“…Upon production, the pore pressure ( P p ) in the reservoir decreases relative to the overburden stress ( σ v ), which increases the vertical effective stress ( σ v ,eff = σ v − P p ) acting on the load‐bearing structure of the reservoir rock. This leads to recoverable poroelastic and, in some cases, permanent, inelastic compaction of the reservoir rock (Bernabé et al, ; Pijnenburg et al, ; Shalev et al, ), potentially with a time‐ (creep) or rate‐dependent component (Doornhof et al, ; Nagel, ). Permanent compaction occurs when the effective stress acting on the rock becomes large enough to activate inelastic grain‐scale deformation processes, such as grain rearrangement (Menéndez et al, ), grain and grain contact failure by equilibrium or subcritical crack growth (Brantut et al, ; Brzesowsky, Hangx, et al, ; Brzesowsky, Spiers, et al, ), intergranular clay film deformation (Spiers et al, ), pressure solution (Dewers & Hajash, ; Gratier et al, ; Schutjens, ; Spiers et al, ), and intergranular frictional slip (Spiers et al, ).…”