Reservoir Modeling For Horizontal-Well Exploitation of A Giant Heavy-Oil Field
Reservoir Modeling For Horizontal-Well Exploitation of A Giant Heavy-Oil Field
Reservoir Modeling For Horizontal-Well Exploitation of A Giant Heavy-Oil Field
Summary
The Hamaca field, located in Venezuelas Orinoco heavy-oil belt,
is a giant extra heavy-oil accumulation operated by Ameriven, an
operating agent company for PDVSA, ConocoPhillips, and ChevronTexaco. Over the 35-year life of the field, more than 1,000
horizontal laterals are planned to deliver 190,000 BOPD to a
heavy-oil upgrader facility. Reservoir models are built to support
a broad continuum of activities to meet this objective. This paper
will review the Hamaca reservoir-modeling process, the challenge
of integrating many sources of geologic and geophysical constraints (including horizontal-well information), the focus on continuous model improvement, and issues unique to Hamaca rock
and fluid properties. We will show that efficiently evolving a very
large geocellular model in an active project like Hamaca can be
accomplished through the use of object-oriented process automation. In addition, the paper will illustrate that careful consideration
should be paid to issues related to horizontal-well sampling bias
and positional uncertainty before constraining a geocellular model
with horizontal-well data. The paper will discuss the multiple sophisticated modeling techniques that were used to address the objectives of the Hamaca modeling program.
Background
The Hamaca field is located in Venezuelas Orinoco heavy-oil
belt, which is reported to contain more than 1.2 trillion barrels of
heavy and extra heavy oil in a huge stratigraphic trap on the
southern flank of the Oriente basin (Fig. 1). The Hamaca concession area, which covers 160,000 acres, contains 8 to 10API gravity oil trapped in shallow fluvial-deltaic reservoirs of the Oficina
formation (Miocene age). Sandstone reservoirs of the Oficina formation at Hamaca were generally deposited in a bed-loaddominated, fluvial-deltaic environment. Reservoir properties are
excellent, with porosity values of up to 36% and permeability
values of up to 30 darcies. Hamaca crude is considered foamy
and is generally saturated with gas at reservoir conditions.1
Over the 35-year life of the field, more than 1,000 horizontal
laterals are planned to deliver 190,000 BOPD to a heavy-oil upgrader facility, which is currently under construction.2 To date,
more than 110 horizontal wells have been drilled to produce from
the Hamaca reservoirs. Oil is being produced under cold production methods (no added heat) using progressing cavity pumps to
bring oil to the surface. Cold production is possible because of the
extended length of the horizontal wells (5,000 ft), excellent reservoir properties, and the foamy-oil nature of Hamaca crude.2 The
heavy oil will be mixed with diluent just downstream of the wellheads to facilitate transport to the upgrader facility. The Hamaca
crude will be converted to a sweeter crude product of approximately 26API at the upgrader.
The combined use of both well and seismic data is critically
important for characterizing the stratigraphic complexity of the
Hamaca fluvial-deltaic systems. To assist in targeting sweet spots
for horizontal-well placement, a 250-km2 3D seismic survey was
acquired along with the drilling of 91 stratigraphic information wells
with an average separation distance of approximately 1.5 km.
Modeling Approach
Hamaca reservoir-modeling activity has been motivated by strategic and tactical business drivers that include reservoir sweet-spot
identification for development planning, reserves studies for a contractual acreage-relinquishment decision, and horizontal wellbore
design and steering. The continuous flow of new information from
stratigraphic and horizontal-well drilling programs and the analysis of original and reprocessed vintages of 3D seismic data have
required flexibility in evolving geologic and engineering concepts.
One Size Fits All. An ambitious undertaking began in 2000 to
build a single evergreen reservoir model that satisfied each of
the Hamaca business drivers. The design goals in building such a
model were to maintain a high level of consistency across all the
operational activities in a resource- and time-efficient manner.
Creating a one-size-fits-all model required that the model cover a
large enough area (3733 km) to satisfy strategic activities such
as flow simulation for reserves assessments and sweet-spot identification, and that it be sufficiently detailed to plan and steer the
horizontal wellbores.
In selecting the appropriate model-cell dimensions, the tradeoff
between resolution and computational efficiency was considered.
Some of the factors that weighed on the selection of cell dimensions were:
Sufficient sampling of the expected vertical and horizontal
heterogeneity as defined by variography.
Accuracy in the simulation of pressure drawdown and associated production of gas in the vicinity of wells.
The ability to update the geologic model with new information with a 24-hour turnaround time.
Flow-simulation and history-matching turnaround time.
Hardware and software memory limitations.
After extensive testing, the optimal cell dimensions of 100
100 m in the horizontal and .6 m in the vertical were chosen,
resulting in approximately 38 million cells distributed among 10
major stratigraphic units. For computational flexibility, major
stratigraphic units were built as separate 3D grids (SGrids) and
then merged as needed for flow simulation and well-planning and
-drilling activities. Efficiently evolving such a large model as new
information became available posed unique challenges that required a creative approach to the model-building process.
Process Automation. The continuous inflow of new information
from the stratigraphic-well drilling program, horizontal-well drilling program, and seismic interpretation required that Ameriven
focus effort on building a reservoir-modeling process that is efficient, consistent, and repeatable. These goals were achieved by the
use of automation.
Model-building automation was accomplished by the use of
process scripting within an object-oriented modeling system.
Scripts are files containing a sequence of commands that modify
object properties and control object-to-object interaction. Nested
layers of scripts were written to manage the entire model-building
process including data loading, well-log processing, framework
construction, region definition, reservoir parameter population,
generation of numerous quality-control products, and export of the
model to the simulator (Fig. 2).
With such a large model, many of the model-building functions
require hours to complete; the use of scripting allows those processes to continue running overnight without the need for intervention. For example, when information from a recently drilled
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model as a function of model porosity and VSH using the relationship shown in Fig. 4.
Fluid Distribution. A thorough understanding of water distribution in a heavy-oil project like Hamaca is imperative to avoid
earlier-than-expected water encroachment and the operational
costs associated with remediation (water shutoff). Because the
specific gravities of Hamaca oil and water are very similar (.965
vs. 1.01 g/cm3), the small difference in buoyancy results in poncheros, or perched pockets of water above the oil/water contacts.
Multiple Scales of Heterogeneity. Multiple scales of heterogeneity generally exist to a degree in most depositional settings. In
Hamacas fluvial-deltaic depositional environment, dual scales of
variability are clearly evident in variograms of reservoir properties.
Long correlation ranges in these variograms are related to large-
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scale variations in the form of channel complexes that are developed in some areas of the field but are absent in others. Within
these overall channel complexes, individual channels anastomose
and downcut into previously existing channels, with the resulting
stratigraphy showing discontinuous channel features (bars) with
shorter scale variability (Fig. 7). Short correlation ranges in
Hamaca variograms are related to these individual channel features. The different scales of variability were modeled using nested
(linearly combined) variograms. The relating of structures observed in experimental variograms with scale-dependent geologic
processes resulted in a more geologic interpretation and modeling
of reservoir spatial continuity.
Variable Azimuth. A unique aspect of the Hamaca modeling
approach is the extensive use of the variable-azimuth (VA) technique for populating model properties.5 In most modeling projects,
reservoir properties are usually distributed into a geocellular
framework using a variogram model describing a single direction
of maximum anisotropic correlation. For the Hamaca model, the
azimuth of greatest continuity was allowed to vary geographically
so that the trend of the reservoir properties would be oriented
similarly to the overall channel-complex trends that have been
interpreted. The result is greater model pore-space connectivity
and a more realistic representation of the geology (Fig. 8).
Incorporating Horizontal-Well Data
Three-dimensional geocellular models are routinely used in many
development projects to justify and plan horizontal wells. How-
Fig. 9VSH histograms from one stratigraphic interval including (lower left) and excluding (upper left) horizontal-well
samples. Inclusion of the biased and overrepresented horizontal-well samples skews the VSH property distribution toward
cleaner rock. On the right is a net sand map showing the location of wells used in the histograms.
Fig. 8Net sand map (left) used as a constraint for VSH population and resulting VSH property for a single layer of the model
using the variable-azimuth technique (middle) and using a constant variogram azimuth (right). Note the higher degree of sand
continuity and better consistency with the net sand map that
results from using the variable-azimuth technique.
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m2
m3
o
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m
cm3
km
km2
Fig. 10(a) Schematic cross section with the horizontal wellbore positioned correctly relative to model framework, resulting
in correct variogram analysis; (b) schematic cross section with
the horizontal wellbore not positioned correctly relative to
model framework, resulting in an incorrect model of variability.
Terrell H. Tankersley is a senior development geologist specializing in reservoir modeling for the Hamaca Project in Puerto La
Cruz, Venezuela. e-mail: tankersley@chevrontexaco.com.
Since 1981, he has held various positions with ChevronTexaco,
focused primarily on reservoir modeling and development geology. He has worked in numerous basins in Indonesia, Venezuela, and the Gulf of Mexico. Tankersley holds a BS degree
in geology from the U. of Georgia. Michael W. Waite currently
manages reservoir-modeling and flow-simulation activities for
the Hamaca Project in Venezuela. e-mail: waitemw@
chevrontexaco.com. Since 1982, he has held positions with
ChevronTexaco involving seismic acquisition and processing,
development and application of subsurface imaging techniques, prospect evaluation, reservoir characterization using
3D/4D seismic data, and geostatistical model building. He
holds a BS degree in physics from the U. of New Orleans. Waite
served as a 199798 SPE Distinguished Lecturer on the topic of
time-lapse seismic monitoring.
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