Abstract

Reservoir damage is considered one of the major challenges in the oil and gas industry. Many studies have been conducted to understand formation damage mechanisms in borehole wells, but few studies have been conducted to analyze the data to detect the source, causes, and mitigations for each well where damage has occurred. I have investigated and quantified the reasons and mitigation of reservoir damage problems in the middle Miocene reservoir within the El Morgan oil field at the southern central Gulf of Suez, Egypt. I used integrated production, reservoir, and geologic data sets and their history during different operations to assess the reservoir damage in El Morgan-XX well. The collected data include the reservoir rock type, fluid, production, core analysis, rock mineralogy, geology, water chemistry, drilling fluids, perforations depth intervals, workover operations, and stimulation history. The integration of different sets of data gave a robust analysis of reservoir damage causes and helps to suggest suitable remediation. Based on these results, I conclude the following: (1) Workover fluid has been confirmed as the primary damage source, (2) the reservoir damage mechanisms could be generated by multisources including solids and filtrate invasions, fluid/rock interaction (deflocculating of kaolinite clay), water blockage, salinity chock, and the high sulfate content of the invaded fluid, and (3) multidata integration leads to appropriate reservoir damage analysis and effective design of the stimulation treatment. Furthermore, minimizing fluid invasion into the reservoir section by managing the overbalance during drilling and workover operations could be very helpful. Fluid types and solids should be considered when designing the stimulation treatment and compatibility tests should be performed. Long periods of completion fluid in boreholes are not recommended, particularly if the completion fluid pressure and reservoir pressure are out of balance, as well as the presence of sensitive formation minerals.

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