SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts 2006 2006
DOI: 10.1190/1.2370195
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Measuring velocity sensitivity to production‐induced strain at the Ekofisk Field using time‐lapse time‐shifts and compaction logs

Abstract: In chalk reservoirs such as the Ekofisk Field, fluid flow and geomechanical effects combine to change both the location and properties of the reservoir and overburden. Pore pressure and fluid saturation changes cause reservoir compaction and perturb the elastic properties of the reservoir rocks. The overburden responds to the compaction with piston-like seafloor subsidence and length changes (strains). These overburden strains change the seismic velocity. The resulting velocity changes are observed on time-lap… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…13b) broadly agree. Maximum Dt is 6 ms and the maximum Dz is 1.5 m. This relationship between time-lapse time shifts and vertical displacement is in broad agreement with observations at Valhall (Hatchell & Bourne 2005) and Ekofisk (Janssen et al 2006). Both maps show fault control of reservoir compaction, where faults clearly act as flow barriers.…”
Section: Compaction Monitoring On the Northern Crestsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…13b) broadly agree. Maximum Dt is 6 ms and the maximum Dz is 1.5 m. This relationship between time-lapse time shifts and vertical displacement is in broad agreement with observations at Valhall (Hatchell & Bourne 2005) and Ekofisk (Janssen et al 2006). Both maps show fault control of reservoir compaction, where faults clearly act as flow barriers.…”
Section: Compaction Monitoring On the Northern Crestsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…Conventional methodologies employ poststack data and compaction-induced vertical stress/strain to estimate time-lapse velocity and volume changes (Hatchell and Bourne, 2005;Janssen et al, 2006;Carcione et al, 2007;Hodgson et al, 2007;Roste, 2007;Staples et al, 2007;De Gennaro et al, 2008). However, migration and stacking of data represents a complex filtering process that can corrupt phase relationships and arrival times.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, as the saturation signal is more localized around the injectors than the pressure, this helps when evaluating the overall impact on the seismics. It has been observed on similar fields to South Arne that amplitudes, in particular, are known to be small and noisy and lack the ability to detect the dynamic properties of the reservoir (Janssen, Smith and Byerley 2006). In our case, however, the 4D amplitude signature for the Tor formation appears to reveal a well‐developed region of amplitude decrease (or impedance increase) around the producers, consistent with the zone of strain deformation or pressure depletion indicated on the fluid flow and also the geomechanical simulation predictions (Figs 13 and 14).…”
Section: Data Applicationmentioning
confidence: 99%