Abstract

Abstract The Clyde Field, which was discovered in 1978, is located on the SW edge of the North Sea Central Graben. The reservoir is developed with Late Jurassic shallow marine sands of the Fulmar Sand Formation. An estimated 408 MMBBL of oil is present (Annex B), of which 154 MMBBL is considered recoverable. The structure of the Clyde Field takes the form of a rotated Jurassic fault block, truncated at its crest by a major unconformity. Oil is retained within a combination trap, sourced from Late Jurassic Kimmeridge Clay thermally matured in the highly productive basinal lows, adjacent to the field. Reservoir sand quality is highly variable, ranging from excellent with permeabilities in excess of Id, to poor with permeabilities of less than 1 md. The principal control on reservoir quality appears to be original depositional texture, although strong diagenetic effects are also present. Production is from a single, centrally located, platform provided with thirty slots. Aquifer support is insufficient to maintain reservoir pressure at the current plateau production rate of 50 000 BOPD and so a programme of water injection has been implemented.

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