Petroleum Exploration and Development (Dec 2023)

Control of strike-slip faults on Sinian carbonate reservoirs in Anyue gasfield, Sichuan Basin, SW China

  • Xiao HE,
  • Qingsong TANG,
  • Guanghui WU,
  • Fei LI,
  • Weizhen TIAN,
  • Wenjun LUO,
  • Bingshan MA,
  • Chen SU

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 50, no. 6
pp. 1282 – 1294

Abstract

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The largest Precambrian gas field (Anyue Gasfield) in China has been discovered in the central Sichuan Basin. However, the deep ancient Ediacaran dolomite presents a substantial challenge due to their tightness and heterogeneity, rather than assumed large-area stratified reservoirs controlled by mound-shoal microfacies. This complicates the characterization of “sweet spot” reservoirs crucial for efficient gas exploitation. By analyzing compiled geological, geophysical and production data, this study investigates the impact of strike-slip fault on the development and distribution of high-quality “sweet spot” (fracture-vuggy) reservoirs in the Ediacaran dolomite of the Anyue Gasfield. The dolomite matrix reservoir exhibits low porosity (less than 4%) and low permeability (less than 0.5×10–3 μm2). Contrarily, fractures and their dissolution processes along strike-slip fault zone significantly enhance matrix permeability by more than one order of magnitude and matrix porosity by more than one time. Widespread “sweet spot” fracture-vuggy reservoirs are found along the strike-slip fault zone, formed at the end of the Ediacaran. These fractured reservoirs are controlled by the coupling mechanisms of sedimentary microfacies, fracturing and karstification. Karstification prevails at the platform margin, while both fracturing and karstification control high-quality reservoirs in the intraplatform, resulting in reservoir diversity in terms of scale, assemblage and type. The architecture of the strike-slip fault zone governed the differential distribution of fracture zones and the fault-controlled “sweet spot” reservoirs, leading to wide fractured-vuggy reservoirs across the strike-slip fault zone. In conclusion, the intracratonic weak strike-slip fault can play a crucial role in improving tight carbonate reservoir, and the strike-slip fault-related “sweet spot” reservoir emerges as a unique and promising target for the efficient development of deep hydrocarbon resources. Tailored development strategies need to be implemented for these reservoirs, considering the diverse and differential impacts exerted by strike-slip faults on the reservoirs.

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