Abstract

This Canadian oil-sands case history is a very shallow play with a complex geology that includes Quaternary thrusting at surface, sinkholes, and highly karsted Devonian carbonates at the base of the notoriously complex McMurray reservoir. Despite this challenging environment, we were able to demonstrate that Depth Imaging brought significant improvements as compared to the routinely used time imaging. Recent developments in Anisotropic Pre-Stack Depth Imaging technologies provided a better focused and better positioned 3D subsurface image that accurately tied several hundreds of wells. These results were achieved using steering filters, solver bounds and simultaneous multi-parameter tomography inversion while constraining the tomography updates with the well top picks from over 800 wells. Surveys of different vintages, geometries, orientations and shooting directions were regularized using 5D interpolation and merged together. Besides a better imaging of the subsurface, one of main objective of the project was the characterization of the McMurray reservoir. To that aim, the Anisotropic Pre-Stack Depth Migration (APSDM) generated better conditioned Offset Vector Tile gathers for subsequent pre-stack inversion work. The Alberta oil sands are one of the largest bituminous hydrocarbon reserves in the world (Alberta Energy Regulator, 2015). At reservoir temperature, the bitumen is so viscous that it can almost be considered as a solid. In situ thermal recovery processes such as steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) that lower viscosity and increase mobility are required to extract the bitumen from the reservoir. SAGD operations consist of horizontal well pairs that are drilled into the base of the reservoir. In each pair, one well is drilled about 5 m directly above the other well. The top well is injected with steam to melt the bitumen. The bitumen seeps down towards the bottom producing well, which pumps the bitumen to the surface. The well pairs are generally configured to about ten parallel horizontal well pairs that are around 100 m apart horizontally and are 1000 m long, which constitute a 1-km2 pad.

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