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SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013
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Page 1: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

SAMPLE IMAGE

Shale Gas Development:Integrated Approach

Hemant Kumar DixitMumbai, India18 January-2013

Page 2: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Introduction

Motivation: Use seismic data to improve economics in resource shale plays

– Higher margins with less drilling and perforations/fracturing stages– Minimize environmental impact

Challenges: – Sweetspot identification – Optimize well location– Optimize completions

Drilling Completion

Installations

Page 3: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Motivation of Unconventional Resources

Source: Halliburton 2011-03

23% US gas production is from unconventional reservoirs (2010) Coal stores 6-7 times more gas than conventional reservoirs 4 trillion bbl of oil in Canada oil sands and Venezuela heavy oil Environment – proppant, water, noise, contamination

Page 4: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Based on graphic by Al Granberg

Fissures

The shale is fractured by the pressure induced

in the well10,000 ft

2,000 ft

8,000 ft

4,000 ft

6,000 ft

0 ft

Fissure

Sand keeps fissures open

Mixture of water, sand and chemical

agents

Well

Natural gas flows from fissures into

well

A mixture of water, sand and chemical agents is injected at high pressure in

the well

The challenge: prediction and control of fracturing

What seismic brings: Seismic Reservoir Characterization Stress & Fracture modeling Real-time Microseismic

Challenges in Shale Explortaion

Page 5: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

CGGV North American Experience

2007 - 2011

5 Projects726 sq km

Marcellus

2008 - 20116 Projects

1405 sq km

Montney

2009 – 2 projects

178 Sq km+ 2D

Regional

Utica

2009 - 20112 Projects

5607 sq km

Haynesville

2010 - 2011

13 Projects6920 sq

km

Woodford

2009 - 2011

8 Projects1155 sq

km

Horn River

2010 - 1 Project

340 sq km

Eagle Ford

2009 - 3 Projects457 sq km

Bakken

2006 - 20083 Projects

+440 sq km

Picenace / Uinta

2007 – 8 Projects

+500 sq km

Barnett

More than 40 projects and 18,000 km2

Page 6: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

CGGV in Shale Resource Exploration

Integrated solutions for Unconventional Resources Full suite of tools and technologies From prediction to monitoring Calibration & correlation with well data

Data acquisition Processing & Imaging

Fracture / stress characterization & rock properties

Sweet spot prediction with well-calibrated

attributes

Microseismic fracture

monitoring

Feasibility study & survey design

Calibration with well data – correlation with production data

6

Page 7: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Generating Geomechanical Properties and Sweet Spot Identification for optimum driling

Tri-Parish Line Case Study

Page 8: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Shale Plays: Questions?

Shale TypeDuctile or Britle

Gas ContentTOC, Bulk Volume of Gas

FractureFracture Type, Direction and Length

Validation

Page 9: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Shale Plays: Seismic Driven Answers?

Shale Gas

Randomly oriented fractures

Bulk Volume Gas

Closure Pressure

Young’s Modulus

Poisson’s Ratio

17

Reservoir Quality

Brittleness

Stress

Page 10: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Shale Plays: Seismic Workflow

Page 11: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Haynesville Shale: Bulk Volume Gas

Bulk Volume Gas = Total Porosity x (1–Water Saturation)

Page 12: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Stress Analysis Workflow

Seismic AzAVO Terms E – Young’ s Modulus n – Poisson’s Ratio ZN – Normal Compliance

Hooke’s Law / Linear Slip Theory

h H

H

h

V

V

Patent Pending

Page 13: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Differential Horizontal Stress Ratio (DHSR)

If sHmax ≈ shmin (DHSR ≈ 0) Tensile cracks any direction

|| rock weakness Fracture network

If sHmax >> shmin (DHSR > 3-5%)

Fractures || sHmax

Shear Fractures Tensile Fractures

Connect to existing fracture network for production sHmax

sHmax

Pressure

shmin = Closure Stress

shmin

Patent Pending

H - h

HDHSR

Page 14: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Cross-plot DHSR vs. Young’s Modulus

Static Young’s Modulus

Aligned Fractures will form (YELLOW)Fracture Swarms will occur (GREEN)

Ductile (RED)

Diff

eren

tial H

oriz

onta

l Str

ess

Rat

ioDuctile Brittle

Page 15: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

DHSR platelets overlaying Young’s Modulus

Plate orientation: direction of maximum horizontal stressMap colour: derived Young’s modulus

DHSR

BRITTLE

H - h

H

Page 16: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Volumetric Interpretation

16

Aligned Fractures (YELLOW)Fracture Swarms (GREEN)

Ductile (RED)

Page 17: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Probable Zones of Better Hydraulic Fractures

Static Young’s ModulusDiffe

rent

ial H

orizo

ntal

Stre

ss R

atio

H-h

H

Percentage of Hydraulic Fractures HighProbability: Zones of better hydraulic fractures (random pattern)

Low

H

h

H- h

H

Bottom of HVL

Page 18: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Multi-Attribute Analysis

High

Low

Highlighting Potential Good Production Areas

Page 19: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Validation: Analysis of orientation of H

Triaxial Measurements and Orientation H from

oriented core samples from different depths in the

Haynesville Shale

Orientation H across the Haynesville Shale derived

from seismic

EASTWEST

The direction of maximum horizontal stress predicted from

the seismic observations matched the corresponding

core stress measurements to within 5%.

compared with

-25o

Page 20: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Conclusions

Fully Integrated workflow for shale plays – acquisition to interpretation

Flexible multi-attribute solution correlating seismic observations to production figures, using Geomechanical rock properties Stress – HTI

Applications for: Sweet spot identification Well location optimization Completions optimization

20

Page 21: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Conclusions

Environment Water access Proppant access Leakage prevention

Financial Well costs reduced Well performance enhanced Return On Investment

SEISMIC can help!

21

Page 22: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

22

Thank You

Reference:

Gray et. al.Estimation of Stress and Geomechanical Properties using 3D Seismic Data, First Break, Volume 30,March 2012

Page 23: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

Differential Horizontal Stress Ratio (DHSR)

If sHmax ≈ shmin (DHSR ≈ 0)

Tensile cracks any direction || rock weakness Fracture network

If sHmax >> shmin (DHSR > 3-5%) Fractures || sHmax

Shear Fractures Tensile Fractures

Connect to existing fracture network for production

sHmax

shmin

sHmax

Pressure

shmin = Closure Stress

H - h

H

Page 24: SAMPLE IMAGE Shale Gas Development: Integrated Approach Hemant Kumar Dixit Mumbai, India 18 January-2013.

E: Young’s Modulus

DH

SR

E E

DHSR and Young’s Modulus Crossplot


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