Developments in Petroleum Science, 38 studies in abnormal pressures DEVELOPMENTS IN PETROLEUM SCIENCE Advisory Editor: G.V. Chilingarian Volumes 1, 3,4,7 and 13 are out of print 2. W.H. FERTL - Abnormal Formation Pressures 5. T.F. YEN and G.V. CHILINGARIAN (Editors) -Oil Shale 6. D.W. PEACEMAN - Fundamentals of Numerical Reservoir Simulation X. L.P. Dake - Fundamentals of Reservoir Engineering 9. K. MAGARA - Compaction and Fluid Migration 10. M.T. SILVIA and E.A. ROBINSON - Deconvolution of Geophysical Time Series in the Exploration for Oil and Natural Gas I I. G.V. CHILINGARIAN and P. VORABUTR - Drilling and Drilling Fluids 12. T.D. VAN GOLF-RACHT - Fundamentals of Fractured Reservoir Engeneering 14. G. MOZES (Editor) - Paraffin Products I SA. 0. SERRA - Fundamentals of Well-log Interpretation, 1. The acquisition of logging data I SB. 0. SERRA - Fundamentals of Well-log Interpretation, I. The interpretation of logging data 16. R.E. CHAPMAN - Petroleum Geology 17A. E.C. DONALDSON, G.V. CHILINGARIAN and T.F. Yen (Editors) -Enhanced Oil Recovery, I. Fundamentals and analyses I7B. E.C. DONALDSON. G.V. CHILINGARIAN and T.F. Yen (Editors) - Enhanced Oil Recovery, 11. Processes and operations I XA. A.P. SZILAS - Production and Transport of Oil and Gas, A. Flow mechanics and production (wcond completely revised edition) I XB. A.P. SZILAS Production and Transport of Oil and Gas, B. Gathering and Transport ~ (\ccond completely re\iwd edition) 19A. G.V. CHILINGARIAN, J.O. ROBERTSON Jr. and S. KUMAR - Surface Operations in Petroleum Production, I 19B. G.V. CHILINGARIAN, J.O. ROBERTSON Jr. and S. KUMAR - Surface Operations in Petroleum Production, I1 30. A.J. DIKKERS - Geology in Petroleum Production 21. F. RAMIREZ - Application of Optimal Control Theory to Enhanced Oil Recovery 22. E.C. DONALDSON. G.V. CHILINGARIAN and T.F. Yen - Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery 23. J. HAGOORT - Fundamentals of Gas Reservoir Engineering 24. W. LITTMANN -Polymer Flooding 25. N.K. BAIBAKOV and A.R. GARUSHEV - Thermal Methods of Petroleum Production 26. D. MADER - Hydraulic Proppant Farcturing and Gravel Packing 27. G. DA PRAT Well Test Analysis for Naturally Fractured Reservoirs ~ 2x. E.B. NELSON (Editor) - Well Cementing 29. R.W. ZIMMERMAN - Compressibility of Sandstones 30. G.V. CHILINGARIAN, S.J. MAZZULLO and H.H. RIEKE - Carbonate Reservoir Characterization: A Geologic-Engineering Analysis, Part I 31. E.C. DONALDSON (Editor) Microbial Enhancement of Oil Recovery - Recent Advances ~ 32. E. BOBOK Fluid Mechanics for Petroleum Engineers ~ 33. E. FJER, R.M. HOLT, P. HORSRUD, A.M. RAAEN and R. RISNES petroleum Related Rock Mechanics 34. M.J. ECONOMIDES - A Practical Companion to Reservoir Stimulation 35. J.M. VERWEIJ - Hydrocarbon Migration Systems Analysis 36. la. DAKE - The Practice of Reservoir Engineering 37. W.H. SOMERTON - Thermal Properties and Temperature related Behavior of Rocklfluid Systems 38. W.H. FERTL, R.E. CHAPMAN and R.F. HOTZ (Editors) - Studies in Abnormal Pressures 39. E. PREMUZIC and A. WOODHEAD (Editors) - Microbial Enhancement of Oil Recovery - Recent Advances - Proceedings of the 1992 International Conference on Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery Developments in Petroleum Science, 38 studies in abnormal pressures Edited by WALTER H. FERTL~ Late President, Atlas Wire Services, Houston, Texas, USA RICHARD E. CHAPMAN The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia and ROD F. HOTZ Western Atlas International, Houston, Texas, USA ELSEVIER, Amsterdam - London -N ew York -T okyo 1994 ELSEVIER SCIENCE B.V. Sara Burgerhartstraat 2.5 P.O. Box 21 I. I000 AE Amsterdam, The Netherlands ISBN: 0-444-X9999-5 0 I994 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means. electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher, Elsevier Science B.V., Copyright & Permissions Department. P.O. Box 521. IOOO AM Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Special regulations for readers in the USA - This publication has ken registered with the Copyright Clearance Center Inc. (CCC). Salem. Massachusetts. Information can k obtained from the CCC about conditions under which photocopies of parts of this publication may k made in the USA. All other copyright questions. including photocopying outside of the USA, should be referred 10 the publisher. No responsibility is assumed by the publisher for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods. products, instructions or ideas contained in the material herein. This book is printed on acid-free paper Printed in The Netherlands V PREFACE This should have been Walter’s book. It was his idea, and it grew from his very successful first book, Abnormal Formation Pressures, published by Elsevier Science Publishers in 1976. Unfortunately he did not live to see his idea take more than general form. He died on November loth, 1990. I say it should have been Walter’s book because the double tragedy was that his own contributions to it were either not written or were lost. So what was left was the work of those whom he had invited to contribute to the book. I became involved in 1987 as a contributor. In 1988 he invited me to join him as co-editor. We had known each other since the middle 1970s, and my r81e was to have been more as an editorial adviser to him. Rod Hotz worked with and eventually for Walter during the many years of their employment with Dresser Atlas, which eventually became Western Atlas International in 1987. He edited most of Walter’s work and co-authored a number of papers with him. He had begun to assist Walter in preparing both text and figures for the second book prior to November loth, 1990. After Waiter’s death there were many difficulties in restoring the project. Rod Hotz was able to locate most of the files Walter had accumulated for this book and I am very grateful to him for all the help he has given me. With the contributors coming from North America, it would have been virtually impossible for an editor across the Pacific to have done it unaided. I am also very grateful to Ed Bigelow for accepting Rod’s invitation to fill the gaps left by Walter - the chapters on world- wide occurrences of abnormal pressures and on their detection and evaluation with well logs. Last, but certainly not least, I am very grateful to the contributors for their patience with me and for updating their chapters so long after they had first written them. This then is not the book Walter Fertl would have produced. It is the best we could do without him. We dedicate it to his memory. RICHARD E. CHAPMAN This page intentionally left blank vii WALTER H. FERTL Dr. Walter Hans Fertl was a relatively young man when he died in 1990, but he had achieved much. Somehow he had managed to combine a prolific writing and lecturing career with a professional career of steadily increasing executive responsibility. Walter was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1940. He studied at the University of Mining and Metallurgy at Leoben and then emigrated to the United States in the mid-1960s. At the University of Texas at Austin he received his MS and PhD degrees in petroleum engineering before launching off into his professional career. That in itself was no small achievement for one whose childhood and early education had been in the German language. Walter Hans Fertl, 1940-1990. ... Vlll WALTER H. FERTL After eight years with Conoco’s Production Research Department he moved to Dresser Atlas in 1976 (the year his book Abnormal Formation Pressures was published) as Director of Interpretation and Field Development. In 1981, largely through his initiative, Dresser Petroleum Engineering Services was formed; and he was its Vice President and General Manager until 1983 when he became Vice President of Marketing for Dresser Atlas. Four years later he was promoted to Executive Vice President - but the following year, 1988, he was appointed President of Atlas Wireline Services. It was to be his last appointment but one. His last appointment, the one we all have to keep sooner or later, was on November loth, 1990. The career here sketched would be regarded as highly satisfactory by anyone, but that was not all. While doing all these things he found time to publish over 300 technical papers and articles, write or contribute to ten books, acquire 27 U.S. patents, and lecture around the world. He was honoured by Iran and Thailand, by the Society of Professional Well Log Analysts with their Gold Medal and their Presidency, by Dresser Industries with their Silver Medal Award for Technical Creativity, by the Society of Petroleum Engineers as a Distinguished Lecturer, and by four U.S. Universities with the degree of Doctor Honoris Causa. In brief, Walter’s professional life had that rare mix of quality and quantity. No one is indispensable, but some are more so than others. Walter’s influence on all those around him was great, as was his influence on petroleum engineering. FOREWORD Abnormal formation pressures are no less important today than they were in 1976 when Fertl’s first book on the subject was published. What has changed is that the topic is now beyond the scope of a single mind, and for this reason, the book consists of chapters contributed by specialists in their field. Bigelow begins with a summary of the occurrence of abnormal pressures around the world. They are known to occur in all the continents except Antarctica. Chapman discusses the geology of abnormal pressures and reminds us that they occur in two distinct geological contexts, regressive sequences as in the U.S. Gulf Coast and the Niger delta, and in rift basins as in the North Sea and the Atlantic seaboard of the Americas. He follows this with a survey of causes and essential theory. The ever-increasing number of abnormally pressured producing reservoirs has demanded understanding of the reservoir engineering concepts involved. These are discussed by Bernard. And because water is always involved, Chilingarian, Rieke and Kazi describe the essential pore-water chemistry. Many of the problems of fifteen years ago are still problems today, but modern technology has reduced them. For example, the need to know the depth to abnormal pressures, and their magnitude, before drilling has been felt for at least 50 years - it is not sufficient simply to rely on local experience. In new areas it is essential for proper planning to have some idea of the risks involved. Once drilling starts, the risks must be updated; and once drilling has been completed, the pattern of pore pressures must be evaluated. These topics are treated here by their experts. Kan and Sicking describe the geophysical methods of detection and evaluation of abnormal pressures using geophysical methods before drilling. Bigelow describes their evaluation using well logs. Hardage tackles the problem of looking ahead of the bit using seismic methods in real time. Desbrandes and Clayton discuss the acquisition of parameters while drilling - the measurement-while-drilling (MWD) technology. Shallow abnormal pressures occur in many parts of the world and Bourgoyne assesses these hazards. Some hazards remain, and if the worst happens and a well blows out, it is essential to reduce the damage to the environment and to humans to a minimum. Offshore this usually involves drilling a relief well. Desbrandes treats this topic. An important development in the theory of abnormal pressures is that they can be caused by petroleum generation. Although V.C. Illing in 1938 wrote that there must be a volume increase during petroleum generation, it is only comparatively recently that abnormal pressures from this cause have been documented. Spencer looks at this aspect, taking examples from the Rocky Mountain region.
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