Geoscience Magazine GEO ExPro V17i4 PDF
Geoscience Magazine GEO ExPro V17i4 PDF
Geoscience Magazine GEO ExPro V17i4 PDF
4 – 2020
geoexpro.com
TECHNOLOGY EXPLAINED
GEO TOURISM Making Waves with Big
Altiplano
EXPLORATION
Chasing Plays Along the
Rona Ridge
SEISMIC INTERPRETATION
Cinder Cone or Mud Volcano or …?
INDUSTRY ISSUES
No Longer a Dream
Contents
Vol. 17 No. 4
20 5 Editorial
Elnur Amikishiyev /123RF
10 A Minute to Read
22 14 Cover Story: GEO Tourism: The Bolivian
Intrigue and geopolitics surrounded
early oil exploration in the northern Altiplano
provinces of Iran.
20 Technology Explained: A Bridge
Between Two Worlds
Alfredo Guzmán
Alamy
42
28 Seismic Foldout: Artificial Intelligence –
Alfredo Guzmán has been an Revolutionizing our Understanding
untiring advocate for Mexico’s oil
and gas industry and its people. 34 Seismic Interpretation: Cinder Cone or
Mud Volcano
58
Somalia: A Final
Frontier Opens Up Quaternary
Neogene
2.6
Offshore Somalia is one of the few remaining frontier areas in the Tertiary
Cenozoic
South Atlantic starts opening
world. Only one exploration well, Meregh-1, has been drilled along the 23
Paleogene
country’s entire 1,200 km-long margin. That was in 1982 and very little
exploration has been undertaken in the country for at least 25 years,
particularly the deeper waters, which have only been investigated by
66*
Alpine orogeny
In July 2020, the Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources Cretaceous
Laramide orogeny
of the Federal Republic of Somalia established the Somali Petroleum
Authority (SPA), paving the way for the announcement in early August
of the first ever offshore licensing round – a milestone for the country.
The round comprises seven blocks, numbered 152, 153, 164, 165, 177,
Pangaea breakup
145
178 and 204, covering a total of 30,168 km2. The Somali offshore can
Mesozoic
be divided into three basins: from north to south these are the Obbia Jurassic
Basin; the Coriole Basin, where six of the offered blocks are situated;
Phanerozoic
provide excellent reservoirs, as are tilted fault blocks of pre-rift Karoo
sandstones, while further south, large, well-defined toe-thrust systems
299
with flat spots are visible, again offering attractive potential. Sealing
Carboniferous
FORMATION OF PANGAEA
lithologies are expected throughout the area. Play types identified
by TGS include sandstones and shales in pre-rift tilted fault blocks,
syn-rift sandstone wedges, carbonate build-ups, structural closures
and gravity slides and thrust-bound anticlines. One of the most
exciting aspects of the seismic interpretation is that, unlike much of 359*
East Africa where gas discoveries are the norm, TGS believe that there Devonian
Paleozoic
is a strong possibility of oil-prone prospects offshore the whole length
of the Somalian margin.
A revised Production Sharing Contract has been designed in
parallel with the 2020 round to encourage exploration, with fiscal
Variscan orogeny
419
terms reflecting technical, economic, commercial, operational and Silurian
political considerations.
443*
The round opened on August 4, 2020, with bid applications to be Ordovician
Caledonia orogeny
486
TGS
Cambrian
Eliis
software? For more than ten years, PaleoScan™
and the Eliis team has played its trump on
flexibility and constant innovation, with an effort
to cherish its users daily. This probably explains
why PaleoScan has proven to be a vital piece
of the interpretation puzzle in many areas and
sedimentary basins worldwide. Its avant-garde
semi-automatic interpretation method and its
quick way to get comprehensive data insight yield
an invaluable analytical capability in an intuitive
and interactive interpretation environment.
A few months ago, the 2020 version of
PaleoScan was released. A few of the exciting features to be found in this new version include:
• A way to consistently model the geology has been created that gets free of the seismic artefacts and is able to represent thrust
structures.
• The automatic fault extraction workflow has been improved.
• In 2D, the automatic connection of reflector propagation between the lines makes the interpreter’s life easier.
Discover more at the Eliis website.
number of years. It holds a 42.5% stake and its partners in the joint venture are
Cue Energy (21.5%), Beach Energy (21%) and New Zealand Oil and Gas (15%).
AustinBridgeporth
differences in the earth’s density to yield information
on geologic structures underground and undersea. The
data is acquired using either ships or aircraft and is very
effective at identifying host geologies that are indicative of
hydrocarbons or mineral ore bodies.
Multiclient geoscience data provider TGS and
specialist geosciences company AustinBridgeporth
recently announced a collaboration to undertake a
regional airborne Enhanced Full Tensor Gravity
Gradiometry (eFTG) multiclient survey over the Upper
Egypt region. The survey will also obtain magnetic and
LIDAR data and will be undertaken in a number of
phases. The first phase, which has already commenced,
will cover an area of approximately 120,000 km2 and
has been designed to provide unique, high-resolution
imaging of the region with increased accuracy and higher
spatial resolution to enhance exploration activities. It is AustinBridgeporth CEO Dr Mark Davies outlines the eFTG program to an
expected that the survey will provide sufficient data on the international audience at EGYPS2020.
geological structures and sedimentary basins in Upper
Egypt to enable the Egyptian government to launch new international bid rounds for the area. The project is being undertaken
for Egyptian company GANOPE, which is responsible for all oil exploration and exploitation activities carried out by contractors
in the southern region of Egypt.
Full Tensor Gradiometry measures the rate of change of gravity in all directions of the field, caused by subsurface geology.
The Lockheed Martin eFTG system used in this project is the world’s most advanced moving-base gravity gradiometer,
possessing a noise floor about four times lower than previous gradiometry systems and providing data with higher bandwidth,
giving increased accuracy and higher spatial resolution.
The temperature is -17°C in the tent! ochre and yellow snow-coated, eroded, Altiplano an area of inland drainage
Altitude: 4,700m, the highest campsite volcanic edifices. The Bolivian Altiplano (also called an endorheic basin), the
of the journey. The early morning revealed in all its cruel beauty, so lowest point of which is the Salar de
sunlight does not succeed in heating challenging to conquer. Ten exhausting Uyuni (see below). The basin has an
up the frozen air of Sur Lípez, the days fighting against awful sandy and approximate area of 154,000 km2.
southernmost region of Bolivia. The deep washboard tracks will be necessary The existence of the plateau is the
last noticeable human presence was a to escape this hostile part of the world. result of a gap in tectonic deformation
tourist 4x4 vehicle yesterday afternoon. in this segment of the Andes. Here,
Since then, nothing; the whole desert The Altiplano Plateau most of the tectonic shortening
of the high Altiplano was ours. For the The Altiplano is a high plateau that concentrates on the eastern boundary
first time, we experienced true silence: formed along with the tectonic uplift of the plateau, in the eastern Cordillera
no running water, no moving plant, no of the Andes mountains. Its average and the Sub-Andean ranges, whereas
insect or bird, and no wind. This vast elevation is about 3,750m. It is located the plateau itself has not experienced
emptiness was our anxiogenic sleeping where the Andean range is the widest, much shortening since the Upper
cocoon, a pure feeling of isolation and bounded to the west by the peaks of the Miocene. The reason why the
solitude. After a tasteless oat-based Western Cordillera, consisting of the Altiplano Plateau is poorly affected by
breakfast, we extracted our creaking modern volcanic arc, and to the east by tectonic shortening is still debated.
bodies out of the tent to embrace the peaks of the Eastern Cordillera, of Its preservation as a high plateau is
a stunning landscape: the Salar de tectonic origin. This peculiar geological a result of the arid climate, since the
Chalviri, nestled between mineral red- structural configuration makes the very limited erosion did not erode the
western and eastern boundaries of the
endorheic basin enough to connect it to
Losing the track in the middle of the Altiplano Plateau. The flat scenery is similar to that seen in the either the Pacific or the Atlantic.
middle of the low-altitude Pampas, but here we are at about 3,800m – higher than most European
peaks!
Olivier Galland and Caroline Sassier
West
relief of the southern end of the Bolivian BOLIVIA
Altiplano. Among these, extensive
Sucre
sheets of ignimbrite deposits resulting
e
from gigantic volcanic explosions almost
Eastern Cordillera
rn Co
Potosí
entirely covered this part of the plateau
during the Oligocene and Miocene.
CHILE
In such a dry and windy climate, Salar de
rdille
ignimbrite exhibits peculiar weathering
Uyuni
patterns due to the abrasive effect of
Altiplano Uyuni
sand transported by the ferocious winds.
Nazca Plateau
ra
These aeolian processes have sculpted
astonishing natural features, as can be
seen on the next page, which evoke the
surrealist paintings of Salvador Dalí,
which is why it became known as the Santiago
Salvador Dalí Desert.
Laguna Colorada
The southern Altiplano Plateau
hosts shallow lakes of wonderful colors, Salvador Dalí desert
targets of photographers from all over
the world. The southernmost of these Laguna Verde ARGENTINA
lakes is the Laguna Verde (‘green lake’ in
Spanish), close to the Chilean border. It Ushuaia
nestles at the foot of Licancabur volcano, The Bolivian Antiplano is a vast flat area in the center of the Andes
at altitudes of over 3,600m. The red line indicates Caroline and
the shape of which is characteristic
Olivier’s 10,000-km journey, undertaken in 2015.
of Andean strato-volcanoes. Its green
color is a result of mineral suspensions over more than 60 km2 and less than Laguna Colorada is a special nesting
of arsenic and other minerals collected one meter deep, the deep red ‘blood- place for three species of flamingos,
by the weathering of the neighboring colored’ waters spectacularly contrast including the extremely rare James’
volcanic rocks. Depending on the with shining white borax islands, the Flamingo.
sediment input into the lake, the colors deep blue sky of the high altitudes
vary from turquoise to dark emerald and the snowy peaks surrounding the The Salar de Uyuni
green (see image overleaf). lake. Suspension of red fine sediments The Salar de Uyuni is the world’s
The other famous and picturesque and pigments of certain types of algae largest salt flat, extending over an
lagoon is the salty Laguna Colorada provide this unique color. Because it area of 10,000 km 2 at an elevation of
(‘colored lagoon’ in Spanish). Extending contains high amounts of plankton, 3,656m. It is the lowest point of the
endorheic Altiplano Basin and so collects all the running conditions then trigger water evaporation, leaving the salty
water. It is covered by a salt crust a few meters thick, elements behind. Continued inflow of water from rivers
although the salt deposit can locally reach up to 140m in brings more salty elements, which again are deposited after
places. This vast shining white plain is extraordinarily flat, water evaporation. This process continues through time and
with an average elevation change of less than one meter over leads to high concentrations and large volumes of salts; the
its entire area. subsurface of the Salar de Uyuni hosts salt-saturated brines.
Salars are the natural products of endorheic basins in an The drained area which collects at the Salar de Uyuni is so vast
arid climate. Their formation results from a similar process that when, during the wet season, Lake Titicaca further north
to that of salt accumulation in the oceans. The rain falling on overflows and discharges into other lakes and salars, the waters
the endorheic basin reacts and weathers the exposed rocks, eventually reach Salar de Uyuni. When flooded, the Salar de
dissolving ions. These running waters collect into rivers, Uyuni can be described as the ‘world’s largest mirror’.
which converge toward the lowest point of the basin, in this One of the salts contained in the brines of the Salar de
case the Salar de Uyuni, where the dissolved salty elements Uyuni is subject to worldwide interest: lithium chloride (LiCl).
transported by the rivers accumulate. The arid climate The so-called ‘white gold’ is a key player in the industrial
Laguna Verde, at the foot of Licancabur volcano, the southern tip of Bolivia.
Olivier Galland and Caroline Sassier
A digital twin is a virtual representation the twin includes engineering content, virtual/augmented reality and machine
of a physical object or process and it is such as diagrams and specifications, learning will all progressively merge into
important because it allows analysis of as well as financial considerations and full digital twins which combine data
the data and systems involved in a new uncertainties like weather, customer analytics, real-time and near-real-time
concept before they have even happened. demand and supply disruption. data on installations, subsurface geology,
It is a bridge between the physical and Updating is constant and in real time, and reservoirs”.
digital world. As described in Network so fast decisions can be made using all At the moment much of the oil
World: “a digital twin is a computer available information. industry work involving digital twins
program that takes real-world data about The concept has caught on rapidly. is being undertaken in the design of
a physical object or system as inputs Global research and advisory company platforms and similar installations,
and produces as outputs predications or Gartner identified digital twins as with data on both existing and planned
simulations of how that physical object or one of the most important trends in installations being constantly fed into
system will be affected by those inputs.” 2018, and it is now being used in a the models. By using the cloud for
It is the advent of cloud computing range of industries, from transport to storing datasets from all over the world,
together with machine learning manufacturing and healthcare. accurate and wide-ranging information
algorithms and rapid computing power is used to ensure a new design is both
that has made the idea of integrating Digital Twins in O&G up to date and robustly tested. It
all data together a practical reality. As an industry at the forefront of requires a big investment in systems,
‘Smart’ components containing sensors technology that already works with sensors and analytics, but many
are used to gather data about the real- dynamic software models, oil and gas is companies believe it is worthwhile.
time status, working condition and also taking advantage of this concept, The concept is also in use in
position of a physical item, such as an both in ensuring efficient and safe operations, where it can help inform
engine – or an offshore drilling rig. The ongoing operations and in designing new decision-making around optimizing
data is sent to a cloud-based system, techniques and facilities. Independent production and maintenance by assessing
which stores and analyzes it, combining risk management and quality assurance how actions or events affect a virtual
it with and comparing it to other expert DNV GL has undertaken research model of an asset. Since it is possible to
relevant data, so the twin simulates the that suggests that in the oil and gas model not only existing conditions but
physical object. Additional information industry “cloud computing, advanced to also simulate extreme circumstances,
integrated with the sensor data into simulation, virtual system testing, the digital twin enables the operator to
evaluate the most appropriate
procedures to ensure both
optimal production and
personnel safety.
capable of spotting issues in the field increasing safety and reducing field
before they have had a chance to affect personnel, and in the installations
production. It can be used to test ‘what required to process, refine and
As ever, international interests were at the heart of the intrigue around the awarding
and operating of concessions in the north of Iran.
The early history of oil in Iran Origins of the Persian Oil Industry producer of sulfur, lead, copper and
(Persia) is overshadowed by events In the late nineteenth century, the coal. Although the firman was for ten
surrounding the Anglo-Persian Oil shahs of the Qajar dynasty who mines, and the Khourian fold was of
Company – known as Anglo-Iranian ruled Persia were on the look-out for some interest as an oil-producing area,
from 1935 and the forerunner of British new sources of income, and selling production methods were rudimentary,
Petroleum – which operated the D’Arcy concessions was an easy method of with crude oil being collected from
concession for the south-western part raising extra funds. In 1879, Naser seepages on the ground.
of the country. However, there is a less al-Din Shah granted a German-born The D’Arcy concession, granted
familiar narrative around the provinces British subject, Baron Julius de Reuter in 1901, formed the basis of Anglo-
of northern Iran which, because of – founder of the famous news
their proximity to the oil-rich southern agency – a concession to prospect
Caucasus region, were considered for minerals. Two wells were
promising. At the heart of this story drilled in Fars and one on Qeshm
is the mercurial figure of Akaki Island, but without success.
Khoshtaria, a Russian businessman In 1880 the Shah granted a
from Georgia, who was instrumental firman (or royal decree) to Hajir
in securing oil concessions for the area, Ali Akbar Amin, allowing him
while the competition over oil rights to look for minerals in Kavir-i-
rekindled the nineteenth-century Khourian, a desert area to the
rivalry between Russia and Great south of the town of Semnan.
Britain, only now with a new player in Amin, described as the ‘custodian
their midst: the United States. of the mines’, was a small-scale
Nadar, Wikipedia
operations in Oils Limited with Khoshtaria as a shareholder. Although the
south-western Persian government canceled the concession, and a Treaty of
Persia and Friendship between Persia and Russia in 1921 also cast doubt
specifically on its legality, Anglo-Persian stuck to its guns and insisted it
excluded five was still valid.
northern
provinces – America Moves on the Northern Provinces
Azerbaijan, The early 1920s was marked by two American companies
Gilan, – Standard Oil of New Jersey and Sinclair Consolidated Oil
Mazanderan, Corporation – trying to gain a stake in Persian oil. Since the
Astrabad and D’Arcy concession ruled them out of the south-west, their
Khurasan. In efforts focused on the northern provinces. This was a time of
1908, when the growing interest in overseas oil development, with US firms
company struck being encouraged by Secretary of State Hoover to seek new
oil at Masjid- sources of petroleum around the globe in pursuit of the so-
i-Suleiman called ‘Open Door’ principle.
in Khuzestan In August 1920 US firms were invited to apply for
Naser al-Din Shah Qajar, 1831–1896. province, the concessions in northern Persia. Standard took up the challenge
future direction and opened talks in Tehran, but problems soon emerged.
of Persia’s oil industry was confirmed. Anglo-Persian built Sinclair declared an interest, immediately presenting Standard
a refinery at Abadan and became a major supplier of fuel oil with a rival bid and ensuring that the state department could
to the Royal Navy with the result that, in 1914, the British not favor one firm over the other. That effectively neutralized
government took a 51% share in the company. In this way, Washington’s support at a time when London was pushing the
British imperial interests were firmly tied to the future of interests of its protégé, Anglo-Persian, which was using the
Persian oil. Khoshtaria concession to block its rivals from the northern
provinces.
The Multi-Faceted Akaki Khoshtaria
Akaki Khoshtaria (1873–1932).
Until then, the center of the petroleum world had been the
southern Caucasus, where a number of entrepreneurs made
fortunes in the oil industry. Among them was a Georgian
businessman by the name of Akaki Khoshtaria, who mixed in
the highest circles, counting Winston Churchill and Franklin
D. Roosevelt as acquaintances and keeping close links with
the ruling shahs and the Russians. He was described as ‘an
American-style businessman’, though his start in the industry
owed as much to luck as business acumen. One of his oil
shipments was caught in a storm and diverted to Turkey,
where he sold the cargo at a great profit and was able to invest
the proceeds in equipment, thus entering the ranks of the oil
producers of the time.
When the British spy, Reginald Teague-Jones, visited
Tbilisi in 1922, he stayed at Khoshtaria’s mansion, which was
decorated with the heads of a leopard and an elephant ordered
from a London taxidermist. Many claims have been made on
Khoshtaria’s behalf: that he set up the first railway in Iran, was
first to export cars to Iran, owned a monopoly on soap and
fish producing, was involved in the wool trade and founded
the Georgian navy. He was also a philanthropist, patron of the
arts and sponsored students to study abroad. However, it was
in the realm of oil concessions that his name first came to the
notice of the international oil companies.
In 1916 Khoshtaria was granted an oil concession for
the provinces of Gilan, Mazanderan and Astrabad for a
period of 70 years. This concession was partly based on a
firman granted in 1896 and was generally known as the
‘Khoshtaria concession’. In order to gain a foothold in the
Alamy
BP Archive
they were a popular counterweight
to the overweening influence of
the British. In November 1921,
the Persian government granted
Standard the right to negotiate a
50-year concession, but the fact
that Anglo-Persian controlled the
pipe-laying rights and therefore the
main oil outlet for crude oil was
a major obstacle to their scheme.
However, their bid coincided with
a rapprochement with the British
across the Middle East, with Standard
Oil of New York (Socony) being
allowed into Palestine (see GEO
ExPro Vol. 17, No. 1). In December
1921 Standard New Jersey joined A road to the Persian oil fields, 1926.
forces with Anglo-Persian in the
northern provinces of Persia. believed that to be a viable option. However, after the Teapot
Soon there was an added complication. In December 1923 Dome bribery scandal broke in the US, Sinclair struggled to
the new prime minister, Reza Khan, approved the grant of a raise the funds for a loan owed to the Persian government. In
concession to Sinclair for four northern provinces. In order to June 1924 two Americans were attacked at a Persian shrine,
get around the problem of exporting oil, the company planned one of whom was rumored to be the Sinclair representative,
to transport it across the Caucasus to the Black Sea – in view Ralph Soper. Although Soper was unscathed, he took the hint
of its good relations with the Soviet government, the company and left the country soon afterwards.
A map of the Kavir-i-Khourian concession, created in 1945. The red-hatched area probably contains the lands of the original firman.
Library of Congress
of oil through its territory, the situation became
impossible for Sinclair, and the company withdrew
from the concession in 1925. Standard followed
suit two years later, leaving the field clear for
Anglo-Persian in the south-west, but the status
of the northern provinces was still debatable.
In 1937 the Amiranian Oil Company, a US firm
based in Delaware, gained a 50-year concession
for northern and eastern Iran, but withdrew two
years later, citing political and logistical problems,
while Anglo-Persian argued that the concession
infringed the Khoshtaria concession.
Revolutionizing Our
The data focuses on the Dowsing Graben System (DGS), North Dogger Fault Zone. The complex,
thin-skinned tectonics which define the graben feature are detached from the underlying Permian
tectonics. These are responsible for the surrounding hydrocarbon fields such as Lancelot, Excalibur,
Mordred, Guinevere and Galahad; however, recent studies illustrate the importance of the DGS on
Understanding
the petroleum system (Grant et al., 2019). Knowing that faults can influence the petroleum system,
they all need defining clearly and concisely so a greater understanding of the subsurface can be
achieved.
The clarity of the AI results ensures a rapid and detailed understanding of the structural regime.
As would be expected from the application of AI, the results are available very quickly, the
interpretation is free of any interpreter bias and delivers an indication of the confidence in the
structural interpretation.
Figure 1: New tricks with old data: AI fault analysis of a 1992 dataset from the UK North Sea, revealing the structural complexity of the
Dowsing Graben System. Figure 2: Map showing the location of the Lancelot Study Area (modified after Underhill, 2009).
Geoteric
AI to data types of all quality, from around the world. 1 – bottom right image), an interpreter can gain lateral orientation or strike (Figure
We, and our clients, have seen that AI is now mature a greater understanding of their volume and any 5). Knowing the local stress field, the
Figure 4: (A) fault representation on in-line and cross-line; (B) 3D rendering of fault. Sub/parallel
enough to provide insight and new understanding to potential interaction between stratigraphic features and faults often have strange shallow shapes (A) but when the 3D shape is taken into account and the orientation of the faults which are
datasets young and old. If you think the data quality structural events. Although the AI analysis attempts fault plane visualized (B) the shallow response can be correctly confirmed as a structural lineament. most likely open can be determined
needs to be perfect, think again (Han and Cader, 2020)! to fi nd all faults in the data, the algorithm can miss and examined and the implications
If you need a better understanding of the system you one from time to time, as seen on the furthest left Illuminating Faults considered (Williams et al., 2020). The AI algorithm’s ability
are working with at a development or exploration scale bounding graben fault, where a small antithetic fault The AI fault analysis of the Lancelot field illustrates to see through poor data to a more informative signal that
to inform investment decisions, AI is now proven to is not identified (Figure 1). With the assistance of an exceptional results when visualized in 3D (Figure 3). The is related to the fault structure has resulted in high-quality
be the breakthrough you need. Even in noisy or poorly interpreter, the algorithm can be further trained to ability to see the distribution of faults in a lateral and and reliable data which can be used to make a well-founded
orientated datasets, AI is seen to deliver an informative identify features that were initially of low confidence. vertical continuous manner gives the interpreter more decision about the location and orientation of exploration or
3D model of the subsurface. Th is augmented approach to AI interpretation not confidence in the results and a deeper understanding of the appraisal wells in good and poor data.
only ensures a quick turnaround in results but system. Having the ability to analyze the complex Dowsing The work to produce the models of these fields can take just a
The Big 3D Reveal one determined to have the most accurate level of Graben System in 3D allows for unprecedented subsurface day from receipt of uninterpreted data to the results seen here,
Effective structural analysis is critical to asset team geological understanding. investigation – now the intricacies of the complex faulting with volume calculations.
decisions. The ability to reveal faulting and structural Revealing the structural elements in 3D can be system can be revealed. In this image the internal faulting
elements in 3D helps understanding of the subsurface, greatly beneficial to an interpreter, helping them of the graben system is illuminated with many cross-cutting So, Is It All Hype?
not just in the level of detail that can be obtained, but visualize features that would otherwise remain unseen. and basin parallel faults. We have experienced in several At Geoteric we think it is right to leave that decision to you,
also the speed; time thus saved can be used to enable Best practice for structural interpretation involves projects that the Geoteric 3D visualized model of the but for what it is worth we have already run over 150 seismic
further understanding. Embedding AI fault results interpreting the structures perpendicular to the strike structure delivered by the application of AI has explained volumes and multiple client projects from all over the world.
into the horizon interpretation process ensures the of the faults. However, nature does not always allow multiple post-drill well failures. Had AI been available pre- This AI fault interpretation service is removing the hype from
resulting horizon (Figure 1 – foldout on previous for this, with most seismic volumes containing faults drill, and had it been applied to the data, the well trajectories the machine learning and AI technology cycle and replacing it
page, top right image) is interpreted understanding of varying orientations. In the background image of would likely have been changed before drilling. Bringing the with delivery.
the location of AI-defi ned faults and allows for further Figure 1, several wide, low-angled fault responses drillers and development team together around the 3D AI We believe that this as just the beginning of a deeper
accurate surface generation, tightly tying the faults. As are observed, which would normally be questioned structural model is a key to better, faster and safer projects. understanding of the Earth.
the interpretation is bound by AI-detected faults, this instantly by an interpreter. After investigation,
in turn creates a pseudo-fault polygon representation these responses are confi rmed as faults, but they Path to Success Is Rarely Straight References available online.
are (sub)parallel to the seismic The images from the Lancelot dataset show a
Figure 3: 3D representation of the faults associated with the Dowsing Graben System. section. Faults observed in this horizon that has been offset by a fault – nothing Figure 5: AI fault trends rendered at top reservoir, highlighting the orientation/strike of
Faults with varying strikes are observed and illuminated in this 3D rendering of the AI fault
orientation often produce some so unusual there. The depiction of the fault on lineaments, which are critical to the success of the fractured basement Lancaster Field.
detection.
very interesting shapes, which the in-line is very unusual and is something of
are confi rmed after QC (see invaluable assistance when interpreting horizons
section below). The identification (Figure 4). To aid understanding in the figure,
of (sub)parallel faults can further the fault is shown as an interpreted line on an
assist in horizon interpretation in-line and a cross-line (A), and a time slice. It is
and explain why there may be a also shown as a 3D plane (B) with transparency.
break in an apparent continuous Whilst it may be unusual to see a fault
reflector, only to reappear shortly interpreted as a sub-horizontal ‘smile’ breaking
after. Th is allows an interpreter up a horizon, it is clear this result is logical,
to work in a traditional 2D consistent and correct. If you have reservoir
environment (in-line and cross- engineering or petroleum system questions
line interpretation), whilst having involving flow-pathways, either in production
a strong appreciation for the 3D or exploration, perhaps the answer can yet be
shapes of faults, often an issue found in your seismic data. The identification and
Geoteric
Geoteric
which remains with traditional interpretation of elements that are difficult to find
interpretation techniques. is a key benefit of AI analysis of seismic datasets.
My grandfather once said to me that “sometimes I sits and think, and sometimes I just sits.” In the
Covid Anthropause one might be forgiven for adopting the latter strategy – but the questioning mind
of the geologist is built for puzzle solving, as demonstrated in a recent debate on LinkedIn about a
curious geological puzzle.
The image below was recently posted for hydrocarbons at the time. Is it a gas of potentially uncertain observations,
on LinkedIn by Discover Geoscience escape feature or volcano?” with their alternatives and subtleties.
(Searcher’s G&G team). They asked: The “bad boy” in question is the Weighting of this information can and
“Cinder Cone or Mud Volcano? beautifully-imaged nearly equilateral does create a diversity of interpretation.
We discovered this bad boy lurking triangular structure at the center of the The debate on LinkedIn drew many
in Searcher’s Hahonua Dataset while image below, which we will now call the responses, from all over the globe. Some
working on our regional Gulf of Papua ‘feature’. geoscientists were obviously intimate
Regional Study recently. What do you In the 21st century, this should be a with the area and some less familiar
think it is? simple question; a clear, modern seismic but had a great line in observational
“It sits on a regional flooding surface example of a distinctive feature, many reasoning. However, given a binary
above a small half graben with no of which have been described and seen question, what was interesting was
obvious vertical feeder pipe below. It before. But this is geoscience, and we the range of strongly held conclusions
is 130m high by 1km wide and looks look for both “what are we seeing?” and that were distilled from the available
identical on the crossline. There are “how did it get there?” to tell us what it information.
known volcanics at this time regionally, is made from and whether it has utility. Some responses were simply: “it’s
but the basin was also likely maturing This is deduced from a huge variety a cinder cone” or “it’s a mud diapir”;
Searcher Seismic
analogy (aka “seen this before bias”), or
perhaps based on the click-bait quick
look. As Malcom Gladwell showed in
his book Blink, reflex analyses can be
helpful and insightful, but since as many
jumped one way (igneous volcanic) as
the other (fluidized sediment) by reflex,
we needed a more reductive analysis
to move ahead. So started the more
observational analysis. Of course, before
you can put a geologist in a box with
only two sides, first you need some “but
is it either?” suggestions.
Carbonate Build-Up?
An alternative to seabed extrusion of
one form or another is the suggestion
that the feature is a carbonate build-up.
Pinnacle reefs are well known in the
Gulf of Papua, and Luis Carlos Carvajal An example of a carbonate build-up seen on Searcher’s seismic from Papua New Guinea.
made the excellent suggestion that we
use the Burgess et al. (2013) 20-step observations of the internal geometry seem likely, so we will park that in case
observational ranking methodology of the feature; there appears faintly to we run out of other models.
to analyze the feature as an isolated be a series of internal reflectors parallel If we rule out the carbonate, relict
carbonate build-up. In this system the to the dipping flanks, again suggesting and salt hypotheses in favor of an
feature scored 5 out of 20, suggesting construction via eruption in some form extrusive, the issue for the igneous
that either the ranking system was from a central point. Some observers model is the soft top. Glenn Lovitz
not attuned to this type of carbonate saw this as evidence of extrusion, but suggested that cinder cones may be soft
build-up or it is not one. others did not think there was enough topped with a thick tuffaceous final or
A characteristic of a carbonate internal variation versus analog volcanics major late flow that is highly porous, i.e.
between overlying and underlying that they had seen, as they expected low velocity (see webinar Abdulkader
mudstones is a hard seismic kick in volcanics to be polyphased. The steeply M. Afifi, 2020). A lower impedance
the acoustic impedance at the top dipping layers within the feature suggest compared to the bland shales above
of the feature, with a soft one at the a more central construction rather than could be enhanced by subsequent clay
base. Here, the blue dipping event of an erosional remnant which could be diagenesis of the felsic component.
the flanks of the feature suggest the expected to have base-parallel rather Glenn notes that mapping the internal
reverse, as the top is soft and the base than flank-parallel internal bedding. geometry can differentiate between a
hard. Just to its right, where ‘post- Another non-mud or igneous pinnacle reef and an extrusive, but the
feature’ mudstone sits on syn-rift, the extrusion suggestion was a salt diapir, nature of the extrusion, be it magma
basal event is less strong, implying that yet there is no stock connecting to the or fluidized clastics, could perhaps
the feature is even less dense than the halofer and not enough disruption to generate the same constructional
surrounding mudstone. Several posters make a diapir a candidate. However, salt geomorphology.
noted that shaped features had been could represent the body of the feature;
drilled assuming they were pinnacle it is similar to a remnant salt wall Why No Feeder Pipe?
reefs in various other basins in the between two sediment pods, as seen in But a bigger problem awaits all the
world from New Zealand to Turkey; other salt provinces like Gabon or the extrusive models. Several contributors
anecdotes that usually ended ruefully in UK Central Graben. The occurrence of noted that the feature has no feeder pipe
an old volcano. This may be evidence of salt walls with sediment pods between or disturbance below the cone, at least
sampling bias because fewer carbonate them could explain why the structure not visible on this section. Some great
reefs are discovered by accident by a to the left of the feature is also soft seismic examples were posted showing
well targeting an igneous volcano. topped, although rather less perfectly drilled volcanoes that had very disturbed
formed; could it be another volcano or substrate. If it were a cinder cone or mud
Different Form of Extrudite? relict salt wall? However, salt with a soft diapir then some material, either molten
A non-mud or igneous extrudite model kick top (unlikely unless deeply buried lava or fluidized mud, will be supplied
suggested that it could be an erosional or surrounded by carbonate), in a basin from depth to the then sea floor, where
remnant or even a prograding point where salt is not recognized and most the feature is built. Why can we not see a
bar. There were some quite detailed likely has a deepwater setting does not conduit of material beneath it?
Searcher Seismic
wasting and depositional
processes, in relationship
with sea-level change,
acting in both subaerial and
submarine environments.
However, the mudstones
overlying the feature are
deepwater sediments, so
presumably some of these
processes may have had
little chance to modify the
geometry before the feature
The feature at ‘true scale’.
was buried.
Of course, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence The surrounding mudstones onlap the feature, do not
per se. The feeders may have caused disruption below seismic seem to have eroded it, and appear to have compacted more
resolution (especially if they were clastic injectites) or the line than the feature itself (slightly arcuate downward on the
or feeder pipes need not have been central. Although you only flanks), suggesting that it is made of material that behaves
get a pointed crest on a conic section if you go through the cone differently to the depositional mudstones surrounding it;
top, many cinder cones have pointed caldera-rim ridges that are either mud in the feature is not de-watering on loading, or
offset from the vent center. Allan Scardina favored a volcanic they comprise material that is not compacting. This fueled
cone subject to a better understanding of the paleo-bathymetry the reasoning that the feature comprises a hard (igneous by
of the onlapping section; he felt a lack of feeders is not definitive inference) material, more solid than the mudstones around
evidence as they can be difficult to spot. It was exciting to see a it and perhaps not consistent with it being comprised of soft
post regarding the non-visibility of a possible feeder pipe, with mud volcano extrusives. More solid but lower density with
an example from offshore New Zealand including different that soft seismic kick?
types of igneous seismic facies (Bischoff et al., 2019). The presence or otherwise of distortion in the seismic
When Discover Geoscience posted the original image, above the crest of the feature drew attention. Some identified
they also noted the lack of obvious feeder pipes and also the a gas escape distortion in the overlying strata, others
aspect ratio (height to width 0.1) and the fact that the same unambiguously said there was no sign of gas escape, only
geometry was present on the cross line, making it likely that faulting due to compaction. That fluid flow might continue
we are looking at a conical feature, albeit rather more squashed through a system post-mud eruption and burial is not
flat than the image suggests. Several posters took the time to impossible, yet it is also not compulsory, nor probably limited
recreate the image in ‘true scale’ – a discipline that perhaps only to clastics and could come from volcanics too.
we should endorse more often as it allows our models to be
informed more accurately by real-world observation. However, Curiouser and Curiouser
the aspect ratio is not uncommon in monogenetic submarine So two parallel trains of argument were slugging it out in the
volcanoes composed of poorly consolidated tephra showing LinkedIn feed: the volcanic cinder cone or the mud extrusive.
steep slopes and pointy or flat tops, often characterized by sub- The salt diapir, carbonate build-up and erosional remnant
vertical knolls (e.g. Cavallaro and Coltelli, 2019). Submarine have all left the venue on stretchers with mild concussion.
extrusives are often not as delightfully pointy as this example But now comes a third boxer into the ring: Charlotta Luthje
because of the interplay between volcanic activity, wave and said: “I put my money on a sand volcano at that scale.” This is
(A) Cross-section through a cinder cone, adapted from Németh and Kereszturi (2015). (B) Seismic line across a cinder cone and lava flow highlighting the
general morphology and seismic response.
Sharp Reflections
adapted to the new compute engine, greatly accelerating
the launch of the JIP’s new commercial software, Pre-Stack
Pro. This crowdfunding model established product-market
fit and created a small core of early adopters committed to
using the software on real datasets. Today’s 3D visualization canvas in Pre-Stack Pro. A nearly-unlimited number
of 3D stack and attribute volumes can be loaded to memory on HPC clusters,
True Interpretive Processing and browsed interactively. Pre-stack gathers can also be accessed and
The technology quickly captured a small niche market displayed at specific locations. Data courtesy of Equinor.
among hard-core geophysicists seeking a ‘light’ seismic
processing tool that could be used on multiclient 3D Recognizing the potential of the software beyond marine
exploration surveys. Multiclient data typically require gather streamer acquisition, the pre-stack scope was extended. The
post-processing for AVO or pre-stack inversion studies, and Fraunhofer research team worked with Sharp Reflections to
Pre-Stack Pro provided a real-time, DIY solution. Many extend their pre-stack seismic data model, adding a second
users had hands-on seismic processing experience, with the gather dimension to handle azimuthally-varying seismic data
skills needed to tune processing workflows and optimize collected on land or with Ocean Bottom Node technology.
data quality for specific reservoir objectives. Through a This resulted in the development of new tools to automatically
series of funded foundation projects, these early oil company extract amplitude information from any angle of incidence
customers sponsored development of amplitude mapping, and any azimuth direction and collect the results in a single
well calibration, and pre-stack seismic inversion tools to five-dimensional seismic volume.
help de-risk prospects without switching applications. These
developments began to blur the traditional boundaries Best Practice Workflows, Brought to Life
between seismic processing and interpretation software, with Key advisors in Statoil’s Production Subsurface Technology
a foot in both worlds. organization recognized that Pre-Stack Pro was increasingly
The new pre-stack well tie module. Actual and synthetic pre-stack traces are cross-correlated, providing quick visual feedback about the match quality.
The tool eliminates the need to tie synthetics to each individual partial angle stack and simplifies calibration of seismic amplitudes in producing fields.
Sharp Reflections
a
b
c
Sharp Reflections
Quantitative analysis of pre-stack 4D amplitudes improve understanding of dynamic changes in producing reservoirs. (a) individual and combined pressure
and saturation changes for water and gas each show a distinct 4D amplitude fingerprint on synthetic EEI models; (b) actual EEI differences for specific
reservoir zones are calculated from pre-stack seismic; (c) EEI cross-plots are used to classify the changes according to the expected dynamic response. Data
courtesy of Equinor.
used for routine seismic reservoir understand the quality of their pre- geophysicists have the best tools at hand
characterization tasks in producing stack data and the associated AVO to properly understand and get the most
fields. Nonetheless, critical ‘feature gaps’ information, with the possibility of out of their data.”
remained. The companies signed a new interactively evaluating quantitative Time-lapse 4D projects consist of
exclusive R&D deal to plug these gaps interpretation products all the way a baseline survey and one or more
and develop an efficient geophysical through to pre-stack seismic inversion. monitoring surveys, generating
interpretation workflow stretching from This leads to a much more informed multiple vintages of data that must be
seismic QC and data cleanup to full pre- understanding of how quantitative painstakingly acquired and processed
stack inversion. interpretation can contribute to well to maximize repeatability, resulting
Major developments in the ‘Efficient planning or geomodeling projects for a in a veritable explosion in total data
QI’ (EQI) project included design of given field and dataset. The threshold volumes. Full-angle and multiple
a new pre-stack well tie module and for working with quantitative analysis partial angle stacks are produced for
implementation of proprietary seismic as part of interpretation workflows both each vintage, and difference volumes
inversion codes developed by Statoil in development projects and producing are generated between each time-
and the Norwegian Computing Center fields has been considerably lowered step and all previous vintages. Three
(Norsk Regnesentral). This new solution through the project.” monitoring surveys can create as
had all the functionality required many as 50 individual and difference
to design, build, run and calibrate Multidimensional Interpretation volumes, which must be analyzed
the inversion, and to interrogate and Equinor users soon recognized that to yield a comprehensive picture of
extract maps from the 3D results. the new technology offers even greater production-induced changes. Attributes
Statoil also facilitated IP transfer and benefits when applied to seismic and inversion results add further to the
encouraged the companies to establish reservoir monitoring, prompting the number of derived volumes.
a commercial partnership, which team to look again at the scope of the Equinor researchers and 4D
then secured Statoil’s investment in research. According to Sissel Grude specialists now organize these time-
advanced geophysical technology and Haug, R&D project manager for this lapse volumes into a ‘pseudo’ pre-
a sustainable framework for future project, which is still ongoing, small stack data structure to create logical
innovations. enhancements can make a big impact. collections of volumes for each
Sonja Maultzsch, leading advisor for “We see that minor improvements to vintage. By exploiting the 5D data
quantitative seismic analysis at Equinor, the software can play an important role structure developed for multi-azimuth
has already seen the R&D investment in analysis of time-lapse seismic data, seismic, partial angle stacks for all
bear fruit. “The tools developed through both pre- and post-stack. By funding the seismic vintages can be grouped in a
the EQI project empower geophysicists development of these improvements, single, multidimensional volume. This
throughout the organization to we ensure that our production greatly simplifies the organization
Alfredo Guzmán:
Making a Case for Mexico HEATHER SAUCIER
Alfredo Guzmán is an untiring advocate for Mexico’s oil and gas industry and its people.
He tells GEO ExPro about his years exploring new geographic and technical frontiers in
the country and his hopes for the future.
About 100 years ago, Mexico practically dominated the lift its current ban on hydraulic fracturing and unsuspend
industry as the world’s second largest oil producer, trailing auctions for private investors and international operators.
only the United States, and as the world leader in oil exports. The time for Mexico is now.
Its well-known Northern Golden Lane fields in the Tampico-
Misantla Basin were pumping up to 300,000 barrels of oil a Budding Geologist
day. That era created a strong sense of pride for the country Although his father, the late Eduardo J. Guzmán, worked
and has motivated some of Mexico’s modern-day geologists to as a geologist for Pemex for 34 years, the young Alfredo
push for a renaissance. initially opted to study chemistry at Texas
Believing that Mexico has much more potential Tech University, until a geology professor
than recognized, Alfredo Guzmán, a former took him to Palo Duro Canyon State
Vice President of Exploration at Pemex Park near Amarillo, Texas. Guzmán
and charter Commissioner of Mexico’s became mesmerized with the stories
National Hydrocarbons Commission, that rocks could tell about the earth
is encouraging a renewal of and found himself following in his
exploration. Having worked in all father’s footsteps.
eleven hydrocarbon-bearing basins After earning bachelor’s and
of Mexico and been responsible for master’s degrees in geology,
great surges in production, Guzmán concentrating on carbonates,
knows the country is steeped in he declined offers to work at
unrecovered resources that could independent oil companies,
bolster the struggling Mexican enticed by the great potential
economy. of Mexico. As a young geologist
“Mexico is poorly explored and with big dreams, Guzmán was
exploited because since 1938 the especially attracted to the large
government has maintained a monopoly carbonate fields discovered in
on the search and production of the Tampico-Misantla Basin of
hydrocarbons. It is impossible to benefit North Central Mexico. He began
from its huge endowment with only his career at Pemex in 1974 as a field
one oil company,” Guzmán said. “Even if geologist. Just four years later those
Mexico had an ecosystem of thousands of same carbonate fields gave rise to
operating and service companies, that would the Sureste Basin’s Cantarell
still only make a dent in all that richness.” field, which became the
Guzmán, 72, also knows that the world’s largest
window for capitalizing on offshore oil field
hydrocarbons in 2004, when it
is shrinking, reached its peak
as the world production of
searches for 2.2 MMbopd.
reliable sources Guzmán
of sustainable participated in
energy. As the discovery
a result, he of substantial
has been gas fields in
championing the Vizcaíno
efforts for Desert and
Mexico to Alfredo Guzmán
in the Gulf of
Alfredo Guzmán
compete with the oil-rich
Sureste Basin and were
not developed. “I was not
frustrated about these
discoveries not being
economical to develop,”
Guzmán notes. “I was
young and having fun.”
In the early 1980s, he
worked in the Chihuahua
Basin in search of potential
similar to the Permian
Basin across the border in
the US, but the difference
between the geological
conditions across the Rio
Grande ended any hope of
finding sweet spots there.
He then focused on the
Sierra Madre Oriental fold-
and-thrust belt west of the Petroleum basins of Mexico.
Tampico-Misantla Basin,
known for its oil potential, but a lack proposed leads, prospects and drilling than a dozen new discoveries. After
of high-resolution seismic data and the locations based on 3D seismic data. researching the prolific gas wells
national pursuit of less complex basins Applying advanced technology, such in Trinidad and Tobago, he began
prevented its exploration. as PDC bits, well completions with implementing horizontal drilling
Over the next decade, Guzmán larger fractures, and the commingling completions with slotted casing, and
continued to explore the Tampico- of multiple sands, daily gas production within three years daily production
Misantla, where substantial oil increased from 180 MMcfg to more jumped from 130 MMcfg to nearly
accumulations had been found in than 1.6 Bcfg. 1 Bcfg.
carbonates, and the Chicontepec Sub- In 1995, Guzmán became “Alfredo has carefully studied the
basin, known for its tight oil. However, Exploration Manager of Pemex’s resource development in the US and
“exploration became a challenge, North Region and oversaw the other places in the world and realized
as most human resources, rigs and exploration of northern Mexico, how these lessons could be applied to
investments were transferred to the including the deep waters in the Mexico’s extraordinary opportunities,”
recently discovered fields in the Sureste Gulf of Mexico. Four years later, he said Paul Weimer, professor at the
Basin,” Guzmán explains. “Pemex, became Vice President of Exploration University of Colorado in Boulder and
being the only oil company in Mexico, and, with the help of Brett Edwards, Director of the Energy and Minerals
abandoned for all practical purposes an Australian international Applied Research Center, who worked
the exploration and development of the consultant, he implemented a process with Guzmán on a research project
Tampico-Misantla Basin.” The move for the evaluation of exploration between Pemex and the university.
made sense for a company, but not for a opportunities. Under Guzmán’s “He is a fantastic geologist and a global
country. guidance, the country’s registry grew ambassador of our profession and
from roughly 50 drillable locations to industry.”
A Wave of Success more than 2,100 leads, prospects and
In the early 1990s Guzmán was asked identified drilling locations. The Case for New Technology
to move to northern Mexico to lead Guzmán was made Vice President DeGolyer and MacNaughton had
the rejuvenation of non-associated gas of the North Region in 2001 by Pemex certified in the 1960s that the
production in the Burgos and Sabinas E&P CEO Luis Ramírez Corzo, Chicontepec Sub-basin contained 137
Basins, which were experiencing becoming the first geologist in Mexico Bb oil and 60 Tcfg – yet the area of
significant declines. Having read to hold such a position. His expertise about 5,000 km2 was producing only
about the success of multidisciplinary was needed once more, as that region 3,000 bopd. “Although our marching
approaches in South Texas, he put was responsible for all of the country’s orders were to explore for gas, this
together five such teams for the job and, dry gas resources. He oversaw was too challenging to let it rest,”
harnessing the talent of this broad range operations in the Veracruz Basin and Guzmán said. “This basin has reservoirs
of experts, Guzmán and the teams applied 3D seismic technology across strikingly similar to the Spraberry
evaluated undeveloped discoveries and all producing areas, resulting in more Formation of the Permian Basin.”
Alfredo Guzmán
in tight rocks, which require
horizontal wells with hydraulic
fracturing for recovery. “The
basin has the same amount of
oil and similar reservoirs as the
Permian Basin, which produces
4.8 MMbopd, a third of the US
production,” he adds.
Guzmán shared Mexico’s
plight at the American
Association of Petroleum
Geologists (AAPG) Global Super
Basins seminar in 2019. AAPG
Past President Charles Sternbach
recalled that “Alfredo gave a
brilliant assessment of Mexico’s
undercapitalization. He has been
tireless in his work to help Mexico
achieve its potential.”
Guzmán has been lobbying
for Mexico to encourage third
During a well recovery platform installation at the Carpa oil field, offshore Golden Lane, in 2005.
parties to help bridge the
With a sliver of a budget, Guzmán and his team began technology gap and also adopt best practices in horizontal
testing reservoirs in 2002, raising output to 30,000 bopd drilling and hydraulic fracturing, working to counter local
and making the case for drilling 16,000 new wells. Yet environmentalists’ radical rhetoric about risk, pollution and
additional investments were desperately needed, as Mexico’s seismicity.
powerhouse, the Cantarell field, began declining in 2005, and
Pemex had not really funded exploration since the mid-1980s. Waiting for Change
In 2006, it authorized the development of the Chicontepec After 32 years with Pemex, Guzmán retired in 2007,
and the Ku-Maloob-Zaap fields, but hit a snag when oil affording him more time to dedicate to the AAPG,
prices tumbled in 2013, rendering the Chicontepec project having served as President of the Latin American and the
uneconomical. Caribbean Region, as Regions Vice President, a two-time
When Mexico historically opened its borders to outside candidate for AAPG President and recipient of the Michel
operators that same year, an air of hope penetrated the T. Halbouty Outstanding Leadership Award. He also served
industry and the country, and
With wife Kitty at the Tajin Pyramid located a few miles from Poza Rica, where they moved to in 1993.
Mexico waited for the price of
oil to slowly rise. Developing
Alfredo Guzmán
new discoveries could be the
gateway to renewed prosperity.
Yet, as oil labored through a
long comeback and reached
levels high enough to make
shale plays economical, Mexico
became less welcoming to third
parties and in 2018 announced
a moratorium on hydraulic
fracturing – dashing hopes for a
new era.
“These are regretful
decisions,” Guzmán says.
“Hydraulic fracturing is capital
intensive. Due to Pemex’s
limited resources, independent
parties could help the industry
thrive.”
More than 90% of the
substantial resources in the
Alfredo Guzmán
been promoting the
development of tight oil
resources in the Tampico-
Misantla Basin that could
easily make up for the
steady declines of the
country’s legacy fields.
However, his tenure at
the CNH was short because
of a health condition of his
wife, Kitty. During his career,
Guzmán had moved his wife
and three daughters 18 times
and to nine different states,
and it was time to settle
down.
Yet he continues to
advocate for Mexico’s oil and
gas industry and its people.
“The age of oil will be over
in 20 or 30 years. Countries
such as Brazil, Guyana and
Argentina that are ramping
“Thanks for the lonely night, for the hills, the rush of the darkness and the sea through my heart! This
silence murmuring in my ears is the blood of all Nature seething; … the northern lights flare over the
heavens to the north. By my immortal soul, I am full of thanks that it is I who am sitting here!”
From ‘Pan’ by Knut Hamsun (1859–1952), Norwegian winner
of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1920.
Skydive with us into the quantum world, where we provide to those unafraid of molecular energy
transfer an answer to the question: what happens to Earth’s radiated infrared (IR) photons after they
are absorbed by IR active CO2 molecules in the lower atmosphere? Part VIII (GEO ExPro Vol. 17, No. 3)
showed how CO2 molecules absorb Earth’s IR radiation. Here, we show that the bulk background gases
N2 and O2 are critical for the greenhouse effect because collisions of CO2 (and other greenhouse gases)
with N2 or O2 both take away and add energy to the CO2 molecules. Every collision that adds energy
gives the CO2 molecule a chance to undergo radiative decay and emit a photon.
Two granite sculptures in the work ‘Thoughts for Two’, created by the Sami artist Annelise Josefsen. A boy and a girl, sitting under the Northern Lights in remote
Tranøy Hamarøy, in northern Norway, where Knut Hamsun spent much of his childhood. The quote above is carved into the smooth rock slopes below them.
Ketil Kåsli
kf
A(i) + B(j) + ∆E → A(l) + B(m) (1)
←
kr
NASA/JPL-Caltech
CO2 molecules with the radiation. CO2 is responsible for a
large gap in the transmissivity of Earth’s IR radiation towards
space, centered around 15 µm.
The process whereby a CO2 molecule absorbs an infrared
photon of energy 667 cm–1 and goes to the vibrationally
excited state CO2*(010) reads:
Acknowledgments
The authors have enjoyed many
helpful discussions with
Tore Karlsson. Thanks also to Ketil
Kåsli for providing the Northern
Lights photography.
Pitfall Petrofacies
Using reservoir description and regional geology to recognize problematic non-
reservoir facies in Equatorial and South Atlantic Margin Basins.
ANNE MCAFEE, SIMON GREENFIELD and JOSEPH WHITING; Core Laboratories UK
Despite the advances in seismic and log cuttings, with downhole logs. The We discuss some examples of these
lithology interpretation techniques in reduced acquisition of conventional and in more detail below.
recent decades, some wells still show sidewall core material in recent years
major variations between predicted and has further exacerbated this issue, as Volcanics vs Reservoir Facies
actual lithologies; in some cases, absence turbo-drilled wells lacking good quality A variety of complex lithologies
of the prognosed reservoir facies has been rock material are less likely to provide can develop in basins with igneous
the primary factor in well failure. Core the detailed lithological information influence, particularly when the
Lab’s rock-based approach to regional required to flag the raised reservoir original intrusive and/or extrusive
geological evaluation, which involves risk associated with these complex rocks are partly altered and replaced by
revisiting the exploration legacy of core lithologies prior to follow-on drilling. authigenic clays, carbonates, zeolites
and cuttings material stored in national Comparison of predicted lithologies and/or siliceous minerals, or when
archives, provides some interesting and/or composite log data with rock- the host sediments, including both
insights into the persistently problematic based petrographic information in sandstone and carbonate reservoir
rock types – or ‘pitfall petrofacies’ – multiple sedimentary basins across the targets, are altered by associated
that have proven difficult, or indeed Equatorial and South Atlantic margins high-temperature fluids. Examples of
impossible, to characterize using lithology reveals that the main categories of volcanically-influenced problematic
prediction methods, resulting in the non-reservoir petrofacies that can be lithologies can be found at multiple
recurring misinterpretation of sandstone difficult to discriminate from reservoir stratigraphic levels in basins across the
and carbonate reservoir targets. In some rocks comprise low gamma siliceous South Atlantic Margin.
cases the visual description of drill mudstones and altered igneous or
cuttings and sidewall core samples at hydrothermally-influenced rock Pre-Salt Carbonate Play: Angola and
the wellsite also fails to recognize the types. On a regional scale the lateral Brazil
presence of these atypical lithologies. and vertical distribution of these Extensive industry and academic
Thus it appears that some non- petrofacies can be related to variations evaluation of core and sidewall core
reservoir facies can only be fully in intrabasinal topography, oceanic samples from wells drilled in pre-Salt
characterized through detailed circulation patterns and/or degree of carbonate reservoirs, offshore Brazil
integration of petrographic data, volcanic influence during successive and Angola, has provided detailed
taken from sidewall cores and/or drill phases of basin evolution. classification of the diverse carbonate
A B
D
CoreLab
Figure 2: Simplified sedimentary log (A) and photomicrographs (B-D) illustrating silica-rich facies from a well offshore Suriname.
The siliceous mudstones (C) show lower gamma ray response than the overlying feldspathic (channel) sandstones. These turbidite
sandstones are prone to microquartz cementation as a result of the silica-rich fluids (B, SEM image). Organic-rich beds show suppressed
’hot shale’ response due to siliceous mudstone interlayers (D).
facies encountered in these syn-rift calibration of downhole logs with rock Margin was influenced mainly by
and sag phase volcanically-influenced material in order to map the lateral and acid and intermediate volcanism.
lacustrine basins. However, in areas with vertical distribution of volcanic rocks Syn-rift Jurassic volcanic tuffs here
limited well or rock data it still remains and high temperature mineralization can show high porosity values due
a challenge to fully discriminate igneous in relation to the underlying structural to the microporous nature of the
rocks from carbonate facies on seismic, topography. Facies mapping suggests microcrystalline matrix and, in the
as illustrated by several deepwater that deep-seated fault systems facilitated absence of core material, can be
wells in the Kwanza Basin which failed movement of ascending magmatic difficult to distinguish on logs from
to encounter reservoir facies due to hydrothermal fluids and/or mantle early post-rift alluvial fan reservoir
unexpected pervasive volcanic influence gases through reservoir zones in this facies with abundant reworked volcanic
throughout the late syn-rift and sag petroleum province. clasts. During Late Cretaceous –
succession (see Figure 1). Although Tertiary periods of active andesitic
seismic techniques are evolving in Tuffs vs Reservoir Targets: Atlantic magmatism on this margin, high
order to improve pre-drill recognition Argentina volumes of volcanic glass were
of the igneous rock types (Bonet et al., Unlike the basaltic igneous provinces deposited in the marine environment,
2019), there is still a need for systematic further north, the Argentina Atlantic resulting in markedly increased
D
Prognosed Eocene Reservoir Sand
Mudstone Facies
Actual Siliceous
E
CoreLab
Figure 3: Gabon well illustrating how the Eocene sand-dominant interval on the wellsite lithology log (A: yellow lithology) was proven to comprise non-reservoir chert
and porcellanite through petrographic evaluation of cuttings (B: white and orange lithologies on SEDlog). High magnification thin section (C) and SEM (D) images
illustrate the highly microporous nature of the opal-CT porcellanites (lepispheric fabric), which locally show preservation of silica-rich microfossils (E: radiolarian tests).
The volume of clay present in the matrix influences the rate of conversion of Opal-A to microquartz during burial diagenesis.
biogenic productivity of siliceous micro-organisms. scale Albian and Santonian uplift events, suggesting that
Offshore exploration well data here reveals locally complex tectonic enhancement of intrabasinal topography may
interbedding of volcanic rocks with diatomites, radiolarites, have played a role in the establishment of upwelling silica-
cherts and deepwater mudstones (Figure 1) that are difficult rich currents along the paleo shelf-edge during the Late
to differentiate on log signature, particularly in the absence Cretaceous. Siliceous mudstones are less widely developed on
of petrographic calibration. Although most of the observed the South American Equatorial Margin but similar nutrient-
siliceous rock types represent microporous non-reservoir rich upwelling currents have been described from the Late
facies, some Tertiary samples containing high proportions Cretaceous succession along the flanks of the Demerara
of leached sponge spicules show high measured permeability Plateau on the Suriname Margin (Elrich et al., 2003). Our
values and therefore represent legitimate reservoir targets. well data from this region illustrates how interbedding of
siliceous mudstones, thin turbidite sandstones and organic
Sandstones vs Siliceous Mudstones: Equatorial Transform shales creates a complex gamma log response that requires
The pitfall potential of siliceous mudstones on the West systematic calibration against petrographic data (see Figure
African Equatorial Atlantic Margin has previously been 2). The chert and porcellanite (siliceous mudstone) facies
highlighted by Anadarko Petroleum (Brown et al., 2015) in a show lower gamma response than the overlying turbidite
review of the Campanian ‘quartz claystone conundrum’ that (sub-arkosic) sandstones, while, conversely, in the organic-rich
documented dramatic discrepancies between wireline log mudstones the expected ‘hot shale’ response is suppressed by
interpretations of “thick, high quality, quartz-rich deepwater the presence of interlaminated microporous silica.
sandstones with effective porosity up to 25%” and wellsite rock
descriptions and subsequent laboratory tests that revealed Sandstones vs Siliceous Mudstones: Post-Salt Gabon
non-reservoir, quartz-rich mudstone facies. The presence of chert beds in the Early Tertiary post-salt
Core Lab’s well-based mapping across this margin from succession on the Gabon Margin (Ozouri Formation) has
Benin to Liberia reveals an increased prevalence of these been well-documented through decades of drilling along
silica-rich mudstones in the periods following regional- the inboard parts of the margin, but more recent drilling
For minnow and supermajor alike, Thekah concessions south-east of Zohr the North El Arish block, will, however,
the various plays of the Nile Delta were ultimately relinquished. All of test a large carbonate build-up: the
continue to attract investment for major these blocks are yet to be evaluated Thuraya prospect.
exploration campaigns through the with the drill bit, while carbonate
downturn. The government of Egypt, reef build-up style traps have been Onshore and Shallow Water Win
along with the parastatal operators tested, with mixed results, in Cypriot Since these campaigns, the industry
Tharwa and EGAS, have managed over waters, namely, Glaucus and Delphyne has firmly refocused on the onshore
time to maintain sufficient interest in (ExxonMobil), Onesiphorous (Total) delta and the shallow water acreage in
the exploration upside via reasonable and Calypso (Eni). Th is may be partly the offshore western Nile Delta. SDX
investment terms and a vibrant due to the high commercial value of Energy and Dana Gas have carried out
operating environment. Since the the acreage post-Zohr, with new joint successful campaigns onshore in the
beginning of 2019 around 15 wells have ventures taking too much time, but South Disouq and Balsam concessions
been drilled onshore and seven offshore, also the lessons from the NEMED respectively. Offshore, the 2019
mostly wildcat or near-field exploration, campaign meant the non-reef play was Licensing Round finally delivered a huge
and ten large exploration licenses have still likely to disappoint. payday for the government, with ten
been awarded offshore. Not to be put off, the supermajors awards to the majors and supermajors.
did continue their efforts in 2019 and Winners include ExxonMobil, BP, Shell,
Deepwater Campaign Disappoints 2020 further east. At least three wells Chevron/Noble and Apache.
In the 2000s Shell (partly with were drilled in the deepwater blocks, Given the existing large gas
Petronas) carried out a major wildcat all failing to extend the deepwater developments nearshore at Temsah,
campaign on what was then the distal delta play, perhaps stymied Baltim, Nidoco, Rosetta, Burullus
NEMED block, with at least seven by a lack of major structuration and North Alexandria, exploration
wells coming up dry or with very thin there, although gentle compressional companies are keen to extend the
gas pay. Comparing the Nile Delta to rollovers do exist. Similar size shallow water topset/proximal Oligo-
other mega-river deltas with very thick deltas have benefited from a major Miocene delta play to the west. Recent
sedimentary columns, the supermajors décollement surface, such as shale reserves additions by Eni at Baltim
expected a bonanza to be delivered in in the Niger Delta and salt in the SW and Bashrush (see page 74) serve
the deep water, in a similar vein to the GoM, creating many large structures. to reinforce this strategy for low risk
Niger and US Gulf of Mexico (GoM). Energean’s Ameeq well recovered some exploration adjacent to established
The Oligo-Miocene play does, of course, gas but Nigma (Eni) and Merak (Dana developments in the shallow and
continue – perhaps as far as southern Gas) were dry. Dana Gas’ next well, on onshore Nile Delta.
Israel and into the waters of southern
Cyprus – but the charge and seal
mechanism too often fails, at least
at the scale required for commercial
discoveries. The major exception to
this was the 2015 Zohr discovery,
which proved that source was not
the main issue; up to 30 Tcf gas
was trapped in a major Miocene
carbonate reef build-up.
Th is discovery was enough to
galvanize the large companies
to remap the area for new leads.
Interestingly, the acreage around
Zohr – comprising the Shorouk
NVentures
In the reprocessed PSTM line below, a previously unimaged thick syn-rift section with postulated
lacustrine source rock has been revealed. At this location, the base of the prograding sequence
Searcher
Magallanes Basin. The southern boundary is the Tierra Late Cretaceous with thermal sag and the deposition of The tectonic influence of the rifting of the Scotia
del Fuego fold belt, formed by transpressive movement predominantly open marine sediments. Plate from 50–35 Ma played a key role in the
along the Scotia Plate boundary. It was only when South America began to accelerate Figure 4: Eocene basin floor fan. evolution of the Malvinas Basin and generated
westwards relative to Antarctica, about 50 Ma, that rifting the right conditions for reservoir deposition and trap
Setting the Scene began again south of the Malvinas Basin, opening a shallow the Malvinas Basin (Figure 3). In places, these are sufficiently formation. Reprocessing of seismic data across the basin
The Malvinas Basin sedimentary succession can be (<1,000m water depth) Drake Passage. The accelerated buried to offer exploration targets. Progradation of deltas has aided in the defi nition of Tertiary plays which have
divided into four tectonostratigraphic units: Jurassic rift oceanic crust formation led to uplift in southern Patagonia continued during the Pliocene. been largely underexplored but partially proven by well
deposits; Late-Jurassic to Cretaceous sag deposits; latest and erosion and deposition of marine turbidite sandstones results in the Malvinas Basin. Identification of shallow
Cretaceous to Eocene transitional marine deposits; and into the Malvinas Basin during the Eocene. By 26 Ma Prospective Tertiary Play Levels gas anomalies using deep machine learning has helped to
the late Eocene-Pliocene foredeep deposits. rifting entered a spreading phase and the Drake Passage Two key potential Tertiary play intervals are identified de-risk the potential for Jurassic lacustrine source rocks
As Gondwana began to fragment during the Jurassic, opening deepened to depths greater than 2,000m within the Malvinas Basin: Paleocene to Eocene deep marine to charge the Tertiary plays, suggesting that Tertiary play
rifting commenced across the Malvinas Basin and (Livermore et al., 2005), creating the first oceanic crust turbidite deposits; and the retrogradational basin floor fan, systems will underpin successful future exploration in the
between Antarctica and South America. Jurassic (Figure 2). This drifting led to the formation of the oceanic slope canyons and slope fan deposits of Oligo-Miocene age. Malvinas Basin.
volcaniclastic sediments and potential lacustrine source Scotia Plate, which, interestingly, could potentially be used Paleocene to Eocene-aged deep marine turbidite
rocks of the Tobifera Formation infi lled the rifted as an analog for the formation of the Caribbean Plate. sandstones have been encountered in 23 wells within the References available online.
topography in the Eastern Malvinas Basin. At the beginning of Scotia Plate drifting, the formation Malvinas Basin ranging in thickness from Figure 5: (A) Miocene slope canyon complex; (B) depositional model associated with
Through the Cretaceous however, deconstruction of new oceanic crust was the main driver for the onset of 15m in Sirius X-1 to over 100m in Centauro the recent significant discoveries in east and west Africa (e.g. 80 Tcfg Mamba and Coral
of the supercontinent was relatively quiescent in this tectonic instability in the Malvinas Basin, controlling the X-1. Reservoirs are characterized by massive, Fields, Mozambique, and Jubilee, Ghana, 600–1,800 MMboe). (Modified after Palermo
area. Lower Cretaceous post-rift sag deposits form a development of depositional systems. Syn-rift sandstones amalgamated sandstones in the Paleocene and et al., Insights into a new super-giant gas field-sedimentology and reservoir modeling
of the Coral Reservoir Complex, Offshore Northern Mozambique. Offshore Technology
backstepping siliciclastic marine wedge that was fed were eroded during the uplift of localized areas, as the lower energy interbedded sandstones in the Conference-Asia, 2014.)
mainly from the North (Biddle et al., 1986). At the Scotia extensional plate developed, and transpression Eocene (Figure 4). Traps are generally stratigraphic
Searcher
base of the section is the prolific traditional Springhill on the northern margin of the Scotia Plate compressed or combination structural stratigraphic, with A
Formation target, which incorporates known source the southern edge of the Magallanes, Malvinas and some relief provided by compressional topography,
South Malvinas Basins. The as seen on the foldout on the previous page. Top
Figure 3: A north–south seismic line through the Malvinas Basin showing the Miocene to Pliocene foredeep created by this and lateral seals are provided by the transgressive
prograding deltas, the 35S break-up unconformity, identified plays, and syn-rift geometries. compression was infilled and highstand Eocene deep marine shales or
by shallow marine to basin the progradational toes of the Oligo-Miocene
floor clastic deposition until deltas. Salmon X-1 produced oil and gas from
the Late Miocene. excellent quality Paleocene sandstones proving the
The 35 Ma sequence potential for this section as a viable exploration
boundary marks the target in the Malvinas Basin.
top of the hydrocarbon- The 35 Ma sequence boundary marks the base
bearing Eocene sandstones of Oligo-Miocene deltaic deposition. Progradation
encountered in the Salmon-2 of the deltas occurs into the Malvinas Basin from
well and also corresponds north-west to south-east. Basin Floor Fans are B
to the base of Oligocene to observed on the reprocessed data, along with slope
Lower Miocene sandstones canyons and fans, and slope channel complexes,
from which hydrocarbons apparently influenced by contourite currents
were recovered in the (Figure 5). Twenty-five wells have intersected
Ciclon-1 well. reservoirs sandstones at this stratigraphic level,
Searcher’s 2017 and ranging in thickness from 20m in multiple
2020 seismic reprocessing wells to over 210m in Nerita X-1. Due to the
Searcher
No Longer a Dream
Dealing with large datasets has been always a challenge for the industry, keeping real-
time monitoring and control of subsurface operations, until now, only a dream – but it is
fast becoming a reality.
ALAN J. COHEN, HAMED SOROUSH and SALAH FAROUGHI; PETROLERN LLC
PETROLERN LLC
and use of real-time
decision-making tools.
These include missing
or incomplete datasets;
incompatibility between Schematic of hydraulic fracturing. Swift real-time decision-making is vital for this technology.
data formats; limitations
on storing, transmitting and managing large data volumes; geoscientists and data scientists working on machine
lack of appropriate or useful signals; and hesitance learning and artificial intelligence.
by decision makers in adopting and embracing new
technologies. Solution to a Key Challenge
So, what specifically is different about this new technology?
Recent Technology Award Over the past two decades, there has been a drastic advance in
The US DOE recently awarded PETROLERN LLC, an sensing technologies and data acquisition systems in different
Atlanta-based service and R&D company, a $1.2 million disciplines. Some of these technologies have been deployed in
grant to advance real-time subsurface decision-making. carbon capture and storage (CSS) for monitoring, verification
The project primarily focuses on carbon storage but it could and accounting (MVA) to confirm permanent storage of CO2
also have results that would be advantageous for oil and in geological formations. MVA is a significant cost component
gas and geothermal applications. The technology directly of any carbon storage campaign and necessary for its success.
addresses the challenges associated with transmitting and Automated and low-cost MVA solutions can therefore
managing large data volumes and partly addresses the gap advance CCS towards commercialization by providing a
associated with signal enhancement. It develops hardware
and software to acquire, compress, transmit, process Close integration of geoscientists and engineers (subject matter experts)
and analyze large datasets from downhole and surface and data scientists is a key to success (after Carnegie Mellon/DOE report
sensors (both fiber optic and others), using advanced on real-time monitoring).
signal processing and science-based machine learning
methodologies. Much of the computing is done at the edge
of the survey sensory network rather than solely in the
cloud. The project is illustrated for carbon storage in the
figure on the following page.
The company believes that this technology has the
potential to completely change the way oil and gas fields
and other resources are operated. It is also low cost and
can drastically improve safety and project profitability.
Although still under development in phase 2, it has
already attracted the attention of several oil and gas
operators, utility companies and fiber optic technology
firms. It is the fifth such contract the US government and
industry has awarded PETROLERN in the past two years,
with the objective of pushing the current boundaries
in monitoring and control of subsurface operations by
adding real-time capabilities. One of the reasons this
technology development has thus far been successful is the
close working interaction between subsurface engineers,
reliable and real-time control option over the reservoir, as well methods that focus on recording changes in the data rather
as reducing the associated costs. than recording and analyzing each sample – and this is
For MVA, a complex network of surface and underground what the new technology does. It provides a solution to a key
sensors is often installed, generating a large volume of challenge described in the DOE workshop report, specifically:
intricate datasets that present a challenge in terms of “As the volume of data continues to grow exponentially, the
transmission to the surface. These raw data also require computational tools required to store and transmit such data
swift, automated and affordable tools to be efficiently volumes in real-time have often not kept pace, such that some
processed and analyzed to enable real-time decision-making. data that are currently collected are not used in a meaningful
However, the conventional data collection and processing way. Methods for keeping track of data as it moves through a
methods used are often rudimentary, and significant time system that allows storage, backup, and analysis are lacking”
is required to transmit the high-resolution data to the [and are critically needed].
cloud, with the processing needing significant human
intervention. Furthermore, the hardware platform has What’s Next?
usually been designed and implemented for data acquisition This new technology will be tested, commercialized
and sampling, and the microcontroller architecture cannot and hopefully used routinely in the field in a few years.
provide any computational power to carry out the analytics Subsurface real-time visualization and decision-making,
at the sensor node. Therefore, the entire process is curbed however, is a huge puzzle, for which this new technology
by human aptitude, computational power and the available provides some of the critical components, but not all of
bandwidth. This introduces a huge challenge to collecting them. Some other pieces that need to be resolved include
and processing large volumes of data in an efficient and cost- more advanced sensors, high-resolution visualization
effective manner. tools to display and diagnose anomalies, better so-called
Bottlenecks in data management systems available at ‘reduced-order models’ to reflect subsurface changes on
the moment include, but are not limited to, insufficient the fly and with proper physics, and autonomous control
bandwidth, inadequate storage and limited connectivity, systems that can take action when needed. In the near-term,
meaning it is important to find a solution which reduces the there will be a human in the loop to make decisions when
volume of the recorded data streamed on site. This is achieved an alert sounds, but eventually the control system will be
by developing adaptive data acquisition techniques that enable fully autonomous, and real-time subsurface monitoring and
data compression at the sensor locations. The vast amounts of decision-making will no longer be a dream but will have
data acquired in real-time require improved data compression become a reality.
Preventing
Pitfalls
in
Petrofacies
www.corelab.com/irs
Prediction
Core Lab Equatorial and South
Find out more on Page 52 Atlantic Margin areas of expertise
The Faroe-Shetland Basin (FSB) west of Lancaster field, the UK’s first fractured combination structural/stratigraphic
the Shetland Islands is one of the least basement oil play, have renewed focus traps.
mature producing regions on the UK on these deeper and more challenging Within the pre-rift, the deposition
Continental Shelf (UKCS). Although syn-rift and pre-rift plays (Figure 1). of thick sequences of non-marine
the Central North Sea is considered clastics deposited in fluvial, aeolian and
by the Oil and Gas Authority, the UK Plays at Multiple Stratigraphic Levels lacustrine environments constitutes the
Government industry regulator, to Over the more than 40 years of main reservoir intervals of the Devono-
contain the largest yet-to-find potential exploration in the FSB, plays have been Carboniferous play, typified by the Clair
on the UKCS, the West of Shetland area identified at all tectono-stratigraphic field. More recently, the development of
offers arguably the largest remaining levels (Figure 2), with hydrocarbons Precambrian, Lewisian metamorphic
opportunities for significant new finds produced from reservoir intervals basement along the Rona Ridge has
(Austin, Cannon and Ellis, 2014). contained within structural and established a fractured basement play.
Exploration activity in the basin
began in 1972, with more than 30
wells drilled in the following decade. Figure 1: Map of the Faroe-Shetland Basin and the location
Initially, exploration focused on simple of CGG’s North Rona Ridge 3D PSDM seismic survey.
tilted fault block traps, analogous to
CGG
the North Sea, in relatively shallow
waters (<500m) along the south-east
flank of the FSB. The first hydrocarbon
discovery, although sub-economic, was
made by Shell in 1980 at the 206/2-1
well, located close to the present day
Greater Laggan Area. During this initial
exploration phase the giant Clair (4
Bboe STOIIP) and Victory fields were
discovered in Devono-Carboniferous
and Lower Cretaceous sandstones
respectively. Due to technological
and commercial constraints, these
fields lay undeveloped for many
years. During the 1980s advances in
deepwater drilling technologies shifted
exploration activity into the deeper
parts of the basin, such as the Flett
Sub-basin, where sub-economic gas was
found within the Paleocene. Further
sub-economic discoveries were made
until the discovery of the Foinaven
and Schiehallion fields in the early
1990s. These discoveries were driven
by advances in seismic technology,
particularly amplitude-versus-
offset (AVO) analysis, and led to the
establishment of the Paleocene oil play
with total reserves in excess of 1 Bboe.
Until recently, much of the focus
has been on these post-rift plays.
However, recent successes, including
the development of the Clair field, the
Glendronach gas discovery in Lower
Cretaceous turbiditic sands and the
Hjelm, 2010).
Within the post-rift sequence, by far the most dominant play is the Paleocene
deep marine sandstones. It consists of amalgamated channel complexes derived
from a sand-dominated shelf to the south-east and deposited in the Foinaven
and Flett Sub-basins. The play is typified at the Foinaven and Schiehallion fields
(Lamers and Carmichael, 1999). The majority of these plays are charged by Upper
Jurassic-sourced hydrocarbons generated by the Kimmeridge Clay Formation,
which was deposited in an open marine setting under anoxic ocean bottom
conditions over most of the area during a widespread marine transgression. It
tends to generate a low wax oil. There is also upside potential from Middle Jurassic
shales deposited in more restricted marine/lagoonal settings that tend to produce a
waxier oil grade. Both source intervals are penetrated by well 206/5-1 (Figure 1).
Post-rift deposition of thick, deep marine mudstones provides excellent seals for
the deeper pre- and syn-rift plays, whilst tuffaceous units associated with Neogene
volcanism (i.e. from the Icelandic Plume) provide regional seals for the shallower
plays.
CGG
Figure 2: Chronostratigraphy of the study area
showing key reservoir intervals.
Chasing the Post- and Syn-Rift Plays Further Fractured Basement Potential?
A full 3D seismic interpretation has revealed the geometry The northern Rona Ridge may also provide upside potential
of several key stratigraphic horizons in the area, including within the fractured Lewisian Basement to the north-
the Top Lewisian Basement, Top Lower Cretaceous, east of the currently producing Lancaster field in the
Top Shetland Group and Top Balder Formation, with FSB (Figure 1). From the structural interpretation of the
age calibration from several key wells. The structural top basement horizon a number of structural closures
interpretation has been complemented with attribute can be identified. The seismic data reveal the presence of
analysis to aid understanding of reservoir distribution in the
study area.
For the prospective syn-rift interval, Figure 5: Interpreted dip-line and RMS amplitude extraction (inset) showing the amplitude
response of Paleocene reservoir targets in the FSB.
structural interpretation of the Top
Lower Cretaceous marks the top of the NWSE
prospective stratigraphic units identified at
the Victory and Glendronach discoveries.
The interpretation of this interval has been
extended away from these areas to identify a
more expansive network of Early Cretaceous
syn-rift wedges towards the north-east.
These are deposited on fault terraces on the
eastern side of the Rona Ridge and onlap the
Lewisian Basement. It has been interpreted
that, unlike the deeper marine, turbidite-
prone sand sedimentation to the west of
the Rona Ridge, this more proximal setting
provided conditions for the deposition of
stacked fan delta-to-shoreface sandstones
and inner shelf mudstones in a ponded,
hanging wall, back-basin (Larsen, Rasmussen
and Hjelm, 2010). This more proximal setting
would be conducive to improved reservoir
CGG
References
Austin, J.A, Cannon, S.J.C., and Ellis, D. (2014). Hydrocarbon Exploration
and Exploitation West of Shetlands. From: Cannon, S.J.C., and Ellis, D. (2014).
Hydrocarbon Exploration to Exploitation West of Shetlands. Geological Society,
London, Special Publications, 397, 1-10.
Lamers, E., and Carmichael, S. M. (1999). The Paleocene Deepwater Sandstone
Play West of Shetland. Petroleum Geology of Northwest Europe: Proceedings of the
5th Conference (pp. 645-659). London: Geological Society.
Larsen, M., Rasmussen, T., and Hjelm, L. (2010). Cretaceous Revisited: Exploring
the Syn-Rift Play of the Faroe-Shetland Basin. Proceedings of the 7th Petroleum
Geology Conference (pp. 953-962). London: Geological Society.
Folding and Fracturing of Rocks: 50 Years of Research since the Highly Original Work
Seminal Textbook of J.G. Ramsay Ramsay trained a large number of students; some of the most
Edited by C.E. Bond and H.D. Lebit eminent structural geologists of our time were among them.
Geological Society, London, Special Publication 487, 2020) Two of his students from the 1960s, Susan Treagus and Peter
Hudleston, share their memories of being taught by him in
Every branch of geology probably has two founders: the first Chapter 2 of the new volume. In Chapter 3, Richard Lisle,
one usually lived and worked in the 18th or 19th century and Fernando Bastida and Jesus Aller survey how Ramsay’s 1967
laid down the foundations while the second one pioneered book still tops the list of structural geology books published
the modern version of the discipline. John Graham Ramsay, in the past five decades in terms of citation and influence. This
born in 1931 in England, is the father book, in 568 pages, was reprinted in 2004 (Blackburn Press).
of modern structural geology. (My Two features set Ramsay’s book apart from many other
favorite candidate for the first father structural geology textbooks. Firstly,
in this field is the Austrian geologist it applied mathematics to
Eduard Suess, 1831–1914, but rock strain; and secondly,
opinions in this matter vary.) it was highly original, and
Ramsay graduated from not simply a synthesis of
Imperial College, London with a previous works.
Ph.D. in 1954 and, after military Ramsay also wrote a
service, in 1957 he returned three-volume textbook
to Imperial College where he entitled The Techniques of
became a professor in 1966. The Modern Structural Geology
following year he published (Academic Press, now out of
Folding and Fracturing of Rocks print), totaling 1,061 pages.
(McGraw-Hill, 1967), which It comprises Volume 1, Strain
to this day remains a seminal Analysis (with M. Huber,
work in strain analysis 1983); Volume 2, Folds and
of rocks and geologic Fractures (1987, with M. Huber);
formations. Ramsay left and Volume 3, Applications of
Imperial for Leeds in 1973 Continuum Mechanics (2000, with
and then moved to ETH at R. Lisle). The only other geologist
Zurich in 1977, succeeding who has synthesized and written
the legendary geologist so much in structural geology and
Augusto Gansser tectonics was Eduard Suess, author
(1910–2012). After of the four volumes of Das Antlitz
retiring in 1992, Ramsay der Erde (Th ( e Face of the Earth),
moved to France where written between 1885 and 1901.
he still resides and Ramsay has conducted research in
enjoys playing at cello a number of mountain belts including
concerts (he has talents the Scottish Highlands (his Ph.D.
in music and poetry as well). area), the Alps and the Himalayas. In
Ramsay has been given a number of prestigious fact, I first met Ramsay at a Himalayan
awards. In 2017, a special session was held at the European conference in Switzerland in 1996, to
Geosciences Union in Vienna, honoring the 50 years since the which both Gansser and Ramsay attended and gave talks;
publication of Folding and Fracturing of Rocks; Ramsay also both of them emphasized the importance of field work,
attended the session. Contributions to this occasion resulted observation and mapping in structural geology. I also learned
in the publication by the Geological Society, London of a new that Ramsay has a talent for cooking!
volume discussing the research undertaken since Ramsay’s This new volume, edited by Bond and Lebit, also offers
original publication, edited by the meeting’s conveners Clare 14 theoretical or field case studies related to rock folding,
Bond (Aberdeen) and Hermann Lebit (Houston). The volume fracturing and strain. These field case studies mostly come
consists of 17 articles, including an introductory chapter by from the UK and the USA, but there is also a paper each from
the editors. Greece, the Dead Sea and China.
NVentures
34/4-15. The well proved oil between 3,250m and 3,500m in the Viking and Brent
(Upper to Middle Jurassic) Groups after a sidetrack (34/4-15S) helped refine the
expected recoverable volumes at the discovery to between 40 and 120 MMboe,
compared to the pre-drill estimate of 86 MMboe. This represents the largest
hydrocarbon discovery in Norway so far in 2020, and is the first exploration well in
License 882. In addition, the Dugong discovery has significantly de-risked another
prospect in the license, estimated by Neptune to hold 33 MMboe.
Dugong lies near the north-west margin of the Viking Graben of the
Northern North Sea and north-west of the Snorre and Statfjord giant complex.
Whilst this is conventionally considered a mature area Equinor and partners
appear to be finding significant new volumes, enabling them to extend the life
of existing facilities. They have also made a 20–60 MMboe Brent discovery
near Huldra at 30/2-5 and are drilling 34/7-E-4 offsetting the Vigdis field.
Dugong was drilled by the Deepsea Yantai rig (Odfjell) in 330m of water.
Along with Neptune (40%), Concedo, Petrolia and Idemitsu are partners.
of the Toutouwai-1 well in the Taranaki Basin Block 60093 offshore New
Zealand’s North Island. The well reached 4,317m in April 2020, in 130m
water depth and preliminary results are encouraging, with hydrocarbon pay
measured in Cretaceous sandstones.
The well is north-west of the producing Maui gas field, where Cretaceous
Rakopi Formation coal measures charge North Cape Formation sandstones.
Both oil and gas are reported at Toutouwai-1, and the small Tui area fields
nearby have light oil in the Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene Kapuni
Formation, sourced by organic shales. It will be interesting to see if gas, oil or
both will be tested at the Toutouwai-1 well.
The COSL Prospector was due to spud Maui-8 after Toutouwai-1. However,
exploration drilling is classified as non-essential due to Covid-19 restrictions,
so the rig is understood to have been stood down. Environmental campaigners
are hailing this as the end of exploration offshore New Zealand, whilst the
operating group will have plans to study development possibilities at the new
discovery.
After a string of dry wells in the eastern deepwater Nile Delta, Eni, in
partnership with BP and Total, have had success testing their recent shallow
water Bashrush discovery, in the North El Hammad concession. Over the
last two years, companies drilling beyond the proven Oligo-MioceneSalamat–
Temsah–North Port Said trend in the deeper offshore area, east of Zohr, have all
reported dry or disappointing wells. Focus in this play has now returned to the
shallow Baltim–Rosetta trend for lower risk gas on the doorstep of existing gas
development infrastructure.
The Bashrush well found 102m gas in Miocene Messinian Abu Madi gas
sands in the north-eastern area of the North El Hammad offshore block,
awarded to the Eni/BP/Total group in 2015. The well, drilled to 3,600m in May
2020, delivered 32 MMscfd of gas on test, limited by surface testing facilities,
and the well deliverability could be as high as 100 MMcfgpd and 800 bcpd,
according to the operator. The field is an extension of the Baltim group of fields
and should be tied back relatively quickly.
NVentures
overall net pay in the whole trend: Apache’s Maka Central had 123m and
their Sapakara West found 179m, while to the west the ExxonMobil wells
have been averaging in the neighborhood of 50m net pay.
Following completion of Kwaskwasi-1, the Noble Sam Croft drillship
will move about 25 km to the south-east to drill Keskesi East-1 with
the same general objective interval. Total (50%), as agreed in their
farm-in last December, will then take over operatorship and plan an appraisal and exploration campaign to begin in the first
quarter of next year. Apache are in the process of submitting appraisal plans for the first two discoveries to the government,
and the terms of the farm-in state that Apache will receive a $5 billion cash carry on their first $7.5 billion of appraisal and
development work, and a 25% carry beyond; both companies will fund 50% of new exploration. No acreage relinquishments are
required until mid-2026.
When did you join the AAPG YP group and what prompted an established contact network and work history. This system
you to do so? does not work well for younger members who will not have
I was very fortunate early in my career to have been offered the same network to access when looking for a position. Many
a chance to work in Perth, Australia. It was a brilliant excellent graduate positions are available through the services
opportunity but when I landed I didn’t know a single person and consulting companies; however, a lot of these company
and I was working with quite a small team. I joined AAPG names are unfamiliar to someone who is not established in the
as well as several local societies and instantly had access to industry. I think we need to get better at communicating these
a network of peers who fast became a great group of friends. opportunities or making them much more publicly visible.
When I came back to the UK, I wanted to do my bit to help
build a society to provide others with this same experience. How has the AAPG responded to these changes?
I think AAPG Europe has worked hard to broaden the scope
What has membership of AAPG YPs taught you, of its content. The Energy Transition Conferences have been a
particularly in your leadership role? great initiative to give a platform to geoscientists and companies
We have so much talent and passion within the YP and working across the spectrum of energy providers. The
student communities. People’s willingness to engage with geotechnical workshops also now include subjects like CCS and
their job and professional community outside of working geothermal. As for the YP teams, we have really started to try
hours through networking, training and conferences is, I and push more in the careers support direction. We actively look
think, quite unique. It’s a testament to how much people for opportunities that will suit our members and publish them
just really enjoy their subject that they will happily head into and put together more career-focused content. The recent young
London after hours to talk about rocks. That energy is an professional conferences in association with other societies have
underused commodity (if you will excuse the pun!) again been unique in that they are organized by and geared
solely towards young professionals.
How do you see the industry evolving?
I think the distinction between ‘oil and gas’ and ‘renewables’ What advice have you for student or early career
is fast becoming blurred and the term ‘energy provider’ is geoscientists?
increasingly relevant, with many traditional oil and gas The industry is constantly evolving, and now more than ever
companies moving into renewables. Wind turbines is in a state of change. The desired skills change rapidly,
power production platforms, and hydrocarbons so what may have worked before isn’t always the right
fi ll in the downtime in the renewables sector. thing now. Find what you enjoy – interpretation,
Additionally, the application of carbon coding, thin sections, or whatever – and do
capture and storage (CCS) could potentially everything possible to be as good as you can be in
create thousands of highly skilled jobs and go that area. Take ownership over your training, find
a long way to reducing the carbon footprint of side projects to work on and training material to
the industry. This integration is only going to read and have fun getting really involved in your
increase and hopefully pave the way for more subject. If you are already in a company, find some
sustainable business driven by a diversified data and see if you can work up a new story from it,
energy portfolio. for example. When the time comes that someone is
looking for that skill you will immediately stand out
What could it do better? from the crowd, plus along the way you will be
We need to get better at how we market doing something you enjoy.
jobs to young professionals. We have
relied on a network of peer-to-peer
recommendations and recruiters David is the current Europe President of
that worked well whilst we still had a the AAPG YP network, working with a team
solid graduate scheme pipeline, but of volunteers to provide careers, training
when the pipeline of graduate scheme and networking opportunities for the
AAPG’s younger members. He works for
opportunities dries up, as it has over Ikon Science as a geoscientist, specializing
the last eight years, we are left with in rock physics and has also worked on
Ikon Science
Crude oil
Anyone who has driven in or out of Los Angeles during rush hour will
1 m3 = 6.29 barrels
understand what it means to be in the mother and father of all traffic jams.
Bumper-to-bumper gridlock as fumes hang in the air like the aftermath 1 barrel = 0.159 m3
of battle. Another form of lockdown: alone in a vehicle going nowhere fast 1 tonne = 7.49 barrels
and already late. This is a depressing scenario for any kind of automotive
experience, whether petrol, diesel or electric. Too much traffic is a denial of the Natural gas
personal freedom people have supposedly purchased with their motorcar. Too 1 m3 = 35.3 ft3
much pollution, even for the most enthusiastic climate change activist, can be
1 ft3 = 0.028 m3
more difficult to quantify.
In Los Angeles there are moves to get people out of their single occupancy
gas-guzzlers and onto trains and electric buses, providing of course they follow Energy
social distancing rules and wear a mask. LA Mayor Eric Garcetti wants to be 1000 m3 gas = 1 m3 o.e.
part of a new Global Green New Deal and has announced what he calls the 1 tonne NGL = 1.9 m3 o.e.
Transportation Electrification Partnership: an alliance of cities, carmakers,
utilities, transit agencies and a clean tech incubator. A key target for the group
Numbers
is for zero emissions vehicles to constitute around a third of the total in the
next eight years. That means around 80% of new car purchases will need to be Million = 1 x 106
fuel cell or electric by the deadline. Billion = 1 x 109
Oil and gas companies may not quake at this latest target as they grapple Trillion = 1 x 1012
with more fundamental short-term transition issues. Recent results from Shell
and BP suggest a continuation of the industry’s slash and burn (pardon the Supergiant field
pun) to control costs and present a more diversified face to the world. Shell,
Recoverable reserves > 5 billion
for one, has cut its dividend for the first time since the Second World War
while BP wants to sell off its petrochemicals business, the bit that is doing well, barrels (800 million Sm3) of oil
growing fast and making 10 million tonnes of petrochem products a year. The equivalents
name of the game for these and other oil and gas majors is to protect balance
sheets at a time when transition needs to encompass everything from solar Giant field
energy to investing in hydrogen. Recoverable reserves > 500 million
In the meantime, there are those carbon targets that according to the
barrels (80 million Sm3)
Oil and Gas Climate Initiative (OGCI) mean cutting the carbon intensity
of upstream operations by 13% of 2017 levels by 2025. Shell for one wants of oil equivalents
to reduce its net carbon footprint by 50% by 2050. This includes the 85% of
emissions created by customers – the likes of all of us who have yet to go Major field
electric or board our local hydrogen bus. Recoverable reserves > 100 million
Nick Cottam barrels (16 million Sm3)
of oil equivalents
120
US Dollars per barrel
100
Alexander Grishin/Pixabay
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