
Reservoir Management Techniques Applied in East Randolph Field, Portage County, Ohio: Final Results
SAFLEY, L. EUGENE, BDM Petroleum Technologies, Bartlesville, OK
Since 1992, the East Randolph Field has produced over 450,000 stock
tank barrels of oil and 1.2 billion cubic feet of gas from the Cambrian
Rose Run formation. Declining reservoir pressure and field development
alternatives dictated the need for a comprehensive reservoir management
strategy to improve operational economics and optimize oil recovery.
Log, core, and petrographic analyses indicate that the reservoir quality
of the Rose Run is dependent on sandstone diagenesis and dolomite cementation.
Fracturing plays only a minor role in fluid movement. Based on log and
fluid analyses, Rose Run zone 2 has a high gas saturation, and a primary
gas cap may have been present prior to field development. Special core
analyses suggest that production performance, which is affected by paraffin
precipitation in the pore spaces, may be enhanced by chemical or microbial
treatments. Log analyses and reservoir mapping illustrate the improved
interpretation of reservoir heterogeneities and sandstone body distribution.
Volumetric and material balance calculations more than double original
oil-in-place reserve estimates for the field from 4.4 to 11 million barrels.
Results of full-field pressure history match indicate that the reservoir
is in pressure communication between wells and not compartmentalized by
faulting. Based on relative permeability measurement and reservoir simulation,
waterflooding should not be considered a technically or an economically
viable improved recovery process. Instead, gas re-injection will result
in stabilization of reservoir pressure and incremental oil recovery of
8% of original oil-in-place.