Evaluation of formation susceptibility and sand production potential in an offshore field, Niger Delta Basin, Nigeria

Wellbore instability and sand production are all common challenges in the Niger Delta oil province, resulting in high drilling and production cost as well as damage to oil facilities. The vulnerability of lithologic formations to wellbore instability and resultant sand production is investigated in...

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Main Authors: David O. Ubuara, Yinka A. Olayinka, Godwin O. Emujakporue, Geoffrey C. Soronnadi-Ononiwu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2024-01-01
Series:Energy Geoscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666759223000598
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author David O. Ubuara
Yinka A. Olayinka
Godwin O. Emujakporue
Geoffrey C. Soronnadi-Ononiwu
author_facet David O. Ubuara
Yinka A. Olayinka
Godwin O. Emujakporue
Geoffrey C. Soronnadi-Ononiwu
author_sort David O. Ubuara
collection DOAJ
description Wellbore instability and sand production are all common challenges in the Niger Delta oil province, resulting in high drilling and production cost as well as damage to oil facilities. The vulnerability of lithologic formations to wellbore instability and resultant sand production is investigated in the four delineated reservoirs of the “Areo” field, western part of Niger Delta Basin. The foundation for establishing the geomechanical properties in this study was a 1-dimensional mechanical earth model, using gamma ray (GR), density (RHOB), compressional slowness (DTC), and shear slowness (DTS) logs. Within the Areo oil field, two wells (well 001 and well 002) were correlated. The evaluated formations are still primarily composed of compacted shale and unconsolidated sandstone, with reservoir sand units exhibiting lower elastic and rock strength properties than shale units. High compressibility and porosity make sand more brittle, while low compressibility and porosity make shale stiffer due to high moduli. The maximum force that can be applied to a shale unit without causing it to fail is 17.23 MPa, which is the maximum average rock strength of the shale. It means that shale requires more vertical stress or pressure than sand does in order to deform it (15.06 MPa). The three sand prediction approaches used in the analysis of sand production predictions have cut-off values that are higher than the average values of the formations. The Schlumberger sand production index method (S/I) indicates that the reservoir has potential for sand influx in the two wells, with the average of the four reservoirs studied in wells 001 and 002 being 1.55 × 1012 psi and 1.14 × 1012 psi respectively. However, when a formation's sand production index is less than 1.24 × 1012 psi, as it is in this study, the formation is likely to produce sand. These findings support the notion that the defined sandstone units are highly unconsolidated and have a high potential for producing sands; therefore, sand control techniques must be factored into process optimization and cost reduction plans.
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spelling doaj.art-8d00e89548974db0a139e43f50be939b2024-01-24T05:22:07ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Energy Geoscience2666-75922024-01-0151100213Evaluation of formation susceptibility and sand production potential in an offshore field, Niger Delta Basin, NigeriaDavid O. Ubuara0Yinka A. Olayinka1Godwin O. Emujakporue2Geoffrey C. Soronnadi-Ononiwu3Department of Geology, University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria; Mease Energy Nigeria Limited, Port Harcourt, Nigeria; Corresponding author. Department of Geology, University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria.Department of Geology, University of Ibadan, NigeriaDepartment of Physics, University of Port Harcourt, NigeriaDepartment of Geology, University of Port Harcourt, NigeriaWellbore instability and sand production are all common challenges in the Niger Delta oil province, resulting in high drilling and production cost as well as damage to oil facilities. The vulnerability of lithologic formations to wellbore instability and resultant sand production is investigated in the four delineated reservoirs of the “Areo” field, western part of Niger Delta Basin. The foundation for establishing the geomechanical properties in this study was a 1-dimensional mechanical earth model, using gamma ray (GR), density (RHOB), compressional slowness (DTC), and shear slowness (DTS) logs. Within the Areo oil field, two wells (well 001 and well 002) were correlated. The evaluated formations are still primarily composed of compacted shale and unconsolidated sandstone, with reservoir sand units exhibiting lower elastic and rock strength properties than shale units. High compressibility and porosity make sand more brittle, while low compressibility and porosity make shale stiffer due to high moduli. The maximum force that can be applied to a shale unit without causing it to fail is 17.23 MPa, which is the maximum average rock strength of the shale. It means that shale requires more vertical stress or pressure than sand does in order to deform it (15.06 MPa). The three sand prediction approaches used in the analysis of sand production predictions have cut-off values that are higher than the average values of the formations. The Schlumberger sand production index method (S/I) indicates that the reservoir has potential for sand influx in the two wells, with the average of the four reservoirs studied in wells 001 and 002 being 1.55 × 1012 psi and 1.14 × 1012 psi respectively. However, when a formation's sand production index is less than 1.24 × 1012 psi, as it is in this study, the formation is likely to produce sand. These findings support the notion that the defined sandstone units are highly unconsolidated and have a high potential for producing sands; therefore, sand control techniques must be factored into process optimization and cost reduction plans.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666759223000598Wireline logStressGeo-mechanicanical characterizationSand predictionNiger delta
spellingShingle David O. Ubuara
Yinka A. Olayinka
Godwin O. Emujakporue
Geoffrey C. Soronnadi-Ononiwu
Evaluation of formation susceptibility and sand production potential in an offshore field, Niger Delta Basin, Nigeria
Energy Geoscience
Wireline log
Stress
Geo-mechanicanical characterization
Sand prediction
Niger delta
title Evaluation of formation susceptibility and sand production potential in an offshore field, Niger Delta Basin, Nigeria
title_full Evaluation of formation susceptibility and sand production potential in an offshore field, Niger Delta Basin, Nigeria
title_fullStr Evaluation of formation susceptibility and sand production potential in an offshore field, Niger Delta Basin, Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of formation susceptibility and sand production potential in an offshore field, Niger Delta Basin, Nigeria
title_short Evaluation of formation susceptibility and sand production potential in an offshore field, Niger Delta Basin, Nigeria
title_sort evaluation of formation susceptibility and sand production potential in an offshore field niger delta basin nigeria
topic Wireline log
Stress
Geo-mechanicanical characterization
Sand prediction
Niger delta
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666759223000598
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