Seismically Driven Characterization of Unconventional Shale Plays

16 February, 2012
Who Should Attend
Geologists, geophysicists, engineers, and support technicians who are interested in using a new workflow to look at fractures and shale plays.
Objectives
Course Content

Unconventional shale plays are changing the energy sector in many ways. At the macro-economic level, the shale plays are becoming a geopolitical game-changer with profound consequences on communities, energy companies, local and regional economies, and our planet. At the financial level, billions of dollars are invested each year in acquiring and developing existing and new shale plays. At the industry level, for the first time the integration of disciplines is actually happening thus forcing geophysicists, geologists and engineers to work together to solve the multiple challenges posed by the shale plays. Gone are the days where the buzzword “integration” meant for most people the ability to display in a 3D viewer well logs, seismic data and some engineering information. With the shale plays, the synergetic integration through algorithms and workflows combining multiple data types to create useful 3D models is an urgent necessity. This synergetic integration stems from the fact that a successful development of a shale play requires the knowledge of key reservoir properties that span the entire spectrum of disciplines. What are these key reservoir properties?

This presentation describes a proven workflow that uses a standard narrow azimuth 3D seismic, conventional logs, image logs and core data to build five key reservoir properties required for an optimal development of shale plays. The workflow uses pre-stack seismic data and the Extended Elastic Inversion (EEI) to estimate multiple elastic properties which are used to compute key rock properties such as brittleness. The same elastic properties are used with fracture indicators at the wells in the Continuous Fracture Modeling (CFM) workflow to generate a 3D distribution of the natural fracture system. Knowing the brittleness, the distribution of natural fractures and other key rock properties such as TOC, optimal wells can be placed and fracked at selective intervals thus producing the highest IP while reducing dramatically the completion costs. Some of these concepts are illustrated with the Niobrara shale using the Teapot Dome public data set.

Structure of the E-Symposium

Each e-symposium consists of one-hour live e-symposium, along with material for one full day of independent study. The live portion will be followed by a full day of independent study (not a live event). The one-hour live e-symposium can be accessed from any computer anywhere in the world using a high-speed internet connection. After the event is over, you will receive via email information about accessing the asynchronous segment (not live) which consists of your independent study materials, to be accessed and studied at any time. You will be able to email responses to the readings, along with your study question answers for CEU credit (if you sign up for the extended package).

Recording of original webinar, packet of independent study reading materials, PDF of original PowerPoint presentation by FTP download. (Original presentation date: February 16, 2012.) Some materials will also sent by e-mail.

$75
$75
Expires on
01 January, 2099
Member Tuition without CEU
$95
$95
Expires on
01 January, 2099
Nonmember Tuition without CEU
$25
$25
Expires on
01 January, 2099
Student Tuition without CEU
$100
$100
Expires on
01 January, 2099
Member Tuition with CEU
$145
$145
Expires on
01 January, 2099
Nonmember Tuition with CEU
$35
$35
Expires on
01 January, 2099
Student Tuition with CEU
200
Limit
1.0
CEU

Expanded package for CEU credit is $100 for AAPG members, and $145 for non-members. Special Student Pricing: $25 for Webinar only; $35 for Expanded package.

 

Ahmed Ouenes FracGeo, The Woodlands, TX
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Director, Innovation and Emerging Science and Technology +1 918 560 2604
Desktop /Portals/0/PackFlashItemImages/WebReady/nash-susan.jpg?width=75&quality=90&encoder=freeimage&progressive=true 28 Susan Nash, Ph.D.

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The American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) does not endorse or recommend any products and services that may be cited, used or discussed in AAPG publications or in presentations at events associated with AAPG.