
Study of fine tapping potential of poor reservoirs in late stage of high water cut
Author(s) -
Bochao Xu
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
iop conference series earth and environmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1755-1307
pISSN - 1755-1315
DOI - 10.1088/1755-1315/781/2/022028
Subject(s) - tapping , petroleum engineering , stage (stratigraphy) , water cut , lead (geology) , geology , environmental science , water flooding , engineering , paleontology , mechanical engineering
At present, the oilfield development has entered the late stage of high water cut, and the exploitation objects have been changed to the second and third types of oil layers. The distribution of remaining oil is highly fragmented and complex, and the exploitation difficulty is gradually increasing. In view of a series of geological characteristics of Development Zone A, such as “numerous layers, complex reservoirs, severe phase transition and high viscosity”, the potential tapping technologies of Class II and Class III reservoirs, such as combination of two and three and ASP flooding, have been carried out one after another. In order to further enhance oil recovery and increase recoverable reserves, a large number of fracturing measures have been implemented to increase oil production. In view of the fact that it is more and more difficult to select wells and layers by this measure, we combine the results of fine reservoir description with dynamic data, take Block B as the investigation object, establish the potential pool of sedimentary unit-level measures, recognize the potential distribution of 82 different sedimentary units, clarify the target units of potential tapping measures, and finally explore relatively perfect ways and means to optimize fracturing well layers, and strive to achieve targeted adjustment and accurately tap potential. At present, in the early stage of fracturing in this area, the average daily oil increase of a single well is 7.9 tons, and the above practices also provide empirical reference and guidance for other similar blocks.
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