THE SAWPIT STRUCTURE—EVALUATION OF A FRACTURED BASEMENT RESERVOIR PLAY IN THE OTWAY BASIN
The APPEA Journal
35(1) 558 - 578
Published: 1995
Abstract
The 1992 exploration well Sawpit-1, drilled in the Penola Trough of the western Otway Basin, recovered a minor amount of oil (1.5 BBL) from fractured basement. This oil recovery, the first in the basin from rocks older than the Eumeralla Formation, has opened up a new oil play. Fractured basement reservoirs, which can be prolific producers, require prediction of fracture orientation and intensity to be appraised and developed successfully. Such information was sought from a detailed structural analysis of fault attributes (including dip, vertical displacement and heave) using 3D seismic data acquired over the structure in 1993.This 3D seismic data set, acquired at twice the group interval and less than one-quarter the fold of 2D data in the area, has provided the best imaging to date of the complex rifting events of the Sawpit region. Structural analysis of fault attributes indicates an initial south-southwest direction of extension in the Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous for the Penola Trough, rather than oblique extension as suggested by some authors. This south-southwest extension orientation favours the formation of moderate to high angle fractures trending west-northwest to northwest. Present day minimum horizontal stress is favourably oriented approximately northeast-southwest for these fractures to be open. Interpretation of the 3D seismic data indicates Sawpit-1 probably intersected northeast trending fractures that are oriented perpendicular to the maximum horizontal compressive stress direction and therefore likely to be closed.
A deviated well drilled from the northeast would be optimally oriented to intersect northwest trending basement fractures and test a play that has significant oil potential.
https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ94035
© CSIRO 1995