4.4 Article

Reservoir Modeling in Shale-Gas Reservoirs

Journal

SPE RESERVOIR EVALUATION & ENGINEERING
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages 638-653

Publisher

SOC PETROLEUM ENG
DOI: 10.2118/125530-PA

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Carbo Ceramics
  2. StrataGen Engineering
  3. Computer Modelling Group

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The exploitation of unconventional gas reservoirs has become an ever Increasing component of the North American gas supply The economic viability of many unconventional gas developments hinges on effective stimulation of extremely low-permeability lock by creating very complex fracture networks that connect huge reservoir surface area to the wellbore In addition, gas desorption may be a significant component of overall gas recover), in many shale-gas reservoirs The widespread application of microseismic (NI S) mapping has significantly improved our understanding of hydraulic fracture growth in unconventional gas reservoirs (primarily shale) and has led to better stimulation designs However. the overall effectiveness of stimulation treatments is difficult to determine from MS mapping because the location of proppant and the distribution of conductivity in the fracture network cannot be measured (and are critical parameters that control well performance) Therefore, it is important to develop reservoir-modeling approaches that properly characterize fluid flow in and the properties of a complex fracture network, tight matrix, and primary hydraulic fracture (if present) to evaluate well performance and understand critical parameters that affect gas recovery This paper illustrates the impact of gas desorption on production profile and ultimate gas recovery in shale reservoirs, showing that in some shale-gas reservoirs desorption may be a minor component of gas recovery In addition, the paper details the impact of changing closure stress distribution in the fracture network on well productivity and gas recovery In shale-gas reservoirs with lower Young's modulus rock, stress-dependent network-fracture conductivity may reduce ultimate gas recover), significantly The paper includes an example that contrasts the application of numerical reservoir simulation and advanced decline-curve analyses to illustrate issues associated with convent tonal production-data-analysis techniques when applied to unconventional reservoirs Selected examples from the Barnett shale are included that incorporate MS fracture mapping and production data to illustrate the application of production modeling to evaluate well performance in unconventional gas reservoirs This paper highlights production modeling and analysis techniques that aid in evaluating stimulation and completion strategies in unconventional gas reservoirs

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