.

Discipline Categories

  • 6.6.2 Core Analysis
  • 6.6.11 Formation Testing (e.g., Wireline, LWD)
  • 6.6.9 Special Core Analysis

Keywords

  • Carbonates, Electroporefacies, Integrated reservoir studies, Petrofacies, Petroleum resources

Summary

An examination of the core and log analysis of carbonate reservoirs has confirmed that identified shortcomings are rooted in disparate pore character. Many of the interpretation methods were developed for clastic rocks, which typically show an intergranular porosity, sometimes augmented by fracture porosity. In carbonate reservoirs, the primary pore system comprises interparticle porosity that coexists with a highly variable secondary system of dissolution voids and/or fractures. As a consequence, carbonate reservoirs are markedly heterogeneous from pore to reservoir scales, and this variability poses significant challenges to data acquisition, petrophysical evaluation, and reservoir description. For example, the ranges of carbonate facies and their pore character often control the distributions of net pay, porosity, and hydrocarbon saturation. Putting these matters together, conventional petrophysical practices that exclusively use reservoir zonation based on lithology/mineralogy have limited application in carbonates. Instead, recourse is made to a zonal discrimination that draws upon the distribution of microporosity and its connectivity with macroporosity and fractures. The discrimination scheme uses downhole technologies such as high-resolution imaging and magnetic resonance logs, supported by advanced core analysis. On this basis, a value-adding workflow is proposed to increase confidence in those petrophysical deliverables that are used in static volumetric estimates of petroleum Resources.

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History

  • Original manuscript received: 5 January 2010
  • Meeting paper published: 7 December 2009
  • Revised manuscript received: 25 May 2010
  • Manuscript approved: 13 September 2010
  • Published online: 7 February 2011
  • Version of record: 21 February 2011