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Journal of the Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association (APPEA)
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Pluto 4D Monitor Two – a second outstanding success

Sandra Mann A * and Scott Gagen A
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A Woodside Energy Ltd, 11 Mount Street, Perth, WA 6000, Australia.

* Correspondence to: sandra.mann@woodside.com.au

The APPEA Journal 62(1) 294-309 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ21032
Submitted: 10 December 2021  Accepted: 11 January 2022   Published: 13 May 2022

© 2022 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of APPEA.

Abstract

A second 4D seismic monitor survey acquired over the Pluto gas field has been an outstanding success despite three tropical cyclones, the start of a global pandemic, and technical subsurface risks. At the time of the Pluto 4D Monitor Two (M2) survey (December 2019 till February 2020), the Pluto field had been in production for 7 years and 9 months and had produced approximately 2 Tcf of gas. The M2 4D survey was acquired between December 2019 and February 2020 over a 20 × 30 km area, on a 12.5 m square grid. Data was processed by CGG to pre-stack depth migration, took 6 months to deliver, and required considerable collaboration with Woodside geoscientists. Use of modern processing technologies, including least squares migration, full waveform inversion and wave equation based amplitude versus offset inversion facilitated a high quality interpretation. On the 4D difference volumes, hardening responses were interpreted as water ingress. Hardening responses were seen in multiple Triassic reservoirs. A pronounced response was seen in a large Triassic valley within a predominantly mudstone background unit, which showed continued water ingress into the valley, upwards from the gas water contact towards the producing well. This confined hardening response contrasted with unconfined, water flood front responses seen in other reservoirs. Both responses enabled detailed interpretation of geological features and provided useful control points for history matching. Interpreted water ingress also gave additional depth control.

Keywords: 4D reservoir monitoring, baseline, fluvial and marginal marine, monitor, Pluto gas field, pressure, reservoir management, reservoir modelling, saturation, seismic interpretation, water ingress.

Sandra Mann was the development geologist for the Pluto Studies Team working on the high-resolution Pluto 3D and Pluto 4D M2 surveys, and associated reservoir modelling. Within Woodside she is a subject matter advisor in fluvial and marginal marine sedimentology and has worked across a range of Australian and international assets. Sandra completed her PhD in Engineering (Earth Science) in 2016 at the University of Adelaide. She also holds BEng and BSc (Hons) degrees. Prior to joining Woodside, Sandra worked for the University of Adelaide and in consulting. Sandra’s interests include 3D and 4D seismic interpretation, reservoir characterisation and integrated reservoir modelling.

Scott Gagen was the principal development geophysicist for the Pluto Studies Team responsible for the interpretation of the high-resolution Pluto 3D and Pluto 4D M2 seismic surveys. He graduated from the University of Sydney in 1987 with a BSc (Hons) in Exploration Geophysics. His career spans over three decades including 10 years with Ampolex Ltd, 5 years as Lead Geophysicist with Shell International based in Nigeria and more than 20 years at Woodside, working as a seismic interpreter in exploration and development on the North West Shelf of Australia. Scott’s main interests are 3D and 4D seismic interpretation and visualisation, image processing and seismic inversion studies for reservoir characterisation. He is a member of SEG and EAGE.


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