Although drilling has slowed substantially from its peak in 2010, steadily improving natural gas prices coupled with the promise of demand from liquefied natural gas and gas to liquids facilities have renewed interest in the prolific Haynesville shale gas play in NW Louisiana. A consensus of opinion among operators in the field will agree that only a fraction of the Haynesville potential has been developed to date. As is the case in most shale plays, production from wells has been highly variable, leading to the use of 3D seismic reservoir characterization studies for the determination of sweet spots, well placement and completion strategies where seismic anisotropy has been proven to be an important factor in understanding the shale plays. This paper illustrates a workflow (Figure 1) integrating reservoir and geomechanical properties obtained from pre-stack seismic inversion and incorporating stress and fracture information extracted from azimuthal analysis of the seismic data. Eight wells in the area targeting the Haynesville and mid-Bossier reservoirs were used for calibration of surface seismic measurements of reservoir and geomechanical properties. A variety of seismically derived attributes are used to estimate production potential in the field. This paper shows the application of global azimuthal inversion, a technology for extracting the azimuthal anisotropy. Above all, the workflow makes quantitative use of microseismic and SEM (Scanning Electron Microscope) derived mineralogy data to validate the seismic-derived attributes.
Figure 1 Integrated geoscience workflow for a shale play, incorporating numerous discipline to high-grade the survey area to identify ‘sweet spots’ and optimize drilling locations and completions.
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