I’m personally a fan of using all the “tools in the toolbox” when analyzing well performance.
In
whitson+, that includes,
- Decline Curve Analysis (DCA)
- Flowing Material Balance (FMB)
- Analytical Rate Transient Analysis (ARTA)
- Numerical Rate Transient Analysis (NRTA)
- Numerical Model
They should all tell
a story. And a
consistent analysis would tell a c
onsistent story.
BUT each method has its own strengths, weaknesses, and assumptions.
And those are important to understand.
In the text below, we go through these in detail.
BUT if you want the short story, here it is
- Run DCA as a first pass.
- FMB assumes BDF.
- Hence, it will always represent a conservative estimate of the contacted pore volume (Vp).
- If DCA EUR and FMB Vp estimates are similar, it can indicate infinite acting, or transitional flow.
- Don’t use analytical RTA to resolve estimates of contacted pore volume, or other reservoir parameters.
- Use it primarily for flow regime identification, and to calculate rate normalized pressures (RNPs = (pi-pwf)/q) or pressure normalized rates (PNRs = q/(pi-pwf)).
- Ensure that the contacted pore volume (Vp) in Numerical RTA (numerical model) is larger (if infinite acting/transitional) or equal (if BDF) to the contacted pore volume resolved from FMB.
Flow RegimesBefore going systematically through each “tool” in the “toolbox”, let’s repeat the flow regimes.
1. Infinite acting flow, often referred to as transient flow, is the flow regime that ends as the pressure transient reaches
one reservoir boundary.
2.
Transitional flow is the flow regime that starts as the pressure transient reaches
one reservoir boundary and ends when the pressure propagation reaches
all reservoir boundaries.
3.
Boundary dominated flow, also called pseudo-steady state, is the flow regime that starts when the wellbore pressure response is affected by
all reservoir boundaries.
Decline Curve AnalysisThis is always the first thing to do.
It comes from Fetkovich actually; “Always look at rate-time data first”.
I personally always start with the autofit and like to toggle on the “RATE vs CUM”.
Why? I guess I’m just a “RATE vs CUM” kind of guy.
For this example, the autofit yields an oil EUR of 200 MSTB.
Of course, DCA doesn’t account for changes in bottomhole pressure, but it’s an awesome first pass to bracket your answer.
Strength: fast.
Weakness: doesn’t account for changes in flowing bottomhole pressures, or “physics” (e.g., boundaries / “size of the tank” etc.).
PS! Remember that DCA can be tied to something “physical”, as long as the bottomhole pressure is constant(ish).