Enhanced Sub-Salt Imaging of 2D Seismic from the Northern Red Sea, Egypt
By
Norman C. Allegar1, Robert A Ripple1, Skip Lemanski1, Gamal Abdel Ghafour2, Nabil ElKady2, Sayed Khalil2
(1) BP Egypt, Digla, Maadi, Cairo, Egypt (2) WesternGeco, Cairo, Egypt
Exploration targets in the recently offered Northern Red Sea license blocks
were historically base salt highs in the Miocene. The low success rate for this
play was attributable to poor seismic data quality. 2D seismic data has been
reprocessed utilizing the key technologies of surface related multiple
elimination (SRME), pre-stack Kirchhoff time migration
, and pre-stack Kirchhoff
depth
migration
. Dramatic improvements in seismic imaging show that the
exploration wells missed the Miocene highs or tested eroded highs where the
pre-Miocene reservoir section was absent.
The SRME technique substantially improved the data, suppressing strong
free-surface related multiples and allowing for better velocity
estimation and
imaging. Interbed multiple elimination (IME), with the water bottom as the
multiple generator, provided minimal improvement. Radon de-multiple added minor
improvements. Remaining multiple energy was deemed to be of a diffracted or 3D
nature and could not be removed with 2D techniques.
Pre-stack time migration
provided reliable velocities and imaging to top salt
and proved a good starting point for the depth
migration
of base salt and the
sub-salt section. Tomography, salt flooding and horizon-based substitutions were
used to generate the
velocity
field. Additional improvements to the seismic
image were obtained by vertically stacking a series of migrations where the
pre-salt section was migrated with slightly different
velocity
fields. This
vertical stacking process reduced remnants of the diffracted multiples and
increased the signal-to-noise of the gently dipping underlying geology.
This reprocessing effort contributed greatly to BP’s ability to properly assess the acreage and prepare an appropriate bid application.