Abstract

To evaluate the risk of induced seismicity due to hydraulic fracturing, a detailed stress analysis in a seismically active region, i.e., the Changning shale-gas field in the southern Sichuan Basin, was conducted utilizing sonic wave velocity logs and high-resolution electrical resistivity image logs of shale gas wells. Wells with relatively higher magnitudes of horizontal stresses are spatially located in the vicinity of thrust faults, in agreement with the stress concentration at the upper tip of the basement-involved thrust fault. The prevailing orientation of maximum horizontal principal stress (SHmax) is N110°–120°E on the southwestern Changning anticline, which aligns with the motion of the Sichuan Basin, as driven by the continuous eastward extrusion of the Tibet plateau, which initiated at approximately 50 Ma. However, the SHmax orientation is N30°–70°E along the northern Changning anticline, implying an inheritance of the N–S geodynamic compression during the Jurassic to Late Cretaceous. Drilling-induced tensile fractures primarily appear in compliant layers that are rich in clay or organic matter in wells located adjacent to thrust faults, suggesting that stiff layers can efficiently inhibit the hydrofracture growth height owing to more intense tectonic stress near thrust faults. A natural fault with a strike of approximately 30° to the SHmax orientation can be more easily activated by extreme pumping pressure in wells that are weakly affected by the stress concentration along the thrust fault. Nevertheless, a cyclic injection of fracturing fluid with a gradually increasing target pressure may effectively reduce the magnitude of induced seismicity.

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