Preliminary Hydrogeological Modeling of Deep Injection in the Delaware Basin for Pore Pressure Characterization with Application to Induced Seismicity
Abstract
The Delaware Basin of west Texas and southeastern New Mexico is now one of the world's most productive petroleum provinces. Within the basin the earthquake rate has accelerated significantly alongside recent petroleum development. Many of these earthquakes have been spatiotemporally linked to petroleum operations including deep injection of oilfield wastewater (SWD). Since February of 2020, series of earthquakes have occurred near Mentone, TX including a M5.0. It is possible that this new earthquake sequence has been caused by increasing reservoir pores pressure associated with SWD in formations between basement and the intervals targeted for petroleum production.
To assess the potential for SWD-inducement in the Mentone area and in southern New Mexico we have constructed screening-level 3D geological and hydrogeological models of the entire northern Delaware Basin in Texas and New Mexico that span the formations used for SWD between basement and the intervals targeted for petroleum development. Our geological model was constructed using Petrel with geometric control from ~7,300 wells and spanning the Cambrian through Pennsylvanian strata used for SWD. The thickness of the model varies from 1,000 to 11,000 ft following the structure of the basin and it is partitioned into 15 layers following generalized lithology. Our hydrogeologic uses model uses CMG STARS and incorporates 189 SWD wells, mainly in New Mexico, which were active from January 1989 to January 2020. The reservoir properties are derived from data from the Fort Worth Basin of northcentral Texas which contains closely analogous strata and better quantitative control. The model is calibrated using injection pressure constraints while honoring injection volume history using 37 SWD injection wells.- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2020
- Bibcode:
- 2020AGUFMMR0190008G
- Keywords:
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- 1822 Geomechanics;
- HYDROLOGY;
- 5104 Fracture and flow;
- PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF ROCKS;
- 7299 General or miscellaneous;
- SEISMOLOGY;
- 8118 Dynamics and mechanics of faulting;
- TECTONOPHYSICS