Regional trends in Kansas seismicity, formation pressure ... · Regional trends in Kansas...
Transcript of Regional trends in Kansas seismicity, formation pressure ... · Regional trends in Kansas...
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Regional trends in Kansas seismicity, formation pressure, and fluid levelsShelby Peterie, Richard Miller, David Newell,
John Intfen, Julia Gonzales, Rex Buchanan,
Kansas Geological Survey
___________________________
RISC Webinar
December 4, 2018
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Mechanism well understood
Key factors:– existing fault
• deep crystalline basement rocks
• large crustal stresses
• “critically stressed” faults
• close to failure
• small change in pressure
– pore pressure
• injection interval
• reduces frictional resistance
• 2-30 psi
Traditional Model– one well, one series of earthquakes
– begin near well
– migrate away
• pressure diffusion
• pressure perturbation 5-10 km
Induced Seismicity Mechanism
2from Ellsworth (2013)
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Mississippian limestone
– oil bearing formation
– not productive with conventional techniques
– more economical with horizontal drilling
Development
– Oklahoma: 2009
– Kansas: 2012
– large volumes formation water
– Class II saltwater disposal wells
• historic: ~1,000 bbl/day
• 10,000-30,000 bbl/day
Arbuckle Group
– basal aquifer
– 1000 ft thick, ~4000 ft deep
– hydraulically connected to basement
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Mississippian Limestone
credit: Christopher Liner
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Observations from Oklahoma
4
1980-2008
M ≥3 earthquakes = 46
2014
M ≥3 earthquakes = 584
Earthquake history
– pre-2009: 1/year
– 2009-present: hundreds/year
– strong correlation
• widespread earthquakes
• regional saltwater disposal
• Arbuckle Group
• basement faults
Doesn’t fit the traditional model
– little direct correlation
– cumulative pressure
– pressure diffusion (~20 km)
from Langenbruch and Zoback (2016)
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Kansas Earthquake History
5
Natural earthquakes
– 1977 to 2012
– mostly microearthquakes
– basement structures
– M 3 every 2 years
Possibly induced seismicity
– 2013-2014
– increase in rate, magnitude
– >100 earthquakes
• M 3 or larger = 44
• Harper and Sumner
• few historic earthquakes 1977-2012 2013-2014 (USGS)
Central KS Uplift Nemaha Ridge
Midcontinent
Rift
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Deep Fluid Disposal in Kansas
Decades long history
Class II
– regulated by KCC
– >5,000 SWD wells (gray)
– 50% Arbuckle Group
Class I
– regulated by KDHE
– industrial wastewater
– range of industries
– 50 wells (red)
– Arbuckle
– pressure falloff tests
• time history
• regional pressure
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Increased Disposal Volume
7
change in disposal volume
Harper
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Induced Seismicity
8
2013-2014 Earthquakes (USGS)
Harper
unique vantage to
observe long-range
effects
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Seismic Networks
9
seismic networks in Kansas
US Geological Survey KS Geological Survey
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Mitigation Efforts General strategies: well-based
Kansas Corporation Commission
– geologically based approach
– reduce pore pressure
– initial earthquakes
Ordered phased reduction
– regulation footprint
– 20,000 → 8,000 bbl/day
– July 2015
Generally reduced
– decline in oil prices
– regulation in Oklahoma
10
2013-2014
Earthquakes (USGS)
Class II SWD
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Migration of Earthquakes
11
local injection likely not the causeearthquake (KGS)
KCC regulation area distance (km)
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Initially dense swarms
– 2015-2016
– Harper and Sumner
Earthquake migration
– 2016-2017
– Persist in HP and SU
Migrate progressively farther
– radially away
– up 90 km
– challenges previous belief (20 km)
Migration of Earthquakes
12
90 km
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Magnitude Distribution
13
Total earthquakes: 6,944
Vast majority are microearthquakes
– M < 2 = 4,958 (70%)
– M 2-3 = 1,912
– M ≥ 3 = 74
Regional network (USGS) M~3
– no obvious trend
– isolated, unrelated
Value of local network
– microearthquake data
– improved understanding
– insight into causal factors
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Migration Patterns
14
fluid migration along permeable faults
Nemaha
Ridge
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Migration Patterns
15
fewer earthquakes with brief swarms
role of structure, existing stress
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Migration Patterns
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fewer earthquakes with brief swarms
role of structure, existing stress
Arbuckle Structural Contours
Conway Syncline
central
KS
uplift
mid-
continent
rift
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Arbuckle Fluid Pressure Correlation with SWD
– what’s the driver?
• pore pressure
• poroelastic stress
• combination
Modeling
– estimate pressure and stress
– time intensive
– difficult
Direct P* measurements
– Class I PFO
– time history
– several in study area
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Pressure Falloff Test
Required by KDHE
– annual testing
– evaluate reservoir conditions
During the test
– pressure sensor
– constant rate injection
– shut-in
– pressure monitored
Pressure transient analysis
– porosity
– permeability
– formation pressure
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constant
injectionshut-in
pressure vs. time
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Arbuckle Fluid Pressure
19
90
75
60
45
30
15
0
-15
norm
aliz
ed p
ress
ure
(psi
)
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Regional Pressure Change Map
20
interpolate sparse measurements
?
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Tool Depth Changes
21
P=1200
P=1250
2011 2012
-20.00
-10.00
0.00
10.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
50.00
60.00
70.00
80.00
2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018
no
rmal
ize
d P
(p
si)
year
apparent P
measured
corrected
𝑃𝑐𝑜𝑟𝑟𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑒𝑑 𝑧0 = P𝑚𝑒𝑎𝑠𝑢𝑟𝑒𝑑 −𝑑𝑃
𝑑𝑧(𝑧0 − 𝑧𝑎𝑐𝑡𝑢𝑎𝑙)
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Tool Depth Changes
22
Examples: apparent 100 psi increase
To obtain tool depth
– paper reports
– 1,300 scanned files
• meaningless name
• upside down
– PFO are not standardized
Correct for depth changes
– accurate time history
– true pressure
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Arbuckle Fluid Pressure
Regional map
– sparse statewide measurements
– interpolate
– limited local detail
Pressure change
– absolute pressure varies
– relative to baseline (2002)
Insight into pressure affecting basement faults
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Arbuckle Fluid Pressure
24
Earthquake consistent with ΔP
Unprecedented– Previous studies
• a few high-volume wells
• 10,000 bbl/day
– Kansas
• spatially dense group
• dozens of high-volume wells (4 km)
o 500 MM bbl in 2015
o equivalent to >100 wells
Poroelastic coupling influences pressure diffusion (Segall, 2015)– most studies assume no poroelastic
effects
– uncoupled hydrogeologic models may not be sufficient
Arbuckle pressure seismicity
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Arbuckle Fluid Pressure
25
Earthquake consistent with ΔP
Unprecedented– Previous studies
• a few high-volume wells
• 10,000 bbl/day
– Kansas
• spatially dense group
• dozens of high-volume wells (4 km)
o 500 MM bbl in 2015
o equivalent to >100 wells
Poroelastic coupling influences pressure diffusion (Segall, 2015)– most studies assume no poroelastic
effects
– uncoupled hydrogeologic models may not be sufficient
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What’s happening now?
26
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2018 Seismicity
27
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
nu
mb
er
month
Earthquakes M ≥ 2 M≥2 Jan-Jun 2018
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2017 Disposal
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Arbuckle disposal volume (2015)Arbuckle disposal volume (2017)
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018
vo
lum
e (
MM
bb
l)
year
historic
25% decrease
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2018 Pressure
Regional Arbuckle pressure
– continued to climb in 2017
– stabilizing in Harper county
– unclear elsewhere
Above triggering threshold
– faults will be sensitive
– small fluctuations
– operations previously tolerated
Maintain pressure
– injection volumes remain high
– pressure could remain elevated
29
1900
1920
1940
1960
1980
2000
2020
2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018
pre
ssu
re (
psi
)
year
Arbuckle pressure (HP2)
triggering
threshold
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Extent of Pressure Change
30
baseline
+35 psi
2017 Arbuckle Pressure
is the boundary a result of interpolation, or real?
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Earthquakes to the West
31Pratt
Anticline
M 4.0
study area
more than 400 earthquakes
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Extent of Pressure Change
32
baseline
+35 psi
little to no seismicity
monitor for increase/earthquakes
2017 Arbuckle Pressure
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Extent of Pressure Change
33
baseline
+20 psi
little to no seismicity
monitor for increase/earthquakes
2017 Arbuckle Pressure
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Arbuckle Fluid Levels
34
A A’
-250
-200
-150
-100
-50
0
2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018
stati
c f
luid
level (f
t)
year
static fluid levels at A’
within 50’ (<5 years)
lose gravity feedA
A’
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Dave Newell (KGS)– Class I and Class II
– KS and OK
– freshwater equivalent
– insensitive to density
– regional fluid flow
Subtract hydrostatic elevation from land surface
Depth relative to land surface:
Cannot injection freshwater under gravity feed alone
<300 ft separation between land surface and hydrostatic level for fresh water
<100 ft separation between land surface and hydrostatic level for fresh water
0 ft separation between land surface and hydrostatic level for fresh water (fresh water will not enter Arbuckle by gravity feed)
200 ft head above land surface necessary for freshwater to enter Arbuckle by gravity feed (~50,000 ppm TDS minimum necessary for brine to enter Arbuckle by gravity feed from surface)
70
0
75 0
700
800
900
90
0
650
750
1000
1200
1200
1150
1150
1050
1125
1250 12
25
1250
1250
1250
13001350
1100
ELEVATION of SFL in ARBUCKLE WELLS
(SFL adjusted to fresh-water density)
Arbuckle Fluid Levels
35
< 300 ft
< 100 ft
0 ft (at surface)
elevation of hydrostatic surface (freshwater)
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Summary Increased high-volume SWD
– regionally elevated pressure
– migration of seismicity
Regional pore pressure change
– farther than previously observed
• 90 km
• other studies suggest 20 km limit
• poroelastic effects
– value of local monitoring
Implications
– triggering threshold
– rising fluid levels
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Arbuckle fluid pressure
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Acknowledgements Co-authors
Brandy DeArmond
KGS field crew
– Brett Bennett
– Jeremy Scobee
– Brett Wedel
– Joe Anderson
Earthquake analysts
– Carl Gonzales
– Luke Kingsley
– Will Dufresne
– Brittany Cost
– Jamison Walrod
37