Origin and petrophysical log response of overpressures in the Baram Delta province, Brunei.

The ‘window’ of safe mud weights between pore pressure and fracture pressure is narrower in overpressured sediments than in normally pressured sediments. This ‘window’ also controls the maximum buoyancy pressure, and hence the maximum height of hydrocarbon columns. Therefore, accurate pore pressure...

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Main Authors: Tingay, Mark, Hillis, R., Swarbrick, R., Morley, C.
Other Authors: Not Specified
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Indonesian Petroleum Association 2005
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13144
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author Tingay, Mark
Hillis, R.
Swarbrick, R.
Morley, C.
author2 Not Specified
author_facet Not Specified
Tingay, Mark
Hillis, R.
Swarbrick, R.
Morley, C.
author_sort Tingay, Mark
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The ‘window’ of safe mud weights between pore pressure and fracture pressure is narrower in overpressured sediments than in normally pressured sediments. This ‘window’ also controls the maximum buoyancy pressure, and hence the maximum height of hydrocarbon columns. Therefore, accurate pore pressure prediction is of critical importance for hydrocarbon exploration. Accurate pore pressure prediction is especially important in the rapidly depositing (3000 m/Ma) Tertiary Baram Delta Province where all economic fields exhibit overpressures, often of high magnitude and with narrow transition zones. A database of pore pressure information was compiled for 157 wells in 61 fields throughout Brunei. Overpressures are observed in 54 fields both in the inner shelf deltaic sequences and the underlying pro-delta shales. Porosity-vertical effective stress plots from 31 fields reveal that overpressures are primarily generated by disequilibrium compaction in the pro-delta shales, but have been vertically transferred into the inner shelf deltaic sequences.Sediments overpressured by disequilibrium compaction exhibit different physical properties to those overpressured by vertical transfer and hence, different pore pressure prediction strategies need to be applied in the prodelta shales and inner shelf deltaic sequences. Sonic and density log data detects overpressures generated by disequilibrium compaction and pore pressures are accurately predicted using an Eaton exponent of 3.0. Sonic log data detects vertically transferred overpressures, even in the absence of a porosity anomaly, and pore pressures are reasonably predicted using an Eaton exponent of 6.5.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:02:22Z
publishDate 2005
publisher Indonesian Petroleum Association
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-131442017-10-02T02:27:29Z Origin and petrophysical log response of overpressures in the Baram Delta province, Brunei. Tingay, Mark Hillis, R. Swarbrick, R. Morley, C. Not Specified The ‘window’ of safe mud weights between pore pressure and fracture pressure is narrower in overpressured sediments than in normally pressured sediments. This ‘window’ also controls the maximum buoyancy pressure, and hence the maximum height of hydrocarbon columns. Therefore, accurate pore pressure prediction is of critical importance for hydrocarbon exploration. Accurate pore pressure prediction is especially important in the rapidly depositing (3000 m/Ma) Tertiary Baram Delta Province where all economic fields exhibit overpressures, often of high magnitude and with narrow transition zones. A database of pore pressure information was compiled for 157 wells in 61 fields throughout Brunei. Overpressures are observed in 54 fields both in the inner shelf deltaic sequences and the underlying pro-delta shales. Porosity-vertical effective stress plots from 31 fields reveal that overpressures are primarily generated by disequilibrium compaction in the pro-delta shales, but have been vertically transferred into the inner shelf deltaic sequences.Sediments overpressured by disequilibrium compaction exhibit different physical properties to those overpressured by vertical transfer and hence, different pore pressure prediction strategies need to be applied in the prodelta shales and inner shelf deltaic sequences. Sonic and density log data detects overpressures generated by disequilibrium compaction and pore pressures are accurately predicted using an Eaton exponent of 3.0. Sonic log data detects vertically transferred overpressures, even in the absence of a porosity anomaly, and pore pressures are reasonably predicted using an Eaton exponent of 6.5. 2005 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13144 Indonesian Petroleum Association fulltext
spellingShingle Tingay, Mark
Hillis, R.
Swarbrick, R.
Morley, C.
Origin and petrophysical log response of overpressures in the Baram Delta province, Brunei.
title Origin and petrophysical log response of overpressures in the Baram Delta province, Brunei.
title_full Origin and petrophysical log response of overpressures in the Baram Delta province, Brunei.
title_fullStr Origin and petrophysical log response of overpressures in the Baram Delta province, Brunei.
title_full_unstemmed Origin and petrophysical log response of overpressures in the Baram Delta province, Brunei.
title_short Origin and petrophysical log response of overpressures in the Baram Delta province, Brunei.
title_sort origin and petrophysical log response of overpressures in the baram delta province, brunei.
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13144