The Future Role of the Seismic
Method in Petroleum
Exploration and Production
S. Rutt Bridges
Experts from a variety of fields have predicted a revolution in computational
power within the next five years. It is now apparent that we'll soon have
desktop Cray Y-MP equivalents and parallel machines readily available as network
computer servers with Terraflop performance. In addition, we will have the
capacity to hold all the unstacked seismic
data ever recorded by a company in
readily-available tape storage that can be robotically loaded to disk and
accessed in under a minute. This will be raw, unprocessed field data with all
geometry attached. It will be possible to test new processing algorithms and
exploration concepts on older data and synthetics within a few minutes. Systems
are available today that hold over five Terrabytes (five million megabytes) for
less than a million dollars, and the capacity of such systems should increase
dramatically while their price decreases. Given that a large 3D survey may cost
millions of dollars to record, these systems will be viewed by management as
cost-effective as soon as we can obtain a real exploration benefit from having
all this data available in near real-time.
However, this discussion will focus not just on new computer technology but
instead on how it can and likely will change exploration in the 1990's. How will
seismic
processing evolve? How will this affect our jobs, and how can we prepare
to survive this revolution in exploration technology?
In many oil companies we have seen the formation of exploration teams that
include interpreters, geologists and reservoir engineers, plus support from
various technical specialists. In addition, the goal of exploration is changing
from creating maps of key horizons to building sophisticated three dimensional
models of the subsurface. Increasingly advanced analysis techniques, ranging
from neural networks to seismic
sequence
attribute
analysis, are playing greater
roles in direct hydrocarbon detection and reservoir prediction. Pre-stack
modeling has also become more sophisticated, and we have effectively increased
the amount of exploration and reservoir information we extract from
seismic
data
used in conjunction with well logs and geologic models.
Techniques for 3D acquisition have become more efficient and the cost effectiveness of 3D has been clearly demonstrated. What further advances lie ahead?
Given recent cutbacks in R&D budgets, it is easy to be pessimistic regarding
the future of the seismic
method. However, in spite of these developments, we
continue to see exciting technology emerge in our industry. This talk will
highlight some of these developments and will suggest other areas for
potentially revolutionary advances.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91020©1995 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, May 5-8, 1995