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The APPEA Journal The APPEA Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

DYNAMIC FAULT/FRACTURE SEAL BEHAVIOUR AND GEOMECHANICAL ANALYSIS OF THE GREATER GOBE AREA, SOUTHERN HIGHLANDS PROVINCE, PAPUA NEW GUINEA

M.C. Daniels, D.T. Moffat and D.A. Castillo

The APPEA Journal 41(1) 251 - 272
Published: 2001

Abstract

The Gobe Main and SE Gobe Fields were discovered in the early 1990s in the Papuan Fold Belt in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea. Heavily karstified Darai Limestone at the surface and heli-supported drilling made field appraisal problematic and expensive. With initial well spacing upwards of several kilometres, these fields were thought to be ‘tank’ type models, with field-wide extrapolations of gas-oil and oil-water contacts.

The main Iagifu Sandstone reservoir in the Gobe fields comprises several fluvial and near-shore sand bodies, which are readily correlatable across the fields. The reservoir units display discrete coarsening upward sequences containing medium (~17%) porosity, medium to high permeability (>100 mD) sandstones. Although several different depositional facies are interpreted within the Iagifu reservoir, sand units are extensive on the scale of the Gobe structures and do not appear to be producing significant lateral boundaries or reservoir compartmentalisation.

Geomechanical analysis has enabled the calculation of in-situ stress magnitudes and establishment of a geomechanical model for Gobe. Locally, the Gobe Main Field appears to be in a strike-slip stress regime (SHmax>Sv>Shmin). SHmax directions vary from NNE– SSW to NE–SW. Stress magnitudes indicate the structure is near frictional equilibrium, with a high proportion of natural fractures and faults critically stressed for shear failure. Since first oil in early 1998, performance results have indicted pressure segregation of many of the wells in both the Gobe Main and SE Gobe fields. Although only one fault has been positively identified at the reservoir level, the mapped faults appear to have sand-on-sand juxtaposition with minimal (<50m) throw. The sand-on-sand juxtaposition in the reservoir compartmentalising faults means the production barriers are relatively weak and subject to fault seal breakdown. Bottom hole pressure plots of field production indicate there are specific pressure differentials above which this breakdown is initiated, and appears to be the result of the differential block pressures exceeding the critical capillary entry pressure across the barrier interface, most likely within the gas cap.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ00012

© CSIRO 2001

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