Abstract

Summary The first application of compositional upscaling to the routine modeling of a major reservoir is described. The reservoir— Cupiagua, in Colombia—is a rich gas condensate field. Given that Cupiagua falls rapidly below dewpoint and produced gas is recycled, the main recovery process is the vaporization of liquid components into the gas phase, in which they are transported to producers. Therefore, the process is compositional, but flow is dominantly in one phase. Cupiagua is a heterogeneous reservoir dominated by natural fracture corridors that provide more than 80% of the permeability in some areas. It is not possible to represent these features explicitly within the full-field model (FFM), nor do they fit a conventional dual-porosity representation. Therefore, an upscaling process is required. The process described is the use of alpha-factor compositional upscaling functions, which modify the velocities of individual pseudocomponents. We show how fine-grid cross-section modeling, with a range of sensitivities, may be used to generate an appropriate set of alpha-factor functions, which are validated against detailed sector models and may then be used as the principal history-match parameter in the FFM.

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