Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 10

Brazils Presalt Play

Brazils quest for energy self-sufciency has driven exploration efforts throughout
the vast nation, from its interior basins to its deep offshore waters. Expertise and
techniques developed to exploit deepwater elds of the Campos basin have been
adapted to wells in the Santos basin, some of which are targeting carbonate reservoirs
sealed beneath a thick evaporite layer. Exploration models from the Santos basin
presalt play, in turn, have led to signicant discoveries in neighboring basins.

Craig J. Beasley Years,


Period Epoch Age
Joseph Carl Fiduk Ma
Houston, Texas, USA Piacenzian 2.6
Pliocene
Zanclean
5.3
Emmanuel Bize Messinian
L
Austin Boyd
Neogene

Tortonian
Marcelo Frydman
Miocene

Serravallian
Andrea Zerilli M
Langhian
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Burdigalian
E
Aquitanian r
John R. Dribus 23 Rive
Amazon
Oligocene

New Orleans, Louisiana, USA L Chattian


Tertiary

E Rupelian
Jobel L.P. Moreira
33.9
Antonio C. Capeleiro Pinto L Priabonian
Petrobras
Bartonian
Eocene

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil


Paleogene

M
Lutetian
Oileld Review Autumn 2010: 22, no. 3.
Copyright 2010 Schlumberger.
For help in preparation of this article, thanks to Celso C.M. E Ypresian
Branco and Breno Wolff, Petrobras, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; 55.8
Carolina Castro, Houston; and Joao Felix, Antonio P. L Thanetian
Paleocene

Ferreira, Patricia Marolla, Attilio Pisoni and Ana Zambelli,


M Selandian
Rio de Janeiro.
1. The potential recoverable volume of 5 to 8 billion barrels E Danian
of oil equivalent pertains to an area covered by the 65.5
PA-RJS-628 evaluation plan, which encompasses both Maastrichtian
the Tupi and Iracema areas. Campanian
Beltro RLC, Sombra CL, Lage ACVM, Fagundes Netto JR
and Heriques CCD: Challenges and New Technologies Santonian
Late
for the Development of the Pre-Salt Cluster, Santos Basin,
Coniacian
Brazil, paper OTC 19880, presented at the Offshore
Technology Conference, Houston, May 47, 2009. Turonian
Cretaceous

2. Petrobras, BG Group and Partex were partners in the


Cenomanian
Parati well, with Petrobras serving as operator. 99.6
3. Parshall J: Presalt Propels Brazil into Oils Front Ranks, Albian
Journal of Petroleum Technology 62, no. 4 (April 2010):
4044, http://www.spe.org/jpt/print/archives/2010/04/ Aptian
13Brazil.pdf (accessed August 6, 2010). Montevideo
Early Barremian
4. Parshall, reference 3.
5. BG, Petrobras Announce Discovery of Oil Field in Santos Hauterivian
Basin Offshore Brazil, Drilling Contractor 62, no. 6 Valanginian
(NovemberDecember 2006): 8.
Berriasian 145.5

28 Oileld Review
The discovery of a giant oil accumulation in untested geologic model that led to the Tupi dis- South America and Africa during the Cretaceous
ultradeep waters off Brazils southeast coast is covery in 2006. breakup of Gondwana. The depositional pro-
opening a new frontier for exploration and pro- The Tupi eld lies in 2,126 m [6,975 ft] of cesses created source, reservoir and seal layers
duction. The presalt play, founded on the Tupi water in Santos basin Block BM-S-11, some necessary to successfully create a viable petro-
discovery in the Santos basin, is pushing techno- 250 km [155 mi] southeast of Rio de Janeiro. leum system.
logical boundaries as E&P teams seek to dene There, the 1-RJS-628A well hit pay as it was In part, the technological viability of the pre-
its geographic limits. Containing potential recov- drilled to a total depth of 4,895 m [16,060 ft] TVD salt play is the result of operator experience
erable volumes of 795 million to 1.3 billion m3 subsea.4 The well owed 779 m3/d [4,900 bbl/d] gained through overcoming the challenges of
[5 to 8 billion bbl] of oil equivalent, the Tupi of oil and 187,000 m3/d [6.6 MMcf/d] of gas on a constructing wells in deep and ultradeep waters
structure is just one of several found beneath a /8-in. choke.5 An extension well drilled the follow-
5
off the coast of Brazil. Equally important are
thick layer of salt.1 ing year conrmed earlier estimates announced improvements to seismic imaging, which allow
The Tupi well was not the rst encounter by Petrobras and partners BG Group and Galp geophysicists to identify potential structures
with Santos basin presalt hydrocarbons. In 2005, Energia, thus drawing worldwide attention to masked beneath layered evaporites that may be
the Brazilian national oil company Petrleo Brazils presalt play. as thick as 2,000 m [6,560 ft].
Brasileiro SA, or Petrobras, drilled a wildcat well From a geologic perspective, this play is a This article discusses the geology and history
at the Parati prospect about 70 km [43 mi] from product of interminably slow tectonic and depo- of Brazils presalt play and describes challenges
Tupi.2 The Parati wildcat, in Santos basin Block sitional processes involving continental rifting, associated with exploration and production of
BM-S-10, encountered condensate gas below the seaoor spreading and sedimentation. These pro- presalt carbonate reservoirs.
salt.3 The Parati well conrmed a previously cesses were associated with the split between

10N

gh
Doldrums Fracture Zone

rou
Monrovia Lagos

eT
nu
Be
4 N Fracture Zone
Bioko
re Zone iver
Sao Paulo Fracture Zon
e
Fractu oR
he

g
nc
Roma

Con
Sao Tome 0

Chain Fracture Zone Pagalu


Pointe-
Noire
Fernando de Noronha Ridge

Luanda

Sergipe Lineament 10S


Topaz Seamount

Salvador Lineament
Midoceanic Ridge

St. Helena
Etendeka
Plateau
Vitoria-Tr indade Seamounts
20S
Rio de Janeiro

Rio de Janeiro Lineament


Sao Paulo
e

Florianopolis Lineament
dg
Ri

io
R

is

Gr
alv

an
de
W

Rise 30S

Cape Town

Map adapted from Grothe PR: ETOPO1 Ice Surface Global Relief Model.
Tristan da Cunha Boulder, Colorado, USA: Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental
Science, 2009. This US government publication is in the public domain:
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/global/relief/ETOPO1/posters/ETOPO1
atlanticcentered36x56.pdf (accessed October 28, 2010).

Autumn 2010 29
original stratigraphic level. This autochthonous
salt lies above older rocks and is, in turn, overlain
by younger strata. By contrast, subsalt wells are
drilled into formations lying beneath mobile cano-
pies of allochthonous saltmasses of salt, fed by
the original autochthonous layer, that rise through
overlying layers, then spread laterally (left). To be
Seabed
sure, salt diapirism is an active force in the basins
of offshore Brazil, and suprasalt wells are still tap-
Postsalt
ping into structural traps resulting from salt
movement; however, this article will concentrate
Allochthonous salt on more-recent presalt targets.
Although Brazils presalt exploration efforts
focus heavily on the Santos, Campos and Esprito
Subsalt
Santo basins, layers of salt have also been
found elsewhere along Brazils coastin the
Cumuruxatiba, Jequitinhonha, Camamu-Almada
and Sergipe-Alagoas basins.7 The thickness of the
evaporite deposits is highly variable from one
Autochthonous salt basin to the next. At its widest point, the salt
basin extends to about 400 km [250 mi] in the
Presalt Santos basin but tapers to the north, reaching a
width of less than 100 km [62 mi] in the Sergipe-
Alagoas basin.8
> Presalt versus subsalt. Mobile canopies of allochthonous salt detach from thick layers of autochthonous
salt. Both types of salt are capable of forming traps and seals for migrating hydrocarbons. Presalt wells
Tectonic Foundations
target reservoirs beneath the layer of autochthonous salt. Subsalt wells target reservoirs beneath the
mobile allochthonous salt canopy. Postsalt wells target formations above the salt. The geology of the presalt play is linked to tec-
tonic movements that led to the breakup of the
Gondwanan supercontinent. The split, driven by
Postsalt to Presalt those targets in the strata above the salt are heat from the Earths core, resulted from ther-
From an E&P standpoint, Brazils presalt play is a designated as postsalt, or suprasalt, prospects. mal uplift and rifting that ultimately culminated
fairly new phenomenon. As recently as 2005, most Brazils presalt trend differs signicantly from in seaoor spreading, which continues to this
offshore operators explored delta channel and the subsalt trend found in the Gulf of Mexico.6 day. These processes set up a geologic frame-
deepwater turbidite prospects lying above the Presalt wells are drilled into formations that were work that dates back some 150 million years, in
deep salt of the basins along Brazils southeastern deposited prior to the emplacement of a layer which rapid events may have taken 2 to 3 mil-
coast. With the discovery of presalt reservoirs, of autochthonous saltsalt that remains at its lion years and local occurrences may have
spread over 1,000 km [620 mi] or greater, thus
demanding a big-picture perspective.
Continental masses ride on lithospheric
plates above a partially molten mantle. The mol-
Thermal uplift Hot spot volcano
due to hot spot ten mantle slowly ows along convection cells
that transfer heat from the Earths center to its
surface. As they move, some plates drift over
upwelling magma within the asthenosphere. This
Convection current

Lithosphere Melting of lithosphere magma rises from the deep in a mantle plume
that creates localized hot spots as it conducts
heat upward (left).9 Today, volcanoes, seamounts
Asthenosphere and basalt ows can be used to track the ancient
path of plate migration over a hot spot.
When a mantle plume rises beneath a conti-
Mantle plume nental plate, it also can cause the overlying crust
> Mantle plume. Upwelling mantle material rises from the asthenosphere to swell. Thermal uplift, or doming of the conti-
on convective currents. Depending on the thickness and strength of the nental crust and upper mantle, is followed by
overlying lithosphere, the plume may punch through the crust as a volcano, faulting as the crust stretches, thins and weakens.
or it may reside below the lithosphere, melting the base of the overlying
layer and causing it to stretch and swell upward as a hot spot. As a Rifts develop at the crest of the uplift and radiate
lithospheric plate drifts above a stationary plume, it may leave a trail of outward, at about 120 increments. These rifts
volcanoes and seamounts that map the direction of drift.

30 Oileld Review
Ab Volcanic
ort activity
ed
rift
120$
alley
Rift v

120$
h
120$ ug
Tro
ue
y
Rift valle

n
Be

Parana
flood
> Triple junction in map view. Uplifts over mantle basalts St. Helena
hot spot
plumes develop crestal rifts that intersect at
approximately 120 angles. Two active arms
create an expanding rift that pulls away from the Po
nta
main body of a plate, leaving an inactive aborted Gr
os
rift, or failed arm, that is typically marked by sa
Ar
volcanic activity. ch

Etendeka
Plateau
meet to form a triple junction; typically, two active
rifts create a single accreting boundary where the Tristan da Cunha
hot spot
plates begin to separate, while the third rift
becomes inactive as a failed arm or aborted rift
(above). The failed arm often becomes a locus of
volcanism or other magmatic activity.10 Some
failed arms become the sites of ood basalts,
which are associated with the impingement of a
mantle plume against the base of a lithospheric 0 km 1,000
plate. As the plates continue to diverge, magma 0 mi 1,000
rises up to ll the expanding rifts.11 Basalts
Thermal decay takes over once the plate
drifts away from the hot spot, and the stretched > Hot spots in the southern Atlantic Ocean. Large-scale mantle plumes,
presently located near the islands of Tristan da Cunha and St. Helena,
crust begins to sag as cooling causes it to con-
played roles in weakening the crust during the initial stages of rifting
tract and become denser.12 The resulting basins between South America and Africa. The Tristan plume was responsible for
gradually ll with potential source beds, reser- the ood basalts of the Paran basin. The St. Helena plume developed later
voir rock and evaporites. These sag basins would and is associated with the aborted rift of the Benue Trough in Nigeria.
(Adapted from Wilson, reference 14.)
become the focus of presalt exploration on both
sides of the South Atlantic.

Presalt Geology
Brazils presalt discoveries and a substantial por- 6. For more on the Gulf of Mexico subsalt trend: Dribus 11. For more on how plate movement affects the modern
tion of its postsalt elds are charged by hydrocar- JR, Jackson MPA, Kapoor J and Smith MF: The Prize world: Bunting T, Chapman C, Christie P, Singh SC and
Beneath the Salt, Oileld Review 20, no. 3 (Autumn Sledzik J: The Science of Tsunamis, Oileld Review 19,
bons generated from lacustrine source rocks. 2008): 417. no. 3 (Autumn 2007): 419.
These organic-rich lake deposits formed through 7. Karner GD and Gamba LAP: Timing and Origin of the Coates R, Haldorsen JBU, Miller D, Malin P, Shalev E,
a series of events associated with the breakup of South Atlantic Pre-Salt Sag Basins and Their Capping Taylor ST, Stolte C and Verliac M: Oileld Technologies
Evaporites, in Schreiber BC, Lugli S and Babel
M (eds): for Earthquake Science, Oileld Review 18, no. 2
western Gondwana. The breakup took place dur- Evaporites Through Space and Time. London: Geological (Summer 2006): 2433.
ing the Early Cretaceous; moving clockwise at 2 to Society, Special Publication 285 (2007): 1535. 12. Quinlan GM: Models of Subsidence Mechanisms in
8. Szatmari P: Habitat of Petroleum Along the South Intracratonic Basins, and Their Applicability to North
5 cm/yr [0.8 to 2 in./yr], it took nearly 40 million Atlantic Margins, in Mello MR and Katz BJ (eds): American Examples, in Beaumont C and Tankard AJ
yearsfrom Early Valanginian to Late Albian Petroleum Systems of South Atlantic Margins. Tulsa: The (eds): Sedimentary Basins and Basin-Forming
American Association of Petroleum Geologists, AAPG Mechanisms. Calgary: Canadian Society of Petroleum
agefor South America to separate from Africa.13 Memoir 73 (2000): 6975. Geologists, Memoir 12 (1987): 463481.
The breakup began with rifting in the south- 9. The brittle lithosphere, which consists of the crust and 13. Szatmari, reference 8.
ernmost part of what is now South America. Two upper mantle together, is thought to ride over a deeper, 14. Wilson M: Magmatism and Continental Rifting During the
highly ductile asthenosphere, consisting of the lower Opening of the South Atlantic Ocean: A Consequence of
major mantle plumesthe St. Helena plume to mantle. The lower mantle, in turn, surrounds the Lower Cretaceous Super-Plume Activity? in Storey BC,
the north and the Tristan da Cunha plume to the Earths core. Alabaster T and Pankhurst RJ (eds): Magmatism and the
10. Burke K and Dewey JF: Plume-Generated Triple Causes of Continental Break-Up. London: Geological
southcontributed to weakening of the conti- Junctions: Key Indicators in Applying Plate Tectonics to Society, Special Publication 68 (1992): 241255.
nental lithosphere (above right).14 Thermal uplift Old Rocks, Journal of Geology 81, no. 4 (1973): 406433.

Autumn 2010 31
and thinning of the continental crust resulted in
tensional fractures that later became conduits
Rio de Janeiro for magma, forming igneous dikes.15 Hundreds of
Ponta Grossa Arch
these dikes cut through what is now the south-
Sao Paulo
eastern coastline of Brazil, and their orientations
arm are used to map an important triple junction
thern
Nor (left). The coastal dike swarms mark the north-
B R A Z I L
ern and southern arms of a plume-generated tri-
ple junction system centered on Brazils Paran
Florianopolis State coast. These active arms helped to shape
the present-day coastline, while the third arm,
ANGOLA
known as the Ponta Grossa Arch, failed and

Southern arm
became the locus of basaltic activity.16
The extrusion of massive ood basalts into the
NAMIBIA onshore Paran basin ensued, spreading from
Etendeka
southern Brazil to Paraguay, Uruguay and northern
Plateau Argentina, and covering an area of 1,200,000 km2
0 km 500 [463,320 mi2] (next page). Stacking of different
Montevideo
0 mi 500 magma types suggests that the main locus of mag-
Basalts matism moved north over time, leading some
researchers to conclude that the generation of the
> Paran triple junction. Correlations between dike swarms in Brazil and Paran ood basalts is linked to the northward
those in Angola and Namibia are used to map the Paran triple junction. propagation of rifting in the South Atlantic.17
Basalts similar in composition to the ood basalts of the Ponta Grossa Arch
are found along the Namibian coast near Etendeka. (Adapted from As continental crust ruptured along the rifts,
Coutinho, reference 16.) adjacent rifts linked together, forming a ridge-
transform boundary that heralded the separation
of South America from Africa. This eventually
created an opening for the nascent South Atlantic

150 to 120 Million Years Ago 120 to 110 Million Years Ago 110 Million Years Ago
gh
rou
eT

Western African Shield


nu
Be
er
Riv
go

Midoceanic Ridge
r
ive

Con
nR
azo
Am

Parana
basin Walvis
Ridge Rio Grande
Rise
e
idg
lv is R
Wa

> From rift to drift. Salt basin development occurred gradually, as rifting entering and evaporating from the basins, creating thick evaporite deposits.
between South America and West Africa gradually evolved into a full-edged The area later became completely submerged as continental breakup of
drift. About 150 million years ago, extensional faulting and subsidence were Gondwana led to a separation, or drift, of South America from Africa.
active in the Gondwanan supercontinent. Further stretching and extension Whereas the basins had previously been linked on one continental plate,
during the Early Cretaceous led to the formation of large-scale rifts along the they became separated by a growing expanse of ocean, as injection of new
future western African and eastern Brazilian margins (left). By Aptian times, oceanic crust at the midoceanic ridge caused the Atlantic to open (right).
continued subsidence and a rise in global sea level permitted incursion by Marine sedimentation dominated, with thick deposits of limestone,
the sea (middle). At rst, this was intermittent, with the sea alternately sandstone and shale. (Adapted from Platt et al, reference 24.)

32 Oileld Review
> Cliff face at Fortaleza Canyon, Brazil. The massive volumes of magma that owed from the Paran traps are evidenced by the spread of thick layers of
basalt, dacite and rhyolite, which form distinctive escarpments. The thickness of these ows is reected in this 700-m [2,300-ft] exposure at Serra Geral
National Park, Rio Grande do Sul State. (Photograph courtesy of Marcelo Frydman.)

Ocean, as the protocontinents parted diachron- became the sites of lakes as they lled with fresh 15. Herz N: Timing of Spreading in the South Atlantic:
ously, starting at the south and moving north- water. They also lled with volcanic sediments Information from Brazilian Alkalic Rocks, Geological
Society of America Bulletin 88 (January 1977): 101112.
ward.18 This zipper-like opening of the ocean and continental sedimentsprime ingredients
16. Coutinho JMV: Dyke Swarms of the Paran Triple
would come to be reected in thicker occur- for hydrocarbon-generating source rocks. Junction, Southern Brazil (Enxame de Diques da Juno
rences of salt in the southerly basins. As these lacustrine basins widened and sub- Trplice do Paran, Brasil Meridional), Geologia USP,
Srie Cientca 8, no. 2 (October 2008): 2952.
While thermal energy drove the uplift, rift and sided, ocean waters gradually encroached, and 17. Hawkesworth CJ, Gallagher K, Kelley S, Mantovani M,
drift processes, it also set the stage for creation of some lakes turned brackish because of increas- Peate DW, Regelous M and Rogers NW: Paran
Magmatism and the Opening of the South Atlantic,
the presalt basins. Thermal contraction resulted ing salinity. Conditions within these lakes led to in Storey BC, Alabaster T and Pankhurst RJ (eds):
in collapse and subsidence of crustal domes, high levels of organic productivity and became Magmatism and the Causes of Continental Break-Up.
London: Geological Society, Special Publication 68
which produced gentle sags in the crust. The ll favorable for the preservation of organic mate- (1992): 221240.
of carbonates and clastics in these sag basins rial.19 Lacustrine sediments of this age form the 18. Mohriak WU and Rosendahl BR: Transform Zones in the
drives the current oil boom. principal source rock in much of Brazil. South Atlantic Rifted Continental Margins, in Storti F,
Holdsworth RE and Salvini F (eds): Intraplate Strike-Slip
Three rifting episodes occurred between the Conditions in the rift-lake system were equally Deformation Belts. London: Geological Society, Special
Berriasian to Early Aptian ages of the Early favorable for the deposition of reservoir rocks. Publication 210 (2003): 211228.
19. Katz BJ and Mello MR: Petroleum Systems of South
Cretaceous (previous page, bottom). Each epi- Continental separation continued over time, as did Atlantic Marginal BasinsAn Overview, in Mello MR
sode resulted in a series of basins formed parallel episodes of seawater encroachment. The seawater and Katz BJ (eds): Petroleum Systems of South Atlantic
Margins. Tulsa: The American Association of Petroleum
to the plate margins near the present-day coast- intermittently lled the lakes, inundating low- Geologists, AAPG Memoir 73 (2000): 113.
line. Initially formed above sea level, these basins lying regions of the slowly expanding rift valley.

Autumn 2010 33
As with many countries, oil seeps spurred early
exploration. One of Brazils rst wells, drilled in
B R A Z I L Abro the 1890s near an oil seep in Bofete, So Paulo,
lhos
High
reached a total depth of 488 m [1,601 ft].27 It
yielded only two barrels of oila portent of explo-
ration outcomes for the next four decades. By the
Vitoria
Minas Gerais late 1930s, more than 80 wells had been drilled by
State Vito
ria H government agencies and private exploration com-
igh
Jubarte panieswith consistently disappointing results.
iro
ane However, in 1937, the National Department of
Sao Paulo State d e J te Roncador
o
Ri St a
Albacora Mineral Production (DNPM) began exploration
Marlim in the Recncavo basinpart of a failed rift in
Rio de Janeiro
Sao Paulo Barracuda northeastern Bahia State. In 1939, an oil discov-

Cab
ery in the DNPM 163 well at Lobato eld launched

o
Campos basin

Frio
the national petroleum industry in Brazil. Though

H
igh
noncommercial, this well prompted further
exploration of the basin, and by 1941 the rst
commercial discovery was drilled near Candeias.
Santos basin More than 80 oil and gas elds have been found
within the Recncavo basin.
0 km 200 Exploration along the rift trend led Petrobras
Florianopolis High
0 mi 200 to the Sergipe basin. Here, the company discov-
ered the nations rst giant oil eld at Carmpolis
> The setting for a new play. Since the 1970s, the Campos basin has produced most of Brazils oil and in 1963, spurring close examination of other
gas. The advent of the presalt play is generating much interest in the Santos basin, though the Campos onshore coastal basins. Since then, numerous
and Esprito Santo basins also host presalt prospects. plays have been uncovered throughout the
onshore basins of Brazil. Expanded exploration
These conditions created a low-energy, high-salin- deposits in basins along the South American and activities within each basin, along with improved
ity environment favorable to the growth of cyano- African margins.23 The evaporite deposits covered seismic technology, are helping geoscientists
bacterial colonies. sediments of the preceding rift sequence, form- unlock more of the geologic history of the
The colonies of unicellular algae and other ing an effective seal for the hydrocarbons that regionboth onshore and offshore.
microbes produce exopolymers that are secreted would ultimately migrate into the microbialite The 1960s also saw a concerted effort to
as a biolm.20 The biolm traps and cements sedi- reservoir rock. The Aptian salt deposits mark the explore the shallow waters of the Brazilian
mentary grains into accretionary layers to form transitional evaporitic phase of continental mar- Continental Shelf. Following a program of gravi-
microbialite mats. Microbes in the upper part of gin evolution, which preceded the drift phase in metric and seismic acquisition in 1967, Petrobras
the mat require sunlight for photosynthesis and these basins. began drilling deltaic sequences offshore Esprito
spur upward growth into a laminar domal form By the Middle to Late Cretaceous, rifting was Santo State.28 The companys rst well in the
known as a stromatolite. The distribution of complete, and the continents of Africa and South Esprito Santo basin proved to be a dry hole.
these carbonate-producing microbes is affected America drifted farther apart as new oceanic Petrobras then moved north, to the Sergipe-
by environmental factors such as sunlight, water crust was injected at the midoceanic ridge.24 Alagoas basin and, in 1968, drilled the rst off-
temperature and turbidity, as well as predation Open-marine carbonate platforms developed shore discovery off the So Francisco river delta
by grazing organisms.21 These microbial growths along the Brazilian margin and grew along the at Guaricema eld. Drilled in 30 m [98 ft] of
lithify over time, later becoming reservoir rocks opposite margin between Gabon and Angola dur- water off the coast of Sergipe State, this well con-
of the presalt play. ing the Albian age.25 With continued subsidence, rmed the existence of oil beneath the Shelf.
The marginal basins subsided as the conti- these platforms were drowned and were By 1971, Petrobras had begun exploring the
nental plates continued to pull apart. Plume- eventually covered by clastics during the Late Campos basin, off Brazils southeastern coast
generated volcanic activity along crustal Cretaceous and Tertiary periods. (above left). Following a series of dry holes, the
fractures of the Florianpolis Lineament on the company made the rst discovery within this
South American tectonic plate, and the Walvis Passo A Passo basin in 1974. Drilling in 120 m [394 ft] of water,
Ridge on the African plate, created barriers that Step by step, Brazils exploration horizons have Petrobrass ninth offshore wildcat found pay in
restricted free marine circulation in the expand- expanded in pursuit of new prospectsfrom Albian carbonates at Garoupa eld. This nd
ing South Atlantic Ocean.22 onshore to offshore, and then from shallow to deep opened the way for intensive exploration of the
During the Early Cretaceous, marine waters and ultradeep waters.26 The development of each Campos basin. Although initial exploration objec-
sporadically spilled past these barriers and play has prompted new ways of thinking about tives were Albian carbonates limited mainly to
became trapped in the subsiding basins. Under the local and regional geology, as well as new the outer Shelf, larger discoveries were made in
arid climatic conditions of the Aptian age, these responses to drilling and production challenges. Tertiary sandstone reservoirs in water depths
trapped waters evaporated and left thick salt exceeding 500 m [1,640 ft].29

34 Oileld Review
NW SE
0 Continental Shelf
Cont Late Oligocene-Neogene
inen
tal s
lope Paleocene-Eocene
2

Two-way traveltime, s
Late Campanian-
Postsalt formations Maastrichtian
4
Evaporites Cenomanian-Middle
Evaporites Presalt formations Campanian
6 Presalt formations Sao Paulo Plateau Albian

8 Aptian
Basement Half-grabens 0 km 25
0 mi 25 Neocomian-Barremian
10
> Santos basin geology. Presalt source rocks and overlying carbonate reservoirs are being targeted beneath the thick layer of
evaporites. (Adapted from Modica and Brush, reference 35.)

The following year, a major discovery was to the south. By early 2007, only about 115 wells Atlanta eld.34 Turbidites at Urugu eld produced
drilled in 166 m [545 ft] of water. The 39.7 mil- had been drilled in the Santos basin. intermediate API-gravity oil.
lion-m3 [250 million-bbl] Namorado eld was the From these wells, a handful of elds had been At about this time, Petrobras acquired and
rst of several major clastic turbidite reservoirs established, including a number of signicant processed a large 3D seismic dataset to help geo-
to be drilled in the Campos basin. By expanding discoveries. Petrobras drilled the rst Santos scientists better understand the deep structures
operating experience in the area, Petrobras was basin wildcat in 1970, but it proved to be a dry and stratigraphy of the Santos basin (above).35
able to rene sedimentological and stratigraphic hole. In 1984, Shell Oil afliate Pecten Brazil Once seismic facies were dened, Petrobras was
models of the continental margin, and by the became the rst to discover a gas eld while drill- able to target the presalt section of the Santos
mid-1980s the company was targeting prodelta ing in shallow waters of the basin. Following basins So Paulo Plateau.36
deep-marine siliciclastic turbidite reservoirs.30 two dry holes, Pecten found turbidite pay at In 2006, the giant presalt oil accumulation at
Four giant to supergiant turbidite elds were -ERLUZAlELD DRILLEDINM;FT=OFWATER Tupi was discovered by Petrobras and partners
found in progressively deeper waters:31 In 1988, Petrobras drilled a discovery well at BG Group and Galp Energia, in a reservoir that
s!LBACORAlELD DRILLEDINM;FT= Tubaro eld in 143 m [470 ft] of water. A third averages 5,485 m [18,000 ft] below the ocean
of water lELD %STRELA DO -AR WAS DRILLED IN 32 This surface. The 28 API-gravity oil encountered in
s-ARLIMlELD DRILLEDINM; FT= was followed by the Coral and Caravela elds, the presalt zones is lighter and sweeter than the
of water which produce from Albian oolitic limestones heavy crude that dominates most of Brazils post-
s"ARRACUDAlELD DRILLEDINM; FT= deposited above a layer of salt.33 salt production.
of water In 2000, Petrobras shifted its Santos basin In August 2007, Petrobras announced the
s 2ONCADOR lELD DRILLED IN   M focus to deep and ultradeep waters. This resulted extent of the latest exploration frontier dened by
[6,079 ft] of water. INTHEDISCOVERYOF-EXILHOlELD WHICHRANKSAS the presalt play. Based on evaluations of 15 presalt
By 2007, more than 1,100 wells had been Brazils largest natural gas eld. Other gas elds at wells, this frontier covers an area 800 km [497 mi]
drilled in the Campos basin, resulting in the dis- Tamba and Pirapitanga and oil elds at Carapi long and 200 km [124 mi] wide spanning the
covery of more than 50 elds. This is in stark con- and Tambuat were discovered in Late Cretaceous Esprito Santo, Campos and Santos basins.37
trast to exploration efforts in the adjacent basin turbidites. Eocene turbidites also yielded heavy-oil Following Tupi, numerous presalt discoveries were
strikes at Tambuat eld and at Shell-operated
20. Microbes and bacteria thrive in a wide range of freshwater tributaries. Salt is deposited as the waters 30. Carminatti M, Dias JL and Wolff B: From Turbidites to
environments, and are responsible not only for creating become supersaturated. Carbonates: Breaking Paradigms in Deep Waters,
reservoir rock, but also for creating production problems. 24. For an African perspective on the split: Platt N, paper OTC 20124, presented at the Offshore Technology
For more: Bass C and Lappin-Scott H: The Bad Guys and Philip P and Walter S: Going for the Play: Structural Conference, Houston, May 47, 2009.
the Good Guys in Petroleum Microbiology, Oileld Interpretation in Offshore Congo, Oileld Review 5, 31. A giant oil eld is one whose reserves exceed one billion
Review 9, no. 1 (Spring 1997): 1725. no. 1 (January 1993): 1427. barrels; a supergiant exceeds ve billion barrels.
21. Modern stromatolites can be found in hypersaline lakes, 25. Liro LM and Dawson WC: Reservoir Systems of 32. Petrobras Role in Brazils Economy Disputed, Oil &
marine lagoons and even freshwater lakes, provided Selected Basins of the South Atlantic, in Mello MR and Gas Journal 89, no. 2 (January 14, 1991), http://www.ogj.
that conditions do not favor grazing or burrowing Katz BJ (eds): Petroleum Systems of South Atlantic com/index/article-tools-template/_saveArticle/articles/
organisms that adversely impact stromatolite Margins. Tulsa: The American Association of Petroleum oil-gas-journal/volume-89/issue-2/in-this-issue/
preservation. Modern examples include Shark Bay, Geologists, AAPG Memoir 73 (2000): 7792. general-interest/petrobras-role-in-brazil39s-economy-
Western Australia, and Lagoa Salgada, Rio de Janeiro. disputed.html (accessed July 16, 2010).
26. The concept of deep water has evolved over the years.
Freshwater stromatolites are found at Lake Salda,
Deep water was originally dened as 200 m [656 ft]. This 33. Carminatti et al, reference 30.
Turkey, and Pavilion Lake, British Columbia, Canada.
mark was later eclipsed by industry drilling trends, and 34. Carminatti et al, reference 30.
22. Asmus HE and Baisch PR: Geological Evolution of the now the deepwater standard is set at 1,000 ft [305 m].
Brazilian Continental Margin, Episodes no. 4 (1983): 39, 35. For more on Santos basin stratigraphy: Modica CJ
Water depths greater than 5,000 ft [1,524 m] are deemed
http://www.episodes.org/backissues/64/ARTICLES--3. and Brush ER: Postrift Sequence Stratigraphy,
to be ultradeep.
pdf (accessed September 27, 2010). Paleogeography, and Fill History of the Deep-Water
27. de Luca JC: Brazilian Petroleum Exploration and Santos Basin, Offshore Southeast Brazil, AAPG
23. Evaporation and restricted circulation are the keys to Production: From Monopoly to Free Market, paper Bulletin 88, no. 7 (July 2004): 923945.
salt deposition. This is evidenced by highly saline bodies OTC 15051, presented at the Offshore Technology
of water such as the Dead Sea and Great Salt Lake, 36. Carminatti et al, reference 30.
Conference, Houston, May 58, 2003.
which have no outlets. With no inux of seawater, their 37. Petrobras News Agency: Petrobras Discovers Brazils
28. de Luca, reference 27.
salinity is a product of evaporation, which serves to Biggest Oil-Bearing Area, (August 11, 2007), http://
concentrate the salts that are brought in through 29. Katz and Mello, reference 19. www.agenciapetrobrasdenoticias.com.br/en_materia.
asp?id_editoria=8&id_noticia=4042 (accessed
September 27, 2010).

Autumn 2010 35
Potential Drilling Problems
B R A Z I L
Postsalt
Rio de Janeiro
Sao Paulo
Radial-stress relaxation
BM-S-9 BM-S-10 can cause wellbore collapse.
Parati BM-S-11
Carioca Iara
BM-S-11
BM-S-8 Tupi Salt-creep ledges
Salt impinge on drillstring.
Bem-Te-Vi

BM-S-24
Jupiter
BM-S-21
Caramba BM-S-9
Guara Borehole wall is weakened
by leaching water, gas
Santos basin and other minerals
0 km 200 out of salt.
0 mi 200

> Santos basin presalt cluster. The Tupi well, RJS-628A, ranks as the rst
major oil discovery of the presalt cluster and was followed by at least
seven others in the cluster lease blocks. Wellbore enlargement
results from salt
dissolution.

announced in the Santos basin, including and from anchor handling to pipe laying. The Accumulated cuttings
jam drillstring.
Caramba, Carioca, Iara and Guar.38 In 2009, logistical role will become even more important
Petrobras also released its strategic plan for devel- as pipelines, platforms, FPSOs and associated
oping the Tupi, Iara and Guar elds in three dis- infrastructure are installed to support production.
> Potential drilling problems. Drilling through salt
crete phases, starting with extended well tests, In these waters, exploration and production requires special attention to drilling uids.
followed by pilot projects, then large-scale produc- teams rely heavily on geophysical data to nd Potential problems include sections of borehole
tion through oating production, storage and promising structures and later, to aid in reservoir enlargement and weakened borehole walls as a
ofoading (FPSO) facilities.39 The Santos basin characterization. However, imaging beneath the result of salt leaching. Low mud weight may
allow creep to impinge on the drillstring. Drilling
presalt model has been adapted for exploration of salt can be problematic. To obtain the offsets uids contaminated with salt from the formation
other basins, and important discoveries have been required to successfully image beneath the salt, can develop unfavorable rheological properties
made in the Caxaru, Pirambu, Baleia Franca, advanced acquisition strategies, employing that reduce the muds ability to carry cuttings to
Baleia Azul, Jubarte and Cachalote elds in the methods such as wide-azimuth, rich-azimuth and the surface, causing the drillstring to become
packed off above the bit. (From Perez et al,
Campos basin. The presalt section of the Esprito multiazimuth techniques, are being used.43 reference 45.)
Santo basin is also targeted for exploration. Processing may also be complicated. The high
contrast in seismic velocity between the salt and rates, which can vary by as much as two orders of
Challenges Ahead sediments causes problems for conventional magnitude between the various types of salt.
The Santos basin, initial site of recent presalt dis- time-migration methods, so depth-migration Creep can lead to wellbore restrictions, stuck
coveries in Brazil, presents numerous E&P chal- techniques are preferred. These imaging algo- pipe and casing failure (above).45
lenges implicit in a setting where ultradeep rithms require accurate velocity models above, Furthermore, the presalt reservoirs consist of
waters cover a deep carbonate reservoir masked within and below the salt. With the adaptation of heterogeneous, layered carbonates, which can
by a thick layer of salt.40 The focus of exploration, electromagnetic (EM) technology for deepwater adversely affect drilling progress. Drilling perfor-
the presalt cluster, lies in waters ranging from environments, exploration teams are now inte- mance is always a major concern in ultradeep
1,900 to 2,400 m [6,200 to 7,870 ft] in depth grating EM data with seismic data.44 Joint inver- waters, where drilling rigs command high day
(above). Located some 300 km [185 mi] from the sion of EM and seismic data is key for enhancing rates. The ability to improve drilling performance
coast, presalt cluster activities are driven by pre- structural resolution and locating hydrocarbon will have an impact on extended-reach drilling
cisely coordinated logistics that ensure equip- reserves with an accuracy that would not other- projects that may be required to develop these
ment and crews arrive on location when needed.41 wise be possible. reservoirs in the future.46
The problems associated with distance from Among the more daunting challenges is well- Geomechanics will play a big role in future
shore can be exacerbated by metocean condi- bore construction. Immediately above the target development plans. Geomechanical studies aid in
tions, which can range from moderate to severe: reservoir lie as much as 2,000 m of evaporites. anticipating the potential for rock failure or salt
Waves in the Santos basin can build to much The varying composition of the evaporite interval deformation around the wellbore and can aid in
greater heights than those experienced in the can be especially difcult to drill. This section, selection of drill bits and drilling uids. These
Campos basin to the northup to 40% higher.42 composed primarily of halite [NaCl] and anhy- studies will also be instrumental in devising mud,
This adds a signicant dimension to every off- drite [CaSO4], also contains layers of carnallite casing and cementing programs to extend well-
shore missionfrom crew change to rig supply [KMgCl3s6H2O] and tachyhydrite [CaMg2Cl6s12H2O]. bore longevity in such hostile conditions.
Each layer is characterized by different creep

36 Oileld Review
A key to production ultimately lies in the pet-
rophysical characterization of the presalt car-
bonate reservoir. Although presalt discoveries
have generated interest in lacustrine carbonate
reservoirs, there are still signicant gaps in
industry knowledge regarding their depositional
environments and subsequent diagenetic pro-
cesses. Initial porosity in lacustrine deposits is
highly variable. Worldwide, microbialite forma-
tions often require porogenesis, or diagenetic
enhancement, to form an adequate petroleum
reservoir. In lacustrine reservoirs, faults and frac-
ture networks are thought to provide pathways
for delivering uids that promote diagenetic pro-
cesses, especially dissolution, which can improve
reservoir quality by connecting vuggy porosity
networks.47 In wildcat wells and appraisal wells,
core analysis data, along with an extensive suite > Conceptual drawing of the Brazil Research and Geoengineering Center. The new facility, to be
of logging measurements, are obtained to assess located in the Technology Park at the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, will focus on numerous
projects pertaining to the deepwater presalt environment.
parameters such as wettability, hydraulic con-
nectivity, pore structure and permeability.
Thorough reservoir characterization is neces- To meet these and other challenges, presalt empirical input for models and simulations used to
sary for dening the best well geometries and ventures will call on the technical expertise and help operators develop a comprehensive charac-
completion schemes. In most presalt wells, a research capabilities of service companies and terization of the reservoir:
thick oil column and reservoir heterogeneity academia. In September of 2009, Schlumberger s7ELL 3ERVICES 2EGIONAL 2ESEARCH ,ABORATORY
indicate the need for selective completions. A signed a joint cooperation agreement with the features cementing and stimulation equipment
carefully planned acid stimulation job is also Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro to build an for research activities aimed at enhancing pro-
desirable, to spread production more evenly international research center on the universitys duction from presalt formations.
across the pay zone. campus (above). The Schlumberger Brazil s2ESERVOIR #ORE ,ABORATORY PROVIDES mUID AND
Production or injection can cause stress and Research and Geoengineering Center (BRGC), as core analysis for integration with geophysics,
uid changes within a eld. Changes in effective part of the larger Schlumberger global research petrophysics and geomechanics studies.
pressure can also affect the responses seen dur- and development network, has identied four s2ESERVOIR &LUID ,ABORATORY OFFERS INTEGRATED
ing subsequent 4D seismic surveys. Because seis- areas of concentration: carbonate reservoir char- uid sampling and analysis under representa-
mic 4D response can be subtle and difcult to acterization, 4D geophysical imaging, well con- tive downhole conditions, to reduce data
detect in carbonates, highly accurate and sensi- struction and geomechanics, and reservoir uncertainty in complex development projects.
tive seismic measurements are needed. Once the engineering. The BRGC will accommodate up to The lessons learned within the research cen-
changes are accurately measured, geomechani- 350 people and will house state-of-the-art centers ter may carry over to other basins around the
cal earth models will aid in predicting how these for 3D visualization, seismic data processing, soft- world. Already it is recognized that the predrift
changes might inuence seismic responses and ware development and training. Three specially geology and tectonics of the basins along the
reservoir performance in the future. designed, fully integrated laboratories will provide southeast coast of South America are similar in
many respects to those of the basins along the
38. US Energy Information Administration Country Analysis for Hydrocarbons, Oileld Review 21, no. 1 (Spring
Briefs: Brazil Energy Data, Statistics and Analysis, 2009): 419. west coast of Africa. Each coast has sag basins
(September 2009), http://www.eia.doe.gov/cabs/Brazil/ 45. For more on drilling through salt: Perez MA, Clyde R, containing organic-rich source rocks covered by
Oil.html (accessed July 23, 2010). DAmbrosio P, Israel R, Leavitt T, Nutt L, Johnson C and
39. US Energy Information Administration, reference 38. Williamson D: Meeting the Subsalt Challenge, thick layers of salt.
40. Beltro et al, reference 1. Oileld Review 20, no. 3 (Autumn 2008): 3245. Although important differences exist
41. Formigli Filho JM, Pinto ACC and de Almeida AS: 46. Alves I, Arago A, Bastos B, Falco J and Fartes E: between the basins on each side of the Atlantic,
Santos Basins Pre-Salt Reservoirs Development Pre-Salt Santos BasinWell Construction Learning
The Way Ahead, paper OTC 19953, presented at Curve Acceleration, paper OTC 20177, presented at the experiences gained on one side are paving
the Offshore Technology Conference, Houston, the Offshore Technology Conference, Houston, the way for exploration on the other, and some
May 47, 2009. May 47, 2009.
For more on diagenesis: Ali SA, Clark WJ, Moore WR operators are establishing a presence along both
42. Beltro et al, reference 1.
43. For more on these acquisition techniques: Buia M,
and Dribus JR: Diagenesis and Reservoir Quality, coasts. Along the Brazilian coast, this experi-
Oileld Review 22, no. 2 (Summer 2010): 1427.
Flores PE, Hill D, Palmer E, Ross R, Walker R, Houbiers M, ence is paying off, as seen in excellent results
Thompson M, Laura S, Menlikli C, Moldoveanu N and 47. Guidry SA, Trainor D, Helsing CE and Ritter AL:
Snyder E: Shooting Seismic Surveys in Circles, Diagenetic Facies in Lacustrine Carbonates: Implications obtained from extended testing in a Tupi Sul
Oileld Review 20, no. 3 (Autumn 2008): 1831. for Brazilian Pre-Salt Reservoirs, (abstract) presented well. This well has producedon chokean
at the AAPG International Conference and Exhibition,
44. For more on EM technology: Brady J, Campbell T, average of 2,544 m3/d [16,000 bbl/d] for the past
Rio de Janeiro, November 1518, 2009, http://www.
Fenwick A, Ganz M, Sandberg SK, Buonora MPP,
searchanddiscovery.net/abstracts/html/2009/intl/ year and a half, proving the real potential of this
Rodrigues LP, Campbell C, Combee L, Ferster A,
abstracts/guidry.htm (accessed September 27, 2010).
Umbach KE, Labruzzo T, Zerilli A, Nichols EA, new play in Brazil. MV
Patmore S and Stilling J: Electromagnetic Sounding

Autumn 2010 37

Вам также может понравиться