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7th Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition
Manama, Bahrain
March 27-29, 2006
Exploration Department, Rashid Petroleum Company, Egypt, New Maadi, 293 street, Building 18, Cairo
Egypt, phone: 202-7066110, fax: 202-5180580, [email protected]
The overpressure in the Nile Delta Tertiary sediments certainly influences the various elements and processes of the petroleum system through geologic time particularly seals/traps integrity. As a result, geopressure analysis definitely becomes part of the holistic discipline to investigate the critical element of risk for the hydrocarbon entrapment mechanics in such environment.
Trap
filling can be considered as a dynamic process to maintain constant pressure magnitude and subsequently constant
hydrocarbon column at the top reservoir. Leakage of natural gas from traps in Tertiary rocks resulted in gas chimneys which
are mostly related to faults in the Nile Delta. Sealing rocks are generally sufficient to hold significant hydrocarbon column,
except where structural collapse at crests. It has been mostly found that hydrocarbon column heights (seal capacity)
approaching few hundred meters in the area of interest. Meanwhile, the majority of unsuccessful exploration wells show
evidences of a residual or paleo-hydrocarbon column. These confirm the possibility of critically-stressed cap rock (seal
breaching) with respect to the ambient rock field overpressure and stress developments during or subsequent to the
hydrocarbon charge period.
The pressure lateral seal “centroid” is an extra potential risk for hydrocarbon entrapment and drilling hazards in
overpressured dipping reservoirs. This does not rule out tectonic fault
re-activation as an additional reason for hydrocarbon
entrapment failures in the Nile Delta and North Sinai basins.
Key Points: overpressure, Seal Integrity, Centroid, Fault
Re-activation and, hydrocarbon column height.