Abstract

Time-lapse seismic experiments aim to obtain information about production-related effects in hydrocarbon reservoirs to increase the recovery percentage. However, nonrepeatability problems such as acquisition differences, overburden effects, and noise are often significantly stronger than the imprint of production changes in time-lapse seismic data sets. Consequently, it is very difficult to appraise the changes in petrophysical reservoir parameters over time. We introduce a 4D monitoring approach based on the spectral ratio method. This method produces two time-lapse attributes: the relative change in reflection coefficient and the traveltime shift at reflecting interfaces. These attributes can be used for appraising production-related changes in the subsurface. The approach corrects for time-invariant nonrepeatability effects in the overburden and source-receiver coupling problems in time-lapse surveys. The validity of the method is limited to structurally simple overburden and reservoirs with weak lateral variations. First, we validate the methodology using a synthetic time-lapse seismic experiment. Next, we apply the method to a real time-lapse data set from the Troll West gas province in the North Sea. In the real example, we could not detect movement in the fluid contact of [Formula: see text]. The expected change in amplitude is less than 10%, which is probably below the background noise level for this data set.

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