A Team Approach to Processing
Quality Control is Successful in Optimizing the Processing Flow for a
Challenging 3D Seismic
Data Area
By
AbdulSalam Bin Ishaq1, Abu Baker Al Jeelani2, Erik Kleiss1, Mohammed Samir Al Nahhas3, Abdel Fattah M. Bakhiet3, William Soroka2, Mahfoud Al Jenaibi2
(1) Abu Dhabi Company for Offshore Operations (ADCO), Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (2) Abu Dhabi Company for Offshore Oil Operations (ADCO), Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (3) Jason Geosystems Middle East B.V, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
A successful study was performed to optimise the seismic
processing work
flow and parameter selection of a newly acquired 3D
seismic
volume to achieve a
high-resolution
seismic
image with optimum amplitude preservation and wavelet
stability. Acoustic impedance inversion was found to be an essential step to
highlight details that were important to achieve the survey objectives.
A 3D seismic
survey was recently acquired over a major field in Abu Dhabi, to
better map the reservoir units and quantify reservoir properties. The processing
of the new
seismic
data would need to produce a high-resolution volume that
would permit detailed structural mapping and additional geophysical analysis to
derive quantitative attributes for improved reservoir characterisation. This
study was performed using a team approach on a 40 km2 test cube extracted from
the new
seismic
data.
Interpretations made on key reflectors with different processing flows showed
that the final seismic
images were very sensitive to velocity picking, multiples
and coherent noise in the data. Top reservoir structure was sensitive to the
static solution method and parameters. Well synthetic ties to the
seismic
helped
differentiate real
seismic
events from multiples and highlight where the
seismic
images was good and poor. Acoustic impedance inversion was used to evaluate thin
bed resolution and relative amplitude preservation. The resulting acoustic
impedance volumes were compared quantitatively to acoustic impedance profiles
from the wells to determine which processing flow produced the best match to the
known answer at the well.