1887
ASEG2009 - 20th Geophysical Conference
  • ISSN: 2202-0586
  • E-ISSN:

Abstract

Introduction

One of the challenges faced by reservoir engineers is to understand the way fluid saturation, pressure and compaction change between wells during production of a hydrocarbon reservoir. The optimum placement of infill wells and the identification of new step-out opportunities to maximise recovery of hydrocarbons relies on such information. Time lapse (or 4D) seismic is acknowledged as being the only direct wide-scale reservoir management tool that is capable of revealing these important details about a producing reservoir. The Life of Field Seismic (LoFS) project at the Valhall field on the Norwegian continental shelf illustrates the technical and economic success of reservoir monitoring using 4D seismic data. Today, as the industry explores, drills and produces deeper and/or more challenging targets, reliable and consistent reservoir monitoring is becoming even more essential. A new fibre optic seafloor seismic acquisition system – with high dynamic range, low background noise, low cost per channel and a long operational life – is leading the way towards cost-effective permanent seismic reservoir monitoring.

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/content/journals/10.1071/ASEG2009ab023
2009-12-01
2026-01-23
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References

  1. Barkved, O.I., Kommedal, J.H., and Thomsen, L., 2004. The role of multi-component seismic data in developing the Valhall Field, Norway: EAGE Extended Abstracts, Paris, E040.
  2. Barkved, O.I., and Kristiansen, T., 2005. Seismic time-lapse effects and stress changes: Examples from a compacting reservoir: The Leading Edge, 1244-1248.
  3. Rekdal, T., 2007. Fiber-optic reservoir imaging: E&P, September 2007.
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