Towards an integrated restoration/forward geomechanical modelling workflow for basin evolution prediction

Many sedimentary basins host important reserves of exploitable energy resources. Understanding of the present-day state of stresses, porosity, overpressure and geometric configuration is essential in order to minimize production costs and enhance safety in operations. The data that can be measured f...

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Main Authors: Crook Anthony J.L., Obradors-Prats Joshua, Somer Deniz, Peric Djordje, Lovely Pete, Kacewicz Marek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2018-01-01
Series:Oil & Gas Science and Technology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2516/ogst/2018018
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spelling doaj-c907e7b391954d30a8684567796fd3302021-02-02T02:19:15ZengEDP SciencesOil & Gas Science and Technology1294-44751953-81892018-01-01731810.2516/ogst/2018018ogst180040Towards an integrated restoration/forward geomechanical modelling workflow for basin evolution predictionCrook Anthony J.L.Obradors-Prats JoshuaSomer DenizPeric DjordjeLovely PeteKacewicz MarekMany sedimentary basins host important reserves of exploitable energy resources. Understanding of the present-day state of stresses, porosity, overpressure and geometric configuration is essential in order to minimize production costs and enhance safety in operations. The data that can be measured from the field is, however, limited and at a non-optimal resolution. Structural restoration (inverse modelling of past deformation) is often used to validate structural interpretations from seismic data. In addition, it provides the undeformed state of the basin, which is a pre-requisite to understanding fluid migration or to perform forward simulations. Here, we present a workflow that integrates geomechanical-based structural restoration and forward geomechanical modelling in a finite element framework. The geometry and the boundary kinematics derived from restoration are used to automatically create a forward geomechanical model. Iterative correction may then be performed by either modifying the assumptions of the restoration or modifying the restoration-derived boundary conditions in the forward model. The methodology is applied to two problems; firstly, a sand-box scale benchmark model consisting of sand sediments sliding on silicon leading to the formation of a graben structure; secondly, a field-scale thrust-related anticline from Niger Delta. Two strategies to provide further constraint on fault development in the restoration-derived forward simulation are also presented. It is shown that the workflow reproduces the first order structural features observed in the target geometry. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that the iterative approach provides improved understanding of the evolution and additional information of current-day stress and material state for the Niger Delta Case.https://doi.org/10.2516/ogst/2018018
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Crook Anthony J.L.
Obradors-Prats Joshua
Somer Deniz
Peric Djordje
Lovely Pete
Kacewicz Marek
spellingShingle Crook Anthony J.L.
Obradors-Prats Joshua
Somer Deniz
Peric Djordje
Lovely Pete
Kacewicz Marek
Towards an integrated restoration/forward geomechanical modelling workflow for basin evolution prediction
Oil & Gas Science and Technology
author_facet Crook Anthony J.L.
Obradors-Prats Joshua
Somer Deniz
Peric Djordje
Lovely Pete
Kacewicz Marek
author_sort Crook Anthony J.L.
title Towards an integrated restoration/forward geomechanical modelling workflow for basin evolution prediction
title_short Towards an integrated restoration/forward geomechanical modelling workflow for basin evolution prediction
title_full Towards an integrated restoration/forward geomechanical modelling workflow for basin evolution prediction
title_fullStr Towards an integrated restoration/forward geomechanical modelling workflow for basin evolution prediction
title_full_unstemmed Towards an integrated restoration/forward geomechanical modelling workflow for basin evolution prediction
title_sort towards an integrated restoration/forward geomechanical modelling workflow for basin evolution prediction
publisher EDP Sciences
series Oil & Gas Science and Technology
issn 1294-4475
1953-8189
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Many sedimentary basins host important reserves of exploitable energy resources. Understanding of the present-day state of stresses, porosity, overpressure and geometric configuration is essential in order to minimize production costs and enhance safety in operations. The data that can be measured from the field is, however, limited and at a non-optimal resolution. Structural restoration (inverse modelling of past deformation) is often used to validate structural interpretations from seismic data. In addition, it provides the undeformed state of the basin, which is a pre-requisite to understanding fluid migration or to perform forward simulations. Here, we present a workflow that integrates geomechanical-based structural restoration and forward geomechanical modelling in a finite element framework. The geometry and the boundary kinematics derived from restoration are used to automatically create a forward geomechanical model. Iterative correction may then be performed by either modifying the assumptions of the restoration or modifying the restoration-derived boundary conditions in the forward model. The methodology is applied to two problems; firstly, a sand-box scale benchmark model consisting of sand sediments sliding on silicon leading to the formation of a graben structure; secondly, a field-scale thrust-related anticline from Niger Delta. Two strategies to provide further constraint on fault development in the restoration-derived forward simulation are also presented. It is shown that the workflow reproduces the first order structural features observed in the target geometry. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that the iterative approach provides improved understanding of the evolution and additional information of current-day stress and material state for the Niger Delta Case.
url https://doi.org/10.2516/ogst/2018018
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