Formation damage can occur at any stage during the lifetime of a well. Operations such as drilling, completion, workovers, and stimulations expose the formation to fluids that may be almost all incompatible with the formation and its original fluids. These situations can cause a reduction in the permeability of the formation around the well bore, and/or a reduction in the production of fluids. A detailed description of the formation damage mechanisms is presented in the literature (1,2) .New methods have been developed to counteract formation damage and, in doing so, improve injectivity. One of these methods is formation heating. The aim of formation heating is to increase the temperature of the formation around the well-bore in order to improve the hydrodynamic conditions in the near wellbore area. A popular field application technique of formation heating is the utilization of a down-hole electrical heater. The heater is placed as close as possible to the target zone, and an inert gas, such as nitrogen, is co-injected through the annulus. Using this method, the temperature of the injected gas may rise to as high as 800˚ C before entering into the formation (3) . The big inconvenience of this method is the large energy requirements associated with it.Another remediation technique is the use of a down-hole gas burner. Using this method, hot flue gases are injected into the formation. The main concern with down-hole gas burners is the lack of combustion control, corrosion, and the requirement of specialized and expensive equipment (4) .The utilization of a radio frequency (RF) antenna, as a heating system for enhanced oil recovery, is another remediation technique (5) . Electrical heating tools and their applications can be divided in into three categories: (1) low frequency currents are used in resistive/ohmic heating. (2) high frequency currents are used in microwave heating methods. (3) induction tools utilize electrical energy to inductively heat the reservoir through the ferro-magnetic casing (6,7) . Using these techniques, the increase in temperature of the formation is not enough to vapourize water and, as a result, their application will only result in heating the oil in the near-wellbore area.A technique called combustion stimulation was proposed and used in the 1960s (4,8,9) . Using this method, a combustion front is initiated in the well-bore by means of a heater or burner, and the front is propagated into the formation to a distance of 3 m to 6 m. As a result, the formation in this zone is reduced to clean, burned sand, offering very little resistance to fluid production.Research on the combustion of gases in porous media at the University of Calgary is being carried out with the potential of applying this concept to the process of formation heating. Gaseous combustible mixtures may be injected in a uniform distribution over the sand face, ensuring a uniform treatment, and allowing for a uniform modification of structural and fluid mechanical properties. In the field, this process can be initiated by t...