00:00 | and I'm going to start record and I will be able to pull things |
|
00:05 | with record on anybody wanna answer that situation affected massively in all aspects. |
|
00:25 | you speak up just a little I didn't quite hear that. Oh |
|
00:29 | , I'm saying that the COVID-19 has a massively in all the sectors. |
|
00:36 | . And yeah, that that's probably caused the issue. But but um |
|
00:41 | of mathematically what happened if you can and and you don't have to answer |
|
00:47 | question, make somebody else could answer . But if you can answer it |
|
00:56 | you can answer it. Okay, Covid, Covid 19 had an impact |
|
01:04 | it. What was that? What that impact have been due to the |
|
01:11 | on the pandemic, a lot of got shut down or went on breaks |
|
01:17 | prevent the spread of COVID 19. I guess because of that the production |
|
01:25 | the production of petroleum resources reduced, therefore reducing the release of non clean |
|
01:34 | resources. And I think because this um this led to the growth of |
|
01:41 | korean resources or the korean energy resources we have right now, The increase |
|
01:45 | 2.7%. Okay. And and that's pretty much it. But just to |
|
01:52 | the uh what happens is the overall drops. But the clean energy was |
|
01:59 | going to power generation because that's what does and uh and so it stayed |
|
02:05 | same and the overall demand dropped. with the overall demand dropping the |
|
02:14 | it appeared that the percentage of growth went up because the total demand went |
|
02:21 | and and McManus you're absolutely correct the of all of industry, a lot |
|
02:30 | it was transportation energy and the transportation uh would be the hydrocarbons for the |
|
02:39 | part. And so that sector cut quite a bit in fact from Nearly |
|
02:48 | from nearly a 100 million barrels per to somewhere just over 80 million barrels |
|
02:56 | day. Which which actually did affect levels of C. 02 in the |
|
03:02 | over that period of time. Drop down a lot but probably not |
|
03:10 | So anyway um let's see here We're to start with lecture three and I |
|
03:16 | for not knowing you were watching me Yeah the zoom joint menu popped up |
|
03:29 | it completely covered this up and I see a way to get to |
|
04:02 | Think I need to get a camera my my mainframe because that would work |
|
04:06 | than this laptop actually my desktop. . Can everybody see my screen? |
|
04:31 | . Yes sir. Okay, there are. Okay so now we're going |
|
04:42 | start Basically this is Chapter one in book and I do know you can |
|
04:51 | it electronically. We have a bookstore always wants to know what our books |
|
04:58 | but um how many of you actually to the bookstore and buy books at |
|
05:02 | campus bookstore. I've gotten books from bookstore before you have. Okay because |
|
05:10 | most of the time everybody buys them amazon in spite of what I said |
|
05:15 | about amazon. But but usually, know, you can get a better |
|
05:21 | . Um I don't know if that's true anymore, but in the past |
|
05:27 | price of the bookstore was always a bit more than than what you could |
|
05:31 | online. Mm hmm. Okay. anyway, we'll start out with what |
|
05:40 | petroleum Geoscience and this is the definition the book. Um A lot of |
|
05:50 | like to go through a whole bunch definitions that I have in the |
|
05:54 | but I've given up on that. uh this is a this is a |
|
06:00 | definition. You know, let you read that and after you've read |
|
06:15 | if there's anything you think they've left , let me know. Okay. |
|
06:35 | guess nobody's seen anything they left Okay. Uh you know when I |
|
06:41 | read this, I thought, you know, they don't talk about |
|
06:46 | and scale and all that kind of . But in a way they do |
|
06:49 | origin relates to scale. So when start talking about petroliferos, basins, |
|
06:56 | in which we we hope to find think we can and have found oil |
|
07:02 | gas and the origin, it has lot to do with the type of |
|
07:08 | . It is the distribution has a to do with the type of basin |
|
07:12 | is. And and then beyond that actual properties of the reservoir and where |
|
07:20 | petroleum bearing rocks are, has a to do with sedimentary processes, like |
|
07:27 | stuff that those of you have taken learned in heterogeneous deposition assistance. I |
|
07:32 | everybody here just took that right. so that was a very appropriate |
|
07:37 | And of course you're going to have . You have a course in basin |
|
07:41 | in the program. And, and in this, in this uh particular |
|
07:50 | . We'll look at basins for a and kind of talk about how these |
|
07:54 | basins in different sedimentary basins actually formed habitat of petroleum systems. And, |
|
08:04 | so depending on the nature and type basin that we have form, it's |
|
08:10 | to impact ways in which that oil oil and gas was originated in a |
|
08:16 | rock. What the distribution of that rock is with the transportation routes or |
|
08:25 | routes from that. Um, Source is and uh, and also the |
|
08:31 | , the deposition all systems that create that have porosity that actually hold mm |
|
08:41 | , the hydrocarbons in conventional reservoirs, we know, the source rock deals |
|
08:50 | both the reservoir and the source of unconventional, a typical unconventional resource. |
|
08:57 | , there's a lot of different unconventional , but the main one or the |
|
09:03 | and uh, and that's kind of difference between the two right there. |
|
09:07 | at the end of the day, really talks about everything you need to |
|
09:11 | about to understand both conventional and unconventional . Okay. Uh here is uh |
|
09:25 | mentioned that I do this in um we, The value chain has six |
|
09:32 | frontier exploration exploitation, appraisal development and . And based on the way a |
|
09:41 | of the workflows are integrated with each . Ah The one at the top |
|
09:49 | very distinctive from all the others in exploration really is trying to look in |
|
09:57 | where we're not that familiar with the systems yet. And now that we've |
|
10:04 | drilling for oil for well over 150 , I think a lot of people |
|
10:11 | at first thought, I think that a lot of places that we've already |
|
10:17 | and there's nothing else to look But that's never true. We will |
|
10:21 | about some, some very real frontier areas and they're not just places that |
|
10:30 | kind of off limits or unapproachable, like the Antarctica or the arctic |
|
10:36 | uh or places like Anwar, the National Wildlife Refuge, you know, |
|
10:47 | where we haven't been able to get by due to the environment or by |
|
10:53 | and or even conscience in some, ways, I think people probably don't |
|
10:59 | to mess up the arctic ocean and , and at the same time the |
|
11:04 | of the antarctic and uh, but there are definitely lots of resources there |
|
11:10 | be had if we if we ever them. Ah the key is there's |
|
11:17 | lot of places we've never looked and even even right under our |
|
11:23 | for example, the big boom in uh the unconventional is particularly the shale |
|
11:33 | uh prior to the technology that was to help us produce that natural |
|
11:43 | We didn't even look at it. was right under our noses. We |
|
11:46 | right through it and I'm not sure any of, you know this, |
|
11:53 | one of the, one of the that we um actually started looking at |
|
11:59 | potential was that a lot of wells drilled through the source rocks also had |
|
12:05 | in the source rocks and they just , from an engineering standpoint figure out |
|
12:10 | way to extract those hydrocarbons to the of their advantage and efficiently and in |
|
12:15 | manner that would allow them to make . So that's kind of the start |
|
12:22 | all that. But so uh and very obvious place would be anywhere along |
|
12:32 | margin of the south atlantic, that's the Akkadian age. Uh, it's |
|
12:39 | of near the top of the Excuse me, it's sort of the |
|
12:42 | of the cretaceous or the top of , of the lower cretaceous when, |
|
12:49 | the oceans opened up to the rest the world sees and us. It |
|
12:58 | a immediate thing. There was, was a phase where it opened and |
|
13:03 | and you get the salt deposits and it opens back up again uh in |
|
13:08 | late al being in the center And so, you know, because |
|
13:16 | the fact that it's still difficult to underneath two km of salt, there's |
|
13:21 | a lot of areas of potential expiration salt that could go on. And |
|
13:28 | course imaging sub salt with seismic has a very difficult thing and will remain |
|
13:33 | very difficult thing I think. But can get tools down into the sub |
|
13:41 | . And we've had a lot of drill into that on the margins of |
|
13:46 | of the, of the south atlantic , the stuff on shore in in |
|
13:54 | Africa and then eastern brazil, there's lot of outcrops and a lot of |
|
13:58 | have been drilled. I remember at point in time, I I went |
|
14:04 | to Petrobras and looked at Samples from like 102 wells all along the eastern |
|
14:12 | of brazil at at things that were salt and age. And that's |
|
14:18 | another tool that we have in geology the fact that sometimes we can't always |
|
14:27 | without a very expensive well what's in basin. But on the margins and |
|
14:32 | are shallower cores, we can see lot of material and shallower wells as |
|
14:37 | and ones that aren't don't cost as because they're not out in the ocean |
|
14:41 | require platforms and that sort of sort of a self sustaining um platform |
|
14:49 | in the middle of the ocean is going to be more expensive. |
|
14:56 | then the next thing exploration exploitation, frontier exploration aspect of this kind of |
|
15:04 | us started on the whole whole But then exploration again, as I |
|
15:11 | is is basically uh when we start and exploitation is if we if we |
|
15:21 | , if we find something successful, then we then we look at that |
|
15:28 | , we call these plays, but look at that that particular play in |
|
15:33 | area that we just drilled that discovery and start looking around to see if |
|
15:39 | same set of conditions that created the there could be lurking very close to |
|
15:45 | property. We own the well we have within the property owner or other |
|
15:52 | nearby the property we own. So those, those are kind of closely |
|
15:59 | things, exploitation is kind of an of, of exploration. But |
|
16:07 | the value chain relates to the So here here we're trying to figure |
|
16:11 | where the reservoir might be here, trying to figure out and we actually |
|
16:17 | to find it here, we we out based on what we found, |
|
16:22 | might be able to find something similar people started getting successful in the bacon |
|
16:27 | the Eagle ford. Ah another way looking at exploitation is that everywhere in |
|
16:34 | world that there's a shale, a rock uh to exploit that resource because |
|
16:39 | started to find it in exploration, could kind of categorize that as, |
|
16:44 | exploit exploitation as well. But once find that reservoir, the next thing |
|
16:50 | have to do is figure out how it is. So you start a |
|
16:54 | of appraisal wells and when you drill appraisal wells, the key is to |
|
17:01 | of figure out the boundaries of the . And then of course, once |
|
17:06 | done that, and you come up a plan of how to develop |
|
17:09 | in other words, put enough straws the ground to get it out. |
|
17:15 | uh, and as it turns out shales, it's a lot of straws |
|
17:20 | conventional resources, it's a limited number straws. And then after that's going |
|
17:26 | , you look back at a lot your production records and things and try |
|
17:31 | figure out is there something here we've . And one of the problems is |
|
17:36 | of the things that I've seen a is people will be developing a field |
|
17:41 | they'll, you know, two different can happen when you can sit there |
|
17:47 | go, you know, we're producing oil than we're supposed to be |
|
17:50 | what's going on here. So you to go back in and try to |
|
17:54 | out what it is about this reservoir series of reservoirs in different compartments that |
|
18:01 | don't understand completely, so that you fully develop it if you're, if |
|
18:06 | producing somewhere on the order in a resource, 50 or 60 of the |
|
18:14 | And your typical recovery rates are somewhere 35. Uh then obviously there's there's |
|
18:22 | aspect of that reservoir you don't understand it's bigger than you thought it |
|
18:26 | and when it's bigger than you think is, it strongly suggests that you |
|
18:30 | need more straws into into that reservoir that reservoir system. And then, |
|
18:37 | then of course, other things that look at, uh you don't get |
|
18:41 | production. So you try to figure what you can do with secondary, |
|
18:49 | and quaternary recovery methods and and try get the most out of that. |
|
18:56 | um in some ways, because you've draining this resource, a particular resource |
|
19:04 | a conventional due to the processes of and migration from a source rock, |
|
19:12 | could even imagine that that production would wherever you have a source rock, |
|
19:19 | a way to get in there and it. But then it it's |
|
19:23 | it's a very different beast and a animal. So, in a |
|
19:27 | you've kind of dipped into this idea frontier exploration again, to get at |
|
19:32 | uh unconventional and try to figure out what it's going to take. But |
|
19:38 | big key difference. And I'll mention more in the future, is that |
|
19:42 | it's unconventional, kind of start in basin, where it is, in |
|
19:47 | words, you know, where you know, where there has to |
|
19:51 | hotspots for production and uh and you of work from that center of activity |
|
19:59 | you know about within it. So , an unconventional, really starts from |
|
20:06 | the basin. And, but frontier , uh, you might run |
|
20:13 | many, many kilometers of three D over a huge area, stay off |
|
20:19 | atlantic coast of the United States and you're sort of looking at from |
|
20:27 | outside and and to uh, you , all around it and what's gonna |
|
20:32 | going on in it. And like south atlantic, when I mentioned |
|
20:37 | uh there was a lot of production in the post salt offshore, but |
|
20:44 | was before they got offshore, they onshore in africa and also in in |
|
20:51 | and the onshore stuff kept indicating uh there might be something further into the |
|
21:00 | . And in other words, quite with frontier exploration, in conventional, |
|
21:05 | start evaluating from outside the basin, in conventional you're already in the base |
|
21:12 | usually, and trying to figure out way to actually produce uh something in |
|
21:18 | , uh, may not be low and usually isn't, but it's a |
|
21:23 | , very low permeability. Okay, , um, I'm gonna have to |
|
21:31 | this just to make sure I follow , explain this correctly. So I |
|
21:36 | see everything okay. And so you can see the value chain in |
|
21:50 | , a really important point, you like to get hints on on test |
|
21:56 | right Here, I've listed the value um I didn't, I forgot to |
|
22:08 | in four steps where we combine this here and we combine this here. |
|
22:17 | exploration is is a very different this is definitely a different beast exploitation |
|
22:24 | kind of a twist on that. appraisal is sort of the link between |
|
22:31 | it and developing it and production is of is sort of like development and |
|
22:40 | . So I like to lump them like this and when I asked you |
|
22:45 | a test question uh what are the of the value chain? Some of |
|
22:54 | answers may not look like this, this would be the correct answer as |
|
22:58 | is here. Um So I just to make it easier and uh I |
|
23:07 | to combine these things that seem to very closely related to each other but |
|
23:12 | is the jumping processes from frontier to in this is very big and from |
|
23:20 | to there is a very big important and from here to there is a |
|
23:25 | big important difference. Now I was developmental geologist at and mobile and an |
|
23:34 | geologist mobil and Amoco and an exploration might end up doing these things in |
|
23:44 | developmental geologist. Of course we'll be these things but most of the time |
|
23:49 | you're in developmental geology they've got a idea that it's that it's definitely an |
|
23:55 | discovery and uh and so you have to do with this, but one |
|
24:01 | the reasons why I want to point that this is a big jump. |
|
24:04 | because the modern geosciences and I know from students and from from seeing how |
|
24:12 | work. Uh there's a big difference where you play so well when it's |
|
24:17 | exploration well and where you place an will, but an attempt to save |
|
24:24 | , a lot of people start to their first well instead of locating it |
|
24:33 | the middle of where you think it or close to the middle, they |
|
24:39 | drill their first well, their discovery around the border to see if not |
|
24:45 | can they find it, but can find, can they appraise it And |
|
24:49 | it with one will. And I'll you a couple examples in the future |
|
24:56 | of how drilling that exploration, that hopeful discovery? Well, the |
|
25:05 | you would drill an appraisal well makes in different parts of the world, |
|
25:11 | tremendously large reservoirs And come up empty a couple to even up to as |
|
25:18 | as 10 wells and still, they not found the mother lode. And |
|
25:23 | some, some places where the countries strong control over over there. Their |
|
25:32 | budgets and oil drilling, you reach point where it becomes politically impossible for |
|
25:39 | country after they've danced around the reservoir go to management and tell them, |
|
25:47 | know what we did it all Um, we've made a circle around |
|
25:53 | reservoir, I think we need to in the middle of it. And |
|
25:57 | sometimes a hard sell in places where are very, very tight and times |
|
26:04 | budgets are tight. Okay, so , here again is all three of |
|
26:08 | steps or excuse me, all six the steps, but like I |
|
26:14 | this is in red for a reason I think of this as a very |
|
26:19 | bit of the value chain. This becomes another very interrelated part and step |
|
26:28 | the value chain. This is if right. The appraisal is very distinctive |
|
26:34 | , from the yellow steps and of the purple steps. Development has a |
|
26:41 | to do with maximizing your return and draining a particular resource. And of |
|
26:49 | the production part of it is how tweak it with limited amount of capital |
|
26:56 | , you're trying to get more and value to come out of a, |
|
27:01 | particular reservoir or a series of One of the things that was |
|
27:13 | say not more than 10 or 15 ago, was that uh oftentimes geologists |
|
27:24 | in this area and engineers were more in this area, but now, |
|
27:31 | it turns out, like I said some ways producing an unconventional is more |
|
27:38 | a development production thing because you're already the basin, you already, you've |
|
27:44 | gone through a lot of this But if you do frontier and |
|
27:49 | it's, it's to try to find how far the limbs of this source |
|
27:54 | are good enough to do horizontal drilling fracking and whether or not you even |
|
27:59 | to do frightening. For example, Austin chalk is very brittle and has |
|
28:04 | lot of natural tracking and uh, a fine grained carbonate, but |
|
28:10 | you often, you don't need to and then in the North Sea |
|
28:17 | uh, they have highly fractured invigorated . They also have ones that |
|
28:25 | have not lit defied yet. And were charged before segmentation took place. |
|
28:35 | so it's almost like toothpaste when you it. And uh, and so |
|
28:40 | are areas of unconventional where you don't to do any, any really extra |
|
28:47 | things. So it's basically more of . You get into, you |
|
28:51 | we figured out where it was and we're going to just develop it. |
|
28:56 | we can figure out exactly how many we have and what kind of shale |
|
29:01 | there are between that porous, carbonate , fine grain formation is. And |
|
29:14 | any rate, the geological effort in beginning for conventional ah was very limited |
|
29:25 | here on this end. And the the geological effort was very high up |
|
29:39 | and uh, but hard geological data uh Mac Dennis, you're going to |
|
29:47 | to forgive me. But um, think hard geological data is seismic |
|
29:53 | I think hard geophysical data is, actually seismic data, to me is |
|
29:58 | very good form. I'm not criticizing , but it's a type of remote |
|
30:03 | . You're not actually touching the but you're sending sound waves through it |
|
30:07 | getting reflections and refraction records back. uh, and and of course there's |
|
30:13 | aspects like gravity Magnetics, which again similar to what you might call remote |
|
30:21 | , but in um, in in any uh drilling effort, uh, |
|
30:28 | know, when we drill a well we have a wire line log, |
|
30:32 | still an estimation of things. But , but at least it's touching the |
|
30:37 | all the way down the well bored we get sidewall cores, we have |
|
30:42 | hard geological data when we have a ah that's something that you can hold |
|
30:48 | your hand to me. That's hard data. What's interesting is that most |
|
30:53 | the hard geological data in the sense I'm trying to use it. Most |
|
30:59 | that is down here where you've got these wells drilled course taken sidewalk |
|
31:05 | taken all sorts of things up All we have is seismic. And |
|
31:12 | and I think it's it was funny the whole time that I was working |
|
31:17 | the oil industry directly. I've worked the oil industry since the turn of |
|
31:23 | century. But before the turn of century mm hmm. I worked directly |
|
31:28 | him since then indirectly. And, know, in spite of this, |
|
31:35 | geologists focused on this and the engineers down here when they had production |
|
31:42 | But also all this hard geological data the geologists working up on this |
|
31:49 | Never got to see. In other , geologists became very good at arm |
|
31:55 | . And of course now, now we go into unconventional, we're all |
|
32:01 | at a lot of the processes that on down at this level of what's |
|
32:06 | on. And so these are some the things that I consider real deal |
|
32:14 | geologic data. And and again, cores are part of the formation. |
|
32:19 | sidewalk cores are cuttings are wire line . There are tools that estimate |
|
32:26 | But but they are at least touching rock or not too far away from |
|
32:32 | on the other side of the mud . And then there's seismic. And |
|
32:36 | course as seismic imaging gets better. , it gets harder. Uh, |
|
32:43 | recently did a PhD at U. H. And they decided that this |
|
32:52 | was all soft data. And the was hard data. And the topic |
|
32:58 | the dissertation was correlating soft data with seismic data. And and that |
|
33:08 | it's seemingly a novel thing. But the same time that's been done in |
|
33:12 | in the oil industry since time in because mostly we had this as geologists |
|
33:19 | we often had input from seismic and . And so, uh that's kind |
|
33:27 | the way it was. Now everything out with seismic because that's what you |
|
33:35 | up here on this end and this to help you find where the reservoirs |
|
33:40 | . And so it's a lot of paid upfront. Okay. And so |
|
33:49 | where you get most of this information is from the steps of appraisal development |
|
33:54 | production, which is not, it not considered the sort of sexy part |
|
34:00 | being a geologist back when I was geologist. Uh but I learned an |
|
34:06 | lot being a developmental geologist because I to uh to see what you could |
|
34:11 | with hard data with or without seismic . Mhm. Okay. And so |
|
34:22 | are some of the main roles of and conventional reservoirs and I put a |
|
34:29 | of dollars here because because geophysics is incredible tool, but it's expensive and |
|
34:38 | think one of the reasons why a of research has been done in |
|
34:41 | it's because it's it's been a big item and when you are a big |
|
34:46 | item, uh the that particular technology a lot of focus and it gets |
|
34:52 | lot of use and uh and and of that, you have a lot |
|
34:57 | people doing it and you get a of advancements over short periods of time |
|
35:02 | is what we've seen and in some geophysicists are kind of keeping up with |
|
35:08 | medical industry and and how to image you can't you can't actually touch and |
|
35:14 | like inside of a body versus inside of the earth. And uh so |
|
35:20 | became it's a very expensive thing. still an expensive thing. And I |
|
35:28 | your realization has been, if you back here, if seismic was mostly |
|
35:34 | up here, uh and we can a lot of money by not doing |
|
35:42 | uh and focus just on this area here. Why don't we do |
|
35:47 | Now? Having said what I just , uh a lot of geophysicists are |
|
35:55 | brilliant and uh and clever. So figured out that they're actually very useful |
|
36:01 | here. But but they haven't been that for as long as they've been |
|
36:06 | these big surveys and looking at in basins and trying to figure out the |
|
36:13 | developmental history of a particular basin and layers the strategic graffiti and then the |
|
36:18 | within the strategic fee or the sequences in the pair of sequences and eventually |
|
36:24 | faces. So, so this uh has sort of been a migration of |
|
36:30 | effort from these huge uh geophysical surveys cost millions of dollars. And now |
|
36:39 | might even cost there might some of ones that were done in the |
|
36:43 | If we were to do three Over that same amount of area might |
|
36:46 | billions of dollars. And then, I don't know that for sure. |
|
36:50 | I'm guessing it could get to that , but now they're focusing down on |
|
36:55 | of that part of the basin where see the source rock that's really in |
|
36:59 | shape and it can focus just on . And it's still, that's something |
|
37:05 | a lot of companies have been doing various places, but it's a smaller |
|
37:11 | and in less dollars than it used be when they were doing these. |
|
37:15 | huh, for example, seismic surveys the entire gulf of Mexico, Some |
|
37:22 | those were funded by the government as for geological research. Okay. |
|
37:31 | the main role of unconventional, of and unconventional reservoirs right now seems to |
|
37:40 | a lot of this geo steering But again, they're looking for sweet |
|
37:47 | in and around a major play. other words, you're not coming from |
|
37:51 | outside and trying to figure out where the spot is on the |
|
37:55 | You're actually on the inside, you're probably initially starting where somebody had |
|
38:01 | well that had some shows. And , you kind of knew this petroleum |
|
38:07 | already. And so you start doing kind of thing. You focus on |
|
38:12 | you can get higher volume and higher rates. You're also gonna try to |
|
38:19 | out places where you can actually align wells with the direction of the stresses |
|
38:26 | create natural fractures because it's often a thing to drill perpendicular to to the |
|
38:34 | fractures. But again, the way surface politics are and I don't mean |
|
38:44 | and stuff. But land ownership in can complicate the direction that you can |
|
38:53 | a well, if you get a of land, it's very long in |
|
38:59 | direction, and it's pointed north south the fractures are north south, there's |
|
39:08 | way you're gonna drill along horizontal. , that's going to be perpendicular to |
|
39:13 | north south trend because east west, might be a very short distance, |
|
39:19 | know, maybe, uh, a of miles this way, but seven |
|
39:26 | 8 miles that way. Uh And you can't really get um too many |
|
39:32 | these things. And of course, I just said was a pretty big |
|
39:36 | of land, but say, say half a mile across and two miles |
|
39:43 | , then you'd have a hard time the north. Excuse me, In |
|
39:46 | west path on your horizontal well, a lot of that ends up being |
|
39:53 | . But nevertheless, sometimes people have acreages and they can drill the wells |
|
40:01 | any direction they want to, and they can figure out up front what |
|
40:06 | best direction would be, they could aligning all their wills. Other things |
|
40:11 | happen is they don't understand the stresses the natural fracture system and they just |
|
40:16 | drilling wells in a certain direction. after they've done that, they kind |
|
40:21 | , it's a lot easier just to of keep in line with with that |
|
40:25 | , even if it's the wrong direction uh and then they start looking for |
|
40:30 | where they could start taking advantage of what the stress fields are and the |
|
40:37 | natural fracture direction is. Uh and try to uh to drill perpendicular to |
|
40:44 | in another part of the play on another a new piece of acreage. |
|
40:50 | The one of the keys of course total organic carbon and and these other |
|
41:02 | here obviously the more the richer the rock is, the more likely you're |
|
41:11 | to have something left and there is produced after it's been matured and I |
|
41:16 | been bleeding off and migrating into conventional . Another thing is uh does anybody |
|
41:25 | know what avi shale is? Can tell us what what the shell |
|
41:45 | So v shell is just to determine amount of sharing information. This according |
|
41:50 | google. Mhm. Okay, so shell is at the v. Is |
|
41:58 | . So uh it's the volume of within that rock. And um and |
|
42:05 | this kind of getting down to basic but when we start looking at rock |
|
42:10 | , reservoir rock properties, it becomes to, but but but the volume |
|
42:17 | shale refers to what type of fine material. Well that rock let the |
|
42:31 | section on the rocks of reservoirs won't wasted. Okay, But the the |
|
42:39 | mainly focuses on the salacious Claes and salacious clays or what can anybody remember |
|
42:47 | one of the properties are of salacious as opposed to as opposed to carbonate |
|
42:57 | grain material shares. There are rich silica, they're what they are rich |
|
43:06 | silica, they have more silicon Oh yes of course they do have |
|
43:14 | silica. Uh And that might throw off in terms of the actual physical |
|
43:22 | of the rock. Because you know you think of silica, you think |
|
43:25 | courts a lot. But what happens you step in a salacious clay say |
|
43:40 | walking around uh marsh? What happens you when you step in salacious |
|
43:47 | Oh you just go deep inside. . Another and suspicious clays are very |
|
43:54 | . In other words they're like they're a massive putty or plastic. |
|
44:00 | And because of that uh rocks that a high d shale versus ones that |
|
44:09 | a low v shell uh Perhaps more uh clay sized particles rather than cell |
|
44:20 | , is clay sized particles, which of those is going to be more |
|
44:36 | . Okay, remember we're drilling into um through through through the little notification |
|
44:46 | . Uh huh. It takes a for the salacious shales. Another property |
|
44:51 | of them have is is uh they water, they have to be de |
|
44:56 | and so between the simple nature like if you get a piece of um |
|
45:06 | you know, you can actually bend but delicious clays ah don't typically cement |
|
45:15 | that much. And they they stay say sort of in an unending rated |
|
45:25 | manner quite in terms of the rock process? It takes a lot longer |
|
45:30 | those things to become hardened. For , you can go and look at |
|
45:37 | of cretaceous shales all around texas and they're pretty easy to break off, |
|
45:44 | if you go to a limestone ah of carbonate sedimentation rates, most of |
|
45:52 | buried chalks and stuff like that gets pretty quickly. And so anyway, |
|
45:58 | make a long story short since we're getting there uh by asking questions, |
|
46:05 | one of the real important things geologists at is this be shale thing because |
|
46:10 | the vichy is high, the ability fracture the rocks is going to be |
|
46:20 | . And of course if you have with a low b shale and its |
|
46:24 | rich instead of salacious rich, it's going to have natural fracturing in addition |
|
46:31 | being a rock that could be fractured lot easier. You know, |
|
46:37 | some shales actually form seals and they're plastic to the point of being like |
|
46:44 | balloon and sometimes they're hard to rupture leak off and uh and they hold |
|
46:55 | brakes and secondary migration. So this something, the total amount of the |
|
47:03 | carbon is important and then how much material is in there is important, |
|
47:10 | what about the, we're talking about stuff and I mentioned that quartz is |
|
47:17 | hard, of course. What if get sand sized particles that are |
|
47:22 | what do they do to one of systems? I would say due to |
|
47:34 | fine grained nature of descend, it be easier to fracture compared to the |
|
47:41 | ability compared to the visual that's coarse , easier to fracture. Okay, |
|
47:47 | you have if you have silk court and stuff like that that that would |
|
47:54 | it up a little bit. So fracturing might be better if you had |
|
47:57 | sand in there. But but the unfortunately has another negative effect on this |
|
48:03 | of a potential source rock and that dilution. The organic material is all |
|
48:09 | to be fine grained. And if get coarse grain influx of sands ah |
|
48:16 | going to um see uh that your . O. C. S. |
|
48:22 | drop off dramatically for those of you with the Eagle ford. Um There's |
|
48:28 | arch that runs up sort of the of texas coastal plain and uh On |
|
48:34 | side of it the Eagle ford is rich. Uh it has lower v |
|
48:43 | and uh and it's a really good for unconventional resource development. If you |
|
48:49 | across the arch uh you get into Houston and basement and a couple of |
|
48:55 | investments uh that were there in the the way back into the cretaceous. |
|
49:05 | they they were producing lots of salacious and salacious sands And so a lot |
|
49:13 | places, the T. O. . S. Are much lower. |
|
49:17 | the and the rocks for lack of better word they're more they're less frack |
|
49:25 | east of this arch. And uh so uh that's an important thing that |
|
49:33 | look at. And then of course a lot of special seismic and geological |
|
49:38 | available. I think one of the things for anybody to learn is how |
|
49:47 | correlate logs and that's when they're But when a lot goes horizontal correlating |
|
49:56 | particular section while you're wiggling through you be wiggling just threw one formation maybe |
|
50:03 | second one above a third one below gets very hard to actually do geo |
|
50:10 | and and figure out exactly what you're at with some of the earlier tools |
|
50:16 | we have now we have tools that almost can look ahead of the drill |
|
50:21 | but not quite. They have a spread which which when they angle down |
|
50:28 | gives them a bit of a forward when they angle up it gives them |
|
50:32 | forward look to the units below. and so some of that new technology |
|
50:38 | making it different but in general the in unconventional reservoirs are already pounding. |
|
50:57 | They're they're down here doing this. so they're getting lots of geological |
|
51:03 | And and so in some ways uh a geologist and unconventional reservoirs can be |
|
51:09 | interesting as long as they don't make do nothing but geo steering, it's |
|
51:15 | as a geologist and a professional to all the skill sets that you're learning |
|
51:21 | be able to focus on some of issues uh, using geological data rather |
|
51:29 | just just helping someone steer steer Okay. Um, so some of |
|
51:39 | main concerns that we have in the ah are these and uh, why |
|
51:49 | the first one important? Mm If it's a bigger basin, it'll |
|
51:59 | more economic to drill it and build and things out of it to transport |
|
52:09 | , if it's unconventional, even just transport water in for fracking and then |
|
52:13 | reporting the gas or oil out. transportation will be an issue. |
|
52:25 | Also, um, I know for were actually like looking for a new |
|
52:31 | we are looking for new resources and new reserve runs there. So if |
|
52:36 | have a bigger basin, we can an idea of the environmental conditions in |
|
52:41 | reservoir that brought about the resources in reserve world. So if it's |
|
52:47 | we can look for other locations in area or in this area that have |
|
52:52 | environmental conditions and we can have more of the trauma resolves resolves in |
|
53:00 | Okay. And, you know, these things are good and, |
|
53:06 | and of course, I didn't really it exactly, but the here it |
|
53:12 | overall basin type depot center structure in other words, mhm at all |
|
53:19 | of here, you know, a basin gives you a lot of |
|
53:25 | uh if it has multiple depot it gives you a lot of |
|
53:30 | Does everybody know what a depot center ? That's a that's a part of |
|
53:36 | basin that's subsiding faster than the It's creating more accommodation space. So |
|
53:41 | usually the thickest part of the sedimentary . And over time that can |
|
53:48 | The other thing is you need big and and the size of the of |
|
53:56 | potential prospects becomes also important. I a couple of students, somebody else |
|
54:03 | there, advisor, and he had evaluate, he had two students, |
|
54:10 | had them evaluate to very, very , obvious traps, structural traps. |
|
54:18 | at the end of the day, think, I think they had something |
|
54:22 | a couple of 1000 barrels of oil in these traps. So to begin |
|
54:27 | , you don't look for something that's to have small prospects what you |
|
54:34 | but you do have uh with larger and more depot centers and lots of |
|
54:42 | is, you have a lot more . Itty, and this would be |
|
54:47 | conventional. Now, Angela brought up good point and and it's, it's |
|
54:54 | , it's kind of funny because it's it's a different, it's a different |
|
54:59 | altogether. Uh when, when we're offshore in these big fields, these |
|
55:06 | areas. One of the limiting factors economics is, do you have pipelines |
|
55:12 | nearby. So in a way it's . So even a big a big |
|
55:19 | in uh in conventional resources can can be a problem in terms of |
|
55:27 | , just like the, well I you about in Denmark, you're sitting |
|
55:32 | in the North Sea, there's a of production there, but they didn't |
|
55:35 | a pipeline near it. And so , ah not only of supplies, |
|
55:42 | also distribution of the production to to refinery or refineries or buyers can become |
|
55:53 | , become a big issue. So can be to some extent detrimental and |
|
55:58 | happened in in uh in the premium in other places where we have lots |
|
56:06 | unconventional resources, particularly in texas, infrastructure it was built and and and |
|
56:16 | to handle the production that we got the conventional reservoirs. A lot of |
|
56:23 | legacy infrastructure no longer works and needs be replaced. So it makes it |
|
56:29 | hard uh to do that. And course, uh when we drill conventional |
|
56:35 | , we don't need as much water that that water becomes a tremendous |
|
56:40 | Another thing that needs to be transported the unconventional, his very special |
|
56:48 | which often are some type of sand particles of different natures and compositions. |
|
56:57 | a lot of times it is courts and other common things, but at |
|
57:04 | same time, it's difficult to get into place, but normally in conventional |
|
57:10 | kind of looking for uh something that's and the reason you have to say |
|
57:17 | , you know, you think about unconventional, there's shales extend like this |
|
57:23 | because that's the way shells are there , very extensive and uh but sands |
|
57:30 | high energy deposits that just occur here there. If you imagine a flu |
|
57:37 | system coming down the coastal plain surrounded a flood plain, there's mud all |
|
57:43 | it, it's cutting through mud, mud in it. But at the |
|
57:47 | bars, you have these little pockets sand which make up the the actual |
|
57:55 | reservoirs in the high porosity zones. high energy zones. And when we |
|
58:01 | to ocean de positional systems, you longer barrier islands and uh particularly in |
|
58:09 | in the gulf of Mexico where the range is low and they're mostly wave |
|
58:16 | . And of course there's places where the sand is wave dominated and it |
|
58:21 | grades as as as a straight line like you see in a shiny |
|
58:28 | But nevertheless uh a typical conventional reservoir is very small in area compared |
|
58:38 | ah an unconventional resource shale. and conventional is it's real important that |
|
58:48 | start out with with large features, geological features, large structures, large |
|
58:56 | , multiple deputies centers and for the North sea has depot centers all |
|
59:03 | and down the North sea. So North Sea has been an incredibly good |
|
59:09 | for petroleum systems. Okay, another thing is, does it |
|
59:16 | does it have these structures? And and that becomes very important in, |
|
59:23 | uh, conventional, in unconventional, would be the structural component in |
|
59:31 | what would be a very obvious structural in a unconventional shale play, |
|
59:42 | faulting and but also, um, know, if you have a limestone |
|
59:48 | it's deposited essentially flat, uh what if there's subsidence on the edges |
|
60:01 | it starts to do this on a scale, you're going to get |
|
60:07 | but if it flexes just a little , a little bit, excuse |
|
60:13 | what it is, Yeah, I'll false, but but on an even |
|
60:18 | scale, what happens as you start if if I have something that's plastic |
|
60:24 | I bend it, what happens to ? It's like an unconfirmed, it |
|
60:30 | do anything. So, but if have, if I have, you |
|
60:37 | , if I have something that's, salaciousness and there's subsidence on either |
|
60:43 | It does this, right, It and conformity. Okay, You're |
|
60:49 | you're right, you're absolutely right. just a tiny little bit of flex |
|
60:58 | on a cell ish. Isse formation going to do what? Almost |
|
61:02 | Right? It's just gonna bend. . Uh depending on how much the |
|
61:10 | gets stretched and the bottom gets you might start getting faulty, but |
|
61:14 | you just flex it, if there's some flexion? Uh not much is |
|
61:19 | happen if it's delicious, but what it's a carbonate rich limestone fractures? |
|
61:31 | . Um one of the things that market worked on with with lime stones |
|
61:37 | just curvature, curvature of the top a flat line. You know, |
|
61:43 | a limestone might be tilted because of scale structure or it might be flat |
|
61:49 | there wasn't that, but normally uh the gulf of Mexico, everything is |
|
61:54 | to the southeast and or the depending on what part of the gulf |
|
61:59 | on. But if for some reason flexes a little bit, you're going |
|
62:03 | get a lot of fractures. So of that top surface, it was |
|
62:10 | attribute that kurt market was used and developed. It's a good way to |
|
62:15 | out what units are going to have lot of natural fracturing as opposed to |
|
62:21 | that will have less natural fracturing. that's, you know, there's a |
|
62:29 | scale structure that becomes very important in unconventional is the point I'm trying to |
|
62:35 | . It's not just the faults are important in conventional because they become usually |
|
62:40 | of the seal and part of the of the trap itself, but, |
|
62:48 | in unconventional, the stress fields that rocks undertook, what's what's pushing and |
|
62:56 | , what direction uh does it happen have the highest stress, in other |
|
63:01 | , what's going to be the preferred of fracture and also the fact that |
|
63:07 | can fracture. And so, so , this is, this is back |
|
63:12 | a reference of the v shale in unconventional. Okay, then again, |
|
63:19 | it have organic rich deposits? And already mentioned this a little bit where |
|
63:26 | have coarse grained influx, you get of the organic source rock potential source |
|
63:35 | . And you can have ones that rich enough and have the organics been |
|
63:41 | and uh, let's just see. , so in a sense, what |
|
63:48 | it about organic rich? Well, looking at this list. Um, |
|
63:57 | anybody goes somewhere, they do, do try to decide whether it's big |
|
64:02 | to have, uh, conventional or shale is big enough to have significant |
|
64:10 | . Mm hmm. This is This button works sometimes and sometimes it |
|
64:20 | work. I'm still not being able figure out why. Okay, I've |
|
64:25 | had this laptop for 10 years. , so it might be because of |
|
64:33 | cursor that I use sometimes, but , nope, it's working now. |
|
64:42 | , I still don't know why. , so the here we have these |
|
64:49 | in here. Excuse Me, this and this one kind of relate to |
|
64:57 | , is there, is there is there going to be enough to |
|
65:01 | at? And here this is kind are we gonna have structures that will |
|
65:06 | us trap it or fracking? It's good way to put it. So |
|
65:12 | would be it creates traps unconventional. frak it. And then we get |
|
65:19 | here, we get to this organic stuff and also whether or not it's |
|
65:24 | matured, uh I put this at bottom of the list, but what |
|
65:28 | you think might be the first thing need to know when you're exploring? |
|
65:38 | need to know if it's set a or in if he is dominated by |
|
65:44 | or ignores rocks in there. well sedimentary is, Yeah, and |
|
65:48 | relates to this basin. So what , what is one of the, |
|
65:52 | haven't gotten to it yet and I know if I'm gonna have time in |
|
65:56 | this semester to go into a little of grabbing mag. But one of |
|
66:01 | reasons gravity Magnetics is used to actually out if if you have a big |
|
66:05 | when you don't have size, you got seismic yet. So that's one |
|
66:09 | the reasons why that's useful, turns it's very good for helping you define |
|
66:13 | boundaries with. So it's a really tool except uh not enough people working |
|
66:19 | to develop that technology to the full that I think it's uh that's worth |
|
66:24 | . Nevertheless. Uh wanna if did you guys just take petroleum Two |
|
66:34 | you just took petroleum geochemistry. okay. So, so you're looking |
|
66:40 | it from a petroleum geochemist perspective what was the most important thing about |
|
66:46 | petroleum system to a petroleum geochemist, , where it would be in the |
|
66:54 | or gas window. Okay, to what you're going to produce or if |
|
67:00 | over mature, under mature. And why is that important? Because |
|
67:08 | you're in, if it's over under mature mature, you're not, |
|
67:13 | could have a high toc, but not actually going to be able to |
|
67:16 | anything. Okay. And so you're, you're, I'm trying to |
|
67:22 | you this give actually a simpler but your answer is absolutely correct. |
|
67:28 | there is there is a tendency for geochemist and it's not an incorrect statement |
|
67:35 | to say that this doesn't matter. this doesn't matter if you don't have |
|
67:40 | . If there's no oil there, no point in even looking. So |
|
67:47 | you have some way to know whether not there's oil there, then, |
|
67:57 | , then you can actually high grade that you want to go look. |
|
68:01 | problem is, is in a large a lot of large basins. That's |
|
68:05 | to do. Now, I worked a project again with Amoco in the |
|
68:10 | center and after the Research center on basins, which tend to be smaller |
|
68:16 | . And on the, on the of these smaller systems are is usually |
|
68:20 | outcrops and you can look at certain that live there and they can tell |
|
68:27 | whether the butter was the right type hydro chemistry, you know, a |
|
68:32 | of us think of lakes as fresh , but there's all kinds of lakes |
|
68:37 | the world. And of course the that have uh well deposits in them |
|
68:43 | actually saline when they were in And not only were they saline, |
|
68:48 | they were a special hydro chemistry. there were certain Biota that would help |
|
68:54 | determined whether or not it was the , the good hydro chemistry or the |
|
68:59 | hydro chemistry. The good hydro chemistry phosphate in the system. And it |
|
69:04 | high productivity rates. And the other chemistry ah has all the elements of |
|
69:12 | a big large lake and all that of thing. But it didn't have |
|
69:17 | hydro chemistry that kept the phosphate in water. It turned it into |
|
69:21 | it took the the phosphate out and the productivity rates were low. And |
|
69:27 | ended up with nothing. So in cases, totally focusing on this is |
|
69:33 | good. And for for the customer , is that true? And almost |
|
69:37 | does it, because a lot of work that we did on this, |
|
69:39 | never published now. Um but in in the sense of an oil |
|
69:47 | uh, you know, looking at , you know, they're always going |
|
69:52 | want to do this if it's a oil company, because because large oil |
|
69:57 | have huge overheads and they need to , they need to uh to get |
|
70:03 | oil resources rather than small ones at time. Uh a smaller oil company |
|
70:10 | gonna always probably focus on this, they're at to make sure it's |
|
70:14 | But also a smaller oil company may even work in a place where this |
|
70:20 | been figured out already. In other , we're all drilling and on the |
|
70:25 | plain of the gulf of Mexico, we already know this is there. |
|
70:30 | not a question. The question is to be mostly migration and traps and |
|
70:39 | the case of unconventional again, it back to everything I've said about in |
|
70:46 | . Okay, well, here is , here is here. We talked |
|
70:59 | big basins. Here's, here's an from the book of a big |
|
71:05 | Um, just taking a quick look it. Can anybody tell me, |
|
71:11 | , what type of basin this might ? You look like a rift. |
|
71:19 | is a rift basin. And what category of basins would a rift basin |
|
71:29 | in? Um, no more Extension of patients would be extension. |
|
71:35 | basins. Right, okay. And is pretty much the central grabbing of |
|
71:41 | North Sea. And uh, and course, the people that wrote the |
|
71:46 | worked in the North Sea most of careers and other places around the |
|
71:51 | But this was kind of their stomping . And this is uh showing |
|
72:00 | uh, in this very large the very thing I'm talking about |
|
72:07 | you see, uh, different bits section and we're going to talk about |
|
72:14 | more in the future. But here have a basin that has source |
|
72:19 | that has reservoir rocks. It has called a seal. And people call |
|
72:24 | cap rock, I think they they it cap rock. Just so they |
|
72:30 | come up with a different letter from instead of calling it a seal. |
|
72:37 | and here you can see uh what you think, What do you think |
|
72:41 | be in here? And this in part, this part, this |
|
72:53 | this part this part and this part see there's a reservoir rock in |
|
73:02 | How does this in time relate to other deposits? And in the development |
|
73:07 | the basin? Think of crosscutting relationships uh think about superposition really. Basic |
|
73:27 | um fundamentals. They were all deposited the same time. Okay, which |
|
73:42 | ? Mhm. Like the coarse grain , the kind of squiggly line you |
|
73:52 | up here? No, down Yeah. Okay, that was a |
|
74:03 | guess. But no. Um So well we'll talk about this in more |
|
74:10 | , but these are probably what we call basement. These would probably be |
|
74:15 | rocks. This is probably an indication metamorphic rocks and not cross bedding. |
|
74:22 | This is pro gradation up here Uh at one point in time, |
|
74:30 | you move all these faults back up this, it was a unit that |
|
74:37 | all the way up like this and bowed. Uh huh. Now it's |
|
74:46 | . But it was bowed at one . What do you think in other |
|
74:51 | of if I push this up to point and that point and that point |
|
74:57 | that point, it's going to go in the air, it's gonna bow |
|
75:00 | little bit, but it's also going be shorter because as it's fallen down |
|
75:06 | this hole, it's extended but it's to be shorter and it kind of |
|
75:13 | of bowed up just a little bit this originally. And and the reason |
|
75:22 | , is because this was a spreading and magma was coming up this |
|
75:28 | So you may have some some igneous but and for the most part a |
|
75:35 | of these are igneous and metamorphic which is basement. And that's what |
|
75:38 | in conformity is the seaway came in eroded some of it. But this |
|
75:45 | this is all pre pre rift. in here is pre riff and this |
|
75:52 | post drift and appear and then in is sin rift while the rifting was |
|
76:02 | on, this was filling it. what happens is first you have the |
|
76:08 | pushing it up and things are kind sliding out of the way and then |
|
76:12 | on this is a failed rift. the magma source dried up, so |
|
76:17 | speak and it cooled and it and flexed and broke down and fell into |
|
76:24 | this depression like this, which created accommodation space up here later. So |
|
76:30 | have here, pre rift rocks syn rocks and then post rift rocks over |
|
76:39 | and the types of deposition, the of reservoirs that you get in the |
|
76:45 | drifting are different from the sin rifting different from the pre rift because the |
|
76:52 | rift was a completely different paleo Same here, you've got a source |
|
76:59 | which is predominantly syn rift, but also have later source rocks here that |
|
77:05 | postscript. Mhm. And uh this rock right here is getting charged. |
|
77:16 | pre rift, but it's it's an rock getting charged by syn rift source |
|
77:24 | . And we'll talk about this a bit more. Okay, And then |
|
77:31 | another aspect, you know, we're at all of this in terms of |
|
77:39 | . The other thing that you have think about it is you're gonna risk |
|
77:44 | lot of capital. You've got to infrastructure or find nearby infrastructure, you |
|
77:51 | to have access and uh, what , anything else this is you gotta |
|
78:07 | ready willing to spend money to get an area. You have to either |
|
78:12 | infrastructure or find nearby infrastructure here. have to get the acreage. But |
|
78:18 | else might be a problem here, you're exploring for oil and gas demands |
|
78:29 | to Yeah, because the economy is on it. But but I was |
|
78:33 | of something, let's let's just assume now, we know we have a |
|
78:40 | and we know that someone's going to that oil and gas. Okay, |
|
78:58 | . Nobody's gonna guess there's only three you. So I can't wait for |
|
79:02 | The 33rd person in the back of classroom to speak up. Ah One |
|
79:06 | the other important things is the security the area that you work, Is |
|
79:12 | a safe place to work? Either or environmentally? Uh And that sort |
|
79:18 | thing, if for example, uh and the arctic ocean has gotten a |
|
79:26 | bit easier since everything's the ice is , but it's still a very treacherous |
|
79:30 | to work. How how many of remember, shall tried to get a |
|
79:36 | rig up there a few years anybody remember that, do you? |
|
79:47 | a few years ago Shell was, trying to drill 10, 10 wells |
|
79:51 | one summer on the north slope in or somewhere near the north slope. |
|
80:02 | they they are taking a rig up that was essentially like a big |
|
80:08 | And uh again it's it's been warmer there than in the past, but |
|
80:14 | what's something else that we know about northern pacific and also the arctic ocean |
|
80:20 | there's free water, in other it's not icebound, the water would |
|
80:30 | deeper. Mhm. Well, and some of the places it |
|
80:36 | and I think where they were going try to plant this thing, it |
|
80:39 | a little bit shallower, but but getting from say Seattle or Anchorage and |
|
80:47 | around Alaska and getting up there, going to uh very treacherous waters. |
|
80:55 | , and one of the oddest things I've ever seen in my life is |
|
80:58 | used one tugboat to tow it and don't know if any of you have |
|
81:04 | seen a rig go offshore Norway. these platforms were the size of the |
|
81:10 | State building and, and they were out to sea during two weeks when |
|
81:16 | weather window was right and the it was only two weeks a |
|
81:19 | They could do this. And Those rigs would have somewhere on the |
|
81:26 | of 20 mm hmm towing vessels to sure that if something, if something |
|
81:34 | down, there would be a backup every position. And not only do |
|
81:38 | have, uh, towers that pull , you have ones that pull back |
|
81:45 | the towers to try to keep it because when you're in a mass of |
|
81:50 | , maintaining control requires that you have speed or a lot of propellers that |
|
82:00 | , can pull in very different directions , depending on what the currents are |
|
82:04 | and the winds are doing. Sometimes currents are opposite the wind. And |
|
82:10 | , tall structure is going to catch wind and want to go one way |
|
82:12 | the current wants to move it another and it's physically impossible to maintain Something |
|
82:20 | tow with one tugboat. And, of course, these aren't little |
|
82:25 | these are tug ships, I should . But nevertheless, they went up |
|
82:29 | with one tug ship and, and engine went out on the tug |
|
82:33 | And so if nothing happened to that tow vessel, it was already |
|
82:44 | . But then something happened to that vessel, they didn't have a, |
|
82:47 | backup. So safety. And in the terms of the environment, |
|
82:53 | also the politics there, there are where they're nasty little civil wars and |
|
82:59 | going on from time to time and don't want to work in there. |
|
83:04 | know Amoco, uh, we were leaders in uh, exploration geologists deaths |
|
83:11 | a while because we kept trying to to certain places and in central and |
|
83:17 | America that were, or having a bit of issues in terms of |
|
83:25 | And then, and then of uh, there was a time when |
|
83:31 | go to Papua new guinea and you run into rebels or you might run |
|
83:36 | headhunters even, I don't think that's issue anymore. But back in |
|
83:42 | The early exploration days in the 50s 60s, there were a lot of |
|
83:47 | that ran into trouble that way. what else could happen in terms of |
|
83:55 | aside from wars and rebels and, headhunters and that sort of thing, |
|
84:05 | . Yeah, corruption could be a thing. And, and rather than |
|
84:09 | that dirty word, I was just to say, uh, how the |
|
84:14 | of uh, works with the oil . And sometimes it works really well |
|
84:20 | the oil companies when you have But most american companies are not supposed |
|
84:25 | work under those conditions, but they do so anyway. But politics can |
|
84:32 | a lot to do with who gets and who doesn't get access. So |
|
84:36 | going to look for a, a that or even a state that that |
|
84:44 | an objective way of evaluating your bid you're bidding for acres. And so |
|
84:53 | has a lot to do with bidding acreage to drill, who are trying |
|
84:59 | line up acreage. I think in United States, sometimes the landman can |
|
85:04 | a little bit aggressive, overly So we tend to look the other |
|
85:08 | , but you can also have landowners make it very difficult to get |
|
85:14 | contiguous areas to actually drill into. in all cases access can be a |
|
85:22 | problem. And it's, it's it's not just a one thing depending |
|
85:26 | where you're at, there's different problems . Um when we were working in |
|
85:33 | on the luau structure, the, reservoir engineers kept working diligently to find |
|
85:43 | cheaper way to produce oil money, oil, Excuse me, More |
|
85:50 | Uh, at less cost so that could turn this two billion barrels oil |
|
85:56 | into a very productive thing and they using seismic to image it better and |
|
86:01 | sort out where the, the poorest were versus the less porous formations and |
|
86:08 | it more efficient that way. But time they came up with and they |
|
86:13 | always sharing their technology with with the like they're supposed to and whenever they |
|
86:19 | out a way to to actually make profit. The chinese government back |
|
86:24 | I don't know if they still do now because I haven't worked there in |
|
86:27 | years. But the the government would , would raise the attacks to lift |
|
86:33 | oil. So if you could make on a barrel of oil the next |
|
86:38 | , they turn around and and tax two more dollars. You could make |
|
86:44 | the next day because of something you , they would add another $3 to |
|
86:48 | lifting tax. So it was really . Two to find a profit. |
|
86:54 | of course when you negotiate, sometimes say we're willing to do this and |
|
86:58 | willing to do that. And so they agreed to some of these |
|
87:01 | So what they ended up having to is sell this massive oil field to |
|
87:05 | company that didn't have a pre existing and was able to to get things |
|
87:11 | in stone so that they could actually out a way to uh to make |
|
87:15 | money. So access can be a complicated thing from a very simple thing |
|
87:20 | , you know, you have to places that have civil wars often to |
|
87:25 | places I don't think you have to about headhunters anymore. But you do |
|
87:30 | to worry about other health issues. also in the case of central and |
|
87:38 | America, a lot of people ran drug lords and that kind of |
|
87:44 | So you have to be really careful and then in the United States, |
|
87:49 | know, you work in one there's a whole different set of rules |
|
87:52 | the next state and you work in county, there may be more |
|
88:00 | Not often county by county, but often state by state, but sometimes |
|
88:04 | could be county by county. Some the conditions could be a little bit |
|
88:08 | to make it more or less Also, can I add one more |
|
88:16 | the climate, the environmental coalition which be caused in in the conversion of |
|
88:22 | resources into use use. Yeah, I really apologize but I'm having a |
|
88:31 | time hearing you. Okay, understanding more point is that the environmental position |
|
88:37 | can be caused during the process of resources conversion and all into the |
|
88:46 | Okay. You mean by the fact we're getting the oil, we're creating |
|
88:49 | pollution problem. Ah Yeah, Yeah. Yeah. Okay. |
|
88:54 | And of course some. Yeah that's that comes under regulations and regulations is |
|
89:01 | whole part of that. And uh my my personal feeling is that we |
|
89:08 | we should welcome regulations to keep things in regulations to keep things cleaner and |
|
89:17 | when somebody lays down a rule and permanent, it's easier for an engineer |
|
89:23 | a geologist for a manager to figure how they can actually cope with it |
|
89:29 | come out ahead anyway. And the problem with all these things that I |
|
89:34 | just talking about is variability. You , some countries can be a great |
|
89:39 | to work for all the right And then the next day that |
|
89:44 | take, take the United States. was, I was going to allow |
|
89:52 | to drill on the East Coast and B. P. Uh made a |
|
89:59 | mistake in the gulf of Mexico. right after that, drilling offshore the |
|
90:05 | States anywhere became LTD and and now we have a new government in, |
|
90:12 | completely shut down lease sales, I they may be starting up soon |
|
90:18 | But but their first response was just shut everything down. And and so |
|
90:26 | that variability that also ah has a to do with this. So and |
|
90:33 | , another way we used to acquaint with stability. You know, are |
|
90:37 | laws stable or the regulations stable? is it a fairly safe stable country |
|
90:45 | terms of governmental leadership, that sort thing. And so that was very |
|
90:51 | . But yes, I totally agree you. Those regulations can be can |
|
90:56 | choking if they move up and just like the taxes if it moved |
|
91:00 | and down. But but if people and good guidelines in the beginning for |
|
91:06 | reasons. I think engineers can sort ways. Two to actually figure out |
|
91:13 | to make money without without spending too money to comply. Uh It's just |
|
91:19 | with the E. P. Laws uh We went from these cars |
|
91:23 | were gas guzzlers and and smog creators to something that was even higher powered |
|
91:32 | less fuel with a lot more emissions because a lot of emissions went back |
|
91:37 | the power of the engine so against of all those things is a critical |
|
91:43 | . So you kind of kind of that up with the with the in |
|
91:47 | mind through the through your answers. . Thanks a lot mate. Okay |
|
91:53 | think it's probably a good time maybe take a little bit of a |
|
91:57 | Um I think we've been gone almost hour and a half. It started |
|
92:05 | little bit late so um we'll go and take a break right now for |
|
92:13 | minutes and it's I see 1017 on clock in. I will try not |
|
92:27 | lose site of where my my thing . And and we'll see you back |
|
92:39 | I guess. Let's just uh make uh 10 30. Come back at |
|
92:47 | 10 18 now on this clock that have. So we'll just make it |
|
92:51 | 30 A little bit more than 2010 rather. Okay. Can you hear |
|
93:35 | ? Yes sir. Very good. so um okay uh the next slide |
|
93:49 | gonna really look at some of the type stuff that we were just talking |
|
93:54 | . But um again a little bit in depth uh explanation of exploration and |
|
94:08 | . We were looking at frontier. exploration exploitation, you you start getting |
|
94:18 | data. You might have done some seismic and some gravity Magnetics but now |
|
94:24 | gonna try to do it over some the basil features that indicate a high |
|
94:30 | that you're going to have um uh structural traps. Because at the end |
|
94:37 | the day, that's mostly what we for. Now when we find |
|
94:41 | graphic traps quite often it's it's a we can see on seismic but many |
|
94:49 | it's something we find accidentally. And you're in an area where you where |
|
94:56 | have ah various types of structures and or strata. Graphic traps. After |
|
95:07 | worked in the area for a you kind of get to to know |
|
95:11 | to expect and where to expect But when you first get started |
|
95:16 | you're primarily going to be looking for traps and large structural traps. Obviously |
|
95:24 | you run a regional survey and see lot of sedimentary, uh see strata |
|
95:32 | that looked like a good sedimentary deposits not just a big ringer that you |
|
95:38 | get when you hit the basement. and you see a lot of structures |
|
95:42 | that's usually what makes you happy if on you find strata graphic traps. |
|
95:48 | even better. Um It seems like was yesterday I said this, but |
|
95:54 | don't think I did. There was area in the gulf of Mexico that |
|
96:04 | worked on where back back when I working with mobile, which was, |
|
96:11 | was quite a few years ago now was able to find strata graphic traps |
|
96:19 | structural traps. And one of the fields with over 60 wells in |
|
96:25 | And people hadn't seen it before. I did that with hard geological |
|
96:33 | And uh approximately 20 22, years the A. P. G. |
|
96:41 | had a big article in that same , she had physicists were able to |
|
96:48 | strata graphic traps. And when I that article, I thought well it's |
|
96:53 | time they can do that because with data we were able to do it |
|
96:58 | that. But having said that the that we were working had really good |
|
97:03 | traps and we didn't realize that down . We had some strata graphic traps |
|
97:11 | created much larger in multiple reservoir systems the same at the same level it |
|
97:21 | , the beds were tilted like this up dip. We had something that |
|
97:27 | a typical structural trap down dip just it. There was a strata graphic |
|
97:32 | that was charged with oil and gas well with a different oil water |
|
97:36 | So it's pretty interesting stuff. So , you're gonna be looking for these |
|
97:45 | of things. You're gonna map these when, when a european defines this |
|
97:52 | , we call a play, which haven't, we actually have ah a |
|
97:59 | of the exploration thing. We go details what a play is and what |
|
98:05 | is and uh and that sort of and then various grades of plays and |
|
98:12 | or leads. And but for I just want to say that um |
|
98:21 | try to look for places that might good prospects and we do uh, |
|
98:30 | of the things we do now is for hydrocarbon indicators and there's a lot |
|
98:34 | hydrocarbon indicators and the use of amplitude offset, which is a tool where |
|
98:42 | look at the reflectivity of a formation from a near source of energy to |
|
98:51 | far source of energy. So, looking at it on the seismic line |
|
98:55 | from a different angle as you move a a near energy source, something |
|
99:03 | close to That body to one farther . It's just like reflectivity kind of |
|
99:10 | up as you get farther and farther and the angle of incidence gets lower |
|
99:15 | lower. Uh you can actually see example, reflections on a tar, |
|
99:21 | tar road and asphalt road. And you're looking straight down at it, |
|
99:26 | just a tar or asphalt, roll with, with hardly any reflection at |
|
99:32 | . And that variation due to the of incidence is what we call uh |
|
99:40 | . A. B. L. vs. Offset offset from the feature |
|
99:48 | um and then ava is a similar doing exactly the same thing using a |
|
99:55 | uh huh. A little bit different on it, but it turns out |
|
100:01 | not always exactly the same. But in a given area, geophysicists and |
|
100:09 | are able to learn uh what really hydrocarbons and sometimes whether it's oil or |
|
100:15 | or fist gas and in certain parts the gulf of Mexico kind of, |
|
100:22 | the continental shelf and excuse me, coastal plain rather the coastal plain of |
|
100:30 | texas particularly in the Eocene. Ah usual formation comes to mind and there |
|
100:42 | all prospects get defined by amplitude versus Because with a good three d. |
|
100:48 | surveys relatively small volumes. I mean guess they're big volumes but relatively small |
|
100:56 | . They get really detailed three seismic and figure out where there's good |
|
101:01 | or not. And that's because the . B. S. Give them |
|
101:05 | hydrocarbon indicators as to what's in the particular traps. And there's still |
|
101:13 | there's still places on the coastal plain have not been fully explored or |
|
101:20 | Uh then you risk. Uh This something that's really dangerous and and the |
|
101:29 | that probability works is that it has very strong lean to negativity and uh |
|
101:38 | Luaus structure was probably risked at But it wasn't risked in a normal |
|
101:45 | because if it had been, it would have been a 2% probability because |
|
101:50 | lot of people will average probabilities in subjective review of the probability, As |
|
101:59 | to a mathematical or quantitative one, you multiply all of all of your |
|
102:07 | times all your other negativity on For example, You think there's an |
|
102:13 | chance of having a good sand. of course There's a lot of reasons |
|
102:21 | you probably have a better than an chance of having a sand there, |
|
102:24 | you. when you see something like . But sands can be difficult in |
|
102:28 | areas to image. And then uh then you multiply that times your probability |
|
102:37 | the porosity And you come up with probability for, say 25% ferocity, |
|
102:45 | you think is good porosity, But you don't get that, you might |
|
102:49 | 20 for 23 or 22. So probability That you're going to get that |
|
102:55 | might be 50% and uh and you 50 times 80 and you're coming up |
|
103:03 | fully, You know, a 40% of finding anything. And, and |
|
103:10 | something that looks pretty good By two variables. It looks worse when you |
|
103:17 | both of them. And and the why I say that's the quantitative probability |
|
103:27 | sometimes overlooking the fact, but it's that everything is going to be the |
|
103:34 | case scenario. And, and so get around this, sometimes people will |
|
103:39 | a high probability evaluation and a low and they'll come up with a midrange |
|
103:45 | and they go without rather than this my bottom line and you end up |
|
103:50 | nothing. And, and I know sounds kind of ridiculous, but when |
|
103:55 | was working at an echo, I the company actually decided it was never |
|
104:00 | to find any oil and gas because had a quality review team, prospect |
|
104:06 | review team that that used the most probability calculations To evaluate everything. And |
|
104:14 | over about 10 barrels of oil was low risk. It was very |
|
104:18 | risk rather and we wouldn't drill So we went from a company that |
|
104:23 | finding multi billion barrel fields all over world to one that can only |
|
104:28 | uh, Maybe a million two million fields in a little place in a |
|
104:35 | in texas or a county in, uh north Dakota or something like |
|
104:41 | So it really, it really hurt company. And at the same |
|
104:44 | the, the group of people that in that, I thought they were |
|
104:49 | a great job. But you have be real careful when you're, when |
|
104:53 | working out a probabilistic model that you focus on all of the negative |
|
105:00 | You have to look at both the side, the mid and the high |
|
105:04 | . And it's best to do the , the low and come up with |
|
105:07 | mid. And and then again, think it's also good to subjectively consider |
|
105:14 | you think is going to happen, if you're doing more of this exploitation |
|
105:19 | you have some idea what the outcomes are in that area, as opposed |
|
105:24 | what you might have to deal with you're dealing with a truly exploration area |
|
105:29 | you don't know much about it at . Okay, so all of these |
|
105:37 | again need to be done and uh of course once you've gone through this |
|
105:44 | , you per purchase the acreage and recommend well, location and uh, |
|
105:49 | can tell you this subjective probability. example, you just kind of look |
|
105:56 | what you have the kind of information have and you decide you have A |
|
106:05 | chance of striking it rich On one 5 large prospects. Uh Add it |
|
106:13 | , you got 100% you think of that way. It has to do |
|
106:19 | learning to deal with risk rather than be frightened by risk. And if |
|
106:25 | drill those five wells, usually one come in, Maybe the other two |
|
106:31 | . But the um if it's, it's one of your bigger plays, |
|
106:39 | will easily pay for the exploration, cost of trying to drill this. |
|
106:46 | a good um manager and an oil understands how to deal with risk without |
|
106:54 | frightened by it. And there are managers that are good risk, they're |
|
107:01 | to cope with risk and understand how deal with it. And so they |
|
107:07 | make the decision, you know, may have to to drill a few |
|
107:11 | , but if I do it I'm gonna get one that will pay |
|
107:14 | way more than all five of those wells. And again, that's why |
|
107:20 | looking for these large structural traps because wanna, rather than be somebody that's |
|
107:29 | adverse, you're somebody that can, actually do positive things in the face |
|
107:33 | risk and that becomes really important. then you, once you get |
|
107:38 | you you purchase this acreage and recommend locations and uh you to get to |
|
107:48 | point, you have to come up a bid and an offer and we'll |
|
107:53 | a little bit more about that in , in the future. And when |
|
107:58 | actually doing the exploration process and in some of the examples now in the |
|
108:06 | drilling, you also have to think the location in terms of visit on |
|
108:12 | , is it offshore is in deep ? Is it shallow water? Um |
|
108:16 | it close to market or is it away from a market? Of |
|
108:19 | the North Sea is very close to a few markets and still infrastructures and |
|
108:26 | wasn't maybe more in the past. it was a huge consideration. Did |
|
108:34 | have any infrastructure at all? We'll at some extra frontier exploration to, |
|
108:41 | now appraisal and development of some areas were in the past untouchable. But |
|
108:49 | infrastructures eventually caught on and they're able start monetizing some of these things that |
|
108:57 | discovered There. There are things in west of Shetland Island that were discovered |
|
109:02 | the 70's that are just now becoming , for example. So the location |
|
109:11 | really important west of the Shetland sort of out in the middle of |
|
109:16 | . Ah then you have to worry these things which relates to uh the |
|
109:22 | , we were talking about the drilling , what her depth is really |
|
109:27 | And onshore on shore has its own of, of issues around ownership of |
|
109:36 | because it's pretty hard to get. many cases, it's hard to get |
|
109:41 | plots of acreage, particularly if you into a highly populated populated area, |
|
109:49 | has a huge farm. It's not problem. Okay, uh then you |
|
109:54 | to come up with an idea of your casing points are going to be |
|
110:01 | there's a drilling engineer knows that given certain depth and no unusual conditions, |
|
110:09 | can drill to, to a certain with an open hole before he has |
|
110:14 | put a casing in to protect the bore. But there could be um |
|
110:20 | things that could happen where the pressure over pressured relative to the formations around |
|
110:27 | . And you want to make sure you have a a good casing in |
|
110:31 | casing shoe set before you cross from normal hydrostatic and with a static pressures |
|
110:39 | something that's overpressure. Of course, of the problem in the BP. |
|
110:46 | , aside from 11 serious mistakes being , they also had some high pressure |
|
110:52 | that they penetrated that even when you're things right, they caused you |
|
111:02 | Okay. And uh so when anything from the standard with a static |
|
111:10 | uh the first while you're drilling an , you're not, you're probably not |
|
111:13 | know. But as it turns there are ways with seismic too to |
|
111:19 | some indications of subsurface pressures. But , to do that, it also |
|
111:26 | to have wells in the area that actually penetrated some of these over pressured |
|
111:32 | . And so if you're in an and you're drilling the first well, |
|
111:38 | for 10s of miles around, uh kind of out in the woods and |
|
111:45 | don't know exactly what's going on. you have to be very careful and |
|
111:49 | for pressure kicks. But once you where those pressure kicks might be, |
|
111:54 | helps you set the casing points and can do things once they get some |
|
111:59 | data to help direct the drillers and them to where they think those points |
|
112:05 | going to occur. Bye ! Correlating few wells and projecting down dipper up |
|
112:11 | where they think the depth is that going to penetrate that particular thing. |
|
112:16 | you come up with the expected geology be be a prospective geological evaluation of |
|
112:26 | that well is going to drill And then you also have to deal |
|
112:31 | sampling. Uh huh. one of things we normally do, which is |
|
112:38 | as as wait until we get close the areas of interest to start collecting |
|
112:43 | lot of the cuttings. But you collect some cuttings just to keep track |
|
112:47 | the with ology and make sure you're the rocks. According to what you |
|
112:53 | would be the potential section that you're to be drilling into. And you |
|
113:00 | a logging and testing plan based on proposed strata graphic column for that |
|
113:07 | Well the geologists don't have to do but but waste disposal is always an |
|
113:14 | . And with unconventional as it becomes huge issue, especially if you're gonna |
|
113:20 | hydrofracking. And then and then the again, we'll look into abandonment and |
|
113:27 | plans. And uh when I was in developmental geology we um we normally |
|
113:37 | every well as a potential producer and you could also in case it was |
|
113:45 | Duster, the engineer would decide what costs were if we didn't put in |
|
113:51 | tubing and do all the casing that necessary to do to get that production |
|
113:56 | in there. And then he also a price ah for just going |
|
114:04 | we had a dry hole price and had a production well price. So |
|
114:10 | kind of comes in here too. , so when you go, maybe |
|
114:20 | I can go back here since this working really, this is kind of |
|
114:24 | you're looking at it. And sometimes of what you can see might be |
|
114:30 | . Some of these little points might popping out of the ground and you |
|
114:34 | use them to get an idea. are places in Greenland where you can |
|
114:39 | see this northeast section and it also up to the south biking and north |
|
114:44 | Robbins, a similar section. those are um, that's an arm |
|
114:50 | , of the uh, of the in outer moray Firth is another part |
|
114:54 | the rift. Ah there's, I'll you this later, but the rift |
|
115:00 | three arms to it, the central Outer moray Firth, and then also |
|
115:05 | south and north viking Robbins. But are places where you can see outcrops |
|
115:10 | Greenland and in other places of this . So, as an X as |
|
115:15 | frontier exploration, you're kind of trying figure out what all this might be |
|
115:19 | on some of these other sections as as what you know about the geology |
|
115:23 | , of these outcrops and whatnot. so you're looking sometimes outside the basin |
|
115:29 | figure out what you're going to find the base. And when you get |
|
115:32 | first seismic line. But when you into exploration exploitation, you're looking for |
|
115:44 | and maybe you'll have a prospect here a prospect there. This is supposed |
|
115:48 | be a predicted will water contact. you know anything about estimation of pressures |
|
115:56 | you drill into it and the seal , you can figure out whether some |
|
116:01 | these things are reasonable or not. first, well, you drill, |
|
116:04 | not gonna know, but the well, you drill, you might |
|
116:07 | a better handle on the strength of seals. And uh, and you'll |
|
116:12 | able to decide whether this, this column at this height, uh, |
|
116:18 | going to be created too much of buoyancy on the, on the seal |
|
116:22 | the top and cause it to And if that's the case, then |
|
116:27 | oil water contact would move up to point uh, upon which you would |
|
116:33 | a stable balance between the overbearing pressure the pressure of the buoyancy pushing up |
|
116:42 | the, on the pores and and here in this, this particular |
|
116:50 | , uh, this would be a of one of these structures. And |
|
116:56 | you kind of have rough thing And Um, I'm assuming this is |
|
117:02 | 7500 ft deep. They do what lot of us do in geology. |
|
117:10 | forget to put our minus signs, this would be subsidy And sub sea |
|
117:15 | . And that would be -75 and would be -7000. Ah Normally when |
|
117:22 | see a fault like this and closure around like that, this is always |
|
117:26 | to be the shallow end because this actually showing you three way closure pretty |
|
117:34 | defined, three way closure, in not four way closure, but |
|
117:41 | water contacts down here, which would represented by that and come out of |
|
117:46 | screen and into the screen. For , you might have a section right |
|
117:51 | through this and and of course the goes into the screen and out of |
|
117:56 | screen if the soil water contact is fact an oil water contact. But |
|
118:01 | you first started drilling a well, a guess and that's another thing uh |
|
118:06 | helped us find bigger fields is we to have a lot of people that |
|
118:11 | afraid to guess, make an educated , it's not just a wild |
|
118:16 | it's an educated guess. Uh you , of course, when we were |
|
118:22 | at that level, we did have that were panhandling, obviously bad potentially |
|
118:30 | that look like they probably had a low probability of success, they would |
|
118:34 | them as as good prospects or And uh so that's kind of the |
|
118:42 | you're at an exploration exploitation and to from this from, from exploration to |
|
118:48 | that once you drill that well, you want to exploit it. And |
|
118:51 | figure, well, if I got here and say this oil water contacts |
|
118:55 | little bit higher having the same that oil water contact might be a |
|
119:00 | bit higher and um and uh and sort of thing. And it's also |
|
119:06 | because it's separated. I don't know it's obvious to you, but this |
|
119:10 | is higher in that column and if stabilized here and you don't have any |
|
119:20 | , secondary migration across this, ah that distance right there, you drill |
|
119:28 | , that's good. You might want consider the seal being strong enough to |
|
119:31 | hold it to there also ah all . If you look at this |
|
119:37 | if this was a reservoir, uh has a spill point down here because |
|
119:45 | can get around that fault over you'd have to go a little bit |
|
119:49 | to get around that fault, which kind of mhm bounding the reservoir on |
|
119:55 | end. And as long as the aren't leaking, you'd be okay. |
|
120:00 | on top of that, you have worry about the seal above it. |
|
120:05 | is that sealed strong enough to keep buoyancy of this hydrocarbon column uh captured |
|
120:14 | in place. And I was just the history of um geologists in North |
|
120:23 | in the, one of them said of his greatest moments was explaining to |
|
120:31 | why leaking reservoirs are very, a significant thing around the world and why |
|
120:38 | important to understand it. And I tell you even to today, highly |
|
120:43 | and highly skilled geologists, just don't it and you're going to have a |
|
120:48 | on how it works and and why works and so hopefully you'll be able |
|
120:55 | use it in your careers. then when we get to discover your |
|
121:01 | , you um you drill an initial on the, on the best prospect |
|
121:10 | uh and if it's successful, you this and so on and so |
|
121:17 | You have been successful, you have flute of champagne. If it's not |
|
121:23 | , you drink the whole bottle, a whole case because you know that |
|
121:28 | one of the things when you drill exploration, well the, the, |
|
121:34 | it's, if it's a Duster, next thing you have to do, |
|
121:36 | to your boss why it was a and why you didn't know enough to |
|
121:42 | that that was going to be the why it was a Duster. It's |
|
121:45 | very difficult thing to do, but a very good educational process. What |
|
121:51 | a lot in larger companies that sometimes will come up with a lot of |
|
121:57 | work in an area for two or years, come up with all these |
|
122:00 | and move on and start looking for in another place. And then |
|
122:06 | some developmental geologist has to take this that didn't work out and figure out |
|
122:14 | to do with it or get rid it. And, but once, |
|
122:21 | you do have that discovery, let's we have the discovery, then you |
|
122:25 | to go down dip to identify the , oil, oil water contacts or |
|
122:29 | phase contacts to delimit the base of reservoirs and the size of uh of |
|
122:38 | particular reservoir and how it might fit a concept of a play that you |
|
122:44 | , that you can start to Um as in here, say you |
|
122:49 | oil here, I discovered all you'd be drilling a well over here |
|
122:55 | this was in your acreage as soon possible to try to exploit that new |
|
123:01 | that you have of these pre rift that are charged and full of |
|
123:10 | Okay. And uh so then you'd delineate um additional fault blocks around |
|
123:17 | accumulations of strata, graphic traps and uh when I help America find the |
|
123:24 | field, the they actually had done lot of this delineation. They had |
|
123:33 | seven, seven exploration wells that were as appraisal wells and they hit the |
|
123:38 | every time where the oil water contact they never found um What I determined |
|
123:45 | be 90 million barrels of oil in center of all the wells they drill |
|
123:52 | by missing that reservoir, they missed fault block to the north and the |
|
123:57 | fault blocks to the south. So you add that all up together, |
|
124:01 | was about 250 million barrels of oil Amico drilled seven wells to not find |
|
124:08 | they were drilling them like an Okay, so here um here, |
|
124:16 | we go back, this is what starts to do for you, here |
|
124:21 | the exploration geologist, simple concept of the reservoir looked like and he would |
|
124:27 | made a I SEpak map of this area and he would have done it |
|
124:32 | just figuring out, you know, I've got ah 500ft of section, |
|
124:40 | I've got maybe Up to 500 ft pay and okay, it's wedged a |
|
124:46 | bit, So they might just you know, here's my blob |
|
124:50 | approximately 250 ft of a vertical section this area, that's what I I |
|
124:58 | it's going to be and if that the case and the process is really |
|
125:02 | , put a couple of wells in and you'll be happy and get a |
|
125:05 | of oil. But once you start here, presumably this would be the |
|
125:12 | . Well, as it says over , I don't like this one because |
|
125:19 | we go back here um you don't to get that close to this fault |
|
125:27 | if you hit the fault, then some reason it deviates on that |
|
125:32 | you're going to miss it. So want to get back kind of back |
|
125:35 | , you might not get the exact of this hydrocarbon column, if you |
|
125:42 | to get off any kind of fault will, if you can imagine uh |
|
125:48 | if I came here, I would none of the section. If I |
|
125:53 | here, I would get a little of this section. And they basically |
|
125:58 | map, the top of that that fault comes up to here, |
|
126:01 | they might also pick it right here that is another boundary on that. |
|
126:08 | you could just be a little bit close to the fault by drilling it |
|
126:11 | close. So in a case like , I would strongly suggest you don't |
|
126:16 | it quite that close, you might to drill it out here. But |
|
126:21 | after a while they noticed that the up depend is separated. So you've |
|
126:26 | a well over here because they've tried get to the peak and they found |
|
126:32 | that the section over here is actually here somewhere and they've hit this and |
|
126:44 | and then they drill another well over . Uh And they actually found the |
|
126:51 | water column. In other words, well, water contact isn't all the |
|
126:54 | down to 70 500 -70 500 they drilled a three and so |
|
126:59 | In the scott field, they had fall block without all these little faults |
|
127:03 | it. And they drilled a bunch wells like this. And they build |
|
127:08 | a bunch of wells along the you know, they had seven wells |
|
127:11 | the way around it and I tried get them to drill it in the |
|
127:16 | . But they drilled it kind of that and they, when I saw |
|
127:20 | location, I said, God, hope you don't hit the fault again |
|
127:25 | complicated things like this can happen as that you see on seismic might have |
|
127:29 | , have a branch to it and , you're having an issue since it's |
|
127:33 | near vertical fault. You might be an issue imaging exactly where it is |
|
127:38 | position in terms of migration, especially you think there's too, if you |
|
127:43 | there's one fault and there's, there's faults, they could have a big |
|
127:48 | on, on the image that you get. Nevertheless, uh, example |
|
127:53 | I was telling about the scott they got, They did get it |
|
127:57 | they got exactly, they got 89 barrels instead of 90 million barrels. |
|
128:02 | I did get some criticism for missing by a million barrels. But previous |
|
128:06 | that, the, based on the that they drilled all the way around |
|
128:11 | , they just assumed there was no there at all that could produce oil |
|
128:16 | gas. And Amerada Hess who was the other side of the fault in |
|
128:21 | block, was doing everything inequity disputes court to keep us from drilling our |
|
128:27 | and producing are, are well, they were sucking us dry. But |
|
128:32 | , uh, that's the kind of when you start drilling the first thing |
|
128:37 | do is you drill this well and sure that you get into the sweet |
|
128:42 | then after that you drill these appraisal and you expect some of them to |
|
128:46 | mrs I would think that you drilled well, given this structure, you |
|
129:00 | have hit the oil water contact. but they don't indicate, they don't |
|
129:08 | that they did find the oil water . If you found the oil water |
|
129:11 | , you would know just exactly where was with that well. And then |
|
129:14 | would never have drilled this one and never would have drilled that one. |
|
129:18 | another reason to drill the right the well in the right place. When |
|
129:21 | the number one, will you have be really careful where you, where |
|
129:27 | picked that spot? Um Again, save money. A lot of |
|
129:32 | Now, I had one class, couple of students as well, we |
|
129:36 | to do this because because they want know how big it is and and |
|
129:40 | can figure out how big it is you drill this well here and you |
|
129:44 | hit that oil water contact, you figure out with trigonometry exactly how far |
|
129:50 | thing extends because you're good at that in time, you're going to have |
|
129:54 | indication of the dip and you're going have some indication of that flat thing |
|
129:59 | as an oil water contact. And can, you know, it's just |
|
130:03 | math. Now here, you can faults in here like this, anybody |
|
130:08 | an idea how they figured out those might have been there. Is anybody |
|
130:28 | ? Yeah, I would say because the location of the discovery. |
|
130:35 | we're one maybe they mistakenly drilled into fault. The fault war the world |
|
130:44 | then the fundamental unfortunately. Okay, this one is dipping that way and |
|
130:52 | one is dipping that way. So those faults are there, where would |
|
130:59 | ? Will have hit it above the or below the reservoir, cool below |
|
131:15 | you would have hit above the this right here. If you come up |
|
131:22 | , it's moving in this direction. fault here, if you go up |
|
131:27 | , it's moving in that direction. the fault is really this small, |
|
131:34 | not sure how they figured it out it probably wouldn't have intercepted that that |
|
131:39 | before unless of course the platform is and it went across it. But |
|
131:47 | that the, the location of this , and I don't know normally this |
|
131:52 | is going to be a straight given the location of this will uh |
|
131:58 | to the dip of these faults, one's dipping up, but when you |
|
132:04 | up section, it moves in this . If you go, if you |
|
132:07 | down this fault, say down to ft. This fault would move in |
|
132:12 | direction to come up to 60,500 ft fall would move in that direction Where |
|
132:19 | is right now, it's right around and over here, this one is |
|
132:23 | 75. Getting close to, I , 7 : 50. Okay. |
|
132:33 | but actually the structure is going down . So it should the fault should |
|
132:39 | been relative to the, to the and the depth of the top. |
|
132:46 | this is something drawn simply for you see these things. But but these |
|
132:52 | faults would be curved just because of orientation that they have. If they're |
|
132:59 | , if you have a straight fault it cuts a surface, the |
|
133:04 | you're going to see it migrate. other words, from this end, |
|
133:10 | would be At less than 7000 ft . This would be over 70 200 |
|
133:16 | . And so this this fault would of bend that way. Or maybe |
|
133:20 | fault was actually like this. If looked at it from map view and |
|
133:26 | causes it to bend over this way you go down dip. And uh |
|
133:33 | this one ah as you go as go up dip, um This one |
|
133:41 | going to bend in that direction and start to get an orientation more like |
|
133:49 | . And maybe maybe if it was little bit longer, I could see |
|
133:52 | penetrate, being penetrated by that. , sometimes you get over here and |
|
133:56 | get over there and you see something the pressure that suggests a different pressure |
|
134:04 | and pressure regimes relate to some sort disruption in inflow of height of fluids |
|
134:12 | the, in the rock section. therefore sometimes differential pressures from one well |
|
134:20 | the next at the top, can give you an indication of whether |
|
134:27 | not there's a barrier or, or baffle of some sort between the |
|
134:31 | Normally, the way you spot these that way though, is you're producing |
|
134:35 | this well and you're producing in that . And the oil water context changed |
|
134:40 | a different rate, which means there's seal going across it. This would |
|
134:45 | a hard thing. These would be to pick from wells that haven't penetrated |
|
134:52 | given the size that they are when was probably done, that's a, |
|
134:57 | are fairly small false, but maybe can see them with, with seismic |
|
135:08 | you can also see there's not a of offset. See that offset right |
|
135:11 | . That indicates what the throw is the fault. Okay, so then |
|
135:18 | we get to, uh, development production, it becomes a, an |
|
135:25 | of moving product. And when you're unconventional, this comes up pretty quick |
|
135:30 | you already, you already knew where basin was. You knew where the |
|
135:33 | rock was. You know, where lot of this stuff is. And |
|
135:37 | right away, you're, you're not moving product out of the well |
|
135:42 | to to a buyer, you're also product into actually frac the well and |
|
135:48 | complete the well and uh trying to these wells at a high rate with |
|
135:58 | least formation damage is important most of time there's chokes on the, on |
|
136:04 | well, so that uh you if you, if you reduce the |
|
136:09 | of the reservoir too quickly, you get breakthrough of water and damage |
|
136:15 | And so engineers have a lot of and rules of thumb. And then |
|
136:20 | course when they work in an area a while, they get really good |
|
136:23 | of them that tell them approximately what of rates you ought to be producing |
|
136:30 | . Now I had a blowout when worked at mobile and we were producing |
|
136:37 | I think somewhere around Um 50 million feet of gas per day. And |
|
136:48 | let me think, no, it's like 15 million cubic feet of guests |
|
136:54 | day. But we had to blow and we had a guy in a |
|
136:59 | suit, get on there and and it on a production line, We're |
|
137:04 | producing 100 million cubic feet of gas day. And because we had a |
|
137:10 | , the pipelines gave mobile a big to produce it. So we're actually |
|
137:16 | a lot of money on a blowout we had that under control that way |
|
137:21 | caught fire and we were able to draw eventually drill a relief well and |
|
137:26 | in there, but and get it control, But it actually went from |
|
137:33 | million cubic feet a day, which means that we had to choke |
|
137:37 | to 15 million. And the reason we had to choke back because if |
|
137:41 | drop all that that gas, ah you're going to get stringers of water |
|
137:48 | to come through towards that well and and they're going to block off the |
|
137:54 | of the gas once they hit the . And so there's, there's ways |
|
137:59 | calculate ah based on the conditions of reservoir rock, the ferocity, the |
|
138:06 | and in the combination of fluids that in there, you can have free |
|
138:10 | , you can have water and you have oil and those things don't like |
|
138:13 | mix with each other. So you to be really careful at what rate |
|
138:21 | produce a reservoir, You can't just a, put a straw in it |
|
138:23 | just suck it out as fast as will come out. But in the |
|
138:26 | of a blowout, we had no because we couldn't get any controls on |
|
138:30 | well, other than a than a pipe. And uh and I think |
|
138:35 | they tried to put a valve on and shut it off, it probably |
|
138:41 | have just blown itself right off again it was wide open, there was |
|
138:44 | choke and there was nothing controlling uh rate at which it was coming |
|
138:49 | it would have been very hard to it, Uh even if you put |
|
138:54 | a valve in that it would, would be a little bit like a |
|
138:59 | , like a train running into a wall. It would just go right |
|
139:02 | it. And so it was something couldn't do without, without killing the |
|
139:08 | and of course even if you could it off, there was a subsidy |
|
139:12 | which can cause all kinds of Okay, so so then one of |
|
139:19 | things that you try to do is many straws that you're going to need |
|
139:22 | actually produce this because obviously you can 40 acres depending on the process. |
|
139:30 | might be able to do 40 acres more if there are no little faults |
|
139:33 | this, no baffles or barriers. of course the barrier is something that |
|
139:39 | flow baffle is something that slows it . Uh for example, this would |
|
139:44 | more of a baffle down here, it's not a barrier because it |
|
139:48 | If you have a fault that goes the way up like that, then |
|
139:51 | a barrier. This is a The bounding faults that seal it are |
|
139:57 | but these little faults that fluids can around would be baffled. Excuse |
|
140:03 | I have a question sir, um the discovery and appraisal, um map |
|
140:11 | treaty assessment coverage, Why do they um along the sides of the |
|
140:20 | It's over in the middle. I you mentioned it before area but I |
|
140:24 | the answer. Oh I might not , which well in particular you |
|
140:30 | Well four and will three and Okay. I think I kind of |
|
140:39 | it, but if you drill this and it penetrates that oil water |
|
140:48 | you don't have to guess it where is today. And uh now it's |
|
140:53 | they drilled the well and they stopped the middle of the formation which is |
|
140:56 | a dumb thing to do. Normally you have a prospective formation you want |
|
141:01 | drill through it and you want to completely through it. So they should |
|
141:05 | been able to to find an oil contact. But if for chance they |
|
141:14 | drilled down to here but they didn't all the way down to there, |
|
141:19 | they wouldn't know where the oil context and they would call that oil down |
|
141:24 | that depth of the red dot or because they have oil in the well |
|
141:32 | have all oil in the well for and they wouldn't know it now if |
|
141:37 | the reservoir was one of these formations not this whole unit, say it |
|
141:45 | just this formation and they drilled down that 2nd formation um they wouldn't know |
|
141:54 | the oil water contact was down here this is this would be the reservoir |
|
141:58 | here. Okay, okay, so the reservoir right there and they drill |
|
142:04 | well here, you can see it be oil down to here, but |
|
142:09 | don't know where the oil water contact yet. So it's boiled down to |
|
142:14 | . And that's one of the terms use in the book, There's other |
|
142:17 | for it, but in other you've cut through the, say this |
|
142:21 | the reservoir, you've cut through the and you've got nothing but oil with |
|
142:26 | oil water contact. So then you be, you know, that it |
|
142:33 | this way to find it. So started drilling wells down, dip in |
|
142:38 | direction to find that oil water So that would be a real explanation |
|
142:44 | how that happened. And And so drilled this one and they still didn't |
|
142:50 | it Because they still didn't find They didn't know if it wasn't all |
|
142:54 | way down here to 7500 ft Um as close as this well is |
|
142:59 | it, you there's a good chance would have hit it. But I |
|
143:03 | what they're trying to show you here they still didn't find it. And |
|
143:07 | they drilled this one to see if went all the way down 2 70 |
|
143:12 | ft. And of course it isn't This is going to have what are |
|
143:17 | to a certain depth, in other , the number three. Well, |
|
143:22 | what I was saying was correct, this was the formation, the number |
|
143:28 | well would have drilled down here and have had just water in the |
|
143:33 | So they wouldn't know where the oil contact is, in three in |
|
143:38 | it looks like they drilled uh they to have drilled right about here to |
|
143:49 | missed the oil water contact because this still all be oil. And the |
|
143:57 | three well had to drill over here , if this is the formation, |
|
144:05 | that make sense? Yes, Now the other issue is the false |
|
144:10 | here and in looking at looking at map that we see over here, |
|
144:18 | is showing some thin sections that have off, so maybe they're actually working |
|
144:24 | this structure And not that one. uh and I think the idea might |
|
144:32 | , you know, because this is of an idealistic problem and it might |
|
144:36 | that, you know, this is you have none of these splinter faults |
|
144:40 | this, uh and this is if do, and so one of their |
|
144:45 | might be, they had something like , but they ended up with something |
|
144:48 | that, and that's what these faults . And so they had to drill |
|
144:55 | the other side of that fault to this to find out whether the reservoir |
|
145:08 | was all the way up here instead down in here, you know, |
|
145:15 | trying to find the up dependable and , once you get a few wells |
|
145:23 | can use trigonometry and figure out exactly all all that is uh weather without |
|
145:30 | . Mhm. So again, it's three D. Problems. So the |
|
145:36 | , you know, originally they thought fault was up here like this and |
|
145:39 | that, but there was a splinter there that that was looking like the |
|
145:43 | fault and the major fault was actually the way back here, but they |
|
145:47 | sure. So they drilled up dip the formation. Of course there would |
|
145:52 | been across this which would have dropped you lose the closure uh that you |
|
145:57 | here and uh and it would be different a different rock unit that would |
|
146:02 | dropped down. So when they went , well they were hoping to find |
|
146:08 | fault that went like this, but turns out this fault was way over |
|
146:16 | and I don't know why this, , well didn't help them because they |
|
146:19 | have penetrated that fault if you come section that well, would have hit |
|
146:24 | up a few 100 ft this well have hit that, well a few |
|
146:28 | ft above that reservoir. And that's in three dimensions. Okay, so |
|
146:37 | got to there, do we talk that? Yeah, we're uh we're |
|
146:43 | about moving product product, how many ? Um Another thing and I'm gonna |
|
146:50 | a diagram to show you a little later on, but reservoir characterization sometimes |
|
146:58 | very necessary and other times it's not uh well what would uh define a |
|
147:09 | rock that doesn't need reservoir characterization. rock would be porous, high |
|
147:21 | high probability. And he's going to adequate social work, um heating mechanism |
|
147:31 | cook the sauce or to cook Now you're talking about source. Now |
|
147:37 | assume we already have a source. were and we're calling it a reservoir |
|
147:42 | we're calling it a reservoir. that means there's oil in there |
|
147:46 | So we know we know we have those elements. So the focus here |
|
147:51 | , what is it about the reservoir that it would need or not need |
|
147:57 | be characterized to be more effectively and the ah aggressively characterized. You |
|
148:10 | why would I have to spend extra to do reservoir characterization on what type |
|
148:15 | rock? And you you were getting those points, by the way, |
|
148:24 | issue? You said, you said lot of porosity, a lot of |
|
148:30 | . What's one other thing that would really important? So you had a |
|
148:33 | of wells, what would also be about that rock if it was high |
|
148:38 | and high permeability. A cap or to trap. Okay, again, |
|
148:47 | a reservoir. So, you there's got to be a trap. |
|
148:51 | , there's gotta be a seal, else about that reservoir rock? You |
|
148:57 | , you have, let's say you one. Well and you you have |
|
149:02 | porosity and hyper permeability and you have second. Well, and you have |
|
149:05 | porosity and permeability, but they're close and then you have a third |
|
149:10 | What a third? Well, what that third? Well, would tell |
|
149:14 | uh that you would need or not reservoir characterization, the migration routes of |
|
149:26 | ? No, if okay, in this reservoir characterization is looking strictly |
|
149:33 | the nature of the reservoir, the itself. And so we have these |
|
149:41 | properties and one of them is processed permeability. But are those things, |
|
149:47 | that a homogeneous or an in homogeneous of the reservoir? In other |
|
150:00 | what's the variability of the porosity and ? If I have three wells over |
|
150:06 | good area of the thing and they exactly the same porosity and permeability. |
|
150:11 | is that telling me about that The sediment that they possess it at |
|
150:19 | same time using the same mechanisms and probably at the same environmental conditions, |
|
150:26 | most importantly is that it's widespread. has has ferocity but has thickness and |
|
150:32 | has, it has areas and if that area and it can be |
|
150:39 | you can have vertical ah changes in and permeability. But if you if |
|
150:46 | drill in in this case, I'm about two wells with 26% ferocity, |
|
150:53 | first thing you got to figure out in the, in in all the |
|
150:56 | is the process of the same You know, is it, is |
|
150:59 | more or less uh like a um of a very homogeneous sandstone and |
|
151:11 | And then the other thing is a homogeneous sandstone in distance and there's certain |
|
151:16 | environments and we'll get into this with a particular figure that goes into |
|
151:22 | But if you have a deposition environment has widespread sand stones and they're like |
|
151:29 | sand stones as opposed to inter collated stones. In other words, it's |
|
151:34 | big chunk of sand, rather like , like a big channel Phil or |
|
151:39 | or a barrier island as opposed to something that has shale breaks and finds |
|
151:48 | or courses upwards, you know, kind of thing. So, reservoir |
|
151:54 | is only needed in places uh which not homogeneous. In other words, |
|
152:01 | not, in other words, an porosity and permeability are not gonna work |
|
152:05 | you in this area. That's when need to do reservoir characterization now, |
|
152:10 | it turns out when, when reservoir and in reservoir engineers ah in the |
|
152:19 | years they looked at everything like almost a tank and everything was homogeneous ah |
|
152:25 | the probably in the, I don't , maybe the late 60s, early |
|
152:35 | , I actually a two lane taught course called the heterogeneous nature of reservoir |
|
152:43 | and it was an eye opener for petroleum engineers. And and of course |
|
152:49 | we know that most, most of reservoirs are heterogeneous and and the, |
|
152:57 | can't think of the uh oh anisotropy uh is kind of a geophysical |
|
153:06 | analog to heterogeneity. But anna Satrapi has a direction to it. And |
|
153:14 | heterogeneity doesn't. But a lot of it does, but it could be |
|
153:18 | could be vertical in the well or could be lateral in the reservoir. |
|
153:23 | reservoirs have an area and they have thickness. And if it's very homogeneous |
|
153:31 | his thickness and laterally, then there's no reason at all to do reservoir |
|
153:37 | . Otherwise, reservoir characterization can help a lot and it can help you |
|
153:43 | in where you place not just your , but where you place your preparations |
|
153:48 | when we get into development, we'll discussing some of those things. And |
|
153:55 | again, strata, graphic traps are important because they also address this uh |
|
154:01 | heterogeneity. Because if you have a bed that pinches out, then you |
|
154:09 | a you have a deposition situation where may have had incision in deposition or |
|
154:17 | may have um you've moved deposition early dip. And uh it's pinched out |
|
154:27 | by the activity of structural geology it's that the deposition really down dip thing |
|
154:32 | in the air. And it's become good strategy graphic trap. Okay. |
|
154:41 | before we get started on this is ready for a lunch break yet. |
|
154:51 | is ready for a lunch break Mm hmm. Okay, I can |
|
155:06 | everybody there. Do you wanna go half hour or you want to take |
|
155:10 | lunch break? Now, I see nodding their heads. But I don't |
|
155:16 | anybody because you're we can take we go another half an hour to |
|
155:21 | Okay. Sounds good. Oops. , so development production. I'm not |
|
155:47 | why these diagrams are so small, oh, I see. This is |
|
155:52 | to show you that we've gone from to exploration two Appraisal. And then |
|
155:57 | get to production and when we get production, we're actually looking at that |
|
156:03 | characterization. And we noticed that in to this structure having faults in |
|
156:09 | the structure also has uh high porosity and low porosity beds. In terms |
|
156:17 | faces. In other words, this channel. Um, And this when |
|
156:24 | d. seismic first started identifying these masses, people said they were |
|
156:32 | But in fact, there were probably belts given the size of them. |
|
156:37 | of course this channel belts. That there's channels going like this. And |
|
156:44 | another channel that started over here at different period of time. It went |
|
156:47 | this. And then another channel that have started here and maybe meandered like |
|
156:54 | . And these are the boundaries of floodplain here. And so you have |
|
157:00 | , uh, an amalgamation of channel prete Parsons and eroded point bar sands |
|
157:11 | clay plugs in here. So this all in three D. Seismic. |
|
157:16 | see something that looks like this. this isn't all 100% saying this is |
|
157:22 | that feature, okay, that was when this river cut through the |
|
157:31 | that were already deposited much earlier and these meandering channels that make up the |
|
157:39 | channel belt that's bound on either side the floodplain boundary. In other |
|
157:47 | you start to get elevation over here you get elevation over here, that |
|
157:52 | bounds as the river goes through it's bound by the clays inside the |
|
157:58 | and uh and it's bound because it more to a road play than it |
|
158:03 | to move sand. So anyway, when you start figuring out where you're |
|
158:11 | to do um production wells, two . Do you want to abandon the |
|
158:19 | appraisal wells or do you want to from them? And just have production |
|
158:23 | ? And do you want to have injection wells? And I guess it |
|
158:30 | help you can still see this. , Let me get this over |
|
158:57 | Okay, you can see here there's there's a lot of additional wells put |
|
159:03 | here and I don't know why I this would be more visible, but |
|
159:17 | would work better in a classroom. . Uh you can't quite see |
|
159:24 | but the dark ones are production wells . They have water injection wells. |
|
159:28 | other words, they're putting water injection down dip. So the the reservoir |
|
159:33 | in the production phase, they've already uh produced some of the audience. |
|
159:39 | here's an outline of where the oil was. And they put these, |
|
159:50 | are injection wells down dip of the Thing. And you can figure this |
|
159:54 | with seismic with 40 seismic and you figure it out from production data. |
|
160:00 | things work and pretty effectively. And they work really well. You may |
|
160:07 | notice that drainages faster on one side the other Or less on one side |
|
160:12 | the other. So you want to sure that you don't put too much |
|
160:16 | water on the side that's moving faster the side, that's moving slower. |
|
160:21 | you want to get that slow side get some more reservoir more energy. |
|
160:26 | you put the same amount of input this side, that's moving a lot |
|
160:33 | . You might start to get breakthrough some of europe deep wells quicker than |
|
160:37 | you would anticipate. So that becomes very complicated estimation and calculations, there's |
|
160:46 | to calculate what you really want to there and we'll be looking at it |
|
160:50 | this problem in cross sections and and in cross sections and looking at the |
|
161:00 | section of a well and how the water column. Ah this wouldn't necessarily |
|
161:06 | a straight line. It might, know, it might be encroaching a |
|
161:10 | bit here and a little bit less here. So you don't always get |
|
161:14 | a complete, this is a very sweep that we see here right |
|
161:19 | but often times it doesn't sweep so and you want to make sure that |
|
161:23 | don't have a sweep where something shoots here and hits this production will and |
|
161:28 | off the oil supplies, because then have stranded oil in your reservoir and |
|
161:36 | better put this back the way it okay. But you get the idea |
|
162:07 | this, we've we've gone through all this and now we're looking at the |
|
162:13 | of the story and what we do where we start getting the reservoir |
|
162:18 | secondary water flood. And when, oil and gas starts getting trapped in |
|
162:24 | pockets here, we might use tertiary quaternary methods to uh, to produce |
|
162:29 | oil and gas. So we'll get up here. Okay, so this |
|
162:37 | sort of what we just went through discovery, we've got frontier, then |
|
162:42 | do exploration and exploitation, then we appraisal. Uh, we kind of |
|
162:49 | the appraisal, We're kind of uh, we're trying to find the |
|
162:56 | upper and lower limits of that oil . And we're trying to figure out |
|
163:01 | lateral extent of it because that area that thickness at each position tells us |
|
163:08 | the full volume is. And that's thing we're looking for. And then |
|
163:14 | start putting in your development wells and you might notice you're getting breakthrough in |
|
163:18 | well or something like that. You're getting an efficient sweep and you start |
|
163:23 | maybe a secondary butter flood because that's the easiest and cheapest thing to |
|
163:29 | But it could be different in some depending on the the availability of |
|
163:35 | And then you get into your more recovery methods and uh, so geology |
|
163:42 | apply to every step of this. as I mentioned before in the |
|
163:47 | a lot of geology was up on end and more engineering was being done |
|
163:54 | this. And now, now, with the events of unconventional, where |
|
164:00 | some ways you kind of, you're shotted through the upper levels of this |
|
164:05 | and you go right into this part away and your, your frontier exploration |
|
164:10 | actually to try shales that you don't any holes in, but you expect |
|
164:16 | see the same kinds of numbers when get there. But of course, |
|
164:21 | you know, as people have searched around the Bacon and the Eagle |
|
164:26 | there are reasons why it's not every is not as good as the other |
|
164:31 | . It's not homogeneous either. And that book on geologists of the gulf |
|
164:40 | Mexico over the last 100 years or . The one of them said he's |
|
164:45 | disappointed that that the oil industry seems think that geologists don't know much about |
|
164:51 | because we should and we've always known were not homogeneous, even though |
|
164:58 | they often get characterized as such Okay, the typical field data that |
|
165:07 | going to be looking for in an . It's gonna be this, this |
|
165:18 | porosity and permeability and with the oil places what the recoverable reserves are. |
|
165:26 | , you know, there's a certain of friction going on and these and |
|
165:29 | have Multiphase fluids so you can't always everything out. And what people try |
|
165:38 | do is to make it easy to in an area, is to come |
|
165:43 | with typical field data, like an processing an average probability. And again |
|
165:48 | mentioned heterogeneity and if if there's a there then you have to worry about |
|
165:55 | the fact that an average might not very good. But but are these |
|
166:01 | horizontal or vertical, you know, the process and permeability changing horizontally? |
|
166:06 | verdict permeability relates to the flow rate it's that flow rate that's going to |
|
166:14 | to cause you a problem. And course when ferocity goes down, you |
|
166:25 | have a reduction in permeability. But premier ability goes down, it doesn't |
|
166:31 | mean uh that process is going You can have very good porosity. |
|
166:38 | terrible permeability. Yeah, the pores small and one of the aspects of |
|
166:46 | that isn't shown by an average or a value. Yes, you |
|
166:53 | 26% porosity of interconnected bugs might be in some cases than 50% porosity of |
|
167:07 | bunch of shales because the permeability. effective porosity is what's important. It's |
|
167:13 | interplay between the pore size and the throat sizes that give us this |
|
167:20 | So it's very, very complex in relationship between size of grains, a |
|
167:29 | of pores, in the size of poor threats. And but anyway, |
|
167:36 | , at some point you reach a of coming up with a volume subtracting |
|
167:42 | water and that will tell you the prophecy minus the water. We will |
|
167:49 | tell you what the oil in places then you don't always know what a |
|
167:54 | recovery factor is in an area that's new where you've worked before. You |
|
167:59 | have a really good idea of what recovery factor should be given the rock |
|
168:04 | that your dealing with in the, the other conditions of that reservoir as |
|
168:10 | relate to premier ability and effective porosity uh and that that will help you |
|
168:18 | up with this recoverable reserves. Uh api gravity can be uh something that's |
|
168:24 | important um when we uh started producing luau structure and uh offshore china, |
|
168:37 | the api gravity was 19, which typically has a very um a very |
|
168:48 | pour point because it's because it's heavy and so we were a little bit |
|
168:57 | put some special bio degrade bio degradation in the oil as it was migrating |
|
169:04 | because of that um it was less than Audi gravity 19 oil normally is |
|
169:14 | they were able to have a four close to 60 F And uh it |
|
169:21 | deep water. So they had to a little bit, but the amount |
|
169:24 | jacket ng required for the production tubing a lot less than we thought it |
|
169:28 | be because again the oil is going be coming up hot in the first |
|
169:33 | and a little bit of jacket ng was all it took to to get |
|
169:38 | to the surface through the water column so all this is variable and then |
|
169:47 | and then the average water saturation, course that, that tells you what |
|
169:51 | of the, the volume that you in your ferocity, that's effective uh |
|
169:57 | going to be uh it's gonna be or oil. And of course I |
|
170:02 | mentioned oil viscosity and the api gravity is directly related to the disgusting, |
|
170:09 | sometimes there's, there's deviations from what normal expectation is. Okay. And |
|
170:17 | stuff is maximum and average net Uh and this is looking at |
|
170:29 | the column of the, in the Lord and the reservoir and kind of |
|
170:37 | a handle on the vertical variations that well bore is a single point, |
|
170:42 | it's the Z axis and you get idea of what, what it is |
|
170:47 | the whole interval. And if it's porous at the top or more porous |
|
170:52 | the bottom, that will affect where put your perforation points depending on the |
|
170:58 | that you're dealing with, which way up dip and which way is down |
|
171:04 | oil water contact is really critical. if you have a connected feel. |
|
171:13 | me, connected reservoirs. Mm In other words, Say one big |
|
171:19 | , your royal water contact is going be just like a plane on a |
|
171:25 | . I mean, it's going to 7521 ft one place and it's gonna |
|
171:31 | 7521 ft another place. And maybe will be 21 place and 20 ah |
|
171:40 | 19 in another place. And in of the fields I worked in mm |
|
171:47 | . Using the seismic, we were to um, estimate where we we |
|
171:53 | the well water contact would be in in a gas field because that's a |
|
171:57 | good ringer. And We were within ft from this. But just by |
|
172:04 | the seismic. And that really, stunned the drillers because normally you can't |
|
172:09 | it. But, but if you a reservoir that's a very poorest reservoir |
|
172:15 | all gassed, you're going to get good amplitude event on that. And |
|
172:19 | , and you're gonna see something Um, if you use some multi |
|
172:24 | seismic, er, it would be , we're revealing. But nevertheless back |
|
172:30 | the, like in the dark ages I was working, we we were |
|
172:36 | to To nail down oil water contacts five ft with some of the technology |
|
172:41 | had at the time. Okay, formation value volume factor has to do |
|
172:48 | expansion to the surface. Uh what um have done in the well bore |
|
172:57 | is a volume, but that volume going to expand as you come up |
|
173:00 | the surface. And uh some some the things that net the natural gas |
|
173:07 | a lot and uh and whether it's solution with the oil or whether it's |
|
173:18 | free gas and uh that will expand and you get oil expansion a lot |
|
173:27 | times. That has to do with gas that's in it and the gasses |
|
173:31 | out of it. But the actual component of it, it doesn't expand |
|
173:37 | much because it's kind of like a system, you know, you can |
|
173:41 | on it and it pushes back uh to make it simple to understand and |
|
173:48 | and then, you know, what the bubble point for the gas because |
|
173:54 | going to have to do with whether you're dealing with all gas and solution |
|
173:59 | some guests not in solution. And that creates a different issue in terms |
|
174:04 | relative permeability, ease between the different admissible fluids and then uh formation water |
|
174:12 | is something uh that it can have little bit to do with what's going |
|
174:21 | with the systems in um and whether actually can help you in some cases |
|
174:27 | out whether you have continuous, continuous between wells or if you have some |
|
174:34 | of barrier, because the water salinity change uh with depth and laterally. |
|
174:45 | , okay. So I'm running unconventional and what are we looking for? |
|
174:53 | , Rather than ask you questions you want to answer. Um we we |
|
175:01 | where the source and reservoir already are so that's a given. And when |
|
175:06 | explore, we're going to look outside where we where we don't know because |
|
175:10 | don't have any wills, where is best porosity and permeability. Whereas it |
|
175:17 | susceptible to fracturing. What are the fracture directions? Where is the richest |
|
175:22 | of the oil source? Um One I don't have on here, but |
|
175:26 | would be also another good point is the richest part of the source? |
|
175:31 | where has the source been depleted or depleted? Because if you if you |
|
175:37 | to maturation and you have expulsion, more of the oils, expulsion, |
|
175:43 | had more oil expression that you've had that source rock, the less it's |
|
175:48 | to be left behind. And then course water production is critical and |
|
175:54 | Is anybody Angela, are you working unconventional? Yes, I've been, |
|
176:02 | of my time at swim has been Appalachian basin, but I just recently |
|
176:08 | into the Haynesville. Okay. And do you, do you have any |
|
176:12 | what the water cuts are there? . Okay. In Malaysia, I |
|
176:20 | think we have much water, I'm learning the Haynesville stuff. Our biggest |
|
176:26 | in Haynesville is the depth and the . Okay, so there there can |
|
176:33 | different things and why is the temperature problem? Um we drilled down, |
|
176:38 | like 13,000 ft. So the temperatures between like 2 85 to 300 degrees |
|
176:49 | drilling. So it's a lot of failures um having to trip out of |
|
176:55 | hole a lot. So you're reaching limits of safe drilling. Yeah, |
|
177:01 | the drill bits and stuff. Can't those types of temperatures. An elevated |
|
177:11 | flow there then, I guess, . Yeah, all those things come |
|
177:16 | play, you know, I'm trying focus on on what's most now from |
|
177:21 | lot of the unconventional water production is an issue just because for an unconventional |
|
177:31 | or to have porosity and permeability, almost has to be water in the |
|
177:35 | , uh, to have kept to kept the, the pore throats open |
|
177:42 | to get the oil to charge We're actually to get the oil to |
|
177:46 | from it. And because that, oil is part of the process, |
|
177:50 | me, the water is part of process of allowing the oil to escape |
|
177:55 | Source Rock in the 1st Place. , a lot of times the water |
|
178:00 | are very high. So that's why general, for the unconventional, |
|
178:05 | you have to worry about a high cut in the Appalachian stuff. You're |
|
178:09 | you're dealing mostly with natural gas. right, Yeah, we do |
|
178:15 | um, liquids, but the division worked in was all dry gas. |
|
178:20 | so, so that's a whole different of system. Yeah, because because |
|
178:26 | gas, the gas can find its through without the help of water and |
|
178:32 | , through through a source rock, . Okay, so, uh, |
|
178:37 | that's important. But I put seals here too, because one of the |
|
178:41 | that I noticed in some of the and stuff, and I don't think |
|
178:46 | do it anymore, but people kept , uh, if you're fracturing, |
|
178:54 | know, they think of, they of the source rock as a self |
|
179:01 | thing with its own seal on but in fact it leaks all |
|
179:07 | which is why it was a good rock and it's gonna move, move |
|
179:15 | either a transmittable formation or one. one that actually has the seal. |
|
179:21 | eventually it will hit a seal. , when you're fracking a um, |
|
179:31 | any uh, unconventional thing, you to be really careful that your facts |
|
179:36 | not going vertically up or vertically going down, you can you can |
|
179:42 | into an aquifer that will start damaging , your reservoir source rock. |
|
179:53 | and if it's up dip and you into it, migration of oil out |
|
179:57 | that thing could become less controllable than wanted to be. And there were |
|
180:04 | number of places where they actually broke top seals and bottom seals relative to |
|
180:10 | source rock and migration and those are you have to be careful of, |
|
180:16 | when they do drill, they try drill, you know, through through |
|
180:20 | sweet spot that's sort of well layered between a number of seals. But |
|
180:27 | , depending on how long your fractures , if they go vertically, they |
|
180:32 | horizontal or lateral, it's it's not much of a problem, but if |
|
180:35 | go very, very far vertically, you have an issue. Okay, |
|
180:41 | I mention something? Sure. absolutely. So one of the kind |
|
180:45 | interesting things that we've had an issue um Northeast Appalachia is the salt |
|
180:52 | So we drill a well frak it it produces well for about a year |
|
181:00 | then the production pretty much stops because we frack it, we're putting Sultans |
|
181:08 | solution and then the salt crystals are and plugging up all the fractures. |
|
181:14 | there's no more production. So there's lot of kind of strange things like |
|
181:20 | that happened to that you have to of figure out how to mitigate. |
|
181:25 | So right now we have areas that can't drill because we haven't been able |
|
181:29 | mitigate that issue. Yeah, that sense. Yeah. And salt salt |
|
181:37 | is good at precipitating quickly. you just, I guess as it |
|
181:44 | into the formation, it's a little cooler, that starts to happen. |
|
181:49 | . So we've tried different things to and mitigate it, but there's just |
|
181:55 | a lot of kind of interesting different that I think are in unconventional that |
|
182:04 | not in conventional um that we've been . So it's kind of cool to |
|
182:10 | at other geological problems and how to them. Oh yeah, and that |
|
182:14 | would be saying that's that's what it , that's what it means to be |
|
182:18 | geologist too. And uh and understanding it coming from a particular salt bed |
|
182:25 | is it just in the cold So there's a lot of salt areas |
|
182:32 | it. So that's what they're they're um it's coming from some of the |
|
182:38 | dominated areas around it. Um One the other issues we've had was drilling |
|
182:45 | salt and then collapse hole collapses because do you case the whole salt section |
|
182:52 | not? Um So there's there's definitely lot of salt up in in that |
|
183:02 | . Yeah, but you don't know there's like actual, well in the |
|
183:06 | , there's a lot that's in the . Right? I think so, |
|
183:12 | . You're talking about Appalachians. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. |
|
183:18 | there's there's places where there's bedded salts um in west, in parts of |
|
183:23 | texas where that they actually injection wells into it, it's just the reverse |
|
183:28 | dissolved it and uh and it started move it into a freshwater aquifer and |
|
183:36 | anyway, it created collapsed structures that reached the surface. It was another |
|
183:44 | where there, in my mind, drilling too close to the surface and |
|
183:47 | know it's great to get hydrocarbons wherever can, but sometimes when you're under |
|
183:53 | few 1000 ft, uh you probably leave it alone because it's kind |
|
184:00 | it's almost like poking into ah some the class rates on the, on |
|
184:06 | ocean floor. You know, it's a lot of natural gas, |
|
184:09 | you don't want to, you don't to disturb it because, you |
|
184:13 | it'll start coming up on its Okay, well, that's really good |
|
184:17 | . I really like that. Thank , Angela. Okay, so here |
|
184:26 | is sort of, the way I see it is that, you |
|
184:33 | you're spending a whole lot of time work through the, to the geological |
|
184:42 | or the, excuse me, the chain and there's sort of a peak |
|
184:47 | around appraisal of, of an overlap an unconventional appraisal is really heavy |
|
184:54 | And my guess is with problems like talking about Angela, the workload |
|
185:00 | could go up out here and be significant because, because one of the |
|
185:05 | geologists do quite often is figure out , where these different water compositions might |
|
185:11 | coming from and uh and where you have salt beds and stuff like that |
|
185:17 | uh, and of course geologists on different scale, there are a lot |
|
185:20 | geologists that work on heat flow Okay, so, um and then |
|
185:29 | we're talking about um reservoir geologists, is pretty much how people are working |
|
185:36 | now um you're going to be a of integrated team and you kind of |
|
185:42 | to learn the language of a geophysicist that of an engineer and you have |
|
185:49 | learn to really uh I don't know you've seen Angela, but normally what |
|
185:56 | is problems come up like the one mentioned when it's brand new, you |
|
186:03 | want to try to get answers really because you have to figure out what |
|
186:06 | do right away and but then as develop experience in that particular problem you |
|
186:14 | to come up with answers a little quicker and I don't I don't think |
|
186:20 | mentioned this to you guys yet, I had a really good mentor when |
|
186:24 | was at mobile and every time I him a question he immediately asked me |
|
186:31 | question which when he first asked that was kind of puzzled because I thought |
|
186:37 | was only one right way to do . He said well how long is |
|
186:41 | going to take you? And I what do you mean? It's going |
|
186:45 | take me as long as it takes figure it out, He says |
|
186:49 | when do you need an answer, does the manager want an answer? |
|
186:54 | does so and so I want an . When do the engineers need an |
|
186:57 | , when does the Vice president of need an answer? When do you |
|
187:01 | an answer and that? And this something that I think it's not unique |
|
187:07 | our business, but it is, is very uh huh. It's a |
|
187:14 | rewarding thing to learn when you're working an oil company, particularly if you're |
|
187:21 | um things right around the the the of appraisal where you might be looking |
|
187:26 | exploration issues and at the same time handoff to production to development and |
|
187:33 | So sometimes people need very quick answers the wells drilling and they got to |
|
187:40 | when to stop it or when to . And so as geologists, you |
|
187:46 | often have to learn how to answer questions without all the information you think |
|
187:50 | need, but you need to do good job in spite of not having |
|
187:54 | that information. And then of course you're given the benefit of a lot |
|
187:59 | time, you need to also know to do it exactly the right |
|
188:02 | In other words you need to two in an instant you need to make |
|
188:07 | you can, You can give the solution and explain that it's a 60% |
|
188:13 | And if you have a little bit time you do an 80% solution And |
|
188:17 | you have a lot of time you a 90% solution and odds are you'll |
|
188:22 | need to do 100% of the other words in in the business, |
|
188:27 | in a in a master's thesis, don't have to painstakingly convince people everything |
|
188:35 | exactly the way it is. You need to say how it works and |
|
188:39 | it's going to work that way. with those 80 and 90% solutions, |
|
188:44 | going to get close to reality, not proving a theory or or substantiated |
|
188:51 | theory. Rather I should say, you're trying to come up with given |
|
188:57 | information you have, what is the response that we can give and take |
|
189:03 | a certain situation. And I found found that when I was an active |
|
189:12 | developmental geologists to be more exciting than in exploration. And because, you |
|
189:18 | , it's every word you say, even when I was in exploration sometimes |
|
189:24 | you know, one of the I sat in the Caspian sea, |
|
189:29 | I was flown in, I was in all the way from from Houston |
|
189:34 | Azerbaijan, they gave me my own helicopter to get out to the rig |
|
189:41 | so I could make a decision on to stop that well that they were |
|
189:46 | because well they drilled before that they to do a core And it cost |
|
189:51 | $8 million dollars and the drilling engineer there's no Something, something, something |
|
189:58 | that I'm going to spend $8 million drilling a core. So I want |
|
190:02 | to tell me when we hit this . And I said okay, and |
|
190:07 | and I did that and uh and geologists get that kind of thing. |
|
190:11 | it it wasn't a perfect situation and sent SAM samples back to the lab |
|
190:17 | reconfirm what I did. But at point in time we had be able |
|
190:20 | make a decision literally. I probably on the rig a couple of days |
|
190:28 | we were drunk as we were getting and closer to the the formation that |
|
190:31 | had contracted to drill two. And and made that decision and uh things |
|
190:38 | that, completely different from that of very timely matter, happened quite a |
|
190:44 | . and here I say, one you don't ever want to do is |
|
190:47 | into the role of a map and section maker because you need to understand |
|
190:55 | how to make a cross section or to make a map. You need |
|
190:58 | know why you need to make a and why you need to make a |
|
191:01 | section, What is it telling the and the managers what they need to |
|
191:07 | about finding that oil. And uh I think when it comes to um |
|
191:16 | geologist, reservoir geologists, you don't to fall into the trap of just |
|
191:22 | a good operations ah between picker for drilling or geo steering because as a |
|
191:34 | , you can you can provide a more information. So I think this |
|
191:40 | geologists to learn more geophysics and engineering for for geophysicists to learn more geology |
|
191:47 | engineering is a really good thing for you to do because you can communicate |
|
191:51 | with each other. And I know example, personal example, I took |
|
191:59 | course and um uh different things to around the wellbore with problems and uh |
|
192:10 | think I've been working at mobil for weeks. I know excuse me six |
|
192:14 | , but somewhere around three months in got this course and in a different |
|
192:20 | issues, production issues around the preparations uh six months into it um the |
|
192:28 | engineer was was out on vacation or or something and somebody had on the |
|
192:34 | had to decide whether to gravel pack not. And they gave him an |
|
192:38 | good explanation because I just took a in it and they were stunned because |
|
192:44 | knew I wasn't an engineer and we up doing that. And uh again |
|
192:51 | it's a really good thing not only to learn about what it is you |
|
192:55 | to do on that job, but about what all the people around you |
|
192:58 | doing, so that you actually make feel like they really need you on |
|
193:03 | team, okay that I think we take a lunch break and this is |
|
193:09 | chart I was referring to in the but we'll get to this after the |
|
193:13 | break and But 45 minutes be long . Yes, sir. Okay, |
|
193:28 | good with that. A 45 minute break. I don't know about |
|
193:32 | You guys haven't been talking much, I'm really tired. Mhm. And |
|
193:38 | can get cranky so I'm gonna take good break. Okay. Thank you |
|
193:45 | see you. Uh see you Make it 1:00 because it's almost |
|
194:00 | |
|