Abstract

Abstract A case history of the Moxa Arch in southwestern Wyoming details the initial development on 640 acre spacing in 1977 through 1982 and the results of subsequent infill wells drilled from 1989 to 1992. The engineering evaluation includes an integration of 3D hydraulic fracture modeling and reservoir simulation with petrophysical and geological studies. The study indicates that the Moxa Arch Frontier Formation is very heterogeneous with permeabilities ranging from 0.001 mD to more that 0.1 mD. The productive sand thicknesses vary from less than 10 ft to over 70 ft. Effective drainage areas range from over 640 acres to less than 100 acres, with ultimate gas recoveries estimated from less than 1 BCFG to over 5 BCFG. Reservoir and hydraulic fracture modeling indicate that infill drilling on 160 acre spacing (within a portion of the Moxa Arch) would increase reserves by 68% when compared to reserves for 320 acre spacing. Results from new CO2 foam/ISP stimulations did not show significant improvement compared to early water-based fluid and sand treatments.

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