Abstract
Estimation of CO2 saturation from time-lapse CO2 well logging in an onshore
aquifer Nagaoka,Japan
Exploration Geophysics, 37, 1, 19-29, 2006.
Xue Ziqiu, Tanase Daiji, Watanebe Jiro
The first Japanese pilot-scale CO2 sequestration project has been
undertaken in an onshore saline aquifer, near Nagaoka in Niigata
prefecture, and time-lapse well logs were carried out in observation
wells to detect the arrival of injected CO2 and to evaluate CO2
saturation in the reservoir. CO2 was injected into a thin permeable
zone at the depth of 1110 m at a rate of 20?40 tonnes per day. The
total amount of injected CO2 was 10 400 tonnes, during the injection
period from July 2003 to January 2005. The pilot-scale demonstration
allowed an improved understanding of the CO2 movement in a porous
sandstone reservoir, by conducting time-lapse geophysical well logs at
three observation wells. Comparison between neutron well logging before
and after the insertion of fibreglass casing in observation well OB-2
showed good agreement within the target formation, and the higher
concentration of shale volume in the reservoir results in a bigger
difference between the two well logging results. CO2 breakthrough was
identified by induction, sonic, and neutron logs. By sonic logging, we
confirmed P-wave velocity reduction that agreed fairly well with a
laboratory measurement on drilled core samples from the Nagaoka site.
We successfully matched the history changes of sonic P-wave velocity
and estimated CO2 saturation after breakthrough in two observation
wells out of three. The sonic-velocity history matching result
suggested that the sweep efficiency was about 40%. Small effects of CO2
saturation on resistivity resulted in small changes in induction logs
when the reservoir was partially saturated. We also found that CO2
saturation in the CO2-bearing zone responded to suspension of CO2
injection.
Copyright(C) Research Institute of Innovative
Technology for the Earth (RITE). All rights reserved.